Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Youngistan's truth

With due respect to all those who predict the country's salvation at the hand of the youth, I got to know that there is a 47 year old youth congress president in a state down south! That is anything but acceptable...

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Gandhi and Gandhi

The nation has become bewitched with the crown prince's charm. The austerity drive, the train ride, stays at dalit homes are all evident efforts to accumulate the support and love of the masses -- the magnitude who can create a new king in 2014.
But Gandhi's initiatives of late seem like leaves pulled out of another book; his newly found public persona strongly reminiscent of a 'surname'sake before him.
Remember Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi? The man, who for all his vision and fallacies, was the epitome of a public figure. A harbinger of many revolutions, MK became the source that gave strength to an entire nation of orphans during independence.
MK gave the country's larger populace an ideology to live by and a lifestyle that could be adopted. He introduced terms like satyagrah, harijan and non violence.
Along came a leader whose ideas could be emulated. MK was also a journalist during much of his youth. He edited several journals and also launched a handful of weeklies. Of these, the Indian Opinion, Young India and Harijan, all three printed in English, Hindi and Gujrati, were hotsellers.
MK was a passionate writer and translated much of his thoughts and advice for people in the editorials of these weeklies. He sought a mouthpiece suitable for discussion and public consumption, and he produced one.
Look at Rahul today. Despite criticism and a chequered beginning, the crown prince is being seen as his own man, than his late father's reproduction. But, his work and workstyle shows a distinct affiliation to the thinking of MK.
Look at the magazine -- a step at connecting with the youth through a mass medium. The austerity drive -- remember MK smiling in bare minimum facilities. The train travel -- MK travelled in a third class compartment of a train. Dalit companionship -- can you forget the fight for harijans?
Through the years, Rahul has launched several initiatives in his attempt to connect with the people of the day and reach out to them in their own language. And it is a mentor from the pages of history that Rahul seems to have chosen for help this time around.

FYI: MK preferred the model of subscription over advertisement for his weeklies (ignore the sarcastic tripe for marketing led products!).

Sunday, September 13, 2009

RG's mag on hold

The newspaper with the lowercase masthead reports that Rahul Gandhi's magazine is on the backburner (http://www.hindustantimes.com/News/celebwatch/Rahul-s-mag-on-the-back-burner/Article1-452365.aspx)

A general buzz had been in the air for a while, but did not know that it would make it to the front of the daily so quickly Apparenty, say some going in and out of AICC, RG was getting perturbed at the project becoming media fodder. Considering his own PR strategy has changed remarkably in the past 15 months and has done wonders for him, the magazine making news for all the wrong reasons must have upset him.

Many probably reasons are doing the rounds ...from the most inane to teh crafty and the fictitious. Some say that Madam would-be editor was getting too big for her shoes, while some say that she was trying to become close to Big Boss (RG) through the project. But unfortunately, the ladder on which she was trying to climb, did not even have a first step.

Btw, she went ahead and cried foul at the reporter's expense, which was recognised as a desperate, last resort.

However, in general I think it is a big loss for the youth of the country, who may just have gained some new insight through this mag.

Anyway, more later!

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Business of politics...continued

And why only Maytas? Lanco's owner Madhusudan Rao is a Congress MP.
The proximity of GM Rao (of GMR fame) and GVK Reddy (GVK Infra) families to 10 Janpath is well known. I know from friends of the family that they also quietly breed political ambitions, but have not made it evident because of the fear of antagonising 10 JP.
Deccan Chronicle's Ram Reddy has still not given up his desire to be a Congress Rajya Sabha MP. Subbarami Reddy is the undisputed liquor baron.
On the other hand, in Maharashtra, grapevine has that the entire sugar business is controlled by people associated with Sharad Pawar.
You find purely political people only in the Hindi heartland...where politics for them means politics, and is not just a medium to strengthen or protect their business interests.
Infact, clear segregation between politics and business is extremely important. If the country is run by businessmen, it will destroy the whole social fabric, on which we are based.
The idea of NREGA could have only be conceptualised by the likes of Rahul Gandhi and Raghuvansh Prasad Singh. While the latter owes his roots to the rural cowbelt, Rahul has extensively toured rural areas and interacted with the rural poor.
For them, politics is not a means to attain further successes in business. On the other hand,a businessman politician would have argued that schemes like NREGA are wasteful investment, because there is hardly any return on the capital deployed.
Not that I am a great fan of NREGA, and there are many flaws in the way it is currently undertaken (will come back with more on this in the next post). But all said and done, the scheme has at least provided a source of basic sustenance for several millions of rural youth.

Monday, September 7, 2009

The business of politics

Someone with the right political knowhow made quite an interesting observation. He says that it is curious that in South India businessmen do politics, while in West India (read Maharastra) politicians do business.
Doesn't the word Maytas transit through your mind right now...?