THE COST OF A VOTE
THE COST OF A VOTE
Fr Paul
Lelen Haokip
Shareholders trade their fortune in
the share market. Tycoons trade their wealth in commerce. Writers trade their
mind in books. Of course, every eligible voter in the Republic of India trade
his or her future five years in one ‘single vote’. This is a costly trade, a
future with vision or a future with confusion. You can’t avoid religion and
politics. They may not be one but they affect each other.
After the 61st Constitutional
Amendment Act in 1988, the voter's age is reduced to 18 years from 21 (article
326 in the Indian Constitution). Perhaps this was to encourage mature judgment
in voting for one’s representative and early participation in nation building. It
will be absurd to sit back and grumble thinking I am not able to do anything in
governance. No. The Constitution of India has given you a big privilege to
decide your life and future with the right to vote for MLAs and MPs at the age
of 18. This is your tool, your right, your weapon and your future.
Know your
Candidate
Every candidate comes with a broad
manifesto. There will be finer nuances of the broad manifesto as well. Read,
re-read, discuss and give chance to the candidate to spell out his or her
dreams for you and the society. We need to have civil debates and discussions
about our concerns with the intending candidate. Then decide by yourself for
yourself. We need educated and broad minded persons who can articulate the
nuances of the Constitution in front of us and behind us. We need persons who
are responsible and honest. We need persons who can take us forward, not those
who snub us and make us depend on them for eternity. That would not be leadership;
it may akin to dictatorship in democratic clothing.
Whom to Vote for
Do
not merely look at the faces of candidates, their community or their finance.
You have the power to elect. Vote for those who will take you ahead in life,
those who will stick out their necks to safeguard the constitutional rights,
those who know the how’s and ways of
democracy. Vote for true leaders, not
for those who think they are leaders.
Do not cast your precious vote for those who can’t take criticisms and evaluation. They are immature to lead us. Rather
vote for those who accept failure and try to improve upon it. They are our
leaders with maturity. “Progress is impossible without change, and those who
cannot change their minds cannot change anything” said George Bernard Shaw. It
is wiser to exercise informed decision than regret for negative surprises. Vote
for peace, unity and ethnic co-existence in your land. Humans can survive
together for prosperity. Annihilation mind-set and hatred are devil’s powerful ploys
to stagnate human development and strangulate your dreams.
Value your Vote
To value your vote, you need to
first find your own value. If you don’t value yourself, you are likely to trade
your vote. Would you receive rupees 2000 and suffer for the next five years or
say no to ‘Rupees 2000’ and see positive things happening with you and round
you? Why are we so cheap to trade 5 years of our future with some meals and
drinks? If you truly know the value of your vote, you will not trade with it. Your
one vote equals to buying five years of your future.
Blame Game
Blaming others is a natural instinct
many of us perform daily without any hesitation. If you enter the river, you
are sure to get wet. If you elect this or that candidate, you are sure to get
the worth of that person. If you have consciously voted for a person who
promised to build a bridge where no river exists, then you have not done your
homework. Once you vote for him or her, you have not right to complain about it
because you contributed to that election. Don’t blame the elected person. Blame
yourself. And if you dare to criticize something, you should already have a
better alternative to offer.
Beware of
Communal Politics
It is true that everyone somehow
favours his or her own community. But when it comes to your voting right,
beware of those who engage in communal polity. This standard of politics is
cheap and do not command our respect. The world is not composed of one
community. Rather, different communities living and progressing as if in a
garden of variety is the mosaic picture of the world today. Therefore, support
those who support variety of cultures and appreciate creativity in society.
Heretogeneity is a better option than homogeneity where values of acceptance
and diversity are nurtured.
Age of Advocacy
Anyone who agrees with you need not
be your friend, and anyone who disagrees with you need not be your enemy
either. Maturity is to see the point of acceptance and difference.
Personalities such as Cicero and Caesar were among the greatest Roman lawyers
and advocates. Advocacy is best explained in a handbook
for planning advocacy by Save the Children Fund, UK. It says that “advocacy is
a social change process affecting attitudes, social relationships and power
relations, which strengthens civil society and opens up democratic spaces”. Therefore,
advocacy requires coordination, strategic thinking, right information, 360
degree communication, outreach and mobilization. Ritu R. Sharma from the
Academy for Educational Development describes advocacy as a tool for “putting a
problem on the agenda, providing a solution to that problem and building
support for acting on both the problem and the solution”.
As you are preparing to vote, MK
Gandhi’s list of the seven social sins is worth a reflection: Wealth without work. Pleasure without
conscience. Knowledge without character. Commerce without morality. Science
without humanity. Worship without sacrifice. Politics without principle. We
all are responsible for social change. The cost of our vote is immense. Let us
wisely build our future with our votes.
(The
writer can be reached at:
paulhowkeep@yahoo.co.in/paullelenhaokip@gmail.com/https://paullelenhaokip.blogspot.com/)
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