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CORRUPTION APEARS TO BE INCREASING.
iF U HAVE ANY IDEAS TO CURB CORRUPTION THAN FOR GOD SAKE PLEASE TELL US.

I HAVE BEEN TOLD BY MY FRIENDS THAT WE CAN WRITE ANNOYMOUS LETTER TO CORRUPT OFFICIALS INFORMING THAT CORRUPTION IS EATING YOUR SOUL & ADVISE HIM TO CHANGE THE WAYS ELSE ?????

YAHOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

2006-12-24 03:51:53 · 12 answers · asked by anil a 2 in Society & Culture Etiquette

12 answers

jai jinendra
dear friend,
it is not easy to change the whole society as society is not even a group of people it is a flow.
first we have to see ourselves.we must avoid doing bad things and stop taking bribes.we have to set some examples for the society..............

2006-12-24 04:58:58 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The idea of your friend may not work !Because they don't have the soul at all - so they are not worried of your threat. There are several ways to teat that.
1) Write letter (need not be anonymous) to the Anti-corruption dept ! (There may be corruption there also - no alternative)

2) Keep the Devil of corruption starved - (by not feeding it with its favourite food - corruption) - in due course it will have natural death.

3) Educate all the people around us not to incline to feed that Devil - in the anxiety to get undue favours.

2006-12-27 21:23:54 · answer #2 · answered by Alrahcam 4 · 0 0

1.Use Right to information to the extent possible.
2.You should be patient enough to wait for the things to happen for that you should plan in advanceall your activities.
3.Encourage others to follow you
4.As told by our president of our country (India) childrens should encourage parents to stop taking the bibe.
5.Every children should know the income of the parents first and based on the affordability they should put their demand to their parents also.

I all the above five points are follwed it is a hope to eradicate no no squeeze corruption

2006-12-25 10:55:28 · answer #3 · answered by suryanarayanan u 3 · 0 0

Use the Right to Information Act of 2005 , This is a very Powerful tool and you can climb the ladder and hang the officials
If you wnat more inforamation than I can provide you on your intrest.
Thanks

2006-12-27 10:15:14 · answer #4 · answered by Rocky s 2 · 0 0

On our personal part , we can do nothing for this except that we ourselves don't get corrupted.
and if you are so very keen about it, try to get some sources close to the maoists and instruct them to fire 299 bullets into each corrupt man's heart.
TOO RUDE . ISN'T IT?!

2006-12-26 08:29:21 · answer #5 · answered by sailesh 1 · 0 0

whoseoever u find corrupt.you shud immediately write to president of india cell. or pmo ie office of primeminister.
you shud also join anti corruption beauro or group to resort against the corruption

2007-01-01 02:48:07 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If that was only possible life here in Belgium and then you now what corruption is, I can fill a whole TV program what happens here!

2006-12-24 13:17:07 · answer #7 · answered by Chantal D. 6 · 0 0

I've thought a lot about this, myself, because my family is descended from immigrants to America so I think about where they came from and why they thought it was better here in America. Also, I grew up with a lot of immigrants in Los Angeles and I wondered why their families came to America and why they thought it was better. I certainly didn't think LA was nice when I was growing up there and I like it even less as an adult. (I live in Portland, OR) I like to read a lot about other countries and other ways of life. I can't afford to travel... so I read instead.

Two observations:

1) People in countries with low corruption (as defined by Transparency International) talk in their newspapers, etc. about fighting FOR transparency, fighting FOR accountability and fighting FOR a voice for everybody who is affected by a decision (known as stakeholders).

Whereas people in countries that are very corrupt like India (as defined by Transparency International) talk a lot about "fighting corruption" but never seem to get anywhere with it. Its kind of like America's "war on drugs": instead of America fighting for treatment for drug addicts or fighting for good or at least better mental health care (medical care for crazy people), America just locks up poor people who deal drugs because its the best way for the poor to make a living. There's always going to be people who have few opportunities who will break laws to survive. Putting them in jail solves nothing, it just moves them out of the way for some other poor person to take their place.


2) Illiteracy and corruption seem to go hand in hand. Countries that have the highest literacies have the lowest rates of corruption and countries that have the lowest literacies have the highest rates of corruption. India has the caste system so, isn't it the case that the people with the most education are the entrenched elites? How can the poor represent their interest if they can't read enough to even understand the decisions that are being considered that will affect them? Having the poor be illiterate is just a recipe for having the rights, needs and interests of the poor completely trampled over. I think it likely that if India put more effort into increasing literacy and civic participation among ALL its people, that the quality of collective decision making would go up and corruption would go down.

As a side note, if you look at Western countries, corruption has gone down: our past, was, by our standards, quite corrupt. Politicians always want to "have their cake and eat it too." They want to have rules but not follow them, have laws but not put any money from taxes towards enforcement of the laws and make glorious promises when running for office and then do whatever they want after they get elected because no one is paying attention... unless the people do pay attention and raise a fuss. Portland is a wonderful place because of all the activists who live and work here who fight tooth and nail to make it better. That's what it takes. Los Angeles is one of the most corrupt cities in the country because Angelenos are mostly interested in just making money, looking pretty and not offending anyone.

When I say fight, I don't mean violence, I mean BEING THERE. At city hall, at the government buildings, writing letters to newspapers, informing the public, speaking out at public hearings, protesting campaign stops. Do they have public hearings in India? Sticking to elected officials until they are sick of looking at your face and sick of hearing your voice because they should be sick, when they are sick its because they are finally getting the message that the consequences of their actions are harming other people. This message is very difficult to deliver to anyone - it takes persistance. Nobody wants to believe that their actions are harming somone else.

You can draw a political line with liberals in America on one side who realize that America's actions harm others and that some people lose in American society and suffer unnecessarily and with conservatives on the other side who think America is the greatest country on earth and is only a force for good in the world.

I hope this helps.

You might want to look at how Western countries are dealing with the corruption that remains. I know in the US, there's a big problem with kickbacks in military contracting, the military ignoring human rights, safety and environmental laws, and with the police and prison brutality and corruption.

2006-12-29 17:55:19 · answer #8 · answered by Toby Vancouver 2 · 0 0

its definetely a good beginning. it'll help further if we resolve to fight back those people who indulge in corruption. urging our friends to join in this mission will make a good start

2006-12-30 04:26:17 · answer #9 · answered by reach_mv 2 · 0 0

Use Gandhigiri with corrupt people........don't give in to their unworthy demands.

2006-12-30 03:08:06 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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