There are no free lunches in life but India takes this to a different level. There are so many of us that everything is a rat race - even if you win it, you're still a rat. The average man on the Indian streets strives to work in the big cities. When he makes it he realizes that he can't afford the basics of life - housing is expensive, public transport is stressful, oil prices (though subsidized) are unreasonable and what makes things worse is the complete incompetence of administrative authorities. The great 'metropolis' (more like mega slum) of Mumbai comes to her knees every monsoon. Delhi is synonymous with crime and Calcutta with prostitution. India's silicon valley is sinking under it's own pressure and the most educated state is bound by communist shackles. Bihar is two generations behind the rest of the country in progress and 20 behind in terms of law enforcement. Biharis who migrate to Mumbai are kicked out because the locals are threatened by their laborious and hassle free attitude.
If all this wasn't bad enough comes the big T word. Our friendly neighbors breed a mindset of hate and violence and happily send their products to our shores and mountains ever so often. 10 men walk into the financial heart of the city and cause mayhem and its a big deal. A soldier dies every two hours at our borders and that's not "juicy" enough for the media to report. Why? Is his life less valuable than the business tycoon who chose the wrong hotel to spend time with his mistress in?
This is the tip of the iceberg, a sneak peak at Pandora's box. What lies beneath is a country ridden with poverty, corruption, overpopulation, illiteracy and crime. Where human life is so abundant it is no longer valued. Where cricketers and politicians are God and the rest must fight to live.
This country is also giving birth to the new Indian. The Indian who dares to ask, who dares to stand for his morals, who refuses to be a silent spectator of the system, the Indian who rises above sectarian and religious difference and takes an oath to make a change - no matter how small. That Indian is the face you see in the mirror...