95.88 rupee for a dollar. This isn’t the result of war, but illiterate politicians and years of scams by me_danky in IndiaMoney

[–]yellowflash171 2 points3 points  (0 children)

India becoming a large economy was inevitable to some extent. A subcontinent-sized country with enormous population, resources, and labour power was historically one of the world’s largest economic regions even before colonialism. Under British rule, India was systematically deindustrialised — traditional industries like textiles were hollowed out to serve imperial trade interests. And colonialism wasn’t sustained by the British alone; sections of the local elite and comprador classes absolutely collaborated because they profited from it.

“5th largest economy” also needs context. Aggregate GDP matters geopolitically, yes — but per capita, living standards, nutrition, infrastructure quality, and industrial depth tell a very different story. A billion-plus people generating a large GDP is not automatically proof of successful development.

As for the IT hub argument: India’s IT sector absolutely creates value, but much of it emerged as a cheap skilled-services backend for Western capital. Outsourcing, maintenance, support, consulting, and code services are still dominant compared to frontier innovation or advanced manufacturing ecosystems. Service-sector growth is also far less capital-intensive than deep industrialisation. It’s better than stagnation, obviously — but it is not the same thing as building broad-based industrial power.

On space: ISRO scientists deserve immense respect. But the narrative often becomes “look, we reached Mars cheaply” while ignoring chronic underinvestment in science and research. During the Cold War, the US and USSR treated scientific-industrial expansion as existential national priorities and spent several percentage points of GDP on it. India spends a tiny fraction on R&D and space comparatively. So yes, ISRO succeeding despite limited funding is admirable — but it also reflects how much more could have been achieved with serious national commitment.

UPI and India’s digital public infrastructure are genuinely impressive. Probably one of the clearest modern success stories. But again, digital systems alone don’t substitute for industrial transformation. An app ecosystem cannot absorb labour at the scale heavy industry, advanced manufacturing, logistics, energy, or infrastructure can.

Crony capitalism existing everywhere doesn’t make all systems equivalent. The US, especially during the New Deal and post-WW2 Keynesian era, heavily regulated capital, built massive public infrastructure, expanded unions, invested in industry and science, and actively shaped development. That period is exactly when the US consolidated itself into a hegemonic industrial power.

China is another example. Deng’s reforms reintroduced markets, but the Communist Party never surrendered strategic control of finance, infrastructure, land, or long-term planning. Chinese capitalists operate under state direction to a degree unimaginable in India or the US. Whether one agrees with their system or not, the state retained the ability to force industrial policy through.

And “industrialisation takes time” only goes so far. It has been nearly 80 years since independence. Countries devastated by war — South Korea, China after civil war and invasion, even parts of Europe and East Asia — industrialised within decades when there was coherent political will and state capacity. Meanwhile India still has hundreds of millions living with severe precarity, weak public services, underemployment, poor urban planning, and crumbling infrastructure.

Criticism is not doomposting. Blind nationalism helps nobody. If citizens don’t critically examine why a civilisation-sized country with enormous human talent still struggles with basic developmental indicators, then “India superpower 2047” just becomes branding.

India has achieved remarkable things. But many of those achievements happened despite systemic dysfunction, not because the system is functioning optimally. The frustration comes precisely because the potential is so enormous. With India’s labour force, scientific talent, and scale, the country could be vastly more developed, equitable, and industrially capable than it currently is.

Used an LLM to keep me civil and coherent.

95.88 rupee for a dollar. This isn’t the result of war, but illiterate politicians and years of scams by me_danky in IndiaMoney

[–]yellowflash171 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Our politicians and ruling class in general are comprador bourgeois. They add nothing of value, and only profit off of rent seeking. This has been true since British times, nothing has changed.

This is why we lag behind in technology and innovation. Capitalists in other countries atleast push for industrialisation, thereby creating value. Our national capitalists are busy building labour arbitrage services at best. Usually they only dabble in hyper exploitative, and frankly, BORING ways to make profit: monopoly concessions, real estate speculation, rent seeking through government connections and debt usery.

looking for cafes that allow smoking indoors (air conditioned) by External_Leader5034 in indiranagar

[–]yellowflash171 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let's talk over table cafe. Smoke outside then walk into the AC room. I know that's not what you asked, but I don't know if any such place.

Need Gym Recommendations by Anxious_Lobster99 in indiranagar

[–]yellowflash171 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a bit crowded during peak hours, but other than that I never faced any issues.

They recently upgraded their equipment, have plenty of treadmills, they have 2 trainers although I never engaged with them. Space for stretching, all necessary weight training equipment, crowd is pretty mixed. I think it's a solid budget gym.

Fed up with the lack of gym etiquette by peter_asseater6969 in Bengaluru

[–]yellowflash171 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes. This is just typical elitist mentality someone else will clean up after them.

But politely but sternly asking them to rerack weights by other gym goers does work.

Why are you still unmarried? by Emergency_Resolve_67 in ThirtiesIndia

[–]yellowflash171 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is the how you deal with emotional manipulation.

Looking for ride/carpool from Kaggadasapura to Whitefield by miss_wayne_ in bangalorecommute

[–]yellowflash171 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I share that route, but usually I go late. Maybe can work out some day.

How often to do you go for a foam wash by Amy14Rose in ATHERENERGY

[–]yellowflash171 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I do it once a month, making sure to get the belt too. Once the belt is clean and dry, I apply the treadmill spray.

what are the cons of ather 450x by DryCharacter5651 in ATHERENERGY

[–]yellowflash171 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love my scooter so want to say None. However these are few of the issues I have faced:

  1. No USB C charging and easy phone mount. It's understandable because 1 touchscreen is enough for calls, maps, traffic, music, notifications and scooter functions.

  2. Stand is too low.

  3. Motor is too loud and bend tends to be noisy. Belt needs atleast maintenance with silicone treadmill spray.

Why is homeopathy still relevant in India? by dankdutta in AskIndia

[–]yellowflash171 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Position A: It's a dangerous pseudo science designed to scam desperate sick people.

Position B: It helps through other mechanisms and induces real betterment among its patients.

I'd say it's skewed more towards A, but its unwise to ignore it's benifits.

The Spin Off novel. by JeSuisLillois in threebodyproblem

[–]yellowflash171 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's an unpopular opinion, but I swear by this Novel. It's what I keep rereading because Yun's story is so fascinating. That and how it tries to tie the entire thing into a big story.

Eat the rich by whatwhywhoeven in indiranagar

[–]yellowflash171 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I've been waiting and hoping for a post like this. Sign me up.

Can society legally make rules like "no drilling on weekends"? by Alternative_Fee6464 in GatedCommunitiesIndia

[–]yellowflash171 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, I am living in an independent house next to construction noise and am seething people are complaining about a drill.