Tuesday 1 April 2014

Yes, it needs courage Mr Kejriwal

Not long ago, media was agog with encomiums of the crusader and his team. Now it seems a laughing lot. No sooner the technocrat-cum-crusader-cum-politician started to fire his imprecations against the media houses, than his fall started.

In my previous blogs, I've presaged the trampling of a potential politician into oblivion, and my words are nearing come true. The hap-hazard political steps, mud slinging on the opponents and not sparing anyone sans his own team has left them tottering where they began from, i.e. they are back to square one. And the Indian populace, barring his own party members, are giggling at their ventures, and bran-new master-strokes  for grabbing the prime spots in Indian politics, each passing day.

Without proper homework, without proper party build-up, without proper planning and without everything else, they have taken a big plunge into the fray, and are destined to be relegated to an inferior position in Indian political system, until they will ruminate deeply in building their cadre and the party as a whole. The success in Delhi was made ephemeral, and in spite of building it as a base for future endeavours for capturing new grounds, they betrayed everyone--rather stunned and ditched all and sundry. And they stand from where they have began. The poor far-sightedness, and planning, and party principles are to be blamed for.

Ironically, the crusader and his team continues his tirade against those who were cause of his rise--the media. And until he makes room for a little manoeuvre and leniency for media, he is bound to extract a very little gain from this election. And penance of missing a golden opportunity after the elections will only be left for them. And Indians are notorious for their sentimental and strategic voting. Let's hope that the crusader and his team will get ample time after the elections to reinvigorate their cause and reinvent themselves with every thing proper in its place in their definition and understanding of Indian politics.

The gone neckerchief--the patented bonnet--the muffler, is what he is missing from his costume to attract and convince the common man to vote for him; and so is his eternal cough. But, it needs more courage to don the muffler in the scorching sun than leaving the posts he has held previously; and his party will suffer from the loss of suffrages of common men and the elites.Mr Arvind please remodel yourself as a common man once more, and trance the voters to dance to your tunes.

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