A Treatise on CPM on its 30th Birthday
West Bengal Forum:
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A Treatise on CPM on its 30th Birthday
By dave on Wednesday, July 18, 2007 - 06:04 am: Edit PostMy knowledge of the communist party and its affiliates is very limited. And I want to take this time to express my vulnerable ignorance of the important figures of the board. I would also like to take this time to reveal my stance on the political spectrum. I am a conservative, but not to the extent that I hate change. I am also a pro-capitalist and don’t appreciate a communist regime. But, West Bengal is a whole another ball game. The party’s control over the state is hardly controlled, rather it is elected into power over and over again, making this party just as democratic as the Congress Party of India. The communist party has catalyzed its plank with enormous steps over the past 30 years. Today, its seeking a new road, a road that has come under huge scrutiny by the corrupt leftist. CPM’s road to industrialization is not a spur-of-the-moment idea sketched up to invigorate the new youth of the state but a well decisive plan etched in the very heart of the mastermind, whoever that might be, 30 years ago. West Bengal is the only state in the world, that is following a steady and stable path of stabilization to become a first class society. Over the course of 30 years, West Bengal has seen massive innovation in its agricultural sector, and it requires just those 20 or so years to become a stable agrarian society but now its time to revamp again. Industrialization is just the new step in the ladder, that has become the main goal of the all knowing and all powerful Bengal’s communist party, which is far different from the one witnessed by the natives of USSR. The farmer’s rebellion in Nandigram and Singur is expected but without much thought, should be forgotten as just another history in the making as West Bengal sheds its skin. However, it almost seems that the movements in Nandigram and Singur are just the spark of a revolution, one on a large scale. Contradictory to the thought, the CPM is getting a taste of its own medic . But the CPM can’t and shouldn’t budge. The Government has every right to mow down anyone that comes in its way of turning Bengal into a capitalist society and freeing it of unruly pheasants. Farmers such as the ones in Singur and other such isolated areas have no right to disobey laws and rules in a state that doesn’t belong to them. The authorities must take stern action against aliens that tries to harm the economy and well being of Bengal in any way. Extermination might be a little too harsh, but they should definitely be looking into deportation. In a further stance, Citizens of Bengal who doesn’t support the government, should be shunned and labeled as traitors to their state and, if proven to be harmful, exterminated from the region. Such actions might sound ruthless if taken by the government, but the government have no choice but to think of the welfare of the larger people that supports them. It is the right of the government to maintain a democracy in democratic India, and thus should take firm actions against those who interfere in the freedom of innocent bystanders. All protestors, street gangs, and armed pheasants should be suppressed at any cost if Bengal wants to move ahead with its magnanimous plan.
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