Delhi Is Choking, and It Reveals the Cost of the BJP’s Ideology
Delhi Is Choking, and It Reveals the
Cost of the BJP’s Ideology
Delhi’s air pollution has reached
levels many residents describe as unprecedented, even during periods when
crop-residue burning in Punjab is minimal or absent. The city is suffocating
through a crisis that affects health, productivity, and daily life, yet
meaningful structural intervention remains missing. For many, this
deterioration aligns directly with the political shift of 2025, when power
moved from the elected Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government to the Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP). Since that transition, governance in Delhi has increasingly
reflected financial extraction rather than public protection.
The warning signs were visible
even earlier. During AAP’s tenure, more than 1,100 trees were cut in the
capital under the authority of the Lieutenant Governor, an appointee of the
central government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. This occurred amid
worsening air quality and despite ecological objections. Cutting trees in a
city already gasping for air was not merely an administrative failure; it
reflected a worldview where environmental protection is secondary to
centralized power and expediency.
That worldview becomes even
clearer when examining healthcare and energy policy. Under AAP, Delhi received
24-hour electricity, 200 units of free power, and an additional 200 units at
half price, with the government absorbing costs to shield households. Electricity
was treated as a public service, not a profit center. Primary healthcare
followed the same logic. Mohalla Clinics provided free, preventive care at the
neighborhood level, reducing hospital burden and healthcare costs.
Since the BJP assumed control,
this model has been steadily dismantled. Power cuts have returned, electricity
bills have risen, and the promised 300 units of free power have not
materialized. Previous subsidies have been altered, while a growing share of
electricity is routed through private suppliers, including companies associated
with the Adani Group. In a city with relatively high purchasing power,
electricity has been transformed from a managed necessity into a revenue
stream.
This shift raises a deeper
ideological question. Electricity is generated using national natural resources
land, coal, water, sunlight, wind all of which belong collectively to the
people of the country. In responsible democracies, this creates an obligation:
power distribution should operate on a non-profit or limited-profit basis,
because electricity is no longer a luxury but a basic necessity in a modern
economy. When access to power determines education, healthcare, employment, and
even survival during heat waves, treating it as a vehicle for profit extraction
violates the principle of public ownership of natural resources.
Healthcare has followed the same
trajectory. Mohalla Clinics have been shut down or defunded, pushing patients
into larger hospitals and private facilities. Insurance schemes promising
coverage of up to ₹5 lakh for the poor are presented as welfare, but in
practice they reimburse private hospitals for treatment of illnesses that could
have been prevented through clean air and accessible primary care. What was
once free at the point of use is now paid for indirectly, with public money
flowing to private providers.
The political context surrounding
the 2025 election deepens public unease. Prior to polling day, AAP formally
raised concerns about large-scale voter removals across Delhi, affecting tens
of thousands of voters citywide. These objections were documented before the
results were known. While this article does not adjudicate the election, the
persistence of unresolved questions matters, particularly when a change in
power is followed by policies that consistently weaken public welfare.
Taken together, these
developments reveal a coherent ideological pattern. Environmental degradation
is tolerated. Public services are hollowed out. Crises are managed rather than
prevented. Each decision may appear administratively legal in isolation, but
collectively, they shift costs from the state to citizens and benefits toward
concentrated private interests.
An alternative model exists and
has been tested. It prioritizes prevention over profit, public services over
privatized extraction, and local welfare over centralized control. It treats
clean air, affordable electricity, and accessible healthcare as rights rooted
in public ownership of natural resources, not revenue opportunities. Delhi’s
experience shows that ideology is not abstract. It determines who breathes
clean air, who can afford power, and who bears the cost when governance fails.
A nation that chooses profit-driven governance over public welfare ultimately
pays far more than it ever collects.
Added Note:
Reports that more than 54,000
people in Delhi have died due to air pollution should shock the nation. They do
not. They confirm what millions already know and live with every day. I have a
close family member who lived in Delhi and now suffers from chronic breathing
problems. Each time he returns to the city, his condition worsens. This is not
anecdotal; it is the lived reality of an entire population.
Given how toxic Delhi’s air has
become, even this number feels sanitized. When a city’s air routinely damages
lungs, hearts, and brains, deaths caused by pollution do not always appear on
death certificates. They appear as asthma, heart failure, strokes, and weakened
immunity. The real toll is almost certainly far higher than what is officially
acknowledged.
What makes this crisis
unforgivable is not ignorance but indifference. When political power is secured
and maintained while pollution is allowed to worsen, human lives become
expendable. When governance treats illness, hospitalization, and death as costs
to be managed or profits to be extracted, morality collapses. In such a system,
suffering is normalized, and death itself becomes part of a business model.
This is not a natural disaster.
It is a political one.
What Arvind Kejriwal warned voters about before the 2025 Delhi election has largely come true. The Bharatiya Janata Party failed to deliver on its promises. Instead, it implemented exactly the outcomes Kejriwal predicted: power cuts, higher electricity costs, closure of Mohalla Clinics, weakening of government schools, and rising fees in private schools.
ReplyDeleteI state this plainly: Arvind Kejriwal and other senior Aam Aadmi Party leaders were arrested on false charges to undermine their credibility and weaken them politically ahead of the 2025 Delhi election. First Satyendar Jain, then Manish Sisodia, and finally Kejriwal himself were jailed, despite no convictions and eventual bail, exposing the hollowness of the cases. The strategy was obvious: repeat accusations, use arrests as punishment, and let suspicion do the rest. When this was combined with mass voter deletions and disputed additions raised before polling day, the outcome was engineered. Delhi’s citizens are now paying for it through higher costs, dismantled public services, and governance whose moral legitimacy is deeply compromised.
DeleteDelhi people deserve this voting BJPee..They have chosen religious retard bigots to cripple their own well being..
ReplyDeleteHahahahahahaha I like when people are direct
Delete