Saturday 19 April 2014

The endangered youth.

Contemporarily the whole India is experiencing a resplendent deluge of youths. In fact you can say that more than half of the nation is youth. Now a question must arrive in your mind that when the whole nation is having such a plethora of young minds then why the nation’s progress has been stagnant over years? Why the GDP decreasing and poverty increasing? All these questions must have been rattling you a lot but let’s today adopt a proactive approach and try to excavate out the covert truth behind such severe facts. 


Presently around 814 million citizens are eligible to vote in the Lok Sabha elections which commenced from 7th of April and one amusing thing is that around 150 million who are going to vote this time, are the first time voters who have never experienced voting in a ballot before. Nearly two-thirds of Indians are under 35; half are under 25. By 2020, India will be the youngest country in the world, with a median age of 29 years, compared with a median age of 37 years in China at that point. India’s large youth population, often called a “demographic dividend,” could potentially make India the biggest consumer market and the biggest labour force in the world.


No one can repudiate the fact that this time India is experience a youth deluge. Young generations, which are termed as the real assets of the nation are present in the nation excessively but still so many problems continue to swallow nation’s progress and lever up the enigma behind our failures at different levels.
If we go on to try to decipher this abstruse mystery then we would find that these problems carry their genes from the dirty politics that the whole nation is witnessing contemporarily.


Nowadays politics is not being placed on the basis of development, employment or works done by the servants for the welfare of the society, these days people tend to play a vote bank politics.


Casteism and communalism have been one of the most debated topics in the whole nation. Some political parties which just don’t want to lose their jobs of sitting idle in power and amassing public money just take advantage out of these nightmares of the nation. When such political parties recognize that their end is near then they try to threaten minorities that the other person or party concerned in not secular. For them secularism truly means appeasement policy or divide and rule politics. Those who call others non-secular should first look at themselves. Have they done anything for the betterment of the minorities? Have they done anything for the betterment of the society? Definitely not! But still these people hold the placard and monopoly of secularism.


It’s not a hidden fact that all the religions of the whole nation are being exploited these days. Hindu youth, Muslim youth, Christian youth and Sikh youth all of them are facing problems of unemployment, lack of education and many others. Today you could observe thousands of youth with handsome IQ and intelligence doing menial jobs and many of those who deserve nothing are in the top position and those who call themselves secular continue again come fearless demanding five years more to befool the nation. In this global epoch it’s not a hidden fact that when a Muslim youth and a Hindu youth search for jobs they face the same problems and no so-called secular party or leader does them anything. But still we continue to make a moron of us by voting on the appeasement politics despite of the fact that we need an eligible and bold person rather than a timid and so-called secular leader.


This time the youth of the nation need to vote, not as a Hindu, not as a Muslim but as a responsible Indian who will vote for a better economy, better lifestyle and improved life standards rather than giving corrupts of the nation any more chances.


The choice is clear. If you want jobs, you need a good economy and if you want a good economy, then choose a tough, robust and bold leader who is ready to uplift the nation and save it’s youth from extinction.

JAI HIND, JAI BHARAT

JAI MA BHARTI

No comments:

Post a Comment