India fighting for role in global economy
Published: 15 April, 2010, 13:24
Edited: 20 April, 2010, 16:28
The leaders of the world's top emerging economies are getting together to work out how to jointly fight their corner for a greater say on the big global issues, with looking to take a leading role.









‘Shining India’ vs. ‘Real India” After capturing state power in 1947, India’s Brahminists (castes such as Brahmins, Banias, Lalas who form around 8% of the Hindu population) have done very well at the expense of the rest by systematically corrupting, monopolizing and looting all state institutions established by the British. Under the ruse of “Nehruvian socialism”, the Brahminists emerged as the primary rent-seeking commissar class in bureaucracies and the vast state-run industry apparatus. Even in the private sector, economic opportunity and access is primarily reserved for these castes under the ‘permit & license raj’ system. There is how the former clerical-class hired to serve British officers emerged as the new Indian elite and establishment over the past 6 decades. Despite their political affiliation, Brahminists are indoctrinated and motivated by hegemonic ideologies spawned by fascist right-wing organizations such as the “Arya Samaj” (“Aryan Society”, established 1876), Brahmo-Samaj, HinduMahaSaba, RSS (1926, modeled as the brown-shirted Nazi SS), etc. In a largely mythical and delusional history, Brahminists collectively fancy themselves as some perpetual ruling-class of India while the objective historical record clearly shows i) mostly non-Brahmanist rule in the subcontinent over the past 2500 years (e.g. Buddhist empires, Muslim empires, Sikh rule in north) and ii) continual influxes of peoples and cultures from central asia who formed new ruling orders (e.g. Greeks, Indo-Scythians or Sakas, Huns, Mughals, Pathans, British). This divergence between historical reality and Brahminist supremacist fantasy makes them wish to annihilate the identity and history of entire religions, peoples and cultures in southasia. In the west, Brahminists act as self-appointed ambassadors of their ‘Casteocracy’. This is why information on ‘real India’ is blocked and replaced by Brahminist spin on 'shining India’.