I agree that an obsession with becoming fairer is not very healthy, but its hardly the most pressing problem in the world, when compared to hunger and terrorism and extremism etc.
Also, it has nothing to do with an inferiority complex. Infact, the the thought that people who desire fair skin have an inferiority complex stems from the idea that people with dark skin are inferior to fair people.
Obviously, the people making this interpretation expose their own racist mentality.
The standard for beauty in society usually has nothing to do with race. Are we to believe that the obsession with getting tanned in the west, to the extent of using tanning salons and tanning creams has to do with some inferioirty complex too?
Obviously you would not make that interpretation, because of your belief that since white people are 'superior' to dark people, they would not want to be like them.
Racial prejudice on the other hand happens in every society, and not just India. I'm quite certain that considering the attitudes displayed towards dark skinned people on this forum, the prejudice towards dark skin is far worse in Pakistan than it is in India.
Good looking people are more likely to get a better job, and better pay not just in India, but all over the world. That is just the natural human tendency to subconciously form a positive impression about good looking people. And this has nothing to do with skin tone. There are dark skinned people with good looks who get favoured as well.
If people with dark skin didn't get jobs in India, the whole of South India would be unemployed. As it happens, South India contains the majority of Indian jobs. What does that indicate to you?
The problem with you guys is that you try to generalize something about a country which is so vast and so diverse that it is impossible to generalize anything about it at all.
Okay very well manufactured and carefully written diagnosis Sir.
Now couple of points I would like to address here.
Also, it has nothing to do with an inferiority complex.
Think again, many reports and articles confirm that many average dark skinned Indians are purposefully using white skin creamers to raise their status in society for social purposes and economic reasons. Hence, they feel their dark skin gives them a disadvantage in some fields, therefore an inferiority, in India there are commercials, advertisements, papers, all over India advertising using "white women" specifically, never dark Indian women. Hence there is a preference in India itself to malign average darker skin Indians compared to the lighter skin ones. Also nobody suggested it only happens in India as you said, but the phenomenon in India is a very wide-spread national case which is unique.
"The standard for beauty in society usually has nothing to do with race. Are we to believe that the obsession with getting tanned in the west, to the extent of using tanning salons and tanning creams has to do with some inferioirty complex too? Obviously you would not make that interpretation, because of your belief that since white people are 'superior' to dark people, they would not want to be like them."
Yes in many societies beauty has nothing to do with "race" but in many societies it does have to do with "skin color", there is a technical difference between race and skin, you seem to fail to understand.
Now the reason why many women in the west may get a tan, and using tanning salons, and tanning creams is not necessarily to raise their economic and social status in society as the average dark skin Indian using "Fair & Handsome" and other skin whiting cream...
With all respect to you and your country Sir. It is simply for having beautiful skin or just enriching their already white skin to simply a better tone. Also some Doctors suggest for people who have really white skin to tan for health reasons as darker skin protects your skin better from the Sun...
Now what else should I pick a part here...
If people with dark skin didn't get jobs in India, the whole of South India would be unemployed. As it happens, South India contains the majority of Indian jobs. What does that indicate to you?
Please do not misquote or deliberately avoid what I really said. I never said dark skin Indians did not get "jobs" in the "whole of South India"...Now let's examine this if a dark skin Indian is in a different environment other than South India were the majority of the people are really dark skinned and were in Mumbai let's say where there are also lighter skin Indians, they may be subjected to discrimination as the environment is different...
Also I said many don't achieve
"good jobs" this goes for the whole of India...Though they can overcome this with good education and family support...
Regards and Namaste to the Indian community from A1Kaid