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India is dirty because Indians are clean

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The author makes a great point. I think cleanliness of public spaces is something India can learn from many other countries. Chinese cities are so much cleaner compared to India's, even though India is set to surpass China by 2020. Modi-ji must urgently implement policies to solve the problem.


India is dirty because Indians are clean - The Times of India

India is dirty because Indians are clean
The Litter truth: The Indian Litterbug is proud of being filthy; he'll dirty New Delhi but never New York

Like Nature, India abhors a vacuum. Which is a prettier way of saying that India and Nature have had a longstanding joint venture that celebrates filling and trimming spaces with muck and filth that folks in other less rank cultures and countries seem to have such a problem with. It explains why there is no mention of Vedic-era flush toilet technology. It also explains why when three members of the Rolling Stones urinated in public in 1965 making headlines after being fined by the police, Indians wondered what the hullabaloo was all about.

Along with the proliferation of beggars, invasions of privacy and lack of silence, we are inoculated against public dirtiness by being literally inside the garbage dump. Having our streets and roads being extensions of garbage tips and urinals strike us as being as noxious to us as it's scandalous for a lady to be topless at Las Salinas beach in Ibiza.

There's been an explanation passed down generations to explain why we're so filthy: India is so dirty because Indians are so clean. For outsiders, that sounds zen-Upanishadic. But what it's supposed to mean is that our homes are moderately neat — if we don't live in a chawl or a home that resembles a chawl with tubelights, that is - and the world outside can go to the dogs. This explanation is usually accompanied by a description of how other cultures are totally apathetic towards personal hygiene — 'How do you think the Arabs and the French invented the perfume?' 'Have you seen British teeth?' 'The Swiss actually smell of cheese.' 'I was once trapped in an elevator in America...' Essentially, there's some theory about the worse your personal hygiene the better your public cleanliness.Which makes no sense at all for us who take a dip in the very public-cum-personal Ganga or local tubewell to cleanse our squeaky bits including our souls.

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This theory, of course, is wet gunkoozing rubbish. We are a filthy nation because we're quite proud of being filthy. It's a way of declaring we're not namby-pamby and stricken with a fet ish for the antiseptic. We're capable of walking past a hill-sized heap piled with cabbage corpses mixed with detritus with smatterings of used sanitary napkins and dark fluids that look like leftover sewer, without gagging. We aren't coy about throwing out kitchen waste straight out of the windows 'out there'. (A lot of us don't even do the chucking; our cooks and maids 'with little sense of public decorum' doing the needful.) Cleanliness, to us, bears an elitist tag — despite the nice try by yet another Gujarati to tell the country otherwise.Roads and streets in Indian metropolitan cities — you really don't want to talk about the small towns, trust me — are zones that simply connect people from one point to another. These are no flyzipped zones, where if the pavements have rivulets of piss running down the gutter or bear all demonitions of litter, this is, well, India. Why do you think we like travelling abroad? We can walk about in public spaces that aren't as 'colourful, full of aromas and life' (read: visually filthy, smelly and chaotic) without having to be marked out as being un-Indian. It's simply more pleasant to step out in Toronto or Sydney than in Delhi or Mumbai — unless you're a very, very rich ragpicker.

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There's only one way we litterati, garbage-chuckers, public peebodies and spit-mongerers can stop what comes so naturally to us in our happy, filthy surroundings: By having our roads and streets become super clean. Even the dirtiest scumbag will find it tough to mess up pavements made of genuine slabs (rather than of glued-on tar and cement chowder), filthify walls with paan and worsen stains that don't grow lab fungi, and trash public loos that don't give us a sneak peak of narak right here in our Maha Bharat.

Because no one wants to throw a wrapper, to spit, to pee or chuck rubbish in an already-sparkling clean place. Not even proudly filthy people like us who gladly litter Kolkata but never Zurich.

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An article from 5 months back. Dude, you've gotten predictable and boring - honestly, not even fun engaging you. I'd rather engage a less obvious troll.
 
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Shining, superpower India... Glamorous 5 star hotels, world class metros, and glass airports...

Until you step out of them

this is true... most indians don't have a sense of the entirety, the whole, the big-picture... they can think only in isolated pockets, which influences not only the ( lack of ) cleanliness of habitations but also political alliances, employment ( the entire recent software/services industry ) and technology creation ( lack of ).


The author makes a great point. I think cleanliness of public spaces is something India can learn from many other countries. Chinese cities are so much cleaner compared to India's, even though India is set to surpass China by 2020. Modi-ji must urgently implement policies to solve the problem.


India is dirty because Indians are clean - The Times of India

India is dirty because Indians are clean
The Litter truth: The Indian Litterbug is proud of being filthy; he'll dirty New Delhi but never New York

Like Nature, India abhors a vacuum. Which is a prettier way of saying that India and Nature have had a longstanding joint venture that celebrates filling and trimming spaces with muck and filth that folks in other less rank cultures and countries seem to have such a problem with. It explains why there is no mention of Vedic-era flush toilet technology. It also explains why when three members of the Rolling Stones urinated in public in 1965 making headlines after being fined by the police, Indians wondered what the hullabaloo was all about.

Along with the proliferation of beggars, invasions of privacy and lack of silence, we are inoculated against public dirtiness by being literally inside the garbage dump. Having our streets and roads being extensions of garbage tips and urinals strike us as being as noxious to us as it's scandalous for a lady to be topless at Las Salinas beach in Ibiza.

There's been an explanation passed down generations to explain why we're so filthy: India is so dirty because Indians are so clean. For outsiders, that sounds zen-Upanishadic. But what it's supposed to mean is that our homes are moderately neat — if we don't live in a chawl or a home that resembles a chawl with tubelights, that is - and the world outside can go to the dogs. This explanation is usually accompanied by a description of how other cultures are totally apathetic towards personal hygiene — 'How do you think the Arabs and the French invented the perfume?' 'Have you seen British teeth?' 'The Swiss actually smell of cheese.' 'I was once trapped in an elevator in America...' Essentially, there's some theory about the worse your personal hygiene the better your public cleanliness.Which makes no sense at all for us who take a dip in the very public-cum-personal Ganga or local tubewell to cleanse our squeaky bits including our souls.

46228662.cms

This theory, of course, is wet gunkoozing rubbish. We are a filthy nation because we're quite proud of being filthy. It's a way of declaring we're not namby-pamby and stricken with a fet ish for the antiseptic. We're capable of walking past a hill-sized heap piled with cabbage corpses mixed with detritus with smatterings of used sanitary napkins and dark fluids that look like leftover sewer, without gagging. We aren't coy about throwing out kitchen waste straight out of the windows 'out there'. (A lot of us don't even do the chucking; our cooks and maids 'with little sense of public decorum' doing the needful.) Cleanliness, to us, bears an elitist tag — despite the nice try by yet another Gujarati to tell the country otherwise.Roads and streets in Indian metropolitan cities — you really don't want to talk about the small towns, trust me — are zones that simply connect people from one point to another. These are no flyzipped zones, where if the pavements have rivulets of piss running down the gutter or bear all demonitions of litter, this is, well, India. Why do you think we like travelling abroad? We can walk about in public spaces that aren't as 'colourful, full of aromas and life' (read: visually filthy, smelly and chaotic) without having to be marked out as being un-Indian. It's simply more pleasant to step out in Toronto or Sydney than in Delhi or Mumbai — unless you're a very, very rich ragpicker.

46228668.cms

There's only one way we litterati, garbage-chuckers, public peebodies and spit-mongerers can stop what comes so naturally to us in our happy, filthy surroundings: By having our roads and streets become super clean. Even the dirtiest scumbag will find it tough to mess up pavements made of genuine slabs (rather than of glued-on tar and cement chowder), filthify walls with paan and worsen stains that don't grow lab fungi, and trash public loos that don't give us a sneak peak of narak right here in our Maha Bharat.

Because no one wants to throw a wrapper, to spit, to pee or chuck rubbish in an already-sparkling clean place. Not even proudly filthy people like us who gladly litter Kolkata but never Zurich.

46228676.cms

all of it is true, especially the "lack of silence" bit... i find the noise maddening - the dogs, the motorcycles, the mannerless people talking in aggressive voices, people unnecessarily honking at traffic signals ( why?? ), the prayer houses ( perhaps 900,000 all over the country ), the cars of the idiotic neo-rich of the software/mba types, the crows, firecrackers in the diwali festival ( for a week !!! ) or in random family occasions ( just like that !!! ) or during kirket matches, boys playing kirket on internal roads, kids in houses being noisy, vehicles navigating through crowds in little bazaar streets... i can go on... maddening, with a few snatched hours of general quiet 1:00 am onwards until 4:30 am, though still with dogs going on with their filthy sound unless one goes into the balcony and throws something at them... the sound at sea-level in india is just demented.

india needs cleansing at fanatic levels, nothing to hide there... i don't see what indians are doing in stupid jobs and stupider colleges rather than cleansing india first... it is one thing to cheer for india when indian military does operations or does fly-past on "republic day", it is entirely another thing to change our habits to become in harmony with our local ecology and make india clean and live a gentle experience.

An article from 5 months back. Dude, you've gotten predictable and boring - honestly, not even fun engaging you. I'd rather engage a less obvious troll.

let us not shoot the messenger.
 
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I always wondered, if india becomes a super power, will they start invading countries left and right and start imposing open defecation on their societies the way Americans are doing today with Democracy by imposing it down others throats?

a rather unnecessary comment, if i may venture... the author of the op article is from india and so am i.
 
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You have to agree with that ideal that the man presents. But at the same time, have a look at South Asian majority neighbourhoods anywhere in the west and you realize the article falls flat. We are dirty people who will not clean unless we are outnumbered by clean people and under the baton of the law.
 
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Sorry bro, you're right. This is a South Asian problem. But you have to admit, india's situation is worse.
Indian open defection percent is 53 % & Pakistan 44 %
We already launched heavy plan to reduce & later demolished it completely but I don't hear in a Pakistan government someone talking about this problem.
Then how situation is far worse in India ?
 
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You have to agree with that ideal that the man presents. But at the same time, have a look at South Asian majority neighbourhoods anywhere in the west and you realize the article falls flat. We are dirty people who will not clean unless we are outnumbered by clean people and under the baton of the law.
Well, most stinky people I have come across are Indians, when I was in States, and now in Malaysia. I don't know they have allergy with taking baths or some issue using deodorants or something else.
 
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Well, most stinky people I have come across are Indians, when I was in States, and now in Malaysia. I don't know they have allergy with taking baths or some issue using deodorants or something else.

Are you fcking serious? I take cabs driven by pakistanis in dubai all the time and boy do they stink.

I have seen more stinky pakistanis than any other nationality. Is it bad hygiene or a sampling bias (cabbies, construction workers etc) i dont know. But hey im not a think tank so why should i make it reasonable when i can vent my bharaas eh?
 
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