The word "intelligent" has a positive ring to 
                      it and does not connote any evil intention. When we say 
                      such and such a kid is the most intelligent in the class 
                      it implies that he attempts all the questions in the exam 
                      without resorting to malpractices. And strangely, some of 
                      us deploy the word "intelligent" to describe the 
                      behavior of scamster like Telgi. Imagine a kid listening 
                      to such a description and the image s/he will have of Telgi. 
                      What kind of role models are we giving our kids? 
                    At 
                      a personal level, this blurring of distinction between intelligence 
                      and cunningness could prove costly as some of us may end 
                      up doing business with cunning people. On the other hand, 
                      the words that we deploy to describe a given phenomena determines 
                      various political outcomes. Take the recent case of violence 
                      in Assam. The people of Bihari origin have been described 
                      as "outsiders" or as "foreigners". Once 
                      such words gain currency, exclusivist politics based on 
                      violence also gains momentum. Since "they" are 
                      "foreigners" it is perfectly legitimate to throw 
                      them out by whatever means available. Similarly, the slum 
                      dwellers or the pavement dwellers in the cities have often 
                      been described as an "eye sore" or as a "burden 
                      on the city." This characterization has resulted in 
                      skewed public policies such as resettling the slum dwellers 
                      on the outskirts of the city. In some states, the major 
                      political parties went a step further and have been demanding 
                      large-scale evictions and banning the entry of immigrants 
                      into the cities, which is impermissible as every citizen 
                      has a right of movement, residence and employment all over 
                      the country. More importantly, the terms "eye sore" 
                      or "burden on the city" clouds many important 
                      services that slum dwellers provide to the city. The maidservant 
                      who works in residences and the cobbler who gives a timely 
                      stitch to the footwear all come from slums. Instead of "eye 
                      sore" the use of the word "service providers" 
                      to describe the poor in the city might bring about a qualitative 
                      shift in the understanding of the emergence of slums and 
                      policy initiatives to tackle the menace of squalor. 
                    While 
                      the words that we deploy determine policy initiatives, the 
                      penchant for defining or classifying ideas in the social 
                      realm into either "the left wing" or "the 
                      right wing" has evolved into an authoritarian intellectual 
                      tradition. The words either "the left" or "the 
                      right" are freely attached to every new idea and as 
                      a consequence every new idea is not judged on its own merit. 
                      This does not augur well for a democracy, as the vibrancy 
                      of a democracy is contingent on free expression and honest 
                      assessment of new ideas. We must also realize that the battle 
                      for good governance should first be won in the realm of 
                      ideas. This requires that our definition and classification 
                      of corruption, instead of sounding like a eulogy, should 
                      expose the unethical behaviour and dangerous consequences 
                      of corruption. 
                      
                     
                     
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