Balbir Punj is telling the defeat of familyism and casteism in Bihar

22

In the Bihar Assembly elections, especially against Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Rashtriya Janata Dal, Congress, and the leftists contested the great alliance under the umbrella of which the declared basis was 'secularism'. Will Modi-Nitish win in Bihar, the defeat of secularism? - No. In fact, it was a defeat of the perverted mobilization that Indian politics has suffered for decades. After independence, the country was rocked by Nehruvian policies, in which the influence of Left-Socialism was immense. The situation was further distorted when the term 'Secular Democratic Republic' was written in the Preamble to the Constitution, constituted by Babasaheb Ambedkar in 1976 during the Emergency. The Indian economy had collapsed by that time. At the same time, the political parties that emerged from the mix of so-called 'secularism', 'socialism' and 'social justice' - most of the corruption in the corrupt family system today, earned vast wealth in the country and abroad by staying in power, divisive ethnic- Religion is limited to politically motivated and empowering separatist-jihadist powers.

The chief ministerial candidate of the Grand Alliance in Bihar was RJD leader Tejashwi. He represents the chronic familyism where, when his father Lalu was forced to leave Bihar's chair in 1997 in the corruption of 950 crores, he handed over the kingdom to his wife Rabri Devi, inexperienced and confined to the family. Lalu is convicted in serious corruption cases, the RJD is commanded by his younger son Tejashwi and he has also accused of irregularities in railway tenders and Patna Zoo land scams along with his brother Tej Pratap.

In Uttar Pradesh, the SP and the BSP also have a 'secularist' status. When the then Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Mulayam Singh, ordered the firing on the innocent Rambhakt Kar sevaks, he and his family became one of the biggest secularists in the country. BSP was formed in the name of Dalit upliftment. But Mayawati has been keeping her casteist agenda in the mold of 'social justice'. The top leaders of these two parties are today symbols of familism, corruption, communalism, and casteism.

Apart from these, there are many such satraps in the country, be it the Akali Dal, a BJP ally in Punjab, the Thackeray family of Maharashtra, the Chautala Kunba in Haryana, the Stalin in Tamil Nadu, or the Jagan Reddy family in Andhra Pradesh - Telangana - where internal democracy Is severely lacking and the center of power is limited to family members only. The truth is that the Nehru-Gandhi family of the Congress is responsible for this, which is being followed by various parties wearing the mask of 'secularism', 'egalitarianism' and 'social justice'.

In all of these, the left-wing thinking of the Indian Sanatan culture has distorted and stigmatized the national politics of the country. Often Indian leftist political parties talk about public rights, expression, democracy, and constitution, but they kill the same living values ​​first when in power. The suppression of opponents by the Left in Kerala, violation of the right to disagreement, and violence - is an example of this. West Bengal and Tripura have also suffered this stigma for a long time. The truth is that the people of Bihar have not only rejected the impractical promise of 10 lakh government jobs but also rejected the so-called secularists who are deeply racist and communal politics, which is also associated with familism and termite corruption.