Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Why I dont support the prevalent anti-corruption movement?

Mistake: "This is a very good way to teach those politicians a good lesson"
First of all, I am against this whole emotion and attitude of "us versus them". Let me clarify once and for all - politician is not equal to corruption! Politicians are not some aliens from some other planet. They are us. They have come from us. They are not different from us. Politicians are just the fruits of a polluted earth. We are the earth. Corrupt politicians are just an effect/ a symptom. The root cause/ disease is something else. We need to address the root cause. Honest politicians arise from honest people. Corrupt people give birth to corrupt politicians. Why only politicians? Corrupt people will give rise to corrupt teachers, corrupt managers, corrupt sportsmen, corrupt youth, corrupt parents... I can go on and on. A child that lies at home, will grow into a teenager who cheats in exams... who will break traffic rules as an adolescent... who will give and take bribes as an adult.

The current movement seems to all about targeting politicians. That's why I don't support this movement.

Mistake: "CWG, 2G, Adarsh, Illegal Mining, Land Scam are examples of how corrupt we've become"
Secondly, the current movement seems to linking money with corruption. Allow me to express my utmost disappointment with this chain of thought. Corruption is not monetary alone. And even if it were, then the money yardstick that categorizes corruption as bribe (Rs.100), corruption (Rs.100,000), scam (Rs.100,000,000) itself is self-defeating. Corruption is corruption. There is nothing like pardonable offense and punishable crime.

- An MBA student who plagiarizes on an assignment is corrupt!
- A woman who drives her car on the wrong side of the road to avoid a U-turn is corrupt!
- A father riding a scooter who hands over his helmet to his kid for use only when a cop is around is corrupt!
- A person who breaks a queue anywhere is corrupt!
- A person who uses influence to get a job is corrupt!

None of the above have anything to do with a money transaction. But they are all very commonly observed and experienced examples of a corrupt mind, a corrupt society. There are millions of such non-money-related examples of corruption. And almost all of them start at home, at school, on the road, in college, in office. Opportunities! Opportunities! Opportunities!

Each and every such incident described above is an opportunity if you ask me. A wonderful opportunity to correct ourselves, our kids, our friends and our parents. Let us not forget that every Kalmadi, Reddy and Raja began their 'tryst with destiny' with a simple lie, a simple theft, a simple violation. And at every inflection point, someone who could have made a difference, didn't. Opportunity Lost!

The current movement seems to be completely off-track on this point. That's one more reason why I am disappointed with it.

Mistake: "Candle-light vigil, motorcycle rallies, black bands on arms are the need of the hour"
The third frustrating aspect is that of methodology adopted by those who support the movement. We seem to have picked up how to protest (and also how to protest protests) from the British Raj. It probably made some sense then to pelt stones, resort to arson and burn post-offices because it was their property. It is absolutely ridiculous to do the same now. The same goes for hunger strikes and roadblocks. On the same note, it probably was justified then to arrest, lathi-charge and jail protesters because they were them, it is unacceptable now.

What everyone - including those who participate in candle-light vigils and block traffic, who take out motorcycle rallies without wearing helmets, who gather in squares and bunk classes - know deep in their hearts, but do not want to admit it is this - it is a new-found fad to get a seal of honesty on their incorrigible conscience. It is akin to someone lowering their Mercedes' window pane to drop a one-rupee coin into a beggar's bowl at a traffic signal. It is analogous to a corrupt politician donating a million rupees to a temple. Such symbolic acts are meaningless like humiliating your father every day and then sending him a 'Happy Father's Day' card. A good man, who has a good conscience need not pray before god.

The leaders of the current movement should have strictly forbidden this public tamasha and should have requested their supporters that if they truly support the movement then they should sincerely attend classes, work sincerely in offices, conduct business honestly.

The current movement doesn't seem to be thinking on these lines and therefore I am saddened by the route it is taking.

Mistake: "The Jan Lokpal Bill should be tabled in parliament"
Finally, In a twisted, dark, funny sort of way, I try to visualize how the perpetrators and masterminds of terrorism might be rolling on the floor laughing when they hear statements like "Hum ati kathor shabdon mein is nirdayi hatya ki ninda karte hain" (We condemn this heartless act in the strongest words)
And I also try to imagine what a would-be suicide-bomber or terrorist thinks about "strong anti-terrorism laws".

The biggest misfortune of humanity in Kaliyuga is that we believe that laws are needed to enforce morality, ethics and values. Laws cannot and should not be resorted to address issues which dwell in the realm of the conscience and which are sown, nurtured and developed by upbringing. Let me ask this to each one of you: " Are you honest because of a law? Or are you honest because your conscience doesn't allow you to lie? If tomorrow there is a law banning truth, will that stop you from speaking the truth?"

I remember reading a distraught mother's letter in the agony-aunt column of some magazine where she has expressed her helplessness in imbibing "Indian values, morals and culture" in her 10 year old son despite sending him to Ramayana and Mahabharata sessions every weekend. All the poor lady had to do was to lead by example. Sad. Truly sad. We expect our children to appreciate, accept and assimilate behavior which they don't get to see at home! What can we expect of them when they become politicians? Laws? Bill? Somehow I don't see the relevance. Frankly. You see, when the prescribed medicine is wrong, of what use is the discussion on dosage, timing, duration etc? When you wrongly believe that a law is the remedy for corruption, what is the use of fighting over versions?

If at all something needs to be done, then...
- We need protests and agitations in our homes and hearts. Not on the streets.
- We need to target ourselves - as parents, teachers, human beings. Not politicians.
- We need each one of us to do our duty/ job sincerely, on time, every time. We don't need slogans/ banners/ candles.
- We need honest, moral, ethical parents at home, teachers in school. Automatically we will get honest, moral, ethical politicians in government.
- We need a pro-honesty movement. Not an anti-corruption movement.

As a parting note, I recommend you all to watch Manoj Night Shyamalan's (flop?) movie "the Village". If that's too much, then at least try and recall the story of the boy who stole a classmate's pencil, but his mother ignored it only for the boy to grow up into a criminal in later life. I'm sure we all heard this story as kids. But it is now that we should understand it.

2 comments:

Navin Sadarangani said...

Good column Krishna.
I agree to the point that everything begins (and ends) in the conscious. What is there out in the world is nothing but a reflection of our sub-conscious' pattern and therefore behaviour. So in that aspect, i'm with you when you're saying that everything should start from home, from what we teach and do at home, from what we practice in our daily trivial but important treatment of those numerous decisions that we entail.
But here's the thing buddy - when your kid gets out of hand, what do you do? And if he gets disobedient in public, then what do you do? Wait for him to cause an all-pervasive damage to the society and to your family's sanctity or take care of it right there, irrespective of who's around?
What am i getting to here? All i'm saying is that while i agree that we should 'practice what we preach' (hence we need to preach goodness to see it out there), but i think we need to do something abt the situation at hand. In the sense, i think corruption (and for that matter - wrong doing, guilt, lies, violence, etc. should be in the ambit of our purview too). But that's all i agree with it - that we need to do something abt corruption. Not because Team Anna has started this agitation. I'm sure we've all known it for a while and in our own bits have wanted to see some way of correction of the dirt in the society. But I think there's a much more sensible, logical, democratic, institutionalized, inclusive and pragmatic way we can address the problem and not in this non-sensical and very un-democratic approach. And that's where i agree with you. What is being done out there is total commotion in a somehow-seemingly very-accepted mob-mentality. I'm sure not just our well-wishers would be worried about this, but also other markets / countries who are waiting to trace a thread of weakness of India for it ot be pulled down by. Even if we're not very bothered of those outside our borders, i think we should at least be concerned for the goodness and future of the ones within.

Errol Rosario Dsilva said...

Beautiful post.. felt this is what i had in mind when i was reading it... great going...