Home > Author > P.V. Narasimha Rao
1 " Where motivation was concerned, there was hardly any difference between a caveman and a civilised human.The desire to live, and live as well as the next man, was common to all.The point at which virtually all of mankind began to develop a sense of discontent was when it discovered the hiatus between desire and capability. "
― P.V. Narasimha Rao
2 " To keep choosing between the one kind of damage and the other was unprofitable. Wisdom lay in preventing or avoiding damage altogether, of both kinds. "
― P.V. Narasimha Rao , The Insider
3 " The press. I believe that each one is as good as the best in the profession. However, their difficulty is that their job essentially lies in describing the way things go wrong.Most reporters subconsciously believe that all ministers are nitwits, or ought to be if they're true to type. Journalists relish the performance of ministers who mess up with wrong answers and cringe for publicity. "
4 " Chaudhury was further struck by the fact that each politician came to be identified by his or her main or only vice, which shrouded all the virtues.In the political field, frailty was the banner held aloft over each person's chariot, announcing only vulnerable points to the wide world. "
5 " The caste factor loomed larger with every passing day, and Indiraji and everyone in the high command had noticed it. This unmistakable trend had appeared in the political process and threatened to overwhelm it eventually.A casteless society thus seemed to be impossible, at least in the short run, as matters stood. It was a grotesque irony for a party which proclaimed castelessness as its creed. "
6 " From 1959 onwards the situation on the border with China became increasingly tense. It soon became a cause for national concern.In the letters Chaudhury received from Jawaharlal Nehru, about China, he had a hunch about the divergence of views between Nehru and Sardar Patel.The NEFA Reverse, which occurred on 20 October 1962, rocked India's political and military foundations. The nation reacted with anger to the absoluteness of this event. In the words of Brig. John Dalvi, "1962 was a national failure of which every Indian is guilty. It was a failure in the Higher Direction of War, a failure of the Opposition, a failure of the General Staff (myself included); it was a failure of responsible public opinion and the Press. For the government of India, it was a Himalayan Blunder at all levels. "
7 " It is perhaps symbolic of power, Anand mused, that nervousness trails confidence like a shadow. You do something that you think is right, but the very next moment you are no longer sure. A host of critics assail you at once.They believe that you can't do anything right anyway, whatever you do. You end up with more doubts. Until you lose your sensitivity and persuade yourself that you're always right, whatever you do. "
8 " From the age-old climate of strict purdah enforced until recently in the state, the sudden change to increased personal freedom began to be seen as indistinguishable from promiscuity.When the people saw a man and woman together, any man and any woman, they would make barbed comments that reeked of sexual innuendo.Malicious tongues were desperately and subconsciously trying to violate social barriers by touching on this forbidden subject.For some it was also, perhaps unknown to themselves, a manifestation of repressed anger at the transgression of accepted codes that prevailed from the beginning to the end of people's lives. "
9 " To do good seemed to take a great deal of effort, like moving a mountain, while to do seemed easy.Worse still, many people took evil as the expected norm - until it was publicly detected in the actions of the person in power. Then it was played up relentlessly till it was out of all proportion to reality. Often, the person involved was ruthlessly crushed as a fly under a sledge-hammer. "
10 " The great attraction of public life seemed to be its expanding frontiers, its flexible horizons. It was a realm of infinite possibility, a task that was never concluded, a challenge that never abated. "
11 " Elections became an occasion to wage war, an opportunity for both groups and individuals to settle scores.Anyone could change his party at will. Anyone could desert any party at any time and re-enter it later, at his convenience.Candidates in some northern states captured polling booths like enemy military posts in war.The true spirit of democracy became a tattered illusion and a pathetic shadow of autocratic ambience that had existed in the country for centuries. "
12 " I think the most sacred right of man is to be happy. "
13 " So I came to care not so much for wealth, as such; I came to believe that the basic need is happiness. And I shall fight a system that equates happiness with wealth and proceeds to build social relations on the basis of that preposterous proposition "
14 " Appearance, make-up, not the real you; that was what politics was all about. Chaudhury became an expert in the nauseating art of political make-up. He learned how to mouth his party's ideology ritually and endlessly, without believing a word of it. "
15 " The Central leadership had neither permanent friends nor permanent foes in the states. It only had a stock of permanent tools. No two of them were alike and no one agreed with the rest, ever.Each gloated over his own 'pull' in Delhi and ran the others down for having 'fallen from grace'. They furnished regular reports to the Centre about each other's nefarious activities, exaggerated out of all proportion. Each of them waxed eloquent about the supposed CBI investigations ordered against the others. "
16 " In the group game, sometimes the last to join earns the greatest value because he's the one who scores the goal eventually. "
17 " The nation as a democratic entity, was where man's most potent institution, the state, assumed critical importance. If the state deployed its power to step up the hiatus (between desire and capability) further, the organism would break at some point. "
18 " In the high-profile political field, almost every important development could be traced to a clash of egos, sometimes necessary and beneficial, but often leading to catastrophe. "
19 " Anand's father said to him, "Look son, we've had no Lakshmi (wealth) in the family, ever. We had only one, Dhairya Lakshmi (the wealth of courage). Don't ever forsake her, or you will have nothing left to sustain you... "
20 " Anand remembered an adage which he had heard at the law college, that the troubles of a litigant in India begin after he obtains a decree and wants to get it executed. "