Skip to main content

When a few live life king size

Ganga Vilas


PM Modi flagged off the world’s longest river cruise on 13 Jan 2023. The Ganga Vilas will take you from the holy city of Varanasi to the industrial city of Dibrugarh in 51 days at a cost of Rs55 lakh per suite. A suite accommodates two travellers. The charge can be more if you opt for emperor size journey instead of king size.

A few people live their life king size in India now. India belongs to them according to a recent Oxfam report titled Survival of the Richest: The India Story. The richest one percent of Indians own more than 40% of the country’s wealth, according to the report. The richest 100 people in India have a total wealth of Rs54.12 lakh crore which is equal to one-and-a-half years of the central budget. A few rich Indians have the economic potential to buy the country if they wish. [They are already doing it very surreptitiously with the help of the central government which is more than happy to sell the public sector units and forests and minerals and so on.] India already belongs to this affluent class, says the Oxfam report, for all practical purposes. All policies that matter are meant to support them and increase their wealth and power.

What about the other side, the poor Indians? The bottom half – half of the mammoth Indian population – own a meagre 3% of the country’s wealth. Over 46% of Indian families have an income of less than Rs15,000 per month. Families, mind you, not individuals. Contrast that with the daily income of, say, Mukesh Ambani: Rs300 crore.

If India puts an additional 5% tax on its superrich, no Indian will have to go to bed hungry. Yet the government of India won’t do that. Why? India belongs to the superrich and it does not belong to the poor majority. This latter group, the poor majority, will eat the theology of cowdung and drink the intoxication of gaumutra. And they will experience bliss. The brainwashing that is done relentlessly in the name of religion and culture has ensured the crudest intoxication of the poor majority of India.

This new India, which is purported to be Ram Rajya, will not tax its superrich. The poor pay disproportionately high taxes, says Oxfam. The poor pay tax for everything from the water they drink to the education their children get. Essentials like medicine and clothes are taxed high. To add to all those taxes, the earlier subsidies are taken away from food items like rice and wheat supplied through public distribution systems. Many such items have vanished from the system altogether. The Indian government is eradicating poverty by eradicating the poor, it seems.

Whose government is it? The answer is obvious.  

This government writes off gargantuan bank loans amounting to Rs10 lakh crore taken by rich business people. If a poor person takes a small loan of Rs10,000 and cannot repay it in time, this government will drive him/her from pillar to post and finally to suicide.

Whose government is it?

More and more people commit suicide in India today. 164,033 Indians killed themselves in 2021, according to official statistics. The real figure will be higher, no doubt. The national suicide rate that year was the highest in all the recorded history of suicide in the country. Quite many of these suicides are farmers. Every day 15 farmers chose death in the 2021 Ram Rajya. 

When a few people choose to live life king size, the others get trampled underfoot. There are a few kings in India now. The already imperilled Gangetic dolphins will die for their sake as the Ganga Vilas will carry them in majestic suites.

Let me end this with a few highlights from the Oxfam Report.

·      The richest 21 Indian billionaires have more wealth than 700 million Indians.

·      In the Covid-months, up to Nov 2022, the wealth of the billionaires in India rose by 121%, that is, Rs 3608 crore per day or Rs2.5 crore per minute.

·      The wealth of the richest individual in India rose by 46% in 2022.

·      The revenue lost in 2020-2021 in the form of incentives given by the Government of India to the superrich is Rs103,285 crore – enough to implement MG-NREGA [employment scheme for the poor] for 1.4 year.

·      The Modi government has put a lot more burden on the poor for the sake of aiding the rich.

The report suggests a very viable solution: tax the rich. A one-time 20% ta on Gautam Adani’s unrealised capital gains from 2017 to 2021 can potentially raise Rs1.8 lakh crore, enough to pay the annual salary of the 50 lakh primary school teachers of the country.

Now you know why it is said that India is a rich country of poor people. Now you know whose country India really is.

We already know that it is the destiny of the donkey to be the beast of burden.

 


Comments

  1. Hari Om
    While taking on obscene proportions, perhaps, in India, this is not only an Indian problem. The world over we have this issue and although it manifests a little differently here in the UK. That upper entitled echelon exists... and is in government. Meanwhile, more and more folk are sacrificing heating in our winter in order just to have one decent meal a day. Short of full rebellion, I know not how this will resolve. YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, this widening rich-poor gap is a global phenomenon created by the capitalist system that countries adopted. The solution is to modify that system. That would mean putting curbs on human greed which is not an easy task.

      Delete
  2. Bleak realities brought out in the post.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The irony is that the government is very popular in spite of all these!

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

The Little Girl

The Little Girl is a short story by Katherine Mansfield given in the class 9 English course of NCERT. Maggie gave an assignment to her students based on the story and one of her students, Athena Baby Sabu, presented a brilliant job. She converted the story into a delightful comic strip. Mansfield tells the story of Kezia who is the eponymous little girl. Kezia is scared of her father who wields a lot of control on the entire family. She is punished severely for an unwitting mistake which makes her even more scared of her father. Her grandmother is fond of her and is her emotional succour. The grandmother is away from home one day with Kezia's mother who is hospitalised. Kezia gets her usual nightmare and is terrified. There is no one at home to console her except her father from whom she does not expect any consolation. But the father rises to the occasion and lets the little girl sleep beside him that night. She rests her head on her father's chest and can feel his heart...

Florentino’s Many Loves

Florentino Ariza has had 622 serious relationships (combo pack with sex) apart from numerous fleeting liaisons before he is able to embrace the only woman whom he loved with all his heart and soul. And that embrace happens “after a long and troubled love affair” that lasted 51 years, 9 months, and 4 days. Florentino is in his late 70s when he is able to behold, and hold as well, the very body of his beloved Fermina, who is just a few years younger than him. She now stands before him with her wrinkled shoulders, sagged breasts, and flabby skin that is as pale and cold as a frog’s. It is the culmination of a long, very long, wait as far as Florentino is concerned, the end of his passionate quest for his holy grail. “I’ve remained a virgin for you,” he says. All those 622 and more women whose details filled the 25 diaries that he kept writing with meticulous devotion have now vanished into thin air. They mean nothing now that he has reached where he longed to reach all his life. The...

To an Old Friend

Image by Copilot Designer Dear S, I don’t know if you’d even remember me after all these decades, but I find myself writing to you as if it were only yesterday that we parted ways. You were one of the few friends I had at school. You may be amused to know that a drawing of yours that you gifted me stayed with me until I left Kerala after school. Half a century later, I still remember that beautiful pencil drawing, the picture of a vallam (Kerala’s canoe) resting on a shore beneath a coconut tree that slanted over a serene river on whose other bank was an undulating hilly landscape. A few birds flew happily in the sky. Though it was all done in pencil, absolutely black and white, my memories of it carry countless colours. I wonder where you are now. A few years later, when I returned to Kerala on holiday, I did visit your village to enquire about you. But the village had changed much and your hut on the hill wasn’t seen anymore. Maybe, you moved on. Maybe, you took up your father’s...

Waste Land

This is a silly post though I dare to call it a poem.  Read it at your own risk. “In the room the women come and go Talking of Michelangelo.” T S Eliots’ Prufrock had at least the consolation of women coming and going talking of Michelangelo.   I’m back to regular routine tomorrow.  And women will come and go talking of duties, workshops and seminars.  They call themselves experts.  They will dictate the terms and conditions.  They have the backing of a religious sect. And I will sing along with T S Eliot : Weialala leia Wallala leialala The winter break is over.  The real break is going to begin. Religious break? Or feminine break? I’m looking forward to Madame Sosostris with her Tarot cards.  She will determine the future. The future of her staff.  She has started by terminating the services of the redundant.  Who is not redundant in this world? Is the expert essential? Is the Sw...