Russia and Ukraine are involved in a full-blown conflict and the world including India are taking lessons from it. Witnessing how the crisis unfolded, India is taking lessons in the sectors in which it is still to be ‘Aatmanirbhar’.
But, the left media portals like The Print cannot digest India’s growth, and their recent article “There was a gap in BJP’s UP campaign. Putin filled it” symbolizes their hatred towards India’s growth.
Lessons from Ukraine
Ukraine is being invaded by Russia and the conflict has reached Ukraine’s capital Kyiv. The world is going through a crisis, and the countries are taking lessons.
India is in a strong position diplomatically, but there are some lessons for India as well.
Read More: Lessons from Ukraine: Countries that don’t have nukes will cease to exist
The Russia-Ukraine conflict has taught the Indians to respect former Prime Minister Atal Vihari Vajpayee’s decision to go nuclear. India at the time of Pokhran II not only faced sanctions from the West but, also endured backlash from not so intellectual left-liberal class who wanted ‘peace’. Today, the message is loud and clear, the countries that don’t have nukes will cease to exist.
Another important lesson for India is to decrease dependency on the West for technologies. The response of tech giants like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Google is a lesson for India too, that India needs to be self-reliant in the tech sector as well.
Read More: American Big Tech has killed Russia’s E-Infra. India needs to create it’s own E-Infra super soon
Not to mention, the Western superpower did not provide us with GPS information and ditched us during the Kargil war, and they can do it again. Therefore, as India became self-reliant in GPS by inventing its own NavIC, it needs to go ahead the same way in other sectors too.
Read More: Batting for ISIS terrorists, The Print has achieved a new low!
Russia attacked Ukraine, to do Yogi favours: The Print’s absurd report
A leader like Prime Minister Narendra Modi understands the need for India to become self-reliant very well. Hence, he initiated a program like ’Atmanirbhar Bharat’ that was mocked by the opposition initially.
This is the message PM Modi was giving at one of his rallies in Uttar Pradesh. He said in his Bahraich rally that India needs to be powerful and only a strong leader can make it happen. By this, he was signalling the strong and tough leadership presented not only by him but also by Uttar Pradesh’s CM Yogi Adityanath.
The call of PM Modi to select a strong leader was lapped up by the left media group The Print, as an opportunity to malign the ruling party’s image.
The feature-length article describes the three factors of BJP’s campaign. First is brand Modi and the welfare-oriented approach of governments. The second is the construction of Ram Mandir in the Ayodhya and Kashi Vishwanath corridor, which The Print mentions as polarising. Accompanied by this the article elaborates the zero-tolerance policy of CM Yogi in the perspective of ‘bulldozing’. The third comes ‘nationalism’, which has been connected to the Ukraine Russia war.
Dear The Print, be a little nationalist
The Print not only mocks the Indian Government for its nationalistic agenda but also the citizens for supporting them. But then and now, they fail to set a counter anti-India narrative.
The Print needs to understand that Indians have understood the importance of nationalism and are witnessing the perks of electing a nationalist leader. At a time when superpower America has abandoned its citizens in war trapped Ukraine, four Indian ministers are standing tall at the borders of Ukraine to bring back Indians.
PM Modi, asking Indians and UPites to elect a strong, bold and tough leader may be looked at as a part of his campaign. But he is doing no wrong in telling the public that he and his government will stand rock tall for their motherland.
Be it going nuclear or raising its GPS tracking app NavIC, in every era there exist some kinds of ‘The Print’ and, India needs to be aware of such ‘species’.