Come on everybody.... own up!!
Would have loved to blog about my Dilli Yatra - short and exceedingly  sweet. But my sore wrist is protesting. Perhaps tomorrow?? What amazed  me was the indifference in the Capital to the Japanese calamity. The  Tsunami, the earthquake... the monumental tragedy of it all, left  Dilliwallas totally cold! Delhi partied on non-chalantly and desi tv  channels swiftly shifted to local gossip after a few mandatory clips  from the  devastated areas. Shame on us!
 
This appeared in the Asian Age \ Deccan Chronicle yesterday.
 Own up…. and be damned !
Since  India is in Confession Mode – starting with Manmohan Singh - let’s all  start ‘owning up’. Ummmm…. let me think…. I once stole a mango from  someone’s bageecha. Oh yes, a guava , too. And I threw ink bombs on my  French teacher. I also bunked classes constantly. Crashed other people’s  cars. Pinched menu cards from fancy restaurants. Rang the fire alarm at  school.Rode bikes without my parents’ knowledge.Wore lipstick and kohl  at age twelve. Rang doorbells, harassed neighbours, made prank calls to a  couple of Italian blokes…. all this before I turned  fourteen. Broke a  few hearts, too. Had my mine broken. What else? What else? Oh…. a lot  more. But , on looking back, I realise I was pretty stupid. Not only did  I get caught every single time, I also received punishment ( often, far  harsher than the crime committed).  Worse, when I behaved still more  stupidly and owned up, I got thrashed. I knew what every child knows –  owning up is a pretty dumb thing to do, if you imagine there will be  zero consequences.  The rash act of owning up comes with  an important  assumption – it  automatically means you are ready to face the music and  take  what follows on the chin.That could involve standing outside the  classroom for hours on end. Writing a thousand lines, getting  rusticated, not wincing when the cane makes contact with bare skin. You  know, the usual torture that follows school confessions. But obviously,  our netas have rewritten the old rules. The latest fad is to play martyr  and ‘own up’. But after this brave and reckless gesture – what?  Apparently, nothing! Illey po. It is as if   having uttered those  impressive words (“I am willing to own up,” said our pious P.M. earlier  this week), the matter automatically ends right there. Khel khatam….  Boys and girls, go home and play…. or pray. The mighty leader has  admitted his lapses. We should applaud and be grateful.
 What rubbish!
Come  on… this is nothing but nautanki. That too, on a pretty amateurish  level. Is it enough to say sorry and not follow up the apology with  action ( please note: I did not say ‘resignation’). If someone in a  position of great power has indeed had the guts and gumption to admit a  mistake was made, the next logical thing to do is to rectify it. Or at  least pretend! But no. In India it begins and ends with the person  uttering those meaningless ‘magic’ words – I confess. Since the P.M . is  responsible for this trend, we are waiting for the asli culprits to  follow suit. Will they? Not a chance. No wonder fraudster Hassan Ali  Khan is not just smirking in court and muttering ‘stupid people’ under  his breath as some of those bumbling officers of the Enforcement  Directorate get ticked off by Justice Tahilyani like they were errant  school kids (“Do your homework….” said the learned judge). Meanwhile,  India  is left grappling with the numbers being tossed around – who can  understand Income Tax arrears – ARREARS – of  Rs.72,000 crores ( larger  than the nation’s Health Budget)? The ‘aam aadmi’ ( yup , the very same  chap our P.M. wants to impress) is unable to comprehend a thing. All he  or she is interested in knowing is this – will the bounder be punished?  Will he sing? Name names? Or…. errrr… own up?? Since it’s so cool to do  so these days, why not, bhai? That goes for Maharashtra’s Chief Minister  , Prithviraj Chavan, whose image has gone for a toss in the light of  recent revelations. What an irony! Here he was, Mr. Clean himself, who  was supposed to white- wash the mess in the State and make everybody  forget Adarsh Society Ki Ajeeb Kahani. But his brand of detergent wasn’t  good enough! So much dirty laundry has since come tumbling out of his  personal closet, that citizens are wondering how he is planning to crawl  out of three prickly controversies ( CVC,Antrix-Dewas,Wadala  apartment). Will he also take the easy way out and start owning up?
 The trouble with confessionals is that after a point, they lose their  emotional power to generate sympathy. And unless these public  confessions are followed through, they remain hollow and pointless. A  massive book on contemporary confessions would be fascinating to read ,  because such outpourings are engineered to elicit specific responses.  When powerful people admit weaknesses, their words make us feel a little  better about our own miserable lives ….our petty concerns. George Bush  Jr., quite possibly one of the most detested Presidents of America has  surprised  the public by admitting to quite a few gaffes. It may well  have been his intention to influence American opinion and present a more  human side to his crazy Presidency. Obama is definitely not in the mood  to soften his position. While Gaddafi and Mubarak continue to rave and  rant even as the world unites against their tyrannical regimes. Back  home, we are more concerned with Rajat Gupta’s stated position on his  exact role in the various financial scams he is accused of being  involved in. Will he ‘own up’ and opt for as honourable an exit as  International law permits? Or will he take Lalit Modi’s defiant stand  and defend every single action, regardless of the facts in the public  domain?
The ugly truth behind most of the recent confessions is that  those going in for them are doing so with their backs against the wall.  It’s that route – or else. But it certainly does not make them  honourable men, nor does it exonerate them. It should be seen for what  it actually is – a ploy to buy time and fix things.
 India is facing its ‘Sholay’ moment, with the big question being: ‘Ab tera kya hoga, Kaalia?’
But who amongst the current lot will own up to being Gabbar Singh????
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