jamahir
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2014
- Messages
- 28,132
- Reaction score
- 1
- Country
- Location
We are extremely socialist. Government spends a lot on free food/subsidised food/free education/ free healthcare.
I have replied to such posts many a time.
Which "extremely Socialist" country allows 300,000+ farmers to commit suicide for socio-economic reasons ? In fact to commit suicide at all for socio-economic reasons ?
And below are three of my threads that don't quite describe India as an "extremely Socialist" country :
India - student suicide by one aspiring to write a major exam
NEET aspirant dies by suicide ahead of exam in Tamil Nadu's Salem Onmanorama Staff Published: September 12, 2021 04:00 PM IST Updated: September 12, 2021 08:57 PM IST Dhanush Salem: A NEET candidate committed suicide ahead of the entrance exam in Tamil Nadu's Salem. A native of Mettur in...
defence.pk
India - Jobless engineer slits son's throat, takes poison with wife : Cops
Jobless Engineer Slits Son's Throat, Takes Poison With Wife: Cops Both the man (55) and his wife were in acute depression, according to a primary probe based on the latter's statements. Her statements also revealed that the couple had planned the entire episode nearly two to three days ago...
defence.pk
Indian woman student commits suicide because of no scholarship funds received
Trigger Warning: LSR Student Dies By Suicide Due To Financial Pressures As Per Note Soumyaseema Sun 8 November 2020, 12:02 PM IST Nowadays, it is not at all rare to see students stressed, anxious, or perplexed about their future. The ongoing pandemic has added to those concerns in every...
defence.pk
About "free healthcare" I will first quote from a post of mine about the much-touted Ayushman Bharat program aka PM-JAY :
And if free healthcare exists in the country why are there crowdsourcing organizations like Ketto which ask common citizens to chip in with money for medical treatments of other Indians with the treatments costing from a few thousands to 15 lakhs to 16 crores. Below is my thread from some months ago :I searched in the PM-JAY website for "blindness" and it gave me thispage but on going to that page there was no mention of "blindness".
There is the below text :
1. What about treatments that can cost more than five lakhs, like liver transplant : 20+ lakhs ?Benefit Cover Under PM-JAY
Benefit cover under various Government-funded health insurance schemes in India have always been structured on an upper ceiling limit ranging from an annual cover of INR30,000 to INR3,00,000 per family across various States which created a fragmented system. PM-JAY provides cashless cover of up to INR5,00,000 to each eligible family per annum for listed secondary and tertiary care conditions. The cover under the scheme includes all expenses incurred on the following components of the treatment.
The benefits of INR 5,00,000 are on a family floater basis which means that it can be used by one or all members of the family. The RSBY had a family cap of five members. However, based on learnings from those schemes, PM-JAY has been designed in such a way that there is no cap on family size or age of members. In addition, pre-existing diseases are covered from the very first day. This means that any eligible person suffering from any medical condition before being covered by PM-JAY will now be able to get treatment for all those medical conditions as well under this scheme right from the day they are enrolled.
- Medical examination, treatment and consultation
- Pre-hospitalization
- Medicine and medical consumables
- Non-intensive and intensive care services
- Diagnostic and laboratory investigations
- Medical implantation services (where necessary)
- Accommodation benefits
- Food services
- Complications arising during treatment
- Post-hospitalization follow-up care up to 15 days
2. What if more than a person in a family has disease and the cost goes above the five lakh ceiling ? Like in Corona cases there are a few families that have theirs members admitted for Corona in the same hospital. This treatment costs quite a bit IIRC.
3. Why can't all treatments be made free and for all ?
India - Six-month-old with Spinal Muscular Atrophy dies in Kerala amid crowdfunding efforts
Six-month-old with Spinal Muscular Atrophy dies in Kerala amid crowdfunding efforts Recently, Rs 18 crore was raised through crowdfunding for the treatment of one-and-a-half-year-old Muhammed in Kannur, who was also suffering from the same genetic disease. IMAGE FOR REPRESENTATION NEWS DEATH...
defence.pk
A similar case was of another young boy with SMA whose injection requires 16 crores for just one dose and towards his cause Farah Khan and Deepika Padukone had appeared in the Friday special guest episode of KBC last week.
And what is the government doing ? Building temples and new PM house and religious statues ( world's tallest ), purchasing imitation airplanes of the American Air Force Ones etc instead of spending on building free hospitals, purchasing and procuring costly medicines from abroad like in case of SMA cases. Couldn't Modi have set aside some tens of crores for the SMA injections from his 20,000 crore Central Vista project that includes a new PM house ? Is his new palace more important than the life of these children and patients generally ? The central government with much fanfare airlifted some Hindus and Sikhs from Afghanistan and the chaatukaar media excitedly interviewed live some of those evacuees right at the Indian airport but there are children in Uttar Pradesh who are still dying of dengue or are at least seriously ill because of lack of hospitals and staff yet the central government or the state government has not airlifted those children to say Bombay or Delhi for immediate treatment. A ridiculous contradiction !
And during the COVID second wave last year it wasn't just the poor and the middle class dying of it, even a supposedly privileged former ambassador died in a Delhi hospital's parking lot because there was no ICU bed available. And I am sure that hospital wasn't certainly a free-treatment hospital.
People at the bottom don't care about anything more then basic existence.
Agreed, they should organize and demand change. There have been older-time worker unions but now there are the farmer protests which is encouraging.
Even middle class people lack in ambition.
Agreed. Most of them are idiots ( I am including the Indian Muslim middle class too ) wanting nothing more in life than an engineering or MBA degree, a marriage, religion, children and repeat cycle. Doesn't matter that their compatriots, even in their own white collar companies, face injustice. Even they may themselves suffer but they don't organize and demand change. They are the main reason for the existence of right-wing thought in India. Just look at what class are these two women. What has been the political, economic, social and technological contribution of the "educated" Indian middle class to India and the world ? Quite less.
Side note about organizing : I almost created an employee union in an ITES company I worked in for less than a year between 2013 and 2014. If I had seen the plan to completion it would have been the first employee union in the India IT / ITES industry. I had plans for encouragement of this for all such companies throughout India. Foolishly I resigned from the company.
So if your disrupt the upper classes by trying to capture their wealth, Indian economy will crash.
Remember, we don't lack farmers.
We lack businessmen.
Capture their wealth ? I don't need their billions within the country. Money is an artificial construct anyway. It is just that human and material resources have to be reorganized and this need not always require money. I simply propose changing the socio-economic system to one where the basic needs are free and where the traditional Capitalist economic classification ( poor, middle, rich ) has been eradication. Please read this proposal of mine. The formerly rich will become regular citizens who will have access to resources like any other citizen.
And then read my replies to Magra above in this thread in post# 62 reply to Magra and follow the convo.
A basic thing about most human beings= they won't work harder than they currently do, unless the reward is much bigger.
If you are talking about the pitfalls of making everything free then I will again point to my above linked proposal where there is an evolved form on money which will have to be regenerated for the month through contribution.
Further, you seem to want more state monopolies. Bad idea.
If you are talking about banks then please again read my post# 62 reply to Magra and then follow the convo.
In that case, the leadership of the country will become totalitarian, and will start enjoying all the perks you associate with industrialists.
Eg- Gaddafi.
You have misjudged Gaddafi. He stepped down as the executive leader of Libya in the 1970s and let the direct democracy Jamahiriya system that he and his comrades had devised, to govern Libya then on and he became the ideological guide. Libya wasn't a totalitarian-based country but one where the common citizens governed themselves directly without parties and five-yearly elections and such things associated with Western-style so-called democracies. From a 2015 thread ( not mine ) :
Contrary to popular belief, Libya, which western media routinely described as “Gaddafi’s military dictatorship” was in actual fact one of the world’s most democratic States.
Under Gaddafi’s unique system of direct democracy, traditional institutions of government were disbanded and abolished, and power belonged to the people directly through various committees and congresses.
Far from control being in the hands of one man, Libya was highly decentralized and divided into several small communities that were essentially “mini-autonomous States” within a State. These autonomous States had control over their districts and could make a range of decisions including how to allocate oil revenue and budgetary funds. Within these mini autonomous States, the three main bodies of Libya’s democracy were Local Committees, Basic People’s Congresses and Executive Revolutionary Councils.
The Basic People’s Congress (BPC), or Mu’tamar shaʿbi asāsi was essentially Libya’s functional equivalent of the House of Commons in the United Kingdom or the House of Representatives in the United States. However, Libya’s People’s Congress was not comprised merely of elected representatives who discussed and proposed legislation on behalf of the people; rather, the Congress allowed all Libyans to directly participate in this process. Eight hundred People’s Congresses were set up across the country and all Libyans were free to attend and shape national policy and make decisions over all major issues including budgets, education, industry, and the economy.
In 2009, Gaddafi invited the New York Times to Libya to spend two weeks observing the nation’s direct democracy. The New York Times, that has traditionally been highly critical of Colonel Gaddafi’s democratic experiment, conceded that in Libya, the intention was that
“everyone is involved in every decision…Tens of thousands of people take part in local committee meetings to discuss issues and vote on everything from foreign treaties to building schools.”
The fundamental difference between western democratic systems and the Libyan Jamahiriya’s direct democracy is that in Libya all citizens were allowed to voice their views directly – not in one parliament of only a few hundred wealthy politicians – but in hundreds of committees attended by tens of thousands of ordinary citizens. Far from being a military dictatorship, Libya under Mr. Gaddafi was Africa’s most prosperous democracy.
On numerous occasions Mr. Gaddafi’s proposals were rejected by popular vote during Congresses and the opposite was approved and enacted as legislation.
For instance, on many occasions Mr. Gaddafi proposed the abolition of capital punishment and he pushed for home schooling over traditional schools. However, the People’s Congresses wanted to maintain the death penalty and classic schools, and the will of the People’s Congresses prevailed. Similarly, in 2009, Colonel Gaddafi put forward a proposal to essentially abolish the central government altogether and give all the oil proceeds directly to each family. The People’s Congresses rejected this idea too.
For over four decades, Gaddafi promoted economic democracy and used the nationalized oil wealth to sustain progressive social welfare programs for all Libyans. Under Gaddafi’s rule, Libyans enjoyed not only free health-care and free education, but also free electricity and interest-free loans.
This vid is of a Libyan girl delivering a defiant public message to Obomba, Bliar and co. during the NATO+GCC bombing of Libya during the middle of 2011.
Last edited: