I would be glad if you are furious at me for raising such a ridiculous question. But the fact is, that disgusting question is the ongoing opinion poll at
one of the leading English news channels - saw it primetime around 8.30 to 9 pm tonight.
While I have been thinking all along my life that I have the right to stay anywhere in the country, these folks at NDTV seem to be ignorant to such rights. Okay, let's give the benefit of doubt. Even if the intent was to prove to the public that a vast majority are going to answer it with an emphatic "No", aren't there better ways to frame? Perhaps, 'Are Mumbaikars intolerant towards residents from other state?' makes a better question? Media's operational style to frame short & hitting questions, sadly, churns out such insensitive ones. And by doing that they are no distinct from the short-sighted opportunistic politicians. While the latter creates & exploits divisive sentiments, the former rides on the perceived momentum with shameless insensitivity.
On a closing note, a few excerpts from the
news on the same channel's website.
Desperate to grab headlines, the MNS workers have been calling up select media houses and informing them of their plans to attack cabs and shops.
They even called a Hindi television channel and went with them to Ghaktkopar station. They boarded a compartment of a local train and beat up some North Indian vendors, purely for publicity.
While the piece nails Raj Thackeray with...
There have been no signs of remorse from the man, who has plunged Mumbai into a senseless cycle of action and retaliation.
...
But most political analysts believe that regardless of the headlines he has made. Raj Thackeray's attempts to play the divisive politics of identity will backfire in the only city, where he has any political base.
one is left wondering about the need for the following statement.
But Raj Thackeray, seen as increasingly irrelevant in the politics of Mumbai seems to have earned his 15 seconds of fame.
My dear Media-wallas, please give us some sensible questions to express our opinion.
Update: This '
right view', from Tarun Vijay, sure made me question myself. [Landed on that piece from
here and
here.]
And to quote the media part,
The media houses have their nation shrunk in ad revenues and TRP ratings and anything that enhances it overshadows the broad, pan-Indian concern. Hence the daily doses of a tamasha called news gets spread with musical effects and a thousand times repeats of the same 10 second clips with special effects and an anchoring that surpasses the dramatics of a street madari – “dekho dekho dekho-ek tamasha dekho”. The victim is truth and objectivity, but just as the Rai Bahadurs of colonial times didn't care what Bhagat Singh was sacrificing his life for, we too love our comfort zones.