Thursday, June 26, 2008

Left Front (CPI - M): Boon or Bane for India

       I don’t understand the fact that, why CPI-M is christened the nationalist party of India even though they haven’t done anything valuable for India. Be it the recent roar against the N-deal or the secular comment on SP’s (Samajwadi Party) support for UPA (they said the party might lose the faith of Muslims).

       They say India can make the nuclear fuel indigenously, but scientists have said time and again that India needs huge amount of uranium which we can get only by NSG (Nuclear supplier group) and coming under the safeguard of IAEA. But, they don’t budge from their stand of anti-America.

       Communist parties have even managed to make West Bengal stand alongside Eastern Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in terms of development. A state that once was a leader in India, quickly degenerated into becoming a basket case. See the plight of this state now. From a vibrant economy with a thriving industrial infrastructure, it fell under the Communist spell and gradually the trade unions bled the state’s economy dry. Every businessman worth his salt voted with his feet to move to Delhi, Mumbai, Madras, while the Bengali electorate voted the Communists in to power time and again.

       If that is not enough then let me cite some facts from the history.

  • Going back in history, into the 1940s, when India was fighting for its Independence, the Communists actually excused themselves from participating in it. Why? Because the Soviet Union, leaders of Communist movement worldwide, was fighting Germany in the Second World War as an ally of the British. Comrades in India got the order from Comrade Joseph Stalin that Indian Communists must help Big Brother Soviets in their war effort by not joining the Independence struggle.

It seems allegiance to ideology was stronger than the tug at the heartstrings of the     Motherland. Indian Communists were therefore content to play mute spectators, as the freedom movement played itself out till India was finally free in 1947.

  • Later on, when Communist China attacked India, after years of Hindi-Chini bhai-bhai propaganda, their ideological counterparts in India again became Pro-Chinese and supported China. While Indian soldiers fought and died in the biting cold on the treacherous border with China, Comrades in India indulged in so much rhetoric.

       Now, with the world, including Russia and even a market-oriented China abandoning Communism and Communist ideology, those of their brethren in India are sticking to their Red badges.

       I don’t know you agree with me or not. But they are cancerous cells eating into healthy body called India. If we don’t get rid of these guys they can cause havoc like they did in USSR. I hope the people of India will become smarter.

 

 

Posted by sandipsingh at 12:26:08
Comments

4 Responses to “Left Front (CPI - M): Boon or Bane for India”

  1. Anonymous says:

    Hi

    Don’t u think that u r looking only at 1 side of the coin.

  2. sandip singh says:

    If you think i am looking at only one side of the coin, then can you show me the other side of the coin?

  3. Aritra De says:

    nice facts…..
    but a lot must be written about how well they have strengthened the party at the grass root level which the opposition simply cant break……
    look at their votebank…
    illiterate villagers who get satisfied wid the chicken and rice and the country liquor they get for free(they call it feast) which makes them loyal to the party……

    What can be done about it??
    I don’t know and people in Bengal dont know either.
    datz why we have been mute spectators to the CPI(M) misrule for all this years……

  4. Anonymous says:

    @Aritra De, I am in accord with your viewpoint (they have a large vote bank). What we can do, or rather say, we must do is to make people literate coz illiterate people don’t know what they are doing. Literacy is answer to most of the problems in India, be it population, political problems or corruption. The ramification of this would be felt sooner or later.

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