Does India Have a Colonial Consitituion Or is That a Mistaken View? | Karan Thapar

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 393

  • @satyamevjayate786
    @satyamevjayate786 Год назад +100

    Karan demolishes Sengupta. TOTALLY.
    BRAVO KARAN, HATS OFF TO YOU SIR.👊👊👊

    • @bhaveshjethwa5434
      @bhaveshjethwa5434 Год назад

      Karan always interupts and makes it a mockery who doesn't want to come the right answer to come which he does since his career started

    • @padmavihar
      @padmavihar Год назад

      Donkey thy name is Karan

    • @rahulbasumatary-yq9vf
      @rahulbasumatary-yq9vf Год назад

      ​@@padmaviharIgnor you dont watch the wire you have godhi media.

  • @darpan308
    @darpan308 Год назад +42

    Sengupta wrote this book with an obvious agenda to get a few brownie points from the ruling party.
    But Mr Karan Thapar brilliantly negated every attempt made by him to belittle our great constitution by ridiculously labelling it as 'colonial'.
    Our Constitution is dynamic and has the ability to change itself for the good with time, and that is the most beautiful part of it !
    Salute to Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar and the members of drafting committee for thier painstaking efforts in giving us this great text. 🙏

  • @LaxmanraoWaghmare-bc8mv
    @LaxmanraoWaghmare-bc8mv Год назад +99

    One of the Greatest reporter
    karan thapar ji you are absolutely right in defending Indian constitution

  • @rajkeplerhume5002
    @rajkeplerhume5002 Год назад +86

    At times, Karan does come across as a journalist who is impatient, angry and in a hurry but the erudition, learning and articulation of this brilliant journalist is unmatched. Argya, it seems, severely underestimated Karan's articulation and reasoning. He came unprepared. Karan is among the very few journalists I'd pay to listen or read.

    • @ravularanadheer2425
      @ravularanadheer2425 Год назад +10

      Arghya wrote a book, so no need to prepare as such. He would have failed even if he had come prepared because of the hollow arguments he made in his book. He shouldn't have written this book.

    • @maksudhusain1508
      @maksudhusain1508 Год назад +1

      Karan Sir is Karan Sir no match to him.Nice analysis of constitution.Salute to Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar 🙏🏿

    • @sanjaygadhalay1523
      @sanjaygadhalay1523 Год назад +1

      I concur

    • @S.K.B-q4h
      @S.K.B-q4h Год назад +2

      😅😅😅 modi ji aise hi pani nhi pite karan ji ke samne.

  • @franciscaphilip8584
    @franciscaphilip8584 Год назад +8

    Karan Thapar is a blessing to the country. We are so proud of you. Don’t let anyone influence your thoughts on our constitution
    You are absolutely right in defending our constitution bcoz it’s the sincere work of our most intelligent most educated and most discussed document eventually accepted by the powers that be.

  • @ashutoshb7612
    @ashutoshb7612 Год назад +46

    Becoming bigger fan of Karan Thapar with every interview!

  • @ujjwalk.4925
    @ujjwalk.4925 Год назад +59

    Sengupta has written a book but he is not able to justify even the title in any way possible!!

    • @tubester2023
      @tubester2023 Год назад +3

      I think he might have been able to justify his view if Thapar let him speak for one min straight without interruption.

    • @loneranterism
      @loneranterism Год назад +1

      🛎

  • @mrgyani
    @mrgyani Год назад +16

    The length, breadth & depth of Thapar's knowledge 🤯

  • @dhanaazm7897
    @dhanaazm7897 Год назад +10

    What a brilliant discussion. This should go down as an ideal debate. Thank you, Mr. Thapar. Absolutely brilliant.

  • @josephpalathunkal4526
    @josephpalathunkal4526 Год назад +82

    Indian Constitution is based on human dignity and human freedom focussing on the human individual, not human community. I don't find any base to call it colonial.

    • @asmirann3636
      @asmirann3636 Год назад +5

      The Indian system of Governance is very much colonial.
      All this dysfunctional Judiciary, Police, Administration are a remnant of colonial times. Colonial rule was designed to oppress the masses so that the British could plunder as much from the country. This is why these institutions were built not to govern but to oppress and loot.
      A common man in British times had no rights, no legal remedies, no dignified existence. The same systems were adopted in the independent India. Things have improved a few percentage points but overall the Indian system is still colonial in mindset.

    • @astee.007
      @astee.007 Год назад +1

      on the contary the constitution is heavily biased against Individual. and freedom is never espousd by the constitution.

    • @padmavihar
      @padmavihar Год назад

      What's this colonial please explain

    • @ssktrucking4791
      @ssktrucking4791 Год назад

      It’s central power colonial system suck everything out of states

    • @asmirann3636
      @asmirann3636 Год назад

      @@padmavihar Me Lord, Black Courts, Government Bungalows, Lutyens, No Accountability of government officers, Corruption, Bad Policing, Bad Judiciary etc. are examples of Colonial.
      More specifically, Colonial is the mentality that a tiny elite shall rule over the masses for the benefit of the Elite and at the expense of the masses. This is what British Raj was about. It was a system designed to oppress, loot and impoverish the masses. So that the British thieves could become rich.
      Things have changed a bit since then. But the colonial hangover still exists in the Indian Administration, Executive, Police and Judiciary.

  • @shkh3800
    @shkh3800 Год назад +23

    Superb. Absolutely amazing. Hats off to Karan Thapar for making mincemeat out of the author and the entire oremise of his book. 🙌🏾👊🏽👏🏾

  • @PradeepSingh-hh1py
    @PradeepSingh-hh1py Год назад +23

    Kudos to karan for fighting every argument in accordance to Indian constitution ❤

  • @godsdontplaydice
    @godsdontplaydice Год назад +15

    Brilliant interview. Calls out all the BS in the best way possible.

  • @manusebastian1339
    @manusebastian1339 Год назад +15

    Watching this was like watching a defendant admitting the plaintiff's case during cross-examination. The interviewer exposed the superficial and hollow claims of the interviewee and the latter was essentially agreeing to all the points raised by the former.

  • @prfchaos
    @prfchaos Год назад +23

    These are arguments which Sangh want to float to move towards constitution overhaul. There nothing wrong in changing it but intentent is what should be looked at. This guy wrote article saying hindumahasabha wrote constitution where both Hindu and Muslims as equals. That’s a paradoxical statement knowing what Hindu mahasabha is.

  • @fredrickdemello2260
    @fredrickdemello2260 Год назад +38

    Our constitution is amazing. It's just some problematic laws that need to be changed

  • @rajeshkumarchand8802
    @rajeshkumarchand8802 Год назад +8

    Excellent interaction. Probably it has become a fashion to criticize our constitution and the great leaders who fought our freedom and gave us such a great document. The Constitution is a living document and has been subjected to changes from time to time. That's the value of our constitution. Let political leadership and decision makers apply themselves in a moralistic manner and bring out changes which are good for the nation and not for their own political existence.

  • @nalinimenon641
    @nalinimenon641 Год назад +4

    Here Karan Thapar is on top of his game! A brilliant interview on how to decimate your interviewee with gentle politeness!!

  • @RJ-nr8lh
    @RJ-nr8lh Год назад +8

    Single handedly saving Indian Journalism.

  • @Anon999-qk3ue
    @Anon999-qk3ue Год назад +27

    Yes our Constitution was written in immediate aftermath of the colonial period, so it absorbed many aspects of the polity of the time, such as GOI Act, 1935. But it has a framework which allows us to update our laws and introduce modern perspectives as the context demands. Some people, in their insecurity over colonialism, would rather have us go even further back into medievalism.

    • @kiranraavi4240
      @kiranraavi4240 Год назад +5

      Mostly I would agree. I think the main reason provisions like IPC/CrPC have not been updated is lack of political will as well as stagnant social climate, rather than legal Constitutional hurdles. That being said, even Babasaheb had predicted that democracy would not last in modern India. Though he was a brilliant man, I hope he is wrong in this case...

    • @Anon999-qk3ue
      @Anon999-qk3ue Год назад +3

      @@kiranraavi4240 Dr Ambedkar was brilliant I agree. But he also thought that communism would be far more dominant and prevalent than it has proven to be. His thoughts also are a product of his time, in which USSR was dominant. But now the only communist state is China, and even they are really just authoritarian. His main misgivings and disgruntlement with Indian polity were due to lack of any real initiative to help the bahujan/dalit communities, for which he was champion. Sociological change is also possibly more important than political changes; in fact the former often drives the latter. Even in this, Constitution gives us right to form societies and push for change lawfully, albeit outside of the legal domain. Constitution has given us every opportunity to thrive, we just need to seize it

    • @rishabhkumardwivedi
      @rishabhkumardwivedi Год назад +4

      Not just mediaevalism but tribalism!

  • @SiddharthSingh-vg2fu
    @SiddharthSingh-vg2fu Год назад +9

    Mr. Thapar really owned this debate. Excellent, fact based rebuttals of the Author are illuminating, albeit it also helped that the Author was arguing an indefensible point.

  • @krishmehra7188
    @krishmehra7188 Год назад +10

    Hats off to Karan Thapar, the author is agreeing with all that Karan says, tearing his books very basis to shred.

  • @shardsofice
    @shardsofice Год назад +7

    When he says "colonial" he just virtue signalling to RW mob. He could have simply said decentralisation is necessary. But no, let's call it "colonial".
    Karan did not give him any wiggle room, what a glorious takedown. Bravo !

  • @rajkeplerhume5002
    @rajkeplerhume5002 Год назад +25

    Argya,Oh you poor baby! Karan, stop tearing him apart. The kid is supremely nervous and doesn't know what to say.

  • @sekarselvakumar280
    @sekarselvakumar280 Год назад +29

    Mr Arghya Sengupta, wrote a book with the title 'colonial', the fashionable word of the year, but agrees to all that Mr Thapar confronted him with. It seems that there is an underlying scheme ostensibly asking for a new constitution. There is no concrete argument from Mr Sengupta. Blaming the constitutional framers for all the wrong doings of the present day rulers, irrespective of the political parties, is unfortunate.

    • @fredrickdemello2260
      @fredrickdemello2260 Год назад +3

      Exactly. This is the BJP modus operandi people close to them or RW "intellectuals" start making ridiculous claims about something this happens for a few months or years and eventually the government comes up with a controversial new bill. This is an attempt to normalise the idea that our constitution is colonial

  • @space-time-somdeep
    @space-time-somdeep Год назад +7

    Its always pleasant listening to counter narratives, although they are dumb..
    Thanks the wire. You guys are just precious offering for today's journalism landscape. ❤

  • @elizabethseshadri8167
    @elizabethseshadri8167 Год назад +7

    Brilliant lesson on how to challenge a faulty conclusion. Well done, Karan Thapar.

  • @rajeev7898
    @rajeev7898 Год назад +10

    Mr Thapar very convincingly blew away the defective hypothesis of Mr Sengupta.

  • @pvas-7
    @pvas-7 Год назад +2

    Excellent debate sir!!
    Very mindful ☺️

  • @vikastulsi
    @vikastulsi Год назад +19

    isn't that OBVIOUS from the fact that even BJP bringing bill to over-haul the IPC and CrPC could mostly - only RENAME and RE-GROUP different sections.. and very less on actual change...

  • @sureshbopparaju6667
    @sureshbopparaju6667 Год назад +19

    What a fascinating discussion!! Hope Arnab Goswami and his ilk watch this and learn how to conduct debates!

    • @anwarhosain2498
      @anwarhosain2498 Год назад +2

      Please don't take the name of Arnab Goswami,he is a shameless creature.

    • @MotilalJ
      @MotilalJ Год назад

      🧠 is needed for that. 😂😂😂

  • @akashmathew9489
    @akashmathew9489 Год назад +13

    Although the author have some important points regarding the consitution none of his arguments point to his conclusion of it being colonial. It looks like the book came from an idea but the idea did not have any substance to back it up but wrote the book anyway. Good discussion nonetheless.

    • @tk3un
      @tk3un Год назад

      He is a sanghi and not an author.

  • @vadivelayuthamudaiyanathan3428
    @vadivelayuthamudaiyanathan3428 Год назад +10

    The current situation is the proof that constitution of India allowed dictatorship following the perfect democratic route. In any system centralization will result in dictatorship. This is what happening now in India.

  • @sunny123k
    @sunny123k Год назад +8

    The Government of India Act, 1935 was retained, with modifications, because of no other reason than administrative convenience. India had already been governed with that Act and changing the administration entirely would have created an unnecessary burden. So, instead of wasting time on re-imagining the administration, the focus was on contemplating a nation with liberty, equality, fraternity and justice as its ideals and objectives, and incorporating the ideas which evolved during the freedom struggle. For that around 60 constitutions of the world were studied and the best of the ideas were borrowed and adapted. On being accused of borrowing, Ambedkar had said in the Constituent Assembly, “Nobody holds any patent rights in the fundamental ideas of a constitution." You don't need to re-invent the wheel. Since the administrative provisions from the GOI Act, 1935 make up a majority part of the Constitution of India, it is criticized as being colonial. Though that only implies that the administration is colonial if at all. The rest of the ideas that were borrowed, Indianised and adopted from different constitutions give a truly international, democratic, liberal and humanistic attribute to the Constitution of India and also make it the lengthiest and most elaborate constitution in the world, which caters to the diversity of Indian society.

  • @anilgeorge9988
    @anilgeorge9988 Год назад +6

    Karan congrats for a very stimulating and brilliant discussion. Our learned friend jumped to quite a few conclusions to support his shallow premise

  • @dhananjaypatil3116
    @dhananjaypatil3116 Год назад +4

    Most remarkable aspect being how seriously Mr Karan Thapar takes himself. How well prepared he is always. He ought to work very hard to read , dissect , analyse intellectual he is going to interview. Many times he comes across as one with better reasoning & rationale than individuals he is interviewing. If Mr Karan had been a lawyer, he would have been a top notch lawyer & his counterparts & judges would have been scared to face him 😂 . He can destroy anyone on cross examination. Nation lost a great lawyer but more importantly gained a great journalist. He uses words , phrases, quotations as knives to slice his opponents. I would happily prescribe potent anxiolytics to his interviewees 😅

  • @rishabhkumardwivedi
    @rishabhkumardwivedi Год назад +4

    Sengupta should understand that it's always the people in power down to whom lies the responsibility of being morally upright in following conventions and "culture," and if they choose to somehow skirt around constitutional morality, it's not the constitution that's at fault, but them.

  • @A-Tom69
    @A-Tom69 Год назад +12

    Karan sir, इतना मत धोया करो ।
    Please don’t drill poor writers so badly that they think a thousand times before coming to your interviews 😅.
    Having said that, I thoroughly enjoyed it. Cheers and thank you 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏👍

  • @gitabelliappa1164
    @gitabelliappa1164 Год назад +6

    Fascinating discussion Karan. Points you raised are thought provoking .

  • @sukhadac
    @sukhadac Год назад +5

    Masterclass in the art of the follow up questions. Great interview

  • @sherbodh5828
    @sherbodh5828 Год назад +5

    Karan I like that you have deflated this sophist conclusively.

  • @rammohan4617
    @rammohan4617 Год назад +4

    For some part of the discussion, Thapar was not visible , but some other image , papers on his lap ? , was shown. Shoddy camera work or something wrong with my desktop screen ? Despite that , a great discussion 👍

  • @prateekgupta1785
    @prateekgupta1785 Год назад +1

    My reading is that Mr. Sengupta's answers are "simplistic"

  • @adityamookerjee.
    @adityamookerjee. Год назад +12

    The constitution will only endure if it is regarded appropriately. How are the people of India supposed to be thinking properly according to our political leaders, if they are addressed as they are during political rallies and gatherings? Remember the interview Rahul Gandhi gave Arnab Goswami on Times Now, before the BJP came to power? If you speak to people in such a manner, do you really feel that the constitution of India matters at all to people? It seems all political leaders from Modi to Kharge address gatherings in a manner that could be avoided. The people of India seem to accept this as if it is normal.

  • @Seekho_Seekhao
    @Seekho_Seekhao Год назад +3

    This was such a good academic conversation and discussion. It does seems like Karan Thappar was going by the facts and Arghya Sengupta was going through feelings.

  • @rosarosa6715
    @rosarosa6715 Год назад +1

    Nice discussion. Appreciate that the author is not dogmatic and stood upto the grilling from Karan fair n square.

  • @aadilsultan4313
    @aadilsultan4313 Год назад +8

    Crux: He agrees on everything.

  • @purushottamwelhe4514
    @purushottamwelhe4514 Год назад +2

    Dr. Ambekar said that, freedom, equality, justice and fraternity, we didn't borrowed from french,but taken from Buddha's Dhamma.

  • @Watchandlearn70
    @Watchandlearn70 Год назад +12

    I'm sure he must have read the book again written by himself after going back home.

    • @tk3un
      @tk3un Год назад

      😂😂😂
      Every other idiot is writing gibberish in books these days using ChatGPT.

    • @Watchandlearn70
      @Watchandlearn70 Год назад

      @@tk3un I don't think the source is ChatGPT . It's probably from somewhere else 😉..👉🪷🧑🏻‍🦳®️ss

    • @tapaz179
      @tapaz179 Год назад

      😂😂😂

    • @skhemlangmarweinmarwein8559
      @skhemlangmarweinmarwein8559 7 месяцев назад

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @_ArnabGhosh
    @_ArnabGhosh Год назад +3

    Karan got him ( definitely a closet sanghi ) at 10:54 . ( begins at 10:44 though )
    A masterclass on how to conduct interviews .
    Confrontational but factual.

  • @rocketsinghism
    @rocketsinghism Год назад +4

    Kudos to fearless & pro-people, responsible journalism of Haran Thapar. I've supported the Wire, taking its annual membership.

  • @hemusinghjain9422
    @hemusinghjain9422 Год назад +2

    Thanks Karan, well post-mortem

  • @gauravghosh7728
    @gauravghosh7728 Год назад +2

    One doesn't have to be a Rhodes scholar to figure out paani pike uth jana behter hota.

  • @aditya931
    @aditya931 Год назад +2

    Everything is simplistic according to Mr Sengupta

  • @UjjalDosanjh
    @UjjalDosanjh Год назад +1

    Karan
    You have executed a fine take down of the hollow critique the author offered. Bravo.

  • @ajsujit
    @ajsujit Год назад +2

    I agree with larger idea put forward by sengupta. I often wondered why we didn't get rid of all british era laws after independence. Why couldn't we write all laws from scratch. Most importantly, why is indian police still ruled by indian police act 1861 which was drafted to curtail freedom of citizens after 1857 revolt?

  • @debashistalukdar5523
    @debashistalukdar5523 Год назад +7

    This has been the best debate/interview on this channel as far as I am concerned. Both the sides were equally commendable in their command over the language as well as knowledge of the topic.

  • @humptydumpty4773
    @humptydumpty4773 Год назад +6

    Arghya Sengupta will regrett this interview with Karan. Karan is a mountain of knowledge and information, and prepares well for all his interviews, including the one with Modi. The interviewee has been found wanting, more often than not, wherever thare are controversial topics.

  • @vanichatterjee87
    @vanichatterjee87 Год назад +2

    Thanks

  • @pkphilips2
    @pkphilips2 Год назад +4

    I think the current move to change the constitution is actually moving more and more powers from the state and centralising it at the union level - including the structure of the tax system

  • @cyrilpereira3996
    @cyrilpereira3996 Год назад +4

    Karan is brilliant.He induced greater ckarity

  • @vivekrajan4398
    @vivekrajan4398 Год назад +8

    Thapar just cooked him 😭

  • @philipkavilae5338
    @philipkavilae5338 9 месяцев назад

    Mr. Tapar with deep study and conviction. An aethist Savarkar ji is the model of Hindutuva. Is there Danger for Hinduism and all religions ? Are we going on a different and totally 😮 new secular way. 🙏🏽

  • @v_ovr_v
    @v_ovr_v Год назад +5

    Funny how the English Arghya is so fluently flaunting is also a colonial legacy!

  • @hrisikesh
    @hrisikesh Год назад +3

    If you don't mind, may I point it out that the word 'constitution' is misspelt in the title as well as the thumbnail?
    Firstly, these things may affect algorithms.
    Secondly, it's just my habit to notice things like that and point at it.

  • @surendrakamath9580
    @surendrakamath9580 Год назад +2

    Both are half right..argument can go both ways Constitution is colonial or anti colonial..!!

  • @yogeshgogawekar5284
    @yogeshgogawekar5284 Год назад +2

    Mr. Karan Thapar, thank you for your great questions to give us exact picture of Our Constitution. Our constitution is having the impact of our freedom movement. It is not colonial.
    Not satisfied the answer given by Mr. Sengupta

  • @madhusudankharwar1052
    @madhusudankharwar1052 Год назад +1

    Hello karan sir your interview is always fantastics. Thank you.

  • @twenty-twenty
    @twenty-twenty Год назад +4

    This was so delicious. Every time the author says “That’s right” a part of him dies inside

  • @kaleshmenon
    @kaleshmenon Год назад +3

    Now this is the kind of debate we should see in the parliament.. Great interview Mr Thapar and well played Mr Sengupta

  • @baqirhemraj7639
    @baqirhemraj7639 Год назад +1

    The term ‘constitution’ refers to the principles, rules and laws that establish and underpin a political system. The Constitution creates and defines the powers of different political institutions and determines how they should relate to each other. It sets out the limits of these powers and regulates the relationship between the state and its citizens. Constitutions place both limitations and obligations on governmental organisations in their relationship with the people and provide opportunities for the public to influence the political process. The important question is whether the present Indian constitution is properly implemented or not and why. Who is to be blamed for it?

  • @ganeshiyer5249
    @ganeshiyer5249 Год назад +9

    Arghya Sengupta usually has a keen legal eye but he comes second best in this discussion. Karan is a master

  • @saadhussaini100
    @saadhussaini100 Год назад +1

    Great conversation, enlightened us. Thanks

  • @nagarajanv6381
    @nagarajanv6381 Год назад

    Great debate. Both Karan and Mr. Sengupta are evenly matched although I am more sympathetic to Mr. Sengupta. We have a feudalistic democratic Constitution.

  • @dilipbari8765
    @dilipbari8765 Год назад +5

    Every rupee provided to Sengupta by University and by salary, must be recovered back.

  • @sasidash3903
    @sasidash3903 Год назад +3

    It has become fashionable in the present days to describe things colonial to attract attention and please the party in power.

  • @kmbanan9511
    @kmbanan9511 Год назад +2

    You have corned Sengupta very well. Sengupta as per my view wants a constitution which can run on its own without the intervention of people responsible to implement

  • @ajayg6358
    @ajayg6358 Год назад +2

    Bravo Karan!!!

  • @gadass4067
    @gadass4067 Год назад +1

    Very insightful discussion. ❤❤❤

  • @lalatendusamantasinghar6374
    @lalatendusamantasinghar6374 Год назад +3

    Can you please share....from where this author have his secondary education....is it from Sarswati Sishu Mandir....?

  • @rocketsinghism
    @rocketsinghism Год назад +8

    Yes, our Constitution has been heavily borrowed, rather, a copy of the Government of India Act 1935. In fact, both India & Pakistan have borrowed from this Act, and because of this, there are many features common b/w them, in both countries, the Central Govt can pull down, elected state govt, in no other democratic country, it is possible!

  • @navaramkumar
    @navaramkumar Год назад +2

    However good a Constitution may be, if those who are implementing it are not good, it will prove to be bad. However, bad a Constitution may be, if those implementing it are good, it will prove to be good

  • @gangadharhiremath7306
    @gangadharhiremath7306 Год назад

    Great mind blowing discussion.
    Nowhere else can we get such incisive thought provoking talk.
    But,half through the discussion,I developed great confusion about the word "colonial"
    What does that really mean?

  • @JayEnaar
    @JayEnaar Год назад +2

    Well done to Karan Thapar. I am left with the Q. Why ever did Mr Sengupta write this book?

  • @danielvictor3418
    @danielvictor3418 Год назад +1

    In spite of tilted scholarship and labelling loosely the constitution ‘colonial’ , our inability to see the failure of our character, is the extent to which I see now, how blind we all have become, including scholars and writers and many commoners, that we don’t see the colossal erosion of character and it’s horrendous nature straightaway and end trusting anybody to be our leaders.

  • @tararrum
    @tararrum Год назад +4

    If only more debates were so erudite and civil.

  • @Khalil-r1l
    @Khalil-r1l Год назад +1

    Karan, you did a fantastic job; you literally ripped him! The key idea of our constitution is about giving every citizen the human dignity and equality under law. And this very idea is not digestible to the groups like RSS and likes who wants to continue thousands years old practices that usurps the very rights that the constitution guarantees. So, now when BJP is in power, they are trying to bring back the same old rules by calling out everything that challenges their divisive and exploitative ideas as “colonial”. But they are mistaken, we Indians are not fools!

  • @waseemshoaib2673
    @waseemshoaib2673 Год назад +1

    Ask him why the deputy lok sabha speaker is vacant for nearly the whole 17th LS. There was a convention of appointing him "soon". When will "soon" arrive so that Birla should not feel lonely and not have to unwillingly go to the hot seat.

  • @sanjaygadhalay1523
    @sanjaygadhalay1523 Год назад

    "The secret of happiness is this: let your interests be as wide as possible, and let your reactions to the things and persons that interest you be as far as possible friendly rather than hostile."
    Bertrand Russel.

  • @Shepherd_in_quest
    @Shepherd_in_quest Год назад +10

    He wasted lot of papers writing a book 😂

  • @alexwolf4000
    @alexwolf4000 Год назад +1

    Grt conversation

  • @medonuopongen8148
    @medonuopongen8148 Год назад +1

    Hats off!!! To sir,Karan.the person who called himself Expert.😂.seems to agreeing with everything who is countering with his book . " he looks like a student in front sir,Karan. An intellectual interviewer 🙏

  • @ajkichurants2185
    @ajkichurants2185 Год назад

    This was a wonderful discussion but Karan absolutely owned it with his points.

  • @vampa7314
    @vampa7314 Год назад

    Karan sir just banged it with his intellectual

  • @TonyDCheruvathur
    @TonyDCheruvathur Год назад +1

    Brilliant interview. All through the interview, I had a feeling that the author must be some one from right wing intelligentsia but towards the end of the interview, the statistics he quoted does make me think otherwise. And it is a shame that our Constitution doesn't have a strong mechanism to prevent such injustices - About 87 lakh people are in prisons without following any of the rules prescribed for such arrests purely at the mercy of the officers and politicians responsible for their detention. It is a huge lacunae that this can happen to any of our citizens but the misusers of power always go scot free.

  • @RohitSharma-jg8ym
    @RohitSharma-jg8ym Год назад +1

    Brother got owned

  • @Healing556
    @Healing556 9 месяцев назад

    The term COLONIAL
    Is a spirit of Religious fanatic coming as an angel of light.

  • @fazlulkarim9123
    @fazlulkarim9123 Год назад +5

    Freedom movement was led by hindu and muslim uppercaste. It was Ambedkar who had given freedom to the people of India.

  • @MrPeaceGuy54
    @MrPeaceGuy54 Год назад

    One of the greatest strengths of the Indian constitution is its rather flexible nature. While our founders attempted to create the best possible vehicle, it was not a vehicle that was unchangeable. This is why we have had so many amendments. Perhaps they were able to foresee the moments of transformations that would inevitably appear without disregarding the fact that there can be a dynamic foundation. This is not that distant from the Vedantic ideas of Mahatma Gandhi.
    Edir: Mr Sengupta seems to assume that two different paths cannot reach the same destination. To think that our founders, all of whom were erudite, did not give any thought to the nature of the constitution and blindly accepted an existing structure makes little sense. Is it not possible that they analysed the structure and found it to be congruent with Indian values in many ways? The truth belongs to everyone. The British said that they believed in liberty, equality, and fraternity. Does that mean that we should not use those words? We can learn from others and make what is good in us even better. Values can align, which is why the constitution (if we are only focusing on the structure that was adopted) can be described as a nationalist constitution. This description gains strength when one takes into account the fact that, as Mr Thapar mentioned, many rights were added by the architects of our constitution. Mr Sengupta's insistence on calling the constitution colonial does not seem right to me. Imagine that the framers of our constitution had wholly discarded the pre-existing structure and begun afresh. If, after much deliberation, they ended up with a draft that shared almost all of the features of the colonial document, would we be justified in calling the draft nationalist merely because it has been formed by Indians? Who writes a letter does not change what it is. A will not become B if it was written by Deepak instead of John.
    Also, should we forget about the fact that the 1935 act was brought after a sustained campaign by our freedom fighters to give more rights to Indians? It introduced direct elections and granted provincial autonomy. It would also be worthwhile to mention that modern India's constitutional journey did not begin in the 1940s. The Nehru Report and the Karachi resolution had already been created.

  • @fauziaansari6243
    @fauziaansari6243 Год назад +1

    Mr. Karan Thappar please comment on the killing of a Muslim boy eating Prasad . Alas this is what Bharat has come to. It was better as India .
    Thanks to the PM