A Massive Scale Democracy At Work

The world’s largest democracy (India, in case you didn’t know) is voting now to choose its new government. The sheer numbers that India is dealing with are enormous and astounding – some that the rest of the world will  never witness.

As of Feb 2014, the number of people from this 1.2 billion strong country who are eligible to vote is an amazing 814 million+. Compare that to about 150 million registered voters in USA.

In fact, around 120 million voters in India will be voting for the first time since the last national elections that were held in 2009….they are the new grown-ups with a huge, new responsibility to help guide the country into their future.

A_voter_in_India_General_Elections_2014

A first time female voter displaying her voter identity card, at a polling booth during the 4th Phase of Lok Sabha General Elections-2014, in Sikkim on April 12, 2014

930,000 polling stations will be used with 1.4 million electronic voting machines. Thousands of police and paramilitary personnel have been deployed to polling stations to provide security. Truly a behemoth project!

The actual voting is taking place over a period of more than a month, that began on April 7th and will go through May 12th in a phased manner across various regions of the country.  

The national level elections for the Lok Sabha or the “House of the People” (the lower house of the Parliament of India) is represented by members of Parliament from a total of 543 constituencies. The leading party (likely an alliance of parties) will need 272 seats to form the government of India for the next five years. By mid-May, India will have a new leader and government, elected to take the country forward.

Sadly of the more than 3300 candidates contesting the national elections, more than 550 have criminal charges filed against them, with 328 of them being serious charges (murder, kidnapping, rape…).  😦   How is this even permitted?

Appalling Statistics. Frightful Reality

Appalling Statistics. Frightful Reality.

But even with all that said and done, this is truly a marvel as it unfolds…democracy in action at a truly massive scale. And whether one likes the outcome or not, the country has to live with it because the majority has spoken. Did I say, democracy?

[Click here to know everything about this election in 2 minutes, video by BBC]. 

I can safely say that the leading candidate scares the bejesus out of me.

I lost my right to vote when I immigrated and became a citizen of the great democratic nation where I now live. But I didn’t lose my right to care. Or to have an opinion (a strong one at that).

I tell myself, just look back in history and you can see that democracies around the world have survived despite electing some terrible leaders, sometimes coming out even stronger for it.  In fact, you don’t have to look too far, simply see the current highly ineffective, corruption-ridden government of India that is forcing people to choose change

I tell myself that the nation is strong enough to survive, whatever happens. Until the next election.

I tell myself that someday more people will vote for clean, progressive and secular versus the alternative. And someday there will be a viable alternative. Perhaps even multiple alternatives.

I tell myself that I will eat my words if I am proven wrong this time. Happily.

I tell myself that ultimately, even with all its flaws, democracy in action is a beautiful thing.

:

:

Statistics courtesy of Association of Democratic Reforms (ADR), India

Be Grateful!

These past few days, I have been reminded both directly and indirectly, that to be happy is to be grateful. And vice versa.

For silly reasons and serious ones, you are undoubtedly as guilty as I am for often feeling emotions that bring us down – anger, fear, sadness, anxiety, irritation, stress, worry. 

Often we just let these negative emotions run their course – for a few minutes or many days – until something happens that lifts us out of our various funks to make us feel better.

This weekend, I listened as a Buddhist monk gave one answer to address this: Don’t wait for something to happen, instead train your mind to have a different attitude. Be mindful, be happy. It’s intrinsic, not extrinsic and we are in complete control about how we feel. If we only know it.

The best articulation of this advice that I heard was in a TED talk that I watched recently.

Have a watch, and listen carefully. Hopefully, you won’t be sorry.  Instead, perhaps it can be a life-changing fourteen and a half minutes? I hope.

Filmed June 2013 at TEDGlobal 2013

David Steindl-Rast: Want to be happy? Be grateful

The one thing all humans have in common is that each of us wants to be happy, says Brother David Steindl-Rast, a monk and interfaith scholar. And happiness, he suggests, is born from gratitude. An inspiring lesson in slowing down, looking where you’re going, and above all, being grateful.

TED Talk Want to be happy

 

Stop. Look. Go.

And don’t ever underestimate gratitude!

:

: