Wild Wild West

It is sad to see that most things being borrowed from the west today are unwanted or "bad" things. Glamourizing the lifestyles of the rich and the famous, upholding them as worthy of being emulated, encouraging carefree shopping, wasting resources for a reason no better than you being able to pay for them - things that India can very well do without.

The western pop-culture has led to the treatment of celebrities like gods, and this is outrageous. Why is Salman Khan still a hero after the Black buck and DUI cases? Why does Sanjay Dutt still have a fan following - after he has pleaded guilty of possessing illegal weapons and knowing personally those who bombed the commercial capital of the country in 1993? Do we need to be one of the unfortunate many who lost loved ones in those serial blasts to understand that helping a terrorist activity in the narrowest of ways makes you a terrorist, a betrayer, a traitor? The sad thing is that these incidents have given us the impression that when you become a big actor in Bollywood, ties with the underworld are inevitable, and having such ties does not mean you are a traitor yourself. Really, is this the "reality of life" we are teaching our children?

Page 3 is a sad story. But, there are other negative fallouts of economic globalization. What's the new craze for the iPhone? It is just another phone, one with good ergonomics. Haven't we always had leaders like Apple if you take every appliance we use? Wasn't Sumeet mixer-grinder supposed to be better than the other mixies people had? Wasn't a BPL Colour TV a priced possession? Wasn't a Premier Padmini truly "premier"? Everyone knew these things. But there was never a craze for buying all of these as soon as people could. This was because we used to be guided by our needs, and not our wants. We wanted a Premier Padmini, but we didn't need it, and so it could wait. We wanted the new wet-grinder, but we could use our mixie and the grinding stone, and so it could wait. This way of life has started to fade away. I completely agree that moving towards being a developed country gives you such liberties, but India is not there yet. So why this urge to buy more than one cellphone per person? Why the urge to get newer and newer versions of iPods? To get bigger and thinner TV's? Encouraging such mindless shopping will only increase the gap between the rich and the poor. We should not buy for the reason that we can afford something. What happened to our economic values? Wasn't the Indian middle class hailed as among the most economically progressive people, with a habit of saving and a practice of spending with prudence? Has the sight of money that our parents could not have dreamed of left us blinded? This reminds me of the saying by a great man from my hometown, which was aptly printed behind the passbook of the State Bank of Mysore - the place where I opened my first bank account - and it read "If you buy what you do not need, you will need what you cannot buy" - a quote credited to Sir M Vishveshwariah by the SBM. I will not get into the implications of the quote. But, looking at people today, I find it hard to believe that we were once the people guided by such principles.

"Dude, let's drive around, we still have a quarter tank to empty before we return the car" - an example of something that would piss me off. Being able to afford something, or having paid for something do not qualify as valid reasons to waste that thing, especially if it is a consumable. You do not have to empty the gas tank before you return the car just because you have paid for it. Not when you have no real use of the car. You do not have to use the AC in the hotel room when it is not required only because you got a room with AC. The west has pampered its people with such luxuries, what I would call unwanted luxuries. And thanks to Hollywood and TV, Indians are being influenced.

There are many things to learn from the west. But it is up to us to choose the good parts and leave out the bad. Sadly, we seem to be doing the exact opposite.

4 comments:

wanderlust said...

people who havent seen money for the first twenty years of their life are having wads of it for nothing, and don't know what to do... what else will happen.

Piyush Sethia said...

Well written post.. While I agree with all the point so said, lets agree on one thing : The so called economically prudent middle-class lived their life with limited money, hence the prudence.. It was a matter of survival, not choice, for most.

With the opening up of the economy, and new very well paying jobs being created, often where the son's starting salary is more than his dad's after 30 years, the need to be fiscally conservative will obviously disappear.. There is no need to lament about it.

And to be very honest, what on earth do you do with the money if you do not actually spend it?? Other uses of this money : As a equity investment or a real-estate investment would trigger bubbles in these segments, causing a possibly bigger collapse later. Note that I agree with what you are saying, am just being the devil's advocate..

The last point, you cannot blame the rich for being rich.. Agreed that the rich-poor divide is not good for the country as a whole, but blaming the rich for getting rich is not the solution..

ego said...

Probably, I am a bit late here.

While I understand your gripe against people "wanting" stuff, I think it can be put more clearly. I don't think there is anything wrong in having wants. Artha and Kaama are both Purushartha's or man's purposes in life. What should however bother us is the moral emptiness in these wants. The narrow mentality where we want our "wants" to satisfy only us. The outright materialism, which makes us give in to this use-and-throw mentality.

We've seen the outcome of this mentality in the past few months. People are now complaining of not having a moral envelope around their wants. But then, people get what they asked for. It's all Karma, nei ?

Aravind said...

@ Piyush

I highlight that I am not speaking against people wanting things, but am against people wanting to waste things. I am very much a materialistic being driven sometimes by my wants. But, if my want is hurting someone, I would refrain from doing it. I am blaming the rich, not for being rich, but for being irresponsible while being rich (which is every so often the case).

@ ego

You hit the nail on the head with the 'moral emptiness' in our wants bothering us.