Bill's posts with tag: heroes

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We're such a wonderful, deep, great democracy. We're the best and most liberal and so on and so on and so on...

In fact, we're so good that anyone who even thinks anything against us has to be evil, am I not right?

So, suppose there's a doctor who works in the villages for poor people, a doctor, moreover, who dares to claim that poor people may have some human rights, after all, and that just perhaps, big companies shouldn't be allowed to do just as they please, especially in connivance with the government and its security forces and its illegal private militia. Also assume that the heretical bastard just won't keep his trap shut. What should you do with him?
  
Well, Geez Louise, as one of my friends here would say, since we're such a liberal democracy, anyone who's against anything we do is evil, isn't he? So call that bastard a Maoist (he must be one, since he opposes free enterprise and the rights of companies to do what they want), get him in jail, and throw away the key.

Meanwhile, of course, we can go on forming illegal private militia (it's strictly against the constitution) and unleash them on their fellow villagers. it's all in the name of fighting terrorism - or Maoism in this case.

In fact, I'm not making all this up. There is a doctor, a paediatrician named Binayak Sen.
 
He also happens to be a vice president of the People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL), one of those pesky left wing organisations, who, you know, are subversive enough to ask for the poor and marginalised to be given the same rights as SUV-driving upper middle class city people. He also was misguided enough to write of the depredations of the Salwa Judum.


Salwa Judum is a (strictly illegal as per law) private militia set up by the government to "fight Maoism", which, predictably, instead just turned into another gang of gun-toting goons intent on robbery and pillage, who are, in connivance with the state (which in India is now synonymous with big business concerns) forcing people from their homes by beatings, murder, and loot. The fact that he also criticised Maoist violence was unimportant.

One might have been able to predict what would happen to Sen. I think I can say he was lucky - he wasn't shot dead in a staged "encounter", which is the standard way the Indian government disposes of its opponents. Instead, he arrested in May of last year, on charges of being a Maoist (during his visits to jail inmates, he had treated an alleged Maoist prisoner, you see) and thrown into prison without producing any evidence, under one of our "tough anti-terrorism laws". He was in solitary confinement for months, and despite winning international humanitarian awards, there's no sign of him being released soon, if ever.

To quote the writer Anand Patwardhan, "As the system we live in successfully crushes or co-opts all movements of opposition, the term (Maoist) has become synonymous with any form of uncompromising protest. The charge that anyone believes in violence or abets violence need not be substantiated. In a corrupt system, it is enough that a person cannot be bought to mark him as a mortal threat."



But that's quite all right. What's the fate of one man more or less when there's so much money to be made?



Blog EntryWhirling one's own birdOct 23, '07 11:21 AM
for everyone

Ever heard of Mubarak Muhammad Abdullahi? No? He's a 24 year old physics undergraduate from Kano, Nigeria.

So what, you ask?

Mr Abdullahi is a big fan of action movies and a keen student of helicopter aerobatics in those action movies. And so what's such a big deal about that? There must be hundreds like him right here on this website.

Mr Abdullahi is not your typical 24 year old college student and action movie buff. Mr Abdullahi didn't just watch helicopters flying around on the TV screen - he went ahead and built his own. He used aluminum scrap, seats from a  Toyota, the engine of a Honda Civic, and parts cannibalised from a crashed Boeing 747. He financed it himself with money earned from repairing computers and mobile phones. It even flies.

Way to go.

Think about it - a young man collecting scrap metal, sundry spare parts, etc, etc, and knocking together a helicopter that - for all its deficiencies - at least can get off the ground each time its maker wants it to.

That isn't a joke, is it now.

Typically, for a "Third World" (that phrase again) nation, Mr Abdullahi has got no kind of recognition, no help whatsoever, for his feat. Nor will he - this sort of thing is hardly unique to Nigeria. India, for example, is chock-a-block with unsung inventors whose eco-friendly, cheap creations are either overlooked or actually punished  - like a farmer some years ago who knocked together a three wheeled, fuel-efficient, mini-tractor. He was, if I'm not mistaken, penalised for creating a non-authorised vehicle. I don't know what happened to the tractor.

No wonder all the talent flees overseas as fast as it can. The Bush regime for one would be crippled without the efforts of scientists from the same "Third World".

Now of course I am not suggesting Mr Abdullahi and his fellow amateur inventors can take over the market with their hand-built products. However, the talent is there, brimming over, and ignoring it is just going to ruin it and drive it underground. It's a classic reason why we remain underdeveloped.

I hope now that the world has finally heard of Mr Abdullahi, he gets some kind of recognition, and others like him also get their due. I hope so, but I'm not hopeful - if you get what I mean.

But then again, this bit of news came out at a most apposite time. It's the classic riposte to James Watson of DNA fame, who recently claimed that blacks were less intelligent than whites.

Watson said he was "inherently gloomy about the  prospect of Africa" because "all our social policies are based on the fact that their intelligence is the same as ours – whereas all the testing says not really”. That's the usual excuse advanced by those Westerners who love to pass off the results of centuries of colonial exploitation and artificial borders as the inherent traits of the black African.

It's up to Africans like Mr Abdullahi to prove him wrong.

Blog EntryGo Hugo Go! Or, Another Inconvenient TruthMay 4, '07 10:23 PM
for everyone


(I'm stealing Malcolm's idea and inventing a new tag "hero" for Hugo Chavez)

Yesterday I was reading, in the newspaper, some “columnist” or other who, apropos of the faltering Nuclear Deal, said that it was in India’s interests to be on the right side of the world’s “sole superpower” rather than “jokers like Chavez”.

Some joker, Hugo Chavez.

Winner of repeated elections against an opposition overtly supported, funded and advised by Washington (his last election win, in 2006, was so emphatic, in an election that was so free and fair, that even Washington could not pretend it was fixed), restored to power in a popular revolution after a Washington-directed military coup against him, winner over Washington inspired industrial strife and organised street demos, he proves that if you have the people on your side, you can buck Bush and survive.

This is not a convenient truth.

This joker Chavez, by proving himself a beacon of hope for the poor, the neglected, the indigenous of Latin America, has set off a wave of left wing governments being voted to power.

To see the true value of this achievement, it is to be remembered that this was Uncle Sam’s bailiwick and that the US would have tolerated no challenge to its hegemony here; that no people here has the right to choose its own government if it is or might be inimical to Washington (Salvador Allende’s Chile, Grenada, Sandinista Nicaragua, and all the right wing regimes foisted on all these nations including Chavez’ own Venezuela). Chavez proved that people in South and Central America have the right to choose their own leaders, who will not sell out their timber, their oil, their water, their tin to the gringos up north for private gain.

This is not a convenient truth.

This joker Chavez has nationalised his oil industry and now is about to nationalise his banks as well, in a world where Washington is busy privatising its Iraqi colony’s oil supplies and in India public sector bank employees are fighting a rearguard action against privatisation (and while horror stories about the private banks’ harassment of customers, credit card overcharging, etc, are so legion the Supreme Court has taken note of it, somehow these stories never seem to make it to the main pages of newspapers or to the TV channels, and what a big surprise, huh?). Well, to get back to the point, this joker Chavez is on a nationalisation kick, defying history. Capitalism is the only way to progress and prosperity, right? Socialism means poverty, is it not so?

Well, guess again. Chavez, that joker, has paid off his nation’s debt and quit the World Bank (where Paul Wolfowitz, super-Bushie - and another big surprise there, huh? – is fighting desperately to save his job after being caught in flagrante delicto giving his girlfriend an illegal salary raise and a transfer) and the International Monetary Forum. How many small countries who have in recent days trodden the capitalist path written out for them in Washington have not sunk deeper into poverty? Is there a single one?

This joker Chavez proves socialism works.

This is not a convenient truth.

This joker Chavez, when he came to India a couple of years ago, got a hero’s welcome from students and common people, not the protests and the cold shoulder that met Bush last year. This proves you don’t have to come from a big country to be known, respected, and loved, much to the chagrin of the pro-US cabal in our Foreign Ministry.

That is not a convenient truth.

This joker Chavez is the only democratically elected political leader I know of who has, consistently, done what he promised to do after being elected back to power.

This proves that politicians who continuously plead the pressures of circumstances outside their control to show why they can’t fulfil their promises are lying. If they want, they can. If they don’t, it’s because they don’t want.

And that is one hell of an inconvenient truth.

In fact, this joker Chavez is a living inconvenient truth in himself.


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