prasad1
Active member

India at 70 differs widely from what it was and what most founding fathers envisaged. The Constitution they gave us on Republic Day 1950 suited their vision, but has changed comparably.
Will it witness a 70th birthday, or be shorter-lived de jure, as it has been de facto?
Similar questions arise everywhere.
All governments fail their people's expectations, but in democracies the very beliefs, principles and practices long considered Democracy's essence are endangered.
The worst horror is intolerance: No 'decent respect' for any difference; brute force suppressing reasoned discussion; law contemptuously disregarded; bigotry spurred by demagoguery -- such ugly forces multiply worldwide, not least in Western countries long claiming exemplarity of openness.
When the 'world's oldest democracy' succumbs, the whole system's vulnerabilities show alarmingly.Authoritarianism fares no better, but its appeal increases. Making democracy work should be today's prime concern, but most people start preferring anything that delivers.
Our democracy is more vulnerable because the essential foundations never firmly settled. Balfour said the British parliamentary system worked because, despite deep differences, 'there is a fundamental agreement among all to make it work' -- plus some mutual respect and accommodation.
Disappearing everywhere, these conditions never took root here. The spirit essential for the 1947 system doesn't exist.
That too has similarities worldwide. Bitter gridlock from poisonous party-relations substantially caused the Trump phenomenon.
How America, manifesting such impressive self-improving maturity in choosing a black president eight and four years ago, has changed so startlingly so fast needs studying, but our first worry must be ourselves.Not one institution or instrument of State functions properly. Legislatures meet minimally, providing neither laws nor oversight; judiciaries fumble along, often addressing what should not be their business (a Supreme Court running cricket?) while the wait for justice skyrockets; the executive, both political and permanent reinforce each other's failings, in disarray; while the fourth estate, so vital to Democracy, blithely undermines it.
Government-Opposition relations are practically non-existent, the party that led us into Independence now meanders devoid of ideas, leadership and prospects.
Problems intensify as our apparatus for handling them degenerates.
Outside government is no better: in all professions, schools, hospitals, businesses, sloppiness grows -- and nothing is done.
India 70 years ago looked different, though the germs started work straightaway.
We were the most advanced of decolonised States, respected for efficiency, seemingly imminent promise, above all as a democratic model.
Others sent us soldiers, diplomats, doctors etc for training, now we need them.
Put an Indian anywhere abroad, (s)he excels, at home is stifled. Must extending entitlement debase quality, or has our approach been wrong?
http://www.rediff.com/news/column/what-reality-will-replace-the-dream-of-1947-/20170325.htm