Open defecation is worse than killing people outright? I don't think so.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Tue Oct 01, 2019 12:34 pmThis... This has to be the worst thing about humans.
This is it, right?
There is no cleanser liquid, there is no scrubby thing, and property is limited. 88% of the population has access to at least basic water, but only two Indian cities have continuous running water. 93% of sewage in India found its way to ponds, lakes, and rivers without treatment at least as of 2011.Travis B. wrote: ↑Tue Oct 01, 2019 1:08 pm My question is how much of the population of India has running water and sewers, and to me cleaning a toilet is as simple as squirting some cleanser liquid into the toilet then scraping a scrubby thing around it every so often, barely something that one needs to hire a Dalit for. And even when there isn't running water and sewers, a latrine can be simple as an outdoor hut placed over a hole in the ground, and when the hole gets full, the hut is moved somewhere else and the hole is covered over...
Defecating outdoors is what Indians have always done, so there's traditionally no shame associated with it. It helps fertilize the plants (or at least this is part of the traditional view).The thing I don't get is how do they consider defecating outdoors to be less degrading than merely occasionally cleaning their own toilet.
Of course he was casteist. His own son has publicly admitted that he was.
Like I said, he tried to portray himself as if he wasn't casteist. But the reality was that he was extremely patronizing towards low-caste people, including low-caste fellow revolutionaries. He failed to listen to them and their grievances. Earlier, Zompist mentioned Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, the architect of the Constitution of India, independent India's first law and justice minister, a Dalit rights activist and freedom fighter, and a Dalit himself. Ambedkar and Gandhi were deeply opposed, so much so that Ambedkar heavily criticized Gandhi on the BBC and declared that he did not deserve the title "Mahatma." Gandhi was in favor of keeping the caste system despite his supposed opposition to untouchability, and Ambedkar accused him of opposing casteism only when writing in English while writing in favor of it in Gujarati.