Slashdot Mirror


Indian Nationalists Forcibly Censor Orkut

starkravingmad writes "The Economic Times is running a story on Hindu nationalists in India threatening to wreck internet cafes that don't block parts of Orkut that the vigilantes find offensive. From the article: '"Orkut is used by many destructive elements to spread canards about India, Hindus, our gods and cultural heritage," said Abhijit Phanse, president of Bharatiya Vidyarthi Sena, the student group. "We are gently telling Internet cafe owners that it is their responsibility to see that surfers do not use their facility to carry out such hate campaigns ... Or else, we will have to do that job for them." Last week, dozens of Shiv Sena workers vandalised some Internet centres, saying they were not stopping their customers from accessing Orkut groups involved in sending hate messages.'"

51 of 360 comments (clear)

  1. why bother? by ILuvRamen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why do these censoring countries and the groups in them even bother? They're just going to be twice as pissed when 13 year olds find ways around it lol. The harder you try and block it, the harder people will try to unblock it and then you look like the bad guy for trying to block it.

    --
    Google's Super Secret Search Algorithm: SELECT @search_results FROM internet WHERE @search_results = 'good'
    1. Re:why bother? by ResidntGeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do you honestly think these people care more about looking good than about doing the will of their gods?

      --
      ResidntGeek
    2. Re:why bother? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This has got absolutely nothing to do with religion.

      This is just another vote bank tactic to gain the votes of the poor and middle-class by using these "campaigns".

      The internet penetration is so low that nobody in India really cares about Orkut or any other site for that matter. This just a show to the larger middle-class population that they are taking steps to "preserve the culture".

    3. Re:why bother? by Bastard+of+Subhumani · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hindu mythology is an interesting topic. Then again, most mythologies are...
      Just as long as you're not daft enough to actually believe any of them.
      --
      Only three things are certain; death, taxes, and apocryphal quotations - Ben Franklin.
    4. Re:why bother? by bheer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > as well as ur signature

      If you can't tell that the signature is quoting something very funny that someone else said (that hyperlink thing, you know), you need reading comprehension class.

      > but ur comment does deserve a mod-down.

      Sure, mod me down because I've hurt your feelings. If I were physically present, you'd probably be calling for my head. See where the fascist tendencies come from?

      > Status of Shivaji is not going to be changed

      No, but it will change thanks to neo-Nazis like the Shiv Sena and this Internet-cafe-bashing organization. Just like St George became the mascot for quite a few racist English bigots. Frankly the Shiv Sena (and their friend Narendra Modi in Gujarat) are doing a much better job besmirching Indian culture than anyone else ever can.

      > And to tell u, if someone supports a campaign protecting one's culture, it doesn't necessarily mean that the individual use to have a negative thinking.

      Vandalizing others' property and/or terrorizing others != protecting your culture. Don't pretend to teach me what Hinduism is. I've actually read the Vedas and know my heritage better than you do.

      And oh, writing "u" all the time makes you look like an idiot. Try and refrain.

    5. Re:why bother? by XchristX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Bhere is right, your comment and the report of RSS and Shiv Sena actions have greatly diminished my idea of Hindu's. Although I respect his position more and I assume he is a Hindu. Violence is the last resort of the incompetent and the action reported in the article clearly high light this. If they were competent they would ignore the small slights and aim for larger political goals. Instead they storm around like goods giving Hindu's a bad name. If a comment and a report converts you into an anti-Hindu bigot then I suppose debating with you is a waste of time, but here goes. Hindus have the same rights to protect, preserve and practice their faith, culture and society as anyone else. While I do not support mindless violence, the only reason why these people have gone that far is because they have been pushed there by the Communist-dominated Indian government, polity and intelligentsia, who spend a good deal of their time and political power creating a culture of hatred against Hindus in general.

      Violence is the last resort of the incompetent Not in the real world. The real world often require defense with weapons and armies. Otherwise America and her allies could never have liberated Germany from the Reich, and India would never have liberated a brutally persecuted Bengali population from Pakistan in 1971. Those wars were violent, but necessary.
      --
      l'Homme n'est Rien l'Oeuvre Tout: Gustave Flaubert to George Sand
    6. Re:why bother? by XchristX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      but a lot of the reforms that I am aware of that effect Hindu's tend to be positive human rights related things (laws regarding the untouchables). Quite so, but most of those reforms were done by Hindus. Hindus are hated even more because they reformed. The hatred stems from those communities and political groups who do not show the same propensity for reform as Hindus, and, instead of observing and learning from them, wind up loathing them instead. The dynamic of anti-Hindu bigotry is basically the same as that of Anti-Semitism in Europe and the Middle east. Jews were/are hated primarily for their social and cultural pliability by Anti-Semites, as are Hindus by Anti-Hindus.

      No culture has any intrinsic right to exist So you're saying that Israel does not have an intrinsic right to exist as a Jewish State? You might want to read something about the long and tragic history of Antisemitism in Europe and the Middle East before reaching such a radical conclusion. How about the Irish? Didn't they have a fundamental and intrinsic right to fight anti-Irish persecution and discrimination by the English for the preservation of their right to exist? Hindus are doing just that. Fighting with increasing desperation for their right to exist without fear of persecution or discrimination.

      Usually "cultural protection" is just another name for racism In my view, I consider such a statement to be itself a racist one, though perhaps in an "equal opportunity offender" sense. Every culture has a fundamental right to survive and grow, so long as it is not at the expense of others (a very significant proviso). To hold a view that is as radical as yours creates an atmosphere of conflict and violence between cultures, and sounds too much like political anarchism for comfort.

      I will agree that violence has it place but you explore other avenues first I don't disagree that violence is a last refuge, but when a people are being systematically persecuted, attacked and their collective backs are against a wall, and when those who hate and loathe them intransigently refuse to engage in "negotiations" or "diplomacy",what is left to do, other than the "last refuge"? You should perhaps read about the often brutal and genocidal nature of anti-Hindu persecution in the history of South Asia before you arrive at your perorations.
      --
      l'Homme n'est Rien l'Oeuvre Tout: Gustave Flaubert to George Sand
    7. Re:why bother? by bheer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Besides, there are no "Hindu Fanatics".

      Really? The chappies who trashed Valentines Day couples must have been figments of the Indian media's collective imagination. Oh wait, don't tell me-- it was also part of the vast Communist-Christian-Muslim conspiracy against Hinduism. Ditto the nice people who chop off Muslims' heads en masse in riots. Oh wait, they are provoked. They have no choice but to ignore the rule of law and become animals.

      With attitudes like that, you dream of becoming a world intellectual leader ("vishwaguru")? Fat chance.

      Btw, all of your lessons in Hindu history pale into insignificance because you forget one thing: there is no one Hindu society. Hindu society is fractured into caste and subcaste. Take a look at what's happening in Rajasthan. First set your own house in order. Get rid of ignorance and superstition. Go to the villages and non-major cities and drive away the evils of caste. Then people might take you a little more seriously.

      There's a lot of good in Vedic Hinduism, except that no one in the country really follows it. They're too entranced by a monkey god and a chap who drove his wife away on the word of a washerman*. And of course there are snakes and rats to worship.

      * That's Hinduism's so-called "ideal person", Rama.

  2. Are you *kidding* me? by metlin · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Shiv Sena? RSS? Those guys are a bunch of nutjobs.

    These are the same who vandalize flower shops on Valentine's Day and threaten couples if they are seen doing anything they consider "obscene" in public.

    Personally, I think that these guys need to have a good drink and need to get laid a little.

    Orkut is used by many destructive elements to spread canards about India, Hindus, our gods and cultural heritage
    I thought it was all about tolerance and forgiveness and all those good things? Pursuit of truth and enlightenment? No? I guess it doesn't quite have the same ring as terrorizing innocent people and flauting your ideologies about.

    Jerks.
    1. Re:Are you *kidding* me? by Omkar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You've pretty much got it. The Shiv Sena and RSS are Hindu chauvinist thugs that aren't taken seriously by anyone educated. Imagine someone like Jerry Falwell in a country as chaotic and mob-ruled as India (I've lived in India for a while and LOVE it, but this is hard to deny).

    2. Re:Are you *kidding* me? by king-manic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's overblown -- the origin of Shiv Sena is due to local Maharashtrian culture having been swamped by influx from every other part of the country -- a unique burden that Maharashtrians have to bear.

      As for RSS, they were created not out of theological compulsions, but as a backlash to Islamic activism -- not so unfounded considering that ethnic group split the country.


      No culture has any innate right to exist. Culture is simply a secondary trait of large groups of people. If a culture is diminishing then either it had to shape up to survive or it fades away. A good sign of a dying culture is this type of fascist/nationalist thuggery. It means rational options for maintaining the culture are not available. It also tend to make enemies further speeding this up. I have nothing against Hindu's and form the sounds of things "real" Hindu's dislike these people and their tactics every bit as much as I do. A culture that needs violence to prop it up is likely in danger of being washed away by the sands of time and no one will shed a tear for it.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    3. Re:Are you *kidding* me? by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Speaking as someone who believes in nothing, I think it's neat that a nation as pluralistic as India has so many different kinds of right wing kook.

  3. dear sensitive religious types by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    hindus upset at orkut, muslims upset at muhammed cartoons, christians upset at crosses in pee, etc:

    i believe that your religion is strong and powerful and moving

    apparently, you don't

    for if you did, you would not be so threatened by such random fluff

    or, alternately, if these stupid offenses affect you, your religious faith is shallow

    you do not honor god/ allah/ shiva/ whomever by being moved by the most contrived of offenses that even a child could shrug off and roll his eyes at

    when you do, you make a mockery of what they stand for, by showing that some of your religions followers (you) are of small easily swayed faith

    you're a shame to your own religion, and your cheap outrage cheapens your religion

    signed,
    people with faith and maturity

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:dear sensitive religious types by Gryle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's okay to be offended by what you perceive to be a mockery of something you hold dear. What's not okay is taking criminal action towards those who have offended you.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
    2. Re:dear sensitive religious types by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's also okay to learn to ignore that mockery. Or, if such mockery is rational, to respond rationally to it.

      This not only makes you less likely to take such criminal actions, but it also is likely to reduce your stress and your blood pressure, and teach you a useful skill.

      Let me put it this way: I find crap like this to be offensive. But then, I usually have to look for it, and even if it was right there in my face, I only have to close that tab to make it go away. And if I really, really cared, I could go write a thoughtful, intelligent response, instead of a troll (caution: second page is NSFW, due to said troll).

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  4. Forget lawsuits by WrongMonkey · · Score: 5, Funny

    I hope that the RIAA doesn't change tactics after hearing about this

    1. Re:Forget lawsuits by KDR_11k · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why? That would make shooting them self-defense.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  5. Anyone else have to look up Orkut? by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 3, Informative

    Orkut is apparently like MySpace, with forums and the like. Just thought I'd throw that out there, since TFA did such a great job of not saying what it is. Here's the wiki

    1. Re:Anyone else have to look up Orkut? by dangitman · · Score: 2, Funny

      See, that changes my whole impression of the story. At first I thought "bad Indian nationalists!" based on the context. But know that I know that they are trying to shut down something like MySpace, I'm all turned around on the issue. MySpace and all of its clones are an evil that must be stopped by any means necessary.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
  6. What the hell is Orkut? by dangitman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't get what's up with journalism these days. I even RTFA, and there was no mention of what "Orkut" is. Even if it is well-known to Indians, then couldn't the slashdot summary give a description, or at least a link to the site?

    Are we just supposed to intuitively know what every obscure website on the interweb is about?

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
    1. Re:What the hell is Orkut? by wizardforce · · Score: 3, Informative

      Google Orkut... it is a social networking site, a lot like Myspace or Livejournal. Here is the orkut homepage link: www.orkut.com Here is the link to the Wikipedia article about it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orkut

      --
      Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    2. Re:What the hell is Orkut? by feepness · · Score: 2, Funny

      This is news for nerds. Everyone who was paying attention in 2004 knows what it is.

      Sorry, I like totally spaced that year.

    3. Re:What the hell is Orkut? by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 2

      It's strange that of all the places on teh Intarwebs Slashdot (or at least a part of its readers) is oblivious to Orkut. Or maybe it's just a testimony to the general American unawareness of the rest of the world even on the Net.

      You can hardly call Orkut obscure. To put it short, Orkut is the MySpace of the Third World. AFAIK, it first got popular in Brazil and now apparently in India, too. Google bought it a while ago and integrated it to its services.

      I've encountered Orkut many times before, even though I don't use it. And yes, "orkut" is also Finnish slang for "orgasms".

  7. Mirror mirror... by davmoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Funny how that works...they are in effect saying "stop the hate campaign we don't like, or we will start a hate campaign against you".

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  8. When I observe how religious believers behave... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...I thank god that I'm an Atheist.

  9. Re:Religion gone wild ..... again.. by ozmanjusri · · Score: 2, Funny
    What about sex?

    Maybe.

    Send me a photo, and I'll think about it.

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  10. World ain't "get" freedom of speech by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why is it only the US seems to "get" freedom of speech? (And even we are losing it, but in different ways). I think people are afraid to learn and confront ideas that they don't want to see. Political and religious criticism, good or bad, is necessary for a mature civalization.

    1. Re:World ain't "get" freedom of speech by Khaed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, one, Sharpton is a professional race-baiter (see Tawana Brawley). But the vandalism part *is* the difference. He never said he'd break into a CBS studio and bust up their radio equipment if they didn't fire Imus.

      If he did, maybe then I wouldn't have to hear him every time he thinks he can make a buck off the suffering of blacks.

  11. Re:chocolate christ by suv4x4 · · Score: 4, Funny

    commoditization of christ for easter

    Yes, they're making mockery of Jesus by tying him randomly to Easter like thatg. What's Easter got to do with Jesus anyway.

    It's about bunnies, people! Next thing, they'll tie him to Christmas as well. Idiots.

  12. Re:Precisely, please mod parent UP by dangitman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The question with Piss Christ, other than the potentially quite offensive art, is government funding.

    Got any evidence for that? If the problem was public funding of art in general, then why did they wait until "Piss Christ" to make a big shitstorm about it? Would any other exhibition that was publicly funded, be just as offensive? Somehow I doubt they would be protesting a publicly funded Monet exhibition.

    So, why the double standard?

    some of the works produced with that government funding are very good, have a wide appeal, and would never come into existence without government support

    But should "wide appeal" really be a criteria for the arts? I would have thought artistic expression would be more important. If you want wide appeal, we already have The Simpsons and Lost.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  13. Useless Hypocrisy by Sukhbir · · Score: 2, Informative

    The reason Orkut is targeted is cause of the popularity. Orkut is like the MySpace of India and people get internet at their homes so that they can access Orkut - so much is the popularity. Shiv Sena and RSS are stupid political parties who have not done anything for the people of India except dividing them on communal lines. If they are so concerned about the people of India, they should stop popularizing their communal agenda and actually start doing something for the people. So what if the communities exist? How does it matter? Is it posing a threat to the country? No. Sentiments are something else agreed, but just cause of one or two things, that doesn't mean they shut the whole thing down. Same was the case with a website by the name of Hindu Unity. It is now banned in India cause it had anti - Islamic content severe in nature. When it was banned, the Shiv Sena and RSS were protesting cause they said censoring was violating the rights of the people. How about it now?

  14. Re:pfft... by mercurialmale · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Specifics aside, this kind of thing is just another piece of why India (as opposed to China, Vietnam etc.) remains all talk and no action. Would you, as an American or EU business owner want to set up shop in a country where these types of things are routine events?

    ...As opposed to setting up shop in a country where you toe the official party line or ship out?

    This is Freedom 101 - you need to put up with idiots and their opinions. India is perhaps the only recently independent nation that has even attempted to achieve an essentially open society. In India, we are free to express and actively promote our views - and that includes morons such as these RSS guys. What's not mentioned in TFA is that we also have recourse to the courts and the police, who, while inefficient, generally do come through in guaranteeing our basic safety.

    India continues to prove itself incapable of shaking off such middle ages thinking


    Thank you for judging me and my entire country based on the actions of these asshats. Should I go ahead and assume that all Americans think like Ann Coulter?

  15. Re:Precisely, please mod parent UP by ChePibe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This may just be a case of taking the bad with the good, and codifying what is "good" and what is "bad" may be nearly impossible.


    I'll assume you missed this part of my post or, more likely, chose to ignore it. Whatever.

    Anyways, why make a stink over the public funding of this piece and not others? I'd think the answer would be obvious to anyone with a basic understanding of human nature - people tend not to get worked up about things they don't perceive as important to them. If a publicly funded artist produces a bunch of landscapes of the boring Kansas countryside, who cares in general? It gets little to no press and little to no attention because there is no controversy. If people perceive an artwork as offensive, though, it attracts interest, controversy, and responses. People start asking why their money was spent on this. Many of them don't mind public funding of the arts in general, but many do mind the public funding of what they perceive (in this case I would argue that the perception was most likely incorrect) as an attack on their religion, particularly from a government who has become so careful about discrimination. It looks to many like the government taking sides in some sort of religious argument, the sort of thing that Americans generally feel the government should stay out of. How would atheists feel if the government funded artists whose work was extremely pro-religious in nature, or anti-atheist? What about, say, an anti-semitic work? Or a blatantly racist artwork? I personally don't believe the art in this case was anti-Christian, but I also see how a reasonable person could come to the opposite conclusion - one does not generally dip portraits of loved ones or those to whom one feels neutral in urine for fun or to show respect.

    The question then is - how does one judge what art gets funded? I don't know, and it could be debated endlessly. We're used to government funding being codified - the proper item from the proper distributor, or bidding processes for government buildings, etc. Art is outside of this system. It is hard to control and its variations are endless. Where does one draw the line in a sea of fuzzy gray? What is censorship and what is a reasonable response to the taxpayer's wishes? Don't those who are paying the bills have some right to decide what is made? Or is this simply stiffling artists and does it constitute censorship? And then, what if the piece can be interpreted in many different ways, as almost all great art can be? Should we throw it out because one of many interpretations is "bad", because it could be perceived as offensive? But why should I pay for something if I find it offensive?

    Religion and art share a long history as well, and a great many works will undoubtedly reference religion in ways that many people on both sides may be uncomfortable with - especially when they find out they're footing the bill. I have yet to make up my mind on Piss Christ, but I can see that both sides do have reasonable arguments and valid concerns, and I find myself siding a bit more with those against it on reasons of policy. Then again, as soon as I begin to side with them, many questions from the preceding paragraph pop up. I realize that someone who hasn't quite made up his mind is viewed as a heretic or worse in this polarized atmosphere, but I'm a fence-sitter on this one.
  16. Mod parent up by mercurialmale · · Score: 5, Informative
    Spot on - this has nothing to do with religion. Note that the real Hindu clergy is not protesting.

    This is pure, filthy politics - the Shiv Sena and their ilk are just trying to fight their own growing irrelevance - this is just to remind the UPA government that they still have the power to make life difficult - an attempt to gain leverage on some obscure internal negotiations, perhaps.

    You and I are not the intended audience for this charade - the current administration is. The poor Internet cafes are merely caught in the crossfire.

    And finally to all those who lament censorship in India, please don't worry on our behalf. We Indians have seen off graver challenges to our freedoms. We maintain a level of openness unmatched in the third world, and it will take more than a few assholes like these guys to change that. We're far from perfect in this regard, of course, but we'll get by just fine.

    1. Re:Mod parent up by XchristX · · Score: 3, Insightful



      Really?

      Here is an interesting interview of Nobel Laureate V.S. Naipaul that points out how the "Indian Intelligentsia" (ie communist fanatics and Islamists) deliberately skew media reports against the Shiv Sena as part of a systematic campaign of hatred directed against Hindus. The Shiv Sena has done more for the emancipation of the Maharashtrian poor then any of the leftist parties who attack and villify them.


      Also notable is Naipaul's famous observation in his bestseller "India, A Wounded Civilization":

      <quote>
      There was one portrait. And interestingly, it was not of the leader of the Shiv Sena or of Shivaji, the 17 th century Maratha King, but of the long-dead Dr. Ambedkar...Popular-and near-ecstatic-movements like the Shiv Sena ritualize many different needs. The Sena here, honouring an angry and (for all his eminence) defeated man, seemed quite different from the Sena the newspapers wrote about
      </quote>

      I'm not a big fan of Shiv Sena or the RSS in general. But when I see our own media attack and villify them as part of a shameless excuse to pander to a rising tide of Communist and Islamic Fundamentalism, while ignoring the brutal and barbaric massacres and atrocities against Hindus in Kashmir, Pakistan, Bangadesh, and even at times condoning them, and when Communists in the media openly attack Hindus and demand for their mass killings, I have no choice but to speak out, even though, on leftist-dominated slashdot, that makes me a "Filthy Hindu animal" worthy only to be a hateful object.

      Sorry, but in an atmosphere when rabid Indophobia and anti-Hinduism is tolerated and a culture of hatre is built against them, how the hell do you expect them to react? Bend over and take it?

      The RSS was basically founded as a social service organization for the emancipation and protection of poor Hindus during the 1940's in a rising tide of violence directed against Hindus by Islamic Fundamentalist mobs during the Islamic Caliphate resurrection movement in India and the days following the anti-Hindu genocides in Bengal (the Direct Action Riots instigated by the Pakistani Nationalists and the Partition massacres). In that sense, they were more like the Anti-Defamation League in the US contemporary to that period. For the most part, even currently their primary goals are social service, the emancipation of the poor (the RSS spent millions coordinating relief efforts during the 2004 Tsunami disaster in South India), an active campaign against untouhability and caste bigotry (60% ofRSS members are Dalits and other lower castes), and trying to provide a unified political emancipation movement for Hindus in a rising climate of hostility against them, much like Irish Nationalism or Zionism in Israel.

      However, because this would endanger the power base upper-caste dominated left wing government and polity in India and their Islamist votebank, they started a virulent hate campaign against the RSS, one that spilled over to hatred against Hindus in general. Eventually, they were pushed hard enough to the wall to start pushing back, that's all.















      --
      l'Homme n'est Rien l'Oeuvre Tout: Gustave Flaubert to George Sand
    2. Re:Mod parent up by stony3k · · Score: 3, Informative

      Umm... when was the last time V. S. Naipaul lived in India, and I mean lived, not visited. He should not comment on things he has no clue about. The problem with many of the Indians living outside India is that they have been fed a lie that Hinduism is under attack in India and is dying. Nothing could be further from the truth, just going by the sheer number of people who are present whenever any so-called "Godman" comes to town.

      I'm not denying that there is a section of the Indian polity that is often anti-hindu because of vote bank politics. But there is equally a section that is rabidly pro-hindu because of vote bank politics.

      Have you ever stopped to wonder why every news story about Shiv Sena involves vandalism - they're never doing anything constructive, always destructive. It's no wonder then that they find themselves slowly losing favor in the eyes of the common man.

      --
      Freedom is not worth having if it does not include the freedom to make mistakes. - Mahatma Gandhi
    3. Re:Mod parent up by XchristX · · Score: 3, Informative

      The problem with many of the Indians living outside India is that they have been fed a lie that Hinduism is under attack in India and is dying. The problem with Indians in India is that they are too blinded by propaganda disseminated by a Communist intelligentsia, moderated by a socialist regime, and aggravated by the rising tide of Islamist militancy in the country. It is precisely the objectivity of outside observation that Naipaul brings to the Indian social landscape, something which Indians in India do not possess, unfortunately. It is a sad day for the Indian intellect when an outsider like Naipaul is needed to expose the reality...

      they're never doing anything constructive, Really? Who do you think improved living conditions in the Dharavi Slum in Mumbai (the worst slum in Asia)? The Shiv Sena. Yet, nobody but Naipaul wrote about that obvious fact (known to most Mumbaikars). Who do you think build all those expressways in Mumbai and removed the congested traffic that was choking the city's economy, the Shiv Sena. Also a fact known to most Mumbaikars. Yet, it is only mentioned by the media as an insignificant footnote.
      There is most definitely a pervasive media bias against the Shiv Sena. A bias that stems from Islamist votebank politics, motivated primarily by a sense of "My enemy's enemy is my ally" style of realpolotik and the desire of the left to ultimately eradicate all criticism from Hindus and render India a totalitarian, communist regime.
      What about the thuggery and villany of the Communist Party? What about the decades of nepotism, corruption, and state-sponsored buggerry conducted by Communist bastard despots like Jyoti Basu in West Bengal? What about the thugs and murderer Communists called Naxalites inIndia's red corridor (Bengal, Bihar, orissa and northern AP)? How well does the Indian Media report about their killings, rapes, bombings and Pakistani support? No, the Indian media is only obsessed with Hindus.
      How well does the media report the attacks on poor Hindus carried out by the Communist thugs in Nandigram just a few months ago? In the finest traditions fo Stalin and Mao, the CPM massacred dozens of poor Hindus in Nandigram , and the media conveniently hid the whole damn thing under the rug. Only the international media reported on it with any degree of objectivity.
      --
      l'Homme n'est Rien l'Oeuvre Tout: Gustave Flaubert to George Sand
    4. Re:Mod parent up by XchristX · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Check out the many number of books and articles written by Arun Shourie during his journalistic days I know Shourie's works vry well. Communists hate Shourie and loathe him...

      They came into being because the 'State' failed to do its duties and instead abused the citizens. It is a well known fact that the police and the politicians abuse their power and the poor are hapless observers. This was the cause for the naxalites to come into being Bollox. Naxalism is pure and simple terrorism. They are merely a subversive group of thugs and murderers who decided to take over a bunch of colleges and start raping babies. Might want to read about Their gangster leaders Charu Mazumdar and Kanu Sanyal. Kanu Sanyal invented the Naxalite terror tactic (called Yugantar). Sanyal openly admitted that he was a terrorist. He was proud of it. He is no better than Osama bin-Laden and deserves the same fate. Instead, he stands merrily prancing about the country as a statesman.

      they are equally reticent about any disruptive actions of the Indian military in Kashmir and the various Kashmiri leaders that are under house arrest Sure, sure, and 9/11 was a joint US/Israeli conspiracy, the 2004 tsunami was secretly planned by the Indian government, and the Protocols of the learned elders of Zion actually happened, right?

      /sarcasm

      Nice try Osama, but the Indian Military's actions in Kashmir are a response to massive human rights violations by the Islamists against the Kashmiri Hindus, millions of them have been ethnically cleansed by Muslim militants. It is the religious intolerance and racism of the Islamists that brought their fate upon them.
      --
      l'Homme n'est Rien l'Oeuvre Tout: Gustave Flaubert to George Sand
  17. Re:India is not a Western nation. by whackeroony · · Score: 5, Informative
    I am feeding the troll (sigh!) but well here it goes. I am an Indian and you, AC, are full of crap.

    India may be a democracy, but it is not a Western nation. Being a democracy does not mean that a nation is a democracy. Look at Singapore.

    The first sign that the AC is out of his league. Yes, India is not a perfect democracy ( who is anyway? ) but comparing it to Singapore - a small island nation whose citizens themselves consider the polls to be a sham (wiki link here ) - is a complete joke. Come on, at least India does not have a one-party government that tries to sue the opposition into oblivion.

    India, as any other democracy, has its share of nutjobs. The BVS and Shiv Sena, as has been pointed out by other posters, are essentially groups of uneducated riff-raff that try to present themselves as nationalists to distinguish themselves from common thugs ( which they are in reality ). They have little influence beyond Mumbai.

    In the India of today, honor killings are so widespread that it is a national pasttime. An honor killing is murdering a wife because her family has not provided sufficient dowry to the husband.

    No my dear AC. Honor killings are not what you presented (link). They are women that are killed if they are suspected to have brought dishonor to the family (unwanted pregnancy, etc.). They are extremely rare in India and are more a part of life of our friends across the border in Pakistan ( and other such Islamic societies) than ours.

    What you did state about dowry killings(link) is exaggerated. While it is true that bride burning is still present in India, due to many high-profile convictions in the recent past, it is abhorred widely and the burden of proof is on the suspected in-laws. However, unfortunately, dowry as a social phenomenon still exists in India.:(

    Finally, the Indians are aggressively building nuclear weapons.

    Having been attacked by 2 totalitarian neighbours (who are allied strongly with each other) 4 times in the last 50 years is not a good enough excuse ? Then, pray, why do the United States and Russia, which are far removed from their enemies, have the largest nuclear arsenals in the world ? Anyway, having nuclear devices without a proper delivery system can hardly be considered aggressive.

    So, India is a democracy, but it is not a Western nation.

    So, you took all this effort to point out the obvious. As we say in north India, shabaash mere puttar ! ( well done, my son !)

    Coming back to the topic, as I said before, this is a very local event. The Economic Times is HQ-ed in Mumbai which is why it has received more prominence than necessary. From my personal experience, I can speak of places with worse kinds of restrictions in India. There are hamlets controlled by some political party/ religious group/ communists where information from the outside world, in any form, is not allowed unless they are filtered by the party thugs. But, I would be more worried by the fact that most of rural India, if they ever cared, would not be able to connect to orkut because of the pathetic infrastructure in those parts, rather than being banned from doing so by a collection of retards.

    My INR 10

  18. Re:Religion gone wild ..... again.. by ozmanjusri · · Score: 2, Funny
    Got the photo thanks.

    Ewww. Umm, can we take a rain check?

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  19. This Story Is Not About "Nationalists" by Skippi+Sunshine · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's about RELIGION and should be labelled as such. Don't be such pansies, Slashdot. Call religious lunatics what they are. Don't hide them as "nationalists."

  20. Obscure words explained by Old+Wolf · · Score: 2, Informative

    Orkut is a social networking site
    Shiv Sena is a Hindu fundamentalist group
    Canard presumably means a deliberately false story, in this context.

  21. Re:omfg, are you retarded? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Dear, AC, thanks for your concern about my mental health. For your information, I'm not retarded. Bravo for not only hiding behind the AC option but for starting your reply with an ad hominem attack.

    The US, whether you like it or not, is one of the few countries in the world where someone's religion dictates whether or not they can seriously run for office.

    Polls have been taken on the subject and, when asked, something like 52 percent of Americans have said that they would not vote for an aethiest. That alone shows how much of a ceiling your religion (or lack thereof) poses in the US. Neither of the two main political parties would even consider nominating a non-Christian candidate because his/her religion alone would lose them the race: policies and job suitability wouldn't even factor into it.

    Compare that to anywhere else in the developed world. I live in the UK, and I can tell you that we wouldn't give a fig what religion someone was before voting for or against them. We certainly wouldn't be using religious litmus tests as you do in the US.

    Creationism? Abortion? Seperation of church and state but "One nation under God", and with the motto "In God we trust"?

    As for politics and policies, I can give you clear examples of how serious political debate has been stifled in the US post-September 11th. Perhaps you missed the instances of TV shows being cancelled because of comments people made questioning what was going on and why it was happening? Or how any voice raised in dissent was shouted down as anti-American? Don't you remember any of that?

    What was wrong with asking why the US was attacked in the first place? Are you seriously telling me that that's been questioned by anybody outside the fringes?

    It's only now that this shit has been going on for years and it's cost the lives of over 3,000 US troops (hey, let's not think about the 100,000s of dead Iraqi civilians - they clearly don't count) that serious questions are given more than short shrift by the mainstream media.

    (Still, though, the lunatics running the asylum see nothing wrong. And the lunatics wanting to replace them aren't any better: the eight Republican nominees were asked whether knowing what they know now if they would have done anything differently in Iraq, to which none of them had the common sense to say "yes". Even after seeing the disasterous consequences of the path that they've travelled, they'd still go down that road again.)

    Elsewhere, District Attorneys are being fired for political purposes. But, of course, when it's discovered, the people in charge have "no recollection" of what happened.

    I won't even talk about voter disenfranchisement. Go read up on that before you comment again though.

    Of course, I'm sure you'll say that none of that counts. To be honest, if it wasn't helping to screw the rest of us, I wouldn't give a shit. But it does, so I'm telling you, as a friend, this shit is happening, and it does you no favours to be lecturing the world on religious and political freedoms when your own country's record in that area is far from perfect.

    The politics of the US aren't any better than that of anywhere else. If you, like the person who I initially replied to, truly consider the US to be a place where religious and political freedoms are respected then you're looking through rose-tinted glasses.

    Feel free to tell me I'm wrong and how. Just save the "retard" tag, OK?

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  22. Violence, Retardation, Religion. by crhylove · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of COURSE these ignorant butt-plugs want to censor stuff. The only way anybody can keep talking to imaginary men in the sky and believing in that kind of nonsensical clap trap is to keep the blinders fully on. A quick reading of every wikipedia article for every religion shows how ludicrous every religion really is.

    Go ahead, god squad, mod me down, but the days when society lacks the information to see through your horse shit philosophy systems is at hand. In a few generations, only real Luddites or actual retards will worship invisible men in the sky.

    Information wants to be free. And humans want information. The days of praying to "holy ghosts" and multi-armed gods of war and love are ending. I just wish they would end sooner, like before we have another catastrophic global war, or completely destroy the environment.

    *sigh* Seems unlikely though.

    rhY

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
  23. Re:chocolate christ by adyus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    commoditization of christ for easter

    Yes, they're making mockery of Jesus by tying him randomly to Easter like thatg. What's Easter got to do with Jesus anyway.

    It's about bunnies, people! Next thing, they'll tie him to Christmas as well. Idiots.
    Hmm, I thought they had him 'pinned', not tied, on Easter :P

    There goes my karma, and I don't mean on Slashdot...
  24. Re:omfg, are you retarded? by Kjella · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Creationism? Abortion? Seperation of church and state but "One nation under God", and with the motto "In God we trust"?

    You know, it's funny.... we here in Norway are a christian state, with something like 85% membership in the state church and even though actual religiousness is low, we certainly don't subscribe much to other religions. We had an ordained priest as prime minister from 1997-2000 and 2001-2005. Yet nobody has considered teaching creationism as anything but religious mythology for many, many decades. We've had free abortions up to the 12th week since 1978, and over 80% support the current legislation and there's really no political debate on the issue because the younger generation are almost unilaterally in favor of it. We've had gay partnerships for 15 years now, and not only is it accepted but the latest proposal for marriage law no longer distinguishes between same-sex and opposite-sex marriage including all rights to adoption etc., though that one is still controversial. While we've had some hangups about pornography and only recently allowed hard pornography that has been legal since the 1970s in our neighboring countries, we in general have a very relaxed relationship to non-sexualized nudity.

    In my opinion, whether church and state is separate is not really central at all. What's important is whether or not the law is trying to enforce regligious standards on others. Without butting my head too far into the discussion of what's good christianity and not, which I don't care either way anyway, we've gone to great lengths to allow a free society where you may choose to live a non-christian life. Look to the key elements of chistianity such as compassion, tolerance and forgiveness and you'll see that salvation must come from within. So feel free to preach and hold your opinion that any partiular style of live is a sin against nature, or against God, or whomever. Just do not try to use the law to bludgeon everyone else into adhering to your moral codex. Do not try to use the law to protect yourself from your own moral weakness to the deteriment of everyone else. According to your own religious beliefs, if I choose to live a life in sin then only I can choose to repent. Punishment is not repentance, and do not try to make it so.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  25. Re:chocolate christ by Inverted+Intellect · · Score: 2, Informative

    Even though you appear to have mostly been joking, you've hit on a bit of truth.

    Easter is a heathen celebration of fertility (as demonstrated by the large amounts of eggs and the ever-symbolic rapidly-breeding rodent) taken over by Christianity. Christmas happens to be celebrated on the Winter Solstice, even though the time of Jesus' birth is a somewhat murky matter.

    In some nations, despite being overtly christian, they still call the Winter Solstice celebration by its traditional name, Yule, or variations thereof.

  26. Moderation abuse by Dogtanian · · Score: 2, Interesting
    (Disclaimer: This is about abuse of the moderation system, it is not an endorsement of XChristX's views).

    Regarding the "funny" moderation of the parent. There is nothing obviously funny to me about it; can we assume that:
    • The mod thinks that talk of "OMG!! COMMIES!!!!" is funny, despite the fact that for a long time India was run along very left-wing (if not quite communist) principles? It's not America, and I'm sure communism *is* still a valid factor in politics there.
    • It's an intended piss-take because they disagree with what XchristX is saying? (i.e. deliberately abusive modding)
    • They're exploiting the "Funny doesn't give karma" loophole so that if and when XchristX is modded down to -1, it'll damage his karma more than it would otherwise? (Again, deliberately abusive modding)
    I suspect it's the second and/or third.
    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    1. Re:Moderation abuse by saforrest · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I suspect it's the second and/or third.

      I suspect strongly that it's the first. Most Slashdot readers have very little clue what is going on in India, and probably didn't read past the first few sentences before modding.

      The act of stridently assigning blame for political ills to Communists and Islamists (as those first few sentences do) will strike a chord with most Americans, and echoes a lot of the rhetoric (historical and modern) from their own leaders. The idea that this sort of rhetoric would be happening in very different and faraway place turns the familiarity of such statements into humour.

      Hence the "funny" mod. I really think that's a much more plausible explanation than deliberately abusive modding.

  27. What , no outsourcing or H1B jokes? by Tablizer · · Score: 2

    slashdot is slipping. Next you know, no overlord jokes either.

  28. Re:India: 5000 Slain Brides & 3 Million Prosti by slashdotlurker · · Score: 2, Informative

    The year of the report is 2002. The report proceeds to note the similarity between Indian culture and Islamic culture. Note that "5000" is the number for only murdered brides. That number does not include the many Indian women murdered by Indian man for supposedly shaming the Indian family.
    Forgive me for pointing out an obvious flaw in that "argument". Are we not assuming that honor killings are widespread in India ? I have lived for years in India as a bureau reporter, and while one hears of 3 or 4 bride burning cases every few months, I have never heard of honor killings. That is something that is extremely common in Pakistan. I am sorry, but your attempts to equate Indian and Islamic cultures simply do not wash. That figure of 5000 is on a population that is now 1 billion plus. I daresay that more women are killed by their husbands in crimes of passion, in my home state of California in an average year. 3 million prostitutes in a population of 1 billion ? Eastern Europe and Russia have a far greater proportion than that.

    The parent article tries to paint India as a Western nation. The facts indicate otherwise. Vietnam is more Western than India. Honor killings are extremely rare in Vietnam. It has a much lower rate of children prostitution than India because Vietnamese law enforcement actually punishes the customers of child prostitutes. Note that Vietnam is still a relatively poor nation, so poverty cannot explain the popularity of honor killings and children prostitution in India. The explanation is in the non-Western culture of India.
    India is clearly not a Western nation. These are people from a proud ancient civilization that developed almost completely untouched by the various schools of thought that moulded our European and American histories until beginning of colonialism in this part of Asia. Why would you feel the need to knock down a strawman ? I have lurked on slashdot for many months, and have learned that India is a fairly disliked country among the tech types who post here. I can understand why that is so. While Silicon Valley is stagnating, Indian tech cities are experiencing a boom unprecedented in their history. There is a massive loss of jobs back home and that is an emotive issue. How this translates into an obsession that includes painting India as a retrograde and primitive Islamist culture with honor killings, is something I will not comment on, as I do not understand your motivation behind raising such canards. In my experience, India is one of the most virulently anti-Islamic countries I have ever lived in (and my prior jaunts include Serbia in early 90s, Russia in mid 90s and Israel for a few months in 2002). I do not sympathize with such notions, but given what I have learned of Indian history, its not surprising at all.