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He could just be that key to unlock Tamilnadu.. & create some presence in the state. This guy is pretty strong in Southern TN.. & could be of great use. Although I'm not a great fan of this goon.. then again as that classic say goes.. Jarurat ke waqt pe gadhe ko bhi baap banana padta hai!

Its very interesting to see BJP gaining strength in South while Congress loosing its grip. I am sure by next election BJP will have replaced Congress in TN and Andhra..
 
Newslaundry – Modi Magic?
MODI MAGIC?

Posted by

Anand Ranganathan
| Dec 17, 2013 in Governance | 227 comments


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Editor’s note: There’s a mystery to this article, so be sure to read till the end.

Narendra Modi is a man before his time. A couple of decades along, too late for him, there will be a bigger constituency in India for the anti-Muslim demagogue. Modi dislocates the hypocrisy of a party whose leader fired up a mob and then said he regretted its vandalism.

For those able to look beyond his superb oratory and humour, the vapidity of Modi’s message is striking. His simple views spring from his lack of knowledge. He’s not well-read, has little idea about the world or its history. It will be embarrassing, if he becomes prime minister, to have him in the same meeting as US President Barack Obama. He is aching to bring with him his social vision, which is aligned with that of the RSS, to the rest of India from Gujarat. A money-minded, intellectually barren, segregated, ghettoised, non-drinking and vegetarian utopia that some of us have fled from.

Modi has never been to college and his degree is from a correspondence course. His writing, which is all in Gujarati, is mainly hagiography. It is mediocre and shows little awareness of the world. He has not travelled much outside India. His poetry is shockingly banal. Personally, I am not enamoured of a man who thinks up such rubbish. Unfortunately, his English is also poor, which, in my opinion, has contributed to leaving his mind unopened because there is little access to the world for the Gujarati-only individual. Modi would not have reached the position he is in today, within striking distance of becoming the prime minister, in a civilised nation because he isn’t qualified.

Modi is a Ghanchi, from the trading caste of oil-pressers and grain sellers called Teli in north India. Ghanchis are categorized as Other Backward Class. Education is not a priority for him because there’s hard work required and real thinking, a proper clash with the RSS. Modi sits on top of an anti-Muslim consensus. His popularity flows from this. He speaks a Gujarati purged of Persian words. He makes no concession to Muslims. He is vain and terrified of being humiliated. He does not even contest from his hometown because he’s afraid of losing.

Narendra Modi is the most famous single man in India. He has a wife, a villager, whom he discarded very early on. He does not respond to stories about her. Gujarati women find Narendra Modi very attractive sexually and, even more than the man, it is the urban Gujarati woman who has made Modi a heroic figure in that state. An ageing woman does not have appeal in society because man is instinctively trained to see that her utility is low. It’s banal but true: To improve their odds in the love market, men need to focus on making more money and women on looking more beautiful.

Modi gives the lower rungs of the BJP and the RSS what they want, a full-throated and uncompromisingly Hindu nationalist leadership which radiates strength and power. He owns the BJP in Gujarat, having got rid of all the people who built the party over decades, and inserted his own people up to the second and third tier levels.

What is Narendra Modi’s style of governance? Just as there is no Modi model of economics, there isn’t any Modi model of governance, if by model we mean something original that can be replicated. Has he produced something that is radically different from before 2001? Of course not, and those who call his manner of functioning an economic model are basing this on insufficient understanding of Gujarat’s economic history.

Modi’s fresh Hindutva is more appealing for those who like that sort of thing than Advani’s faded version. The BJP foot soldier is from the RSS and is drawn to the party’s Hindutva ideology.

Gujaratis subscribe to the BJP’s anti-Muslim message in full. The votes of the rioting Hindus tend to go to the BJP while the Muslims look for a defensive option. In Gujarat, the caste that has put and kept the BJP in power for two decades is the Patidar community of Patels. The caste dominates every BJP cabinet and Narendra Modi is actually the leader of the Patels, just as Mulayam Singh is the leader of Muslims in UP.

In Uttar Pradesh, the Jats, who are seething from the riots, will queue up behind the BJP in 2014. On the other hand the Muslims will be terrified by the thought of Narendra Modi coming to power at the centre.

The cities of Gujarat look much like Indian cities anywhere: Dirty streets, chaotic and undisciplined traffic, corrupt police, lawbreaking citizenry. Ahmedabad and Vadodara are the two most savage cities in India. Ahmedabad, a city lacking in any sort of charm whatsoever, is more representative of the Modi era – segregated, sullen and oppressively vegetarian. Surat is the only city in Gujarat with a robust presence of non-vegetarian street food. Some of this is because of the presence of mercantile Muslim communities – Dawoodi Bohras in particular. Another reason is that, unlike in Ahmedabad, the lower caste (and so non-vegetarian) Hindus are empowered in Surat. Modi is from the Ghanchi community (of oil-pressers), but he is, of course, a non-drinking vegetarian.

It would be facile to suggest that the Congress and the BJP are the same creature. The BJP is seen as an ideological party, but it isn’t. The Congress is India’s only ecumenical party. It is genuinely above region, caste and religion.

The way to understand the Bharatiya Janata Party is to see it as India’s party of anger. The BJP is generally a good representative of India’s unthinking and angry middle class. Under Modi, this desire to not be inclusive is amplified and so the problem of allies has become bigger. None of the BJP’s old friends remain with it but for two fellow communal parties: the Sikhs of the Akali Dal and the Marathi chauvinists of the Shiv Sena. The BJP in Gujarat is kept in power through the votes of the state’s biggest and most powerful community, the peasant Patels, who are supporters of Hindutva. The Patel has butchered his daughters so efficiently that now other castes must supply brides.

This is where the Congress has the opportunity to create some mischief. Congress should provide the ammunition for these spent guns. And by that is meant cash. More than half the money a candidate spends on elections in India is directly paid as inducement to voters (cash trumps caste). This is an opportunistic thing to propose, but politics is allowed to be unprincipled in India and has always been.

I predict the decline of the BJP and the fragmentation of its state units into regional parties based on caste.

There exists an enormous and efficient internet propaganda machine that is monitored by Narendra Modi’s office and funded by corporates. An army of 2,000 people is disseminating propaganda for Modi and against his rivals. The comments sections of Indian and Pakistani websites are the most dreadful in the world, without qualification. Hateful and pedantic, the product of minds who are only functionally literate. It’s endemic and representative of the tribal society that India as a whole is. Like some Pavlovian creature, the Indian crowd can always be set off on the right cue.

India’s democracy functions because of caste. The basis of voting is not issues or ideology, as in European democracies, but the preference for one’s own. The Brahmin and the Bania still control the economy, but now the Shudra controls politics. The BJP has always been a party of Brahmins. The RSS takes its Brahmins seriously and grooms them young. The Brahmin is the intellectual keeper of the Hindutva flame.

Does the Congress leadership have a theme today? I think so. It is the mercantile castes. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is a trading Khatri, P. Chidambaram is a trading Chettiar and Kapil Sibal is a trading Khatri. Murli Deora is a Baniya. Of the other senior leaders, SM Krishna is a peasant Gowda and Antony is Syrian Christian. The difference in orientation – Brahmin versus Baniya – shows in the priorities of the BJP and Congress.

The Indian cleaves to his caste. He could escape this through good education. But this is not available in India. Most Muslim OBCs are from jatis that are below that of Hindu OBC castes. It cannot be denied that there is prejudice against Muslims in India. It is the Hindu who has the freedom to attack India and its culture, its vulgarity. The temple in India has always been a place of music, from the militant cadence of the Vedic chant to the soft melodies of the bhajan.

The prime suspect on the crime scene that is India is the middle class. Exactly 95.83% of Indians know absolutely nothing about India and they never will. This is because they haven’t travelled abroad. They have no experience of difference. They will imagine the rest of the world behaves like us.

In India the very poor are illiterate. Their communication has the highest emotional content, since there is little of the intellect they have to express. Because it is quite unsubtle, India’s popular entertainment is not for the intelligent, which in India means urban, upper-class and English-speaking. Bollywood’s spread in the 1930s and 1940s anticipated the arrival of a shrill singer and it turned out to be Lata Mangeshkar. She’s technically first rate but her natural range is actually too high to be pleasant, a fact that did not escape Bollywood’s greatest composer, OP Nayyar. He chose to work with Asha Bhosle instead. Bhosle is a more versatile singer than her sister, but because of her lower range unable to efficiently communicate the virginity which Indians put such a premium on.

The middle-class Indian thinks he’s civilised but he has no comprehension of the meaning of the word. The damage is done by a Hindi-medium world view. Trying to fight it with English-medium tools will end in frustration. When he was only 33, Thomas Macaulay began producing the Indian Penal Code. The code, a colonial set of laws, remains in force in free India. This is because an Englishman accurately assessed us, and predicted our behaviour and our reaction to external stimulus. This makes Macaulay a very great man. He could tell with confidence in 1837 how Gujaratis would go bestial in 2002.

We are a Congress-minded nation. What I mean is that Indian values are best, and I would even say, only represented by the Congress. These values are religious accommodation, comfort with racial and linguistic diversity, acceptance of caste in politics, comfort in dynasty and a preference for compromise over principle. The BJP thinks it is an ideological party but it doesn’t have any real ideology. The BJP is a party of resentful Hindus.

There is a reason why the Congress continually attracts young and urbane talent, but the BJP doesn’t. The reason is the alignment of the Congress with the broad Indian sentiment, which makes it naturally attractive and competitive. The Congress under the Gandhis, and later the Vadra-Gandhis, will remain our one great national party.

It is only under Sonia Gandhi that the party has again become the standard-bearer for Ashokan secularism. She will go down in history as the finest Congress leader along with Nehru. The one asset that Sonia Gandhi built for her dynasty from the time she became its head was an image of reticence and service. The best thing she has done for India is to hand Manmohan charge of policy. Few leaders around the world have control over the details of policy as Manmohan Singh does. Few have his intellectual capacity to understand events and what they portend. Under Manmohan Singh, terrorism has decreased in India and Indians have become safer. The numbers indicate that the Congress government is doing something spectacularly right, and it was actually the BJP that was soft on terror. There are many humiliations, and often defeats. But Singh persists. This is the source of his greatness, his heroism.

So is our dynastic culture all bad? I would say our problem is the opposite. We do not have enough dynasty in India. Indians are unusually good at picking quality dynasties, whether it is the Kapoors or the Nehru-Gandhis. The Congress president has always presented herself as being very moral and upright.

Sonia is slim and fit. At the dining table, she is probably disciplined. She brings the European’s refinement to our otherwise crude politics. She has brought up her children superbly. Both act correctly and modestly. Rahul is quite educated, getting his post-graduation degree at Trinity. From what I have read of him, Rahul is observant and intelligent. He has learned the limits of what the state can do to make India more liveable. He has discovered an essential truth about India. He is doing what Jawaharlal Nehru was doing with Gandhi before 1930, the discovery of India. When Rahul speaks, he usually presents an Indian reality which has come from an uncommon understanding. Though he is good looking, he doesn’t deploy his charisma. By this I mean he doesn’t pose and make heroic statements like Narendra Modi does. He chooses not to. When one is as famous and as good looking as Rahul Gandhi, charisma is a function of deployment.

I have no quarrel with Narendrabhai. He represents an aspect, the bitter resentment, of Gujaratis, and he does it well. On the other side, in my opinion, Narendra Modi doesn’t have the intellectual capacity to engage with policy at a high level and certainly not at the level of legislation. This is understandable given his education and exposure.

He is entertaining and forceful, but nothing more than that. It is true also that it is this sort of thing that voters are looking for.
Now that you’ve read till the end, before commenting, click here
 
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Newslaundry – Why Farmers Will Vote For Modi
WHY FARMERS WILL VOTE FOR MODI
Posted by

Anand Ranganathan
| Feb 19, 2014 in Governance | 124 comments


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I am a farmer, one of 833 million who live in this country. The general elections are here. My vote will decide who will be our next Prime Minister.

I know: 377 million of you are urban. You occupy the ministries and newspapers and news channels and all the rest of the things that you think run the world. Go ahead, occupy – we have no interest in all that. We occupy the earth.

We are poor and we are tired and we have been duped for long. Not anymore. My vote, and the vote of my 833 million brothers and sisters, will go to the person who has shown us results, not promises. My future is in my hand. Your future is in my hand. Thirty years from now, when your population breaches ours, perhaps then you will get to decide the fate of this country. But not yet, not now.

Have I made up my mind? No, not until I have pored over hard facts. People say to me: “Vote for Modi, vote for Modi, there’s a wave, there’s a wave!” But why should I listen to what people say? A wave is best suited to the seas. I intend to make my own mind, and only after I have seen facts – and not just any facts. I refuse to believe Modi. I will, instead, believe the people who hate him. That way no one can point a finger at me and say that I have been done in by tall claims. And if, in the end, I find that Modi has done nothing for people like us, then why would I vote for him? You can go ahead – be impressed by the way he dresses or the way he speaks, but that is of no interest to me. My vote is not for you – in your interest. My vote is in my interest. Get that.

The first thing I want is to find out is what Modi has done for farmers, and compare it with a similar population of a state that is not governed by Modi. Does that seem reasonable enough? I think so. Let us, then, compare Gujarat with Odisha. And, as promised, we will only use the data provided by the ruling UPA.

Gujarat has a rural population of 34,670,817, almost similar to Odisha’s 34,951,234. Their land area is also comparable: Gujarat – 196,024 sq km, Odisha – 155,707 sq km; as is their total population density: Gujarat – 308 per sq km, Odisha – 269. The number of people gainfully employed in agriculture in the two states is similar, too: Gujarat – 12.1 million, Odisha – 10.1 million. Finally, according to the latest Agricultural Census of India report, Gujarat has 4,738 operational holdings, i.e. farmlands, while the figure for Odisha is a close 4,667. We will not look at the GDP figures of these states, although Gujarat’s is higher. The gross produce of a state includes so much else apart from agriculture and I am interested only in agriculture, nothing else.

The share of agriculture in our economy is 14%. Yes, astonishing, isn’t it – 833 million people contribute only around a tenth of our total economic output. The agricultural growth rate is slated to be 3.6% for this coming year. Pitiful. But then we are able to irrigate only 35% of the total arable land. Sixty six years after independence, 833 million of us live on Indra’s mercy. That’s how much you city slickers have cared for us.

Gujarat, however, seems to be bucking the trend. While for India the 2005-12 average GDP growth rate in Agriculture Sector at constant 2004-05 prices is 4.12%, it is almost double, or 7.53% for Gujarat. Only Mizoram (10.85%), Arunachal Pradesh (9.55%), and Chhattisgarh (8.69%) boast of higher GDP growth rates. The figure for Odisha is 3.51%.

For sustainable irrigation we need electricity, not rainfall. Odisha’s Aggregate Technical and Commercial Losses of State Power Utilities (within State) AT&C losses for 2011 are 44.35%, Gujarat’s: 18.25%. The share of electricity consumption for agriculture for Gujarat is 25.74%. For Odisha it is a paltry 1.22%.

Rural connectivity is as important as rural productivity. Health, education, transport, justice – everything depends on it. Gujarat, with 80% rural road connectivity compared to Odisha’s 50% has 8127 unconnected habitations to Odisha’s 28,299. The Planning Commission says: Crucial role being played by Gujarat State Road Development Corporation in upgrading SRs using Central Government’s Viability Gap funding). PPP (Annuity) model adopted by Gujarat since strengthening/widening of SRs does generate a commercially viable return despite 40 per cent upfront subsidy and also an adoption of a plan scheme for land acquisition.

When you consider the average daily wage rate for five operations: ploughing, sowing, weeding, transplanting and harvesting, my brothers in Odisha (Rs. 123.96) are better off by almost 30 rupees as compared to those in Gujarat (Rs. 91.36). Now you might laugh at this figure of Rs 30, but intelligent planning commissioners stress this is more than the poverty line figure devised by them. There is a possibility that Gujarat employs more farm labour than Odisha – something that economists will tell you results in lower wages – but I don’t care for economists and their theories. I only look at what comes in my hand at the end of a long back-breaking day and if I am tilling Gujarati fields I get Rs 30 less.

Hygiene is important where we live although you people may not think so. Open fields, nice crisp air, sun acting as a disinfectant – no, this doesn’t wash. We need money to make toilets and the money can come either from the government or from our savings through increasing prosperity. The percentage of rural households with no latrine facilities is 67% in Gujarat, 85.9% in Odisha. These figures are shocking and there is little comfort in saying that Odisha is worse off than Gujarat. Millions of us shit in the open. This is something that we are ashamed of and so should you be.

Gujarat used 1733.06 thousand tonnes of fertiliser in 2011-12, or 155.60 kg/hectare. For Odisha the figures were 514.69 thousand tonnes and 56.52 kg/hectare. But agriculture is evolving constantly. We aren’t eating what our forefathers did; we aren’t cultivating the same crops either. It is a fact: Technology improves our lives. We need to grow crops that can’t be ravaged by pests. Right now Bt. cotton is the only genetically modified crop being cultivated in India. This has cut down insecticide usage by 50% and the productivity has increased by 30-60% over the past decade. We exported a record 129 lac bales of cotton worth Rs 21,000 crore last year with Gujarat contributing a major chunk. We need a leader who is not shy of using science for the benefit of agriculture. Either that or pay us for the insecticide that we use, and hospitalisation costs for the incurable diseases we suffer as a result. Even better, compensate us for our yearly crop losses. The United Progressive Alliance government report says: “The e-Krishi Kiran Programme implemented by the Government of Gujarat is an online program of technology transfer with an individual farm condition in focus. It helps making transfer of technology more scientific, precise, easy, and need based. The Soil Health Card System is a web based information system designed to run on internet and intranet (Gujarat State Wide Area Network). This is a repository of agricultural information for the benefit of farmers, agricultural scientists and decision makers. The Soil Health Card System is a unique information initiative of its kind for the benefit of farmers at the grass-root level”.

Gujarat has 4 agricultural universities (Junagarh, Sardarkrushinagar-Dantiwada, Anand, Navsari), Odisha only 1 (OUAT).

Around 35% of total land in Gujarat is arid or semi-arid, this in addition to 2,222,000 hectares being severely salinity-affected. For Odisha, the figure is less than one-tenth or 147,138 hectares. Despite this, Gujarat reported the second-highest yield of oilseed crops in 2011-12 (1608 kg/ha), having checked salinity ingress in its coastal areas and reclaimed almost 70,000 ha of land. It now grows 10% of our fruits, 6.4% of our vegetables, and 15% of our spices. Comparatively, Odisha produced 661 kg/ha of oilseeds.

Milk is a major produce of Gujarat, with 10,675 Milk Cooperative Societies having 2.2 million farmers, producing 6.1 million litres of milk every day compared to Odisha’s 0.26 million farmers and 0.42 million litres of milk.

The number of Kisan Credit Cards issued up to March 2012 for Gujarat were 3,563,064; for Odisha – 6,630,018. This is not to say that Odisha has provided almost twice as much credit to its farmers than Gujarat. But it cannot be denied that more credit cards do translate into more dole, and correspondingly more debt for the state exchequer. The Central Fund Release under Important Flagship Schemes as a percentage of total is 2.92% for Gujarat, 5.50% for Odisha while the FTNCA or Financial Transfers under Normal Central Assistance (Plan) is 3.601% for Gujarat, 5.287% for Odisha.

Irrigation is a critical issue for us. But before one cites the progress or lack thereof made by Gujarat on irrigation and water management, it is important to state one UPA government figure. Despite our best efforts, the all India figures for Conveyance Efficiency, On Farm Application Efficiency, and Overall Project Water Use Efficiency are 69%, 52%, and 38% respectively. What this means is that, howsoever big the dam, howsoever extensive the canal or irrigation system of any state, the water-use efficiency remains a pitiful 38%. There can be no worse indictment of the way we as a nation have managed this most precious of resources.

Gujarat has miles to go before it puts into place the canal network that can fetch Narmada water to its most drought-prone areas. While the total planned length of the canal network is 74,626 km, only 22,284.80 km canal construction has been completed in the last four decades. What has caught the attention of the world, though, is the solar panel topped canal project, initiated and completed on a small stretch of canal length. But small stretches of success might fill you urbanites with pride, they don’t irrigate our fields.

So what is Gujarat’s excuse? First, it blames the Central government for not raising the height of the Narmada dam adequately, and second, thorny land acquisition issues make canal construction arduous. Land acquisition is a national problem and as yet there are no clear-cut strategies. Compounding this is the fact that 76% of all displaced people in Gujarat are tribals. Odisha, on the other hand, has a defined re-settlement policy in place but the recent Posco debacle makes it clear that there are gaping holes that need to be addressed.

Meanwhile, Gujarat has done something spectacular. In the knowledge that it is much easier to acquire land for laying pipelines than for constructing canals, Gujarat has put in place a 700 km long water pipeline grid system. Or has it? Startlingly, there is no mention of this achievement in the national media. There is, of course, a Gujarati newspaper and a Gujarat government-sponsored video that describes how all this was made possible. But as I said, no figures and statistics shall be quoted from Modi’s Gujarat for this article. Well, unfortunately, there is hardly anything else to go by. There is one confirmation of the project, from a PR Newswire communiqué:“Mr. Freddy Svane, Ambassador of Denmark to India said that Gujarat was chosen due to the successful creation of unparalleled State Wide Water Grid that is the biggest of its kind in the world”. Then there is this Indian Express report quoting a Gujarat official as saying his state is now a water surplus state because of the grid. The best citation for the water grid completion that I could find was an indirect one: the court proceedings of a case where Gujarat admitted under oath the laying down of grid pipelines. It would be perjury if they are lying and so one must – for want of any other media report – believe this court document. In any case, as a farmer I must ask the question: why hasn’t our media covered this water grid that is so vital for us? The Danes have, but not us. The world’s biggest water grid remains unreported in mainstream Indian media. Meanwhile, Modi himself is lying. He says Gujarat irrigated 53 lac hectares of land last year while according to the Central Government, Gujarat irrigated not 53 but 56.18 lac hectares of land.

Technology, electricity, cooperatives, irrigation, bumper produce – all very good and commendable, but there is one crucial aspect where, much to our surprise, Narendra Modi has ditched us. FDI in retail and farming.

I fail to understand why a chief minister who believes in free-market enterprise would side with faux-socialists, quasi-anarchists, and neo-communists on this issue. Many say this is just political posturing, that Modi will listen to reason once he comes to power. To that I say: not good enough. It may very well be that the kirana-storewaala will put forth his view in I, Small Businessman, but this here is my space, space for 833 million farmers, and we are of one voice: FDI in retail and farming must be allowed. We can no longer take rampant corruption and gut-wrenching destruction of our produce at the hands of middlemen. Does Modi know that half of our total marketable farm produce goes under distress sale? There is only 1 market per 115 sq km, no farm infrastructure to talk of, no proper storage facilities – fact is we are being looted mercilessly while you urbanites wait and watch. We are backed bythe Consortium of Indian Farmers Association, Bharat Krishak Samaj, and every other farmer body you can think of, and yet no one listens to us. Authoritative studies have reinforced the view that FDI in farming would only help us but it seems the nation is run not for those who make it run but for those who watch it run, aground.

Well, the time is right and the time is now. I have laid the facts before you, facts given by those who hate Modi, not by those who love him. Now it is up to my farmer brothers and sisters to read my words and press the button on the fateful day. Jai Kisan!

Author’s note: Next in the series: I, Doctor.
 
Lolol did you go to the link in the last line? Or did you simply do what AAPtards do best?
 
Why would they ? :) Game successfully launched

BTW, how many remember that crazy-wall quit Delhi because of Janlokpal. Post that event, he hasn't uttered a word about that. He is engrossed with NaMo.
There are lot many other things he has forgotten since he started fantasizing about Modi. Neither Shiela Diskshit nor Robert Vadra are brashtacharis any more. He doesn't see anything wrong with Congressis any more! Transformation of Krazywal is complete!

Its very interesting to see BJP gaining strength in South while Congress loosing its grip. I am sure by next election BJP will have replaced Congress in TN and Andhra..
Gone are the days when Congress used be a single party ruler in India. They'll never see those days again. Infact it's Congress which propped up regional parties to neutralise main opposition. In the bargain they themselves lost significance in those states & lost them forever. AP is going to be the latest one in that list. It's only Kerala & Karnataka which is left in the South. If it wasn't for BJP's mishandling... Karnataka would have slipped through as well. Then again.. it still could in coming elections!
 
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Its very interesting to see BJP gaining strength in South while Congress loosing its grip. I am sure by next election BJP will have replaced Congress in TN and Andhra..
Bjp should have talks with Lok Satta Party the party is clean and is the real Aam Admi party not the fake one like kejriwal,The leader jaya prakash Narayan is well respected by everyone .I saw in news they wanted to support BJP , but BJP not going inviting or going towards them.
 
Bjp should have talks with Lok Satta Party the party is clean and is the real Aam Admi party not the fake one like kejriwal,The leader jaya prakash Narayan is well respected by everyone .I saw in news they wanted to support BJP , but BJP not going inviting or going towards them.

BJP is supporting JP narayan in his seat.
 
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I am very surprised to see no other party is talking about development other than BJP. :laugh:
 
This is where he is good at. He should practice and solve this type of mathematical equations only. I do not have any example in front of me where a good scientist or mathematician has turned out to be a good politician. If you talk about solving such equations, what is wrong with Manmohan sing? He is much more qualified than Kejari. Why not appoint top most scientist for the post of PM?

Like knowing maths is a qualification, being a good politician is a even bigger qualification (Only degree is not given). Thousands Like kejri passes out from IITs, UPSC, ICAI, CMAS every year but it took decades for a nation like India to produce a politician like Modi.

:crazy: Only scientists, doctors and engineers are qualified to lead this country, not chaiwaalaas. Solving mathematical equations and entering IIT, then becoming IRS proves Kejriwaalji has brain and talent needed to govern the country. That's why he was able to solve corruption, gave free water and electricity, and all of that in just 47 days which your Fekuji couldnt do in Gujarat in 14 years.

Feku did some jaadu tona on you that's why you have become like sheep doing :blah::blah::blah:, fascist feku bhakts like you should build a feku temple and start worshipping Lord Feku, panditji will distribute chai as prashad for you.

Kejriwaalji is the need of the hour, look how even the river ganges feels blessed when kejriwaalji took dubki in it

live-blog-ink-thrown-at-kejriwal-13957420499656.jpg
 
Lolol did you go to the link in the last line? Or did you simply do what AAPtards do best?
That is why I pasted it without indicating to go to the last Line, the writer is quiet a talented chap. Read his other work also in News Laundry. Article is a good example of Paid media propoganda.
 
Varanasi has close to 10 to 15 % Muslim votes , if AAP plays well Kejriwal can gain votes.

Can only wish you guys a hard luck. Nothing wrong in trying.

But wud like to add, people of Varanasi are not fools like Delhites are.

:crazy: Only scientists, doctors and engineers are qualified to lead this country, not chaiwaalaas. Solving mathematical equations and entering IIT, then becoming IRS proves Kejriwaalji has brain and talent needed to govern the country. That's why he was able to solve corruption, gave free water and electricity, and all of that in just 47 days which your Fekuji couldnt do in Gujarat in 14 years.

Feku did some jaadu tona on you that's why you have become like sheep doing :blah::blah::blah:, fascist feku bhakts like you should build a feku temple and start worshipping Lord Feku, panditji will distribute chai as prashad for you.

Kejriwaalji is the need of the hour, look how even the river ganges feels blessed when kejriwaalji took dubki in it

live-blog-ink-thrown-at-kejriwal-13957420499656.jpg


Is he trying for a role aganist Sunny in her next porno? :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:
 
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