Sumanta Banerjee: Rights and Duties in India

Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a rather controversial comment, while addressing a Hindu religious women’s organization called the `Brahmakumaris’ on January 21. He reminded his listeners: “In the last 75 years, we only kept talking about rights, fighting for rights and wasting our time. The issue of rights may be right to some extent in certain circumstances, but neglecting one’s duties completely has played a large role in keeping India vulnerable. India lost considerable time because duties were not accorded priority….All of you must spend your energy and time on awakening the sense of duty among the people.”

Following his usual habit of making vague allegations without substantiating them, here also he failed to elaborate on what he means by `keeping India vulnerable’, and `India lost considerable time.’ Vulnerable to what? How much time was lost – and for what ? Is he complaining that the time was lost for the BJP because it could not come to power much earlier, due to the Indian people’s failure to `accord priority to their duties’ – the `duties’ according to Modi being the obligation to vote for the BJP in the past?...

https://countercurrents.org/2022/02/rights-and-duties/


Socrates: If the whole is ailing the part cannot be well / Ajit Prakash Shah: Darkness at noon, felled by the judiciary

 

A pre-history of post-truth, East and West. By MARCI SHORE


Shyam Saran: Communal virus runs riot - Attacks on minorities may lead to irreversible fragmentation of Indian Union


Your silence emboldens hate voices: Faculty, students of IIMs to PM


Society of the Spectacle / 'इमेज' - 'Image': A Poem on Deaths in the Age of Covid


Manoj Joshi: India will come apart if secular contract is torn / Harish Khare: The Real Import of Satya Pal Malik's Warning About Narendra Modi


Some uncomfortable thoughts on 'urban naxals'

Popular posts from this blog

Third degree torture used on Maruti workers: Rights body

Haruki Murakami: On seeing the 100% perfect girl one beautiful April morning

Albert Camus's lecture 'The Human Crisis', New York, March 1946. 'No cause justifies the murder of innocents'

The Almond Trees by Albert Camus (1940)

Etel Adnan - To Be In A Time Of War

After the Truth Shower

Rudyard Kipling: critical essay by George Orwell (1942)