“Family First, Country Nothing”: PM Modi’s Hard and fast Assault On Resistance
Family First Country Nothing PM Modi s Hard and fast Assault On Resistance:“The Resistance’s mantra is – of the family, by the family, for the family,” PM Modi said.
New Delhi: State leader Narendra Modi today went after the resistance saying that their center is family, and not the country. “As far as they might be concerned, family is first, country isn’t anything. Defilement is their inspiration. The greater the trick, the mor degenerate the individual, the higher their seat at the table,” PM Modi said while initiating another terminal at Go Savarkar air terminal in Andaman and Nicobar’s Port Blair.
“A vote based system signifies ‘of individuals, by individuals, for individuals’. Yet, the Resistance’s mantra is – of the family, by the family, for the family,” he added.
The assault comes as 26 Resistance groups have assembled in Bengaluru to devise a procedure to take on BJP in the 2024 Lok Sabha surveys.
PM Modi named the continuous Resistance conference a gathering of “in-your-face debases”
The new structure, worked at an expense of around ₹ 710 crore, will support network of the island. With an all out developed area of around 40,800 sq m, the new terminal structure will be equipped for taking care of around 50 lakh travelers yearly.
This ethereal hologram – brutal modern politician as prophet and guru – has won two successive election landslides across a vast, extraordinarily diverse country of 1.3 billion people. But who is the real Modi? In trying to find out, I kept coming back to three key questions. Which country does he see himself as leading: India or Hindu India? Is he saving Indian democracy or is he subverting it? And is he, as he insists, a true economic moderniser – or a fanatical religious nationalist for whom modernisation is a tool to assert supremacy, with reforms proposed, chopped and changed for sectarian advantage?
I have come to the view that these questions can’t be resolved, unless he lurches to extremity thereafter, because chronic ambiguity is Narendra Modi. A fervent Hindu militant in his teens, he now operates within a quasi-western political framework he half accepts and half rejects but has not sought – or at least has not yet been able – to fundamentally change.
Ambiguity is in India’s DNA. Since its refoundation as an independent state in 1947, its prime ministers have been a mix of “strong men” – plus one strong woman – and weak caretakers. They have ruled a just-about democracy characterised by multi-party elections and formal constitutional liberalism but equally by extreme instability and endemic political violence – including regular assassinations – all flowing from two bitter centuries of British imperialism.