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IMMIGRANT'S DIARY more

Reflections of an Indian business traveler in the United States

By Sameer Kumar

I am not an immigrant to your great country. But I have been visiting the US both on business and on vacation since last more than a decade. I would like to share with your viewers some of my experiences there and the observations thereof. I also take some liberty here of making comparative analysis between your country (United States) and mine (India).

At the outset, let me admit, that while my own experiences do not vouch that the US is a totally free country, the individual there is the least enslaved citizen in the world. A decade ago, I thought there was a difference of KIND between the politics of the two largest democracies of the world. Now I have increasingly come to accept that the difference is only of DEGREE - but of course, a very high degree indeed. Ever since the "libertarian politics" lost its momentum, the US lawmakers, whether Democratic or Republican, have taken for granted that they can enact or persist with restrictive laws.

This is not a place or platform to write an analytical thesis in support of the above contentions. But, in particular, so long as your politicians continue to steamroll your productive entrepreneurs by using the outdated and irrational Anti-trust laws, the continued persecution of your best brains illustrates the above view. It all began with the mindless prosecution of the Standard Oil in the beginning of the twentieth century. The destructive trend ruthlessly continued with prolonged suits against IBM, Bell Labs, AT&T, and currently against Microsoft.

Thus, if the Indian democracy is being ruled and ruined by its unscrupulous politicians and its corrupt bureaucrats, the US democracy continues to be handicapped by its (in) Justice department and by its self-seeking lawyers. Indeed, there is a great deal of realism in what Akio Morita, the founder and the former CEO of SONY, once wrote to the effect that the most native product of America is its "Lawyer"!

Hence I say that there is only a difference of degree and not of kind between our two democracies. I hasten to add, however, that a private individual can still make an honest living and can prosper as per his/her potential in your country, whereas in India, there is just no way to advance beyond a point without dishonestly conniving with the politicians and bribing the bureaucrats. The situation obtaining in the other third world countries is perhaps worse.

That is why I strongly advocate that any honest, young person, say of less than thirty years of age, who has still not grown deeper roots in his third world native country, should immigrate to your country. Is your "immigration portal" geared to guide and help him out? Can you seriously influence your senators and congressmen to increase the immigration quotas?

*     *    *    *    *    *

I repeat and reiterate that an individual in the US is the freest person in the world. But even there, he is afraid of two things: the American Lawyer and the sophisticated database of the US government. A perpetual fear and threat of a legal suit rules the world of the American business. It is not unusual to find an advertisement on TV or even in the subway train of some lawyer or the other who encourages litigations with promises of millions by way of judicial awards. It looks that the Indian Judiciary never feels guilty to delay or defer its pronouncements for years and years, and the US judiciary never hesitates to award substantial damages!

Similarly, no individual with a social security number is free from the fear as to how and when the government database may be used against him. He dares not take a public stand on a burning social or political issue as a matter of principle for fear of revengeful use of the database.

*     *    *    *    *    *
Yet, none of the above fear psychosis can be seen in the streets of your cities. An ordinary person in the street is "a happy go lucky" free individual. He/she can be what he/she wants to be in terms of his/her dress and behaviour. When I had read that New York City is the fashion capital of the world, I had a vision of handsome men and women beautifully dressed. But what I saw were the ill fitting and tight fitting dresses of all kinds of imaginative styles, more often enhancing the ugliness of human bodies than their beauty! I am still old fashioned enough to admire the handsomeness of "a suited, and booted" New Englander of earlier times. Similarly, I cannot help thinking of the Indian Sari, which is described by a cynic as the dress, which enhances the curves and hides the angles of a fragile, female form!

But what is relevant to me in the present context is the freedom of an ordinary New Yorker not only for his/her dress but even for his/her public behaviour. They do not have to worry about any socio-cultural restrictions. There are no oppressive dress codes for women, similar to those prescribed for Indian women in some public institutions or in Pakistan and in some Middle Eastern countries for women to appear in public. Similarly, it is a common sight in your streets of young couples or not so young couples, heartily hugging or passionately kissing, without any sense of guilt, shame or fear. They are absorbed in their own dream world and no one else cares one way or the other. No police officer would interrupt or apprehend them. Whereas in India, with the recent political ascent of the Hindu Fundamentalist political parties, a necking couple in the relative privacy of a public garden can be arrested and charged with "indecent behaviour."

Pornographic materials can be openly exhibited and sold in your big stores, whereas in India, an artistic movie based on lesbianism is banned on the name of the Indian culture.
*     *    *    *    *    *
Yet, and yet, your country is so much obsessed with the concept of political and social Equality, both racial and sexual, that one is expected to ignore the obvious. Any where in the world, in a city or in a jungle, if one were to meet a stranger for the first time, there are three attributes of the stranger which are immediately noticeable, even before one exchanges a word, namely, the stranger's skin colour, the gender and the age. But in the US, it is explicitly prohibited to mention or consider these attributes.

The phrases like " white American" and "black American" are a taboo. In the days of Abraham Lincoln and Mark Twain, the word "Negro" was considered civilised, but "Nigger" was regarded derogatory. Nowadays, you cannot call him "Negro"; he is referred as "black" or even better, "coloured". A brown or yellow person cannot be called brown or yellow. He is "ethnic"!

Similarly, it is bad manners to treat a woman as a woman. She is equal and therefore has to be granted or allowed Equality. Age of a woman - or that of a man - is generally obvious. But heaven forbid if you address a young woman as a "young lady". How dare you insult her youth or gender! You can inquire about "career experience" of a prospective employee, but cannot ask his or her age. It is a moot point as to how one gains experience without aging! And for heaven's sake don't ever talk about a person's "I.Q.". I never understood why.

But what is ignored and forgotten behind such idiosyncrasies is that Equality cannot be granted or allowed. "Allowed Equality" is hypocrisy and contradiction in terms. A demanded Equality hides a subconscious inferiority complex. Equality is essentially a matter of self-confidence and of achievement while facing and fighting the harsh realities of the external world.

It also needs to be understood that certain cultural phrases of daily usage or of personal habit do not mean what their words may literally imply. " How are you" or "How do you do" is a form of polite greeting and not an inquiry into your health, action or behaviour. But when I heard for the first time in the US, the often-repeated phrase "take care", I was indeed bothered. Was I being threatened or warned? But in the same manner, certain persons do use mechanically phrases like "my dear" or "young lady" out of sheer personal habit. But they certainly do not imply unsolicited endearment nor mean an insult or reflection on some body's age or sex.

Similarly, I was initially confused about meaning of phrases like "figure out" or "it would take a while". But it took me a while to understand what "a while" meant and to figure out what "figure out" implied!

But the lighter vein of the above episodes apart, the lesson I learnt was "ignore the obvious and the apparent". An American is an American is an American. He is neither white, nor coloured; neither man nor woman, neither young nor old!

A modern American, I was taught, does not have racial or sexual prejudices. I could not agree with the concept more. But every where, in places like huge departmental stores, postal and FedEx offices, Security staff etc., I noticed a conscious effort made for equal representation of persons of different races and sexes. It seemed that in the process of recognising equality, the employers were in fact governed by their employees' colour and sex and not the merits alone. To my mind the comparison was inevitable. We have in India scheduled castes and scheduled tribes. They are supposed to have been denied opportunities of advancement since generations. Hence the laws provide for special reservations in employment for their members. The result: the endless politicking in their interests, bureaucratic graft and wide spread inefficiency, indifference and high handedness.

And, finally, I found many first generation immigrants more American than the born American citizens. They appear to have developed a sense of identity, a feeling of patriotism, deep down in their subconscious. They could very naturally refer to Canada and Mexico as "our neighbours". Their eyes may sparkle with pleasure and patriotism while visiting historically significant places like Fort Henry near Baltimore or Washington farms at the Mount Vernon.

I certainly do not oppose such loyalty. Millions of troubled and disheartened souls from the third world countries have found in US a solace, a relief, a haven to fulfil their ambitions and aspirations. For them, the present day America is the best destination, precisely because of want of a better alternative. But it is NOT the best and the freest country of the immigrants' dreams. When the initial euphoria is over, not only the immigrant, but even a frequent visitor like me also gets disillusioned about some of the restrictive realities in the USA. The past and the present America was substantially built by the several generations of the "first generation" immigrants. May be it requires the next set of the first generation immigrants to reconstruct the truly "freest country" - a nation of their dreams. Meanwhile, a total freedom-seeking citizen of the utopian world would remain a non-entity everywhere, namely, a Resident non-American in America or a "resident non-Indian" in India. RNI and not an NRI!

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