16 January 2010

A disrespect for excellence.

Abhinav Bindra, India's only indiviudal Olympic Gold Medal winner in
history, wants to quit his sport, because he cannot take on the
"system" and is frustrated with it. Why wouldn't he be? His name has
been left out of the list for the Commonwealth Games! The reason
behind this - The "System" wanted him to attend "regular trials" which
form the basis for selection. They won't let him train like he wants
to, but instead want him to attend "regular trials".

Apparently, Bindra has been training abroad for months, and yet, he
came back from Germany to attend one such "regular trial" in December
but it was postponed at the last moment. He then wrote to the NRAI
(the apex clown body that has the power to hinder winners like Abhinav
Bindra), and the Sports Ministry asking that he be allowed to prepare
in a manner similar to his run-up to the Beijing Olympics in 2008.
Till yesterday, he'd got no response.

A case of norms and bureaucracy versus a professional attitude.
Collectively, we're not good at displaying either, but when the latter
shows up, we are somehow capable of throwing the former in its path.

In another incident, unconnected but symptomatic of our very Indian
attitudes towards excellence, West Bengal Sports Minister Kanti
Ganguly and PWD Minister Kshiti Goswami violated FIFA protocol when
they touched the World Cup Trophy just after Germany's 1990 World Cup
winning captain Lothar Matthaeus unveiled the original 18-carat gold
trophy to begin the world-wide tour. The honour of touching the cup
is reserved only for people who have won it, and for heads of state.
These clowns will never be world champions, and hopefully will never
become our head of state either. How can they be ignorant of the
simplest of protocols - respect the FIFA World Cup. It is not for
unfit people to touch and fawn. One of the idiots even tried to lift
it! I wonder if he would have stolen it if there had been a power
outage and the lights had gone out.

What we have in India is a systemic disrespect for excellence. We
love to trash champions and make them "equal" to us, make them
submissive to meaningless protocols and rules that really shouldn't be
there at all in the first place. How else would P T Usha be refused
accommodation at a national sports meet? End of the day, the system
has not only failed to deliver - it stands directly in the way of the
simplest things getting done.

Look at the fiasco with our hockey team. They had to threaten to pull
out of a world championship before their pleas were heard. It was
about getting paid "properly". The cricket team is the only bunch
that are above most of this haggard nagging, only because they have
too much money. It is very cool that they have decided to gift one
crore rupees to the hockey team, but they shouldn't have to.

Abhinav Bindra is a proven champion. Not of some arbid district in
Uttarakhand, not of India, but of the world. He should know a thing
or two about preparing for a major championship like the Commonwealth
Games. He has already delivered. He should focus on his goals rather
than attend some local trials in order to inspire other shooters. For
heavens sake, if his Olympic Gold cannot inspire other shooters, how
can his mere participation in trials do it!?

Champions versus bureaucrats! It has been happening for a long, long,
time, but now it is coming out into the open. Our bureaucrats are by
no stretch of the imagination, champion material. So, what better way
to cut the champions down to size than by showing the power of their
ability to prevent our champions from reaching their goals? It is the
only way dumb and lazy bureaucrats who have never aimed for anything
excellent all their lives can show their power over true champions,
and they are!

Abhinav Bindra has never given undue respect to our "system" because
he didn't come from it. He came up despite the sytem's every attempt
to slow him down. This is no secret. He doesn't make too many
patriotic statements because he is frustrated by the country. He is a
consummate professional instead. What is so hard to understand about
that? Why can't we respect that?

Speaking of protocol, which we seem so eager to throw in the face of
our champions - These ass clowns in WB touching the FIFA World Cup
really have no clue what the meaning behind the FIFA protocol is.
Now, FIFA could take action against the All India Football Federation
and make it very embarrassing. All the efforts of our football
players undone by the PWD Minister of West Bengal! Why does this fool
even have to be anywhere near the World Cup? But how embarrassing can
it be for a country that has hardly ever found itself within the first
100 in football rankings? Probably not much. Life goes on. The same
bunch of idiots left Saina Nehwal's name out of the official list of
participants in the Badminton championships in China. Poor kid lost
out.

This is exactly how not to nurture champions. We seem to think the
"system" needs to do more to produce champions. Sure it does, but it
isn't good enough to do that yet. Right now, our champions are all
finding ways to do it on their own. So, why should the system get in
the way or even get some credit for just being there? Just because
there is an office building somewhere, two ass clowns getting paid to
switch on the air conditioning and warming the seats?

Most Indians have no clue what it takes to be the best in the world -
in anything. Some of us do, and one of the best realizations we have
come to, and Abhinav Bindra has come to exemplify that, is that our
country as a whole is a trash can when it comes to making things work
efficiently. We are corrupt, lazy, focussed on the wrong things,
unwilling to work hard, and glaringly, unwilling to learn. We show
respect for all the stuff that doesn't count for anything in a
champion's pursuit.

With all the mediocrity that India stands for, I'd be embarrassed to
say I am an Indian if I won something of merit and had to unwittingly
represent our country, especially right here in India. Look at the
number of fiascos we have on at the moment. Not an ounce of integrity
in most cases. The message we need to send out should be clear - stay
the fuck out of the way, bloody government punkasses, and we'll bring
home all the gold medals we really aim for. Oh, yeah, we wouldn't let
you touch anything we won, either.

BSK.

08 January 2010

The Ministry of External Fiascos.

http://beta.thehindu.com/news/national/article77168.ece

External Affairs Minister Mr. S.M. Krishna has expressed "shock" over
Indian students in Australia enrolling in courses like Hair Styling
and Facials.

>>>Talking to journalists here, he said: "One can understand students going there [Australia] at the university level, at the IIT level or at the level of some other institution of excellence. When I went there, I was shocked to see so many students in courses they don't need to go to Australia for — such as learning hair styling or doing facials.

"In India, such courses are available in Delhi, Bangalore, Mumbai and
Chennai. So parents should be more discriminating in choosing
educational institutions for their children to pursue higher studies,"
he advised shortly after a meeting with Australian High Commissioner
Peter Varghese.

"The courses to which our students have been going are certainly not
very encouraging. So I would suggest [to] the Indian parents to be
discreet. They better get informed themselves about the courses."

Analysts here said the Minister hit the nail on the head.<<<<

What nail, whose head? Did we send S. M. Krishna to Australia to find
out why our students are being beaten, stabbed and killed or to find
out what they're studying?

Who are these morons calling themselves "analysts" and what the hell
have they been analyzing?

The MEA seems to be suggesting that students studying Engineering in
an "institution of excellence" would be less of a target of racial
attacks. If that isn't absurd enough, why the heck at all is THIS
ministry making a value judgment on what courses are "encouraging"?
Krishna isn't the minister of education, he is the bloody Minister of
External Affairs. What business of his is it to make a comment on
WHAT our students in Australia study?

This is a judgemental, patronizing, conservative upper class Indian
advising his children on what to do with their lives! For heavens
sake, you slowpoke, it is YOUR job to be concerned about the safety of
our people abroad. It is NOT your job to tell them what to study,
what job to get, what car to buy, and how to spend the rest of their
lives. Mind your business, and stop being so patronizing.

Once the nation has issued a passport to an Indian citizen, that
person is free to travel anywhere in the world, and the government of
India should accord that person the respect of protection and
assistance through its missions abroad. Period. If there are
questions to be asked about motive for travel, that is the business of
the receiving country, and its missions in our country - namely, the
visa process. We should tolerate no official value judgement based on
why a person wants to travel to a certain part of the world, and most
definitely not on what one of our students wants to study abroad.

For those of us who don't quite understand where this really absurd
comment from Krishna really comes from, here is the low down. We have
massive class differences in our country. The intellectual upper
class is always going to stare down the less intellectual lower class.
There are no equals in any section of our society, and this is
something we have never come to grips with, particularly post
independence.

A whole section of our population wants to move up the value chain,
but not all of us can realistically aspire to be engineers, doctors or
lawyers, or any of the other professions that the intellectual upper
class has traditionally dominated in numbers. Now, we have an economy
that does indeed need personal trainers, hair stylists, chefs,
hospitality workers, aged care specialists, and thousands of other
professionals, but we are far from recognizing any of them as
"professionals", leave alone treating them as such. Regardless, these
people also need to be as qualified as possible in their professions,
and an education or work stint in a foreign country is always a huge
plus, no matter what part of the world you are in.

Socially, the picture is even more twisted, but still interesting.
Being an average Indian, without a snooty degree in engineering or
medicine, so to say, one is always more likely to be looked down upon,
if one is not very rich. For most of the others, the only way to
compete with the pseudo brainiacs, the only way to gain respect and
claim some lost ground is to get an education abroad, make some money,
maybe even live or settle down abroad, and live "respectably". See
how close so many of our youngsters think they are to this "glorious"
foreign job by working in call centres with stupid accents and
terrible growth prospects? Working for whitey, sounding like him,
getting paid lousy brownskin wages. We're totally ready for this, but
nobody sees that as being demeaning, since we're going to be a
superfreakingpower by being whitey's maidservant without once entering
his manor! A whole other discussion this would be, indeed.

Yes, this is the whole scenario of indentured labour revisiting us
from the 1830s, when we exported thousands of socially low class
people to British plantations around the world under the biggest con
pulled on our people by the East India Company, many of whose agents
were very much Indian but working for the British. But for many of
these indentured labourers, it was still a better choice to go to some
unknown land, than staying in India under oppressive landlords. The
indentured labourers reached their plantations to find that they were
just slaves replacing black slaves, just after slavery was officially
abolished from British colonies, and soon after landing on the shores
of countries like British Guyana, they realized their promise of a
"better" life was a mirage, but it was still a better choice for them
than to return to India to the shame and ridicule that waited for them
here. Imagine the fun we would have poked at them had they returned.
The only thing worse than being Indian is being an Indian who tried
something and failed.

What has changed today? The agents are Indian, working for Australian
institutions! We are here to export not just the IITians and the
doctors, but also the hair stylists and the nurses and the sports
therapists to be! Now, by suggesting that some of these lines of
study are not as "encouraging" as his esteemed upper class head has
decided, SM Krishna has thrown light on the class division mentality
to our people abroad as well. In fact, he has effectively disowned a
huge section of our students abroad. "Aiyaiyo, I thought I was coming
here to the rescue of our engineers and prestigious students. I
didn't know you were all studying to be Hair Stylists!". What a
message!

It is no secret that upper class Indians abroad aspire to lead lives
very much designed by the white man, and the lower class Indians
continue to hang on to their very "Indian" identity. Now, it is
official! Our own Minister of External Affairs has said, "I'm so
sorry, white people, these students are all pariahs of our society,
and they're definitely not very "encouraging" to us". How brilliant!
In one fell swoop, the Minister of External Affairs has pretty much
said everything the racists who hate Indians already wanted to hear,
playing into the stereotypes of stinky, dirty, low lives. We DISOWNED
our people. And if that is not treason on the part of the Minister of
External Affairs, what is?

Let's not hide behind the diplomatic cloud that Delhi pulls upon
itself at every bloody convenience. S. M. Krishna has absolutely
failed in his duty towards his country with this one blunder. But the
opposition will not be smart enough to sieze this opportunity, for
they are also part of this class warfare and they are, if anything,
even more strongly ready to cater to the upper class in mind and
wealth. NOBODY cares about the lower class of any kind in India.
Ergo, the lower class must run abroad for a better life. Period.

Here is the other side of the coin - what kind of a life do we
actually get to lead in India? Forget the money, forget the job. If
I go to Australia to learn how to be a Hair Stylist, I can also get to
see a lovely country, drive on some beautiful roads, enjoy an outing
or ten on a clean beach, jump into a river without worry of getting
poisoned, get a driver's licence without bribing anyone, buy a car,
enjoy a beer while watching cricket match, fall in love with someone
from a different country and culture, have an affair, and not be
stressed or judged for doing any of this. To a lot many of us, these
things are much more important than being safe right here in India
amidst this chaotic nonsense of everyday "Indian" life.

For far too long have we in India been denied the ability to trust the
simplest human every day experiences - some clean air, some peace and
quiet, reliable water and electricity supply, having some privacy, not
being persecuted for having an opinion, and being able to connect with
other human beings without stress, expectations, or suspicion. Let's
face the truth - India is a very stressful place to live in. Many of
us have adapted to these conditions, but let's not take away from the
most fundamental truth about life in India - it is a bloody compromise
in EVERY way possible. NOTHING in India is the best in the world, and
even the best in India costs too much for most of us to afford. As
soon as we solve one problem, which takes ages in itself, we have ten
others, usually exacerbated by dogma, cancerous stupidity and backed
by the power of a clueless majority.

Going to another country, particularly developed countries like the
USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the UK, Germany or even Singapore
or HongKong, definitely has its benefits. The ordinary amongst us can
truly aspire to emigrate to any of these countries and live a life
fundamentally better than we can have in India. THAT Mr. Krishna, is
the reason many of us choose to leave, and that's the reason many of
us won't come back. For doing any of this, one doesn't have to have
an IIT degree.

Even if I work as an ordinary policeman in any self respecting
country, I can trust that my "bulletproof" jacket is indeed capable of
stopping a bullet. Not in India. If I call the police to report my
neighbour's loud behaviour, I wouldn't have to bribe the Inspector to
make the complaint official. Not in India. I can take a walk at 2
AM, just to experience the calm of a Chicago night, but get verbally
abused by ill behaved, impolite, outright abrasive beat policemen in
Bangalore for doing exactly that. India is always just one step away
from anarchy, and this factor alone is enough to discourage many from
staying here.

Shouldn't Mr. Krishna spend some time educating himself on the
realities that people face that enable them to make the choices they
make when they choose to leave India? What kind of an inefficient,
insulated, out of touch clown do you have to be to be "shocked" by
something as simple as finding Indian students studying to be Hair
Stylists in Australia? What's the big deal?

Talk about addressing parents, this guy is a bad joke. Are parents of
Indian kids so ignorant that they would send their children abroad
without even checking on the courses? They KNOW exactly what they are
trying to do - give their children a shot at a life better than they
have had in this country. Their children aren't competing against
Hair Stylists from India. They are competing with out of touch upper
class patronizing powerful people like Mr. Krishna, and their
insulated children with cushy jobs and comfortable homes, social and
financial security, and other "privileges", and they are not likely to
come back to India and look stupid applying for an Indian job with a
Hair Styling degree! They don't CARE about India, because India
doesn't care about them. Get it?

Mr. Krishna, it is not even your job to tell people what country they
should choose to go to, on what pretext. No matter who goes where, it
is YOUR job to take care of them through whatever diplomatic channels
are open to you. That's why your ministry is called Ministry of
External AFFAIRS! It is true, even though it may be unfair - even if
you're not fit for your job it is still your responsibility. It is
NOT your responsibility or indeed any of your business to tell them
what to study and what jobs to look for.

No hair stylist from India has turned terrorist, but an IITian with an
"encouraging" education is in jail for threatening the President of
another country. One child from a lineage of indentured labourers has
even gone on to become the President of a country. His name is Cheddi
Jagan. Please, Mr. Krishna, stop embarrassing us and try to be a
professional. Educate yourself. You won't get beaten or stabbed
while trying to get a job qualification.

- An Indian citizen.