Sunday, April 26, 2026

Bengal's Democracy in Danger (Speech by Arvind Kejriwal)


See All on Politics    <<< Previously


Democracy  ·  West Bengal  ·  Electoral Integrity

Bengal's Democracy
Under Fire

How the systematic erasure of 27 lakh voters, the deployment of central forces as political instruments, and a government addicted to false promises is dismantling the foundational architecture of Indian democracy — one election at a time.

OPINION  ·  ELECTIONS  ·  INDIA POLITICS

There is a particular kind of violence that leaves no blood on the floor. It happens in spreadsheets, in administrative offices, in the quiet deletion of names from voter rolls. It is bureaucratic violence — and it may be the most dangerous kind a democracy can face, because it is designed to look like paperwork.

What is unfolding in West Bengal is not simply a state election. It is a referendum on whether India's federal democracy will survive the weight of a centralising, fear-driven political machine that has turned the apparatus of the state — the Central Bureau of Investigation, the Enforcement Directorate, the Central Armed Police Forces — into instruments of partisan warfare.

A State Besieged

The BJP's decision to flood Bengal with Central Forces is not a neutral act of security management. It is a political statement wrapped in the language of law and order. For a state whose people gave India some of its most iconic freedom fighters — Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, Khudiram Bose, and an entire generation of young men and women who sacrificed everything for independence — having your streets patrolled by centrally-controlled armed forces at election time carries a specific and sinister resonance.

This is not protection. This is pressure. The deployment of Central Forces in numbers disproportionate to any genuine security need sends a message to Bengali voters: we are watching you. The government that spent decades wrapping itself in the tricolour is now using the institutions that tricolour represents to suppress the very democratic participation that makes the flag meaningful.

"Sending the entire army against a civilian electorate is not an act of security — it is an act of intimidation dressed in khaki."

Bengal has its own culture, its own language, its own intellectual and artistic legacy that stretches back centuries. An assault on its electoral sovereignty is an assault on Bengali identity itself. When you tell a Bengali that their vote will be watched, supervised, and second-guessed by forces dispatched from New Delhi, you are telling them that they are not trusted citizens of a democracy — they are suspects.

The 27 Lakh Who Were Erased

Here is a number that should stop every thinking Indian cold: 27 lakh voters — 2.7 million people — have allegedly been removed from Bengal's electoral rolls ahead of the election. Not disqualified through any transparent process. Not relocated. Simply gone.

27 Lakh
Voters allegedly removed from Bengal's electoral rolls

To grasp the scale of what this means: there are entire countries on this planet whose total population is smaller than 27 lakh people. Families are reporting the surreal experience of watching their household split across the democratic ledger — a mother listed, a father listed, but a son's name simply absent. These are people who have lived in Bengal for generations, who pay taxes, who breathe the same air as everyone else, and who have now been told, in effect, that they do not exist as citizens.

The voter roll is not a technicality. It is the foundation of democratic participation. Strip a person from the voter roll and you have not merely inconvenienced them — you have severed their formal relationship with the republic. You have rendered them politically invisible. Without the right to vote, what entitlement does a citizen have to government services, to welfare schemes, to the basic protections of the state? This erasure is not administrative error. Its scale makes that impossible to believe.

Ghost Voters from Across the Country

The picture darkens further when allegations are examined of fake voters being transported into Bengal from Kerala, Chennai, and Goa to cast ballots in the names of Bengali residents — the very residents who have been removed from the rolls. If these allegations are accurate, the architecture of fraud is staggeringly complete: real names are deleted from one end, and manufactured votes are inserted from the other.

This is not democracy. This is a managed outcome. It is the substitution of public will with engineered arithmetic. Every fake vote cast is a theft — not just from a political party, but from every Indian who believes that elections are the mechanism through which the people hold power accountable. When that mechanism is sabotaged, nothing downstream from it can be trusted.

A Prime Minister the World Laughs At

Any serious accounting of the BJP's Bengal campaign must grapple with the condition of its leadership at the national level. Narendra Modi's international standing — once carefully stage-managed through grand gestures and theatrical foreign visits — has visibly deteriorated. India's Prime Minister has been on the receiving end of public humiliation from the leadership of the world's most powerful nation, without offering a syllable of response.

That silence is not dignity. It is weakness — the weakness of a leader whose foreign policy consists of personal rapport with strongmen, a rapport that evaporates the moment it becomes geopolitically inconvenient. A Prime Minister who cannot defend his country's honour on the world stage is not projecting strength. He is demonstrating, in real time, the hollowness at the centre of a political identity built entirely on the performance of toughness.

Meanwhile, the domestic record speaks for itself. Unemployment, price rise, the systematic erosion of institutional independence — the list is long and the government's answers short. What has compensated for this failure is not governance but narrative: a permanent election campaign, a permanent enemy, a permanent state of manufactured outrage to keep attention away from outcomes.

The Woman They Cannot Break

Against this machinery stands Mamata Banerjee — a small woman who walks kilometers on foot through constituencies while the full force of the central government tries to destroy her. The ED investigates. The CBI knocks. Central Ministers descend on Bengal in waves. And she keeps walking.

Whatever one's political preferences, there is something that commands respect in that image. The BJP has deployed more ministerial resources against a single state Chief Minister than it has deployed in managing several national crises. The disproportionality of that effort is itself an admission: she matters. The people she represents matter. And the BJP is afraid of both.

The Welfare War: Promises vs. Delivery

The pattern is consistent and documented: where welfare schemes exist and benefit ordinary people, the BJP works to dismantle them. Free bus rides for women in Delhi — ended. Free electricity units — threatened. The monthly cash transfer to women under AAP — the existence of which was proven possible — was promised by Modi at ₹2,000 per month during Delhi elections in February. By the following March, not a rupee had appeared in any account.

Now, in Bengal, the promise has been inflated to ₹3,000. The logic of the BJP's welfare politics is not distributive — it is extractive. The same government that cannot fulfill its own promised transfers has a robust history of freezing accounts, redirecting funds, and ensuring that the people who most need state support remain dependent on a government that has mastered the art of promising without delivering.

Bengal's women receive ₹1,500 per month under the state government's scheme. That is real money in real accounts right now. The question for every voter is not which party makes the larger promise — it is which government has a track record of actually fulfilling one.


▸ Facts

  • West Bengal has historically had some of the highest voter turnout figures in Indian general and state elections, making any systematic manipulation of voter rolls particularly consequential.
  • The Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) are deployed in elections across India under the direction of the Election Commission, but the scale of deployment in Bengal has been repeatedly flagged as extraordinary compared to other large states.
  • Subhas Chandra Bose and Khudiram Bose, both Bengalis, are among the most celebrated figures of India's independence movement. Bose led the Indian National Army; Khudiram Bose was hanged by the British at age 18.
  • The Enforcement Directorate (ED) and Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) operate under the Union government, and their use in states governed by opposition parties has been the subject of widespread criticism from former judges, legal scholars, and constitutional experts.
  • AAP's Delhi government had implemented free bus rides for women and subsidised electricity slabs, both of which have faced disruption or reversal following BJP's return to power in Delhi.
  • India's Election Commission is constitutionally mandated to be independent, but critics — including former Chief Election Commissioners — have raised concerns about the body's autonomy during the current political period.
  • Voter list manipulation through bogus deletions and additions is an established concern in Indian elections, and the Election Commission has standing mechanisms to address grievances — though their effectiveness in high-stakes contests is disputed.

✕ Criticisms

  • The Modi government has systematically weaponised central investigative agencies — the ED, CBI, and Income Tax department — against opposition-led state governments and opposition politicians, a practice that corrodes institutional independence and turns the instruments of justice into political tools.
  • The alleged deletion of 27 lakh voters from Bengal's rolls represents, if accurate, one of the most consequential acts of electoral manipulation in recent Indian democratic history, and demands a full independent judicial inquiry rather than administrative deflection.
  • Modi's pattern of welfare promises during elections — ₹2,000 for Delhi women, ₹15 lakh in everyone's account, jobs for two crore youth annually — without any intention or mechanism of delivery constitutes a sustained, documented pattern of electoral deception that undermines the informed consent of voters.
  • The deployment of Central Forces into Bengal at a scale inconsistent with genuine security needs functions as voter intimidation, disproportionately affecting communities who have historically faced state pressure — a practice incompatible with free and fair elections.
  • The BJP's leadership has shown zero accountability for India's declining press freedom rankings, the weakening of judicial independence, and the institutional capture of bodies that are constitutionally required to be non-partisan.
  • Modi's failure to respond to public humiliation from a foreign head of government — while simultaneously cultivating an image of nationalist toughness domestically — exposes the fundamental dishonesty of a political persona built on performative strength that evaporates under real diplomatic pressure.
  • The BJP's approach to Bengal specifically — framing a cultural, linguistic, and politically distinct state as a problem to be solved through central intervention — reflects a dangerous majoritarian impulse that threatens India's federal compact and the autonomy of states that the Constitution explicitly guarantees.
OPINION PIECE  ·  The arguments and criticisms expressed in this article represent the author's own analysis and editorial perspective. Allegations regarding voter roll deletions and fake voter deployments are drawn from statements made during the Bengal election period and remain subject to judicial and electoral scrutiny. Readers are encouraged to consult primary sources and independent reporting for further verification.

How to Survive the "2026 Middle Class Squeeze"


Lessons in Investing    <<< Previously


Personal Finance · Indian Economy

The Silent Tax Nobody Talks About

How a 65% surge in crude oil in five months is quietly incinerating the Indian middle class — and what you can do right now

April 2026 · 8 min read

There is a tax you pay every single day. Nobody debates it in Parliament. Nobody puts it on the campaign trail. Nobody sends you a receipt. And yet, it quietly extracts money from your wallet every time you commute, every time you eat, every time you turn on a gas stove. That tax is the price of crude oil.

The middle class in India has been under sustained, slow-burn pressure for years — real wages barely moving, household savings cut in half, and the top 1% of the population now sitting on roughly 44% of the country's total wealth. But if the erosion was slow before, something in late 2025 changed the pace. The slow simmer became a rapid boil.

Five Months. Sixty-Five Percent.

In October 2025, a barrel of crude oil cost $65. By April 2026, that same barrel was trading at $119. That is a 65% jump in five months. To put it plainly: crude oil, which is the bedrock of energy costs in a modern economy, became dramatically more expensive almost overnight.

The natural response when people hear this is a shrug: "I don't deal in crude oil. I'm not a refinery. What does this have to do with my life?" That is precisely the problem. Crude oil is invisible in daily life — until it is not. India imports approximately 88% of its crude oil requirement from abroad. That means nearly every drop of energy that moves this country's goods, vehicles, and food is priced in global markets. When those markets spike, the bill lands at every Indian's doorstep — whether they realise it or not.

The Illusion at the Pump

Delhi
₹94.77/L
Mumbai
₹103.50/L
Kolkata
₹105.40/L
Bengaluru
₹102.90/L

Those prices look familiar. Stable, even. So why the alarm? Because those numbers are artificially held in place — not by market forces, but by a quiet fiscal sacrifice the government is making on your behalf, for now.

Every litre of petrol you buy comes with an excise duty paid to the government. In March 2026, that excise duty on petrol was slashed from ₹13/litre all the way down to ₹3/litre — a cut of ₹10/litre. Diesel's excise duty was brought to nearly zero. The estimated revenue cost to the government? Between ₹1.5 lakh crore and ₹1.75 lakh crore. That is not a rounding error. That is a structural fiscal decision.

Meanwhile, state-owned oil marketing companies — Indian Oil (IOCL), Bharat Petroleum (BPCL), and Hindustan Petroleum (HPCL) — are absorbing losses of approximately ₹24 per litre on petrol and ₹30 per litre on diesel to keep prices at the pump politically palatable.

Reality Check

Shell India, which operates outside the government subsidy regime, raised petrol prices by ~₹7/litre and diesel by ~₹13/litre on April 1st. A litre of Shell petrol in Bengaluru now costs ₹119–120. The gap between what you pay at a government-run pump (₹94) and what the market actually demands (₹120) is roughly ₹25 per litre — and growing.

The Kitchen Is on Fire Too

Petrol is visible. The LPG story is quieter and, for millions of families, more painful.

A domestic LPG cylinder that cost around ₹800 a couple of years ago now sits at nearly ₹900. That is uncomfortable, but manageable. The real blow has landed on commercial LPG — the cylinder used by every roadside dhaba, every street food vendor, every small restaurant across the country. In Delhi, the commercial LPG cylinder rate has surged by ₹332 over the past twelve months, bringing it to ₹2,078 per cylinder.

That extra ₹332 does not vanish. It flows downstream, directly into the cost of your chai, your thali, your pav bhaji. If the vendor cannot pass it on, they cut corners on quality. Either way — directly through higher prices or indirectly through worse food — the hit reaches your plate.

Everything Moves on Diesel

India's freight network runs on roads — approximately 70% of all goods travel by truck. And diesel comprises between 30% and 60% of a truck's operating cost. When diesel gets more expensive, every single thing that moves gets more expensive.

The math is unforgiving. A ₹5/litre rise in diesel translates to an additional ₹2–3 in cost per kilometre for a loaded truck. Now consider the distances: tomatoes from Nashik to Delhi — 1,440 km. Wheat flour from Punjab to Hyderabad — 1,500 km. Refined oil from Gujarat to Kolkata — 2,000 km. Every kilometre of every one of those journeys has just become more expensive. That cost does not stay with the trucker. It trickles through distributors, wholesalers, kirana stores, and ultimately arrives at the price on the shelf you pick up.

Shrinkflation: When the Price Stays but the Product Shrinks

Companies caught in the cost squeeze face a dilemma: raise prices and risk losing customers, or silently reduce what you get for the same money. Most choose the latter. This is called shrinkflation, and it is far more pervasive than most people realise.

Consider Parle-G, India's most ubiquitous biscuit. The ₹5 packet has existed for decades. But that ₹5 packet, which once weighed 100 grams, now weighs around 75 grams — a quiet 25% reduction. The packet price? Unchanged. Similarly, Vim soap bars have shrunk from 155g to 135g. A Britannia Good Day pack that once had 10 biscuits now has 8. The package looks the same. The price looks the same. But you are getting less.

Here is the insidious part: you do not consume less. Your appetite does not recalibrate to 75 grams. You end up buying more packets to meet the same consumption need — and spending ₹20,000–25,000 more per year on goods where the listed price never technically changed. Shrinkflation is inflation in disguise, and it does not show up in the CPI headline number.

Your Personal Inflation Is Not 6%

The government's official inflation number hovers around 5–6%. Many people accept this and move on. But that number is an average across all households, all consumption baskets, all income levels. It is not your number.

Think about where your money actually goes. Education — which is inflating far faster than the CPI. Healthcare. Rent in a major city. Eating out. Your actual personal inflation rate, depending on your lifestyle, could easily be 10–12% or higher. And salary increments? The average is cited around 9.1% — which sounds good until you do the arithmetic. If your raise is 9% but your real inflation is 10–12%, your salary did not grow. It shrank. Your purchasing power — the measure of what your money can actually buy — is quietly going backwards.

9.1%
Avg. Salary Increment
10–12%
Real Personal Inflation
–1 to –3%
Real Salary Growth

What You Can Actually Do About It

Macro forces are largely outside your control. The crude oil market does not care about your household budget. But there are concrete, practical moves you can make right now to cushion the blow.

On the Road

Keep your tyre pressure correctly maintained. Drive between 40–60 km/h where possible for optimal fuel efficiency. Avoid hard braking and unnecessary gear changes. These are unglamorous habits, but they are real money savers when fuel costs are elevated.

At the Grocery Store

Buy staples — rice, pulses, oil, flour — from your local kirana store or wholesale outlets like DMart or Reliance Mart, not from quick-commerce apps. Buy in larger pack sizes; the per-unit cost drops significantly. Small pouches and convenience packaging carry a permanent premium you do not need to pay. And if you are ordering food from delivery apps multiple times a week, that is one of the first discretionary costs worth reviewing seriously.

On Healthcare

There are roughly 18,000 Jan Aushadhi Kendras across India — government-run outlets that sell generic medicines whose original patents have expired. The active chemical is identical to the branded version. The price difference is not. A branded allergy tablet that retails at ₹303 costs ₹13 at a Jan Aushadhi Kendra. A diabetes medication available at ₹55 at a pharmacy costs ₹5.25 at the same outlet. If your household has members on regular medication for diabetes, blood pressure, or any chronic condition, the annual savings from switching to generics can be substantial.

On Discretionary Spending

No one is suggesting you stop living. Travel. Enjoy yourself. But be deliberate. The iPhone that launched yesterday is not necessarily better than the two-year-old model. The laptop that is slightly sluggish can almost always be repaired for ₹4,000–5,000 rather than replaced for ₹1.5–2 lakh. Every unnecessary upgrade that gets financed by feelings — the satisfaction of a new device, the Instagram moment — is future savings being quietly dissolved.

On Investing: Do Not Stop Your SIPs

This deserves special emphasis. When markets are volatile and costs are rising, the temptation is to pause your SIPs. That is the opposite of what should happen. The power of a systematic investment plan lies precisely in market volatility — you buy more units when prices fall, fewer when they rise, and over time the average cost works in your favour. Nobody — not economists, not fund managers, not market analysts — knows when the bottom is in or when the rally will resume. What you can control is the discipline of showing up every month, same date, same amount, whether you are in Nifty 50, flexi-cap, gold ETFs, or international funds. That consistency, compounded over years, is what actually builds wealth.

Expenses Have a Floor. Income Has No Ceiling.

There is one more thing worth sitting with. Your expenses have a floor — a minimum below which you cannot compress your lifestyle without real sacrifice. But your income has no ceiling. It can keep growing for as long as you keep building skills, delivering value, and adapting to where the world is going.

We are living through a technological inflection point similar to the early 2000s internet boom — when anyone who could write code was suddenly earning in dollars and flying to the US. That era rewarded people who adopted early and built relevant skills fast. The current moment, defined by artificial intelligence, is no different. The people who embrace AI — use it to improve the quality of their work, build new capabilities, and position themselves ahead of where the market is heading — will be the ones writing the success stories of this decade. Those who treat it as a threat will watch from the sidelines.

Your expenses are under pressure from forces you cannot control. Your income is waiting to respond to choices you absolutely can make.

Key Takeaways
  • Crude oil has risen 65% in five months (Oct 2025 → Apr 2026), from $65 to $119/barrel — India imports 88% of its requirement, making this a direct cost-of-living shock.
  • Petrol pump prices look stable because the government slashed excise duty by ₹10/litre (petrol) and zeroed out diesel duty — this relief is fiscally unsustainable and cannot last indefinitely.
  • Commercial LPG has risen ₹332 in a year, now at ₹2,078/cylinder in Delhi — a direct hit on every food vendor and restaurant, which feeds back into what you pay for meals.
  • India's freight is 70% road-based. A ₹5/litre diesel rise adds ₹2–3/km in trucking cost — that lands on the shelf price of everything transported.
  • Shrinkflation is eroding real value silently — same price, smaller quantities; real annual impact can be ₹20,000–25,000 per household on common FMCG goods alone.
  • Your personal inflation rate is likely 10–12%, not the official 5–6%. A 9% salary increment in this environment may mean your real purchasing power has actually declined.
  • Immediate actions: Buy staples in bulk from wholesale; switch to Jan Aushadhi generics for regular medications; maintain fuel-efficient driving habits; avoid food delivery as a default.
  • Investing: Do not pause SIPs. Volatility is the mechanism by which SIPs work. Consistency through downturns is where the compounding advantage is built.
  • Income has no ceiling. Invest in skills — especially AI fluency — to ensure your earning power grows faster than inflation's bite.
Citations & References
  1. Crude oil price data: OPEC daily basket price reports, October 2025 – April 2026
  2. India's crude oil import dependency: Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas, Government of India
  3. Retail petrol/diesel prices by city: Indian Oil Corporation (IOCL) daily price notifications, April 2026
  4. Excise duty revision on fuel: Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) notification, March 2026
  5. Oil Marketing Companies' under-recovery data: PPAC (Petroleum Planning & Analysis Cell) estimates
  6. Shell India retail fuel prices: Shell India press release, April 1, 2026
  7. Commercial LPG cylinder prices: IOCL monthly LPG price revisions, Delhi, April 2026
  8. Road freight share and diesel cost ratio: National Transport Development Policy Committee (NTDPC) Report
  9. Shrinkflation examples (Parle-G, Vim, Britannia): Consumer affairs reports, FMCG industry disclosures
  10. Average salary increment data: Aon India Salary Increase Survey 2025–26
  11. Jan Aushadhi Kendra network: Bureau of Pharma PSUs of India (BPPI), Government of India
  12. Household savings decline data: Reserve Bank of India Annual Report 2024–25
  13. Wealth inequality (Top 1% share): Oxfam India Inequality Report 2025

Saturday, April 25, 2026

The Arrow Parable


All Buddhist Stories    <<< Previously

One day, Siddhartha Gautama told a story:

A man is struck by a poisoned arrow.

His friends rush to help and call a doctor.
But the man refuses treatment.

He says,
“Wait! Before you remove the arrow, I must know—
Who shot me?
What caste was he?
What kind of bow did he use?
What wood was the arrow made of?
What feathers are on it?”

The doctor pleads,
“If we don't remove the arrow now, you will die.”

But the man insists on answers first.

And so… he dies, still asking questions.

🌿 The meaning

The Buddha explained:

We are like that man.

We suffer—stress, fear, confusion—
but instead of addressing the pain directly, we get lost in endless questions:

“Why me?”
“Who is to blame?”
“What's the ultimate meaning of all this?”

Some questions matter…
but many only delay healing.

🌅 A thought for right now

At this time, if something is weighing on you:

What is the “arrow” you can gently remove today—
instead of overthinking it?

Even a small step counts.

Breathe.
Simplify.
Act on what you can.

That alone is wisdom.


Recap

The Parable of the Two Arrows (or The Arrow) is a Buddhist teaching found in the Sallatha Sutta, aimed at distinguishing between unavoidable pain and self-inflicted suffering. It highlights that the key to inner peace is not to overthink or over-analyze suffering, but to act immediately to remove its source. The Key Teachings The First Arrow (Unavoidable Pain): It represents life's unavoidable difficulties—physical pain, illness, loss, failure, or a harsh word. Everyone gets hit by this arrow, as it is a natural part of human existence. The Second Arrow (Self-Inflicted Suffering) It represents our reaction to the first arrow—anger, fear, resentment, blaming oneself or others, and overthinking ("Why me?"). This arrow is optional and is shot by our own minds. The Lesson (Don't Overthink, Just Act) The Buddha used this parable to explain that people often waste time on useless questions (who shot the arrow? what is it made of?) while the situation demands immediate, practical action to "remove the arrow". Mindfulness and Control While we cannot always control the first arrow, we can control the second by acting with mindfulness, allowing the wound to be treated rather than worsening it with internal commentary. Practical Application: Next time you face a painful situation, recognize that your initial reaction (the second arrow) is a choice. Instead of obsessively trying to understand or fight the pain, focus your energy on accepting the situation and taking the necessary, practical steps to deal with it.

The Mustard Seed


All Buddhist Stories    <<< Previously    Next >>>


A young mother once lost her only child.
Heartbroken, she carried the child to Siddhartha Gautama, begging him to bring the child back to life.

The Buddha looked at her with deep kindness and said,
“I can help you—but first, bring me a handful of mustard seeds… from a home where no one has ever known sorrow.”

Hopeful, she went from door to door.

At each house, people were willing to give mustard seeds—
but when she asked,
“Has anyone here ever suffered loss?”
the answer was always the same:

“Yes… we have.”

A father lost his son.
A wife lost her husband.
A child lost a parent.

By the end of the day, she had collected many stories… but no mustard seeds.

Slowly, gently, something changed within her.

She returned to the Buddha—not with seeds, but with understanding.
Her grief softened, not because her loss disappeared…
but because she realized she was not alone.

🌿 A thought for your day

When everything feels still and personal, remember: You're carrying something—but you're not the only one carrying something. And strangely… that shared human weight makes it a little lighter.

Recap

The Mustard Seed story is a Buddhist parable about Kisa Gotami, a grieving mother whose child dies. The Buddha tells her to gather mustard seeds from homes untouched by death. She finds that every household has experienced loss, realizing death is inevitable, universal, and natural, helping her move from grief to acceptance. Key Aspects of the Tale The Request: The Buddha asks for a handful of mustard seeds from a house where no one has died—a house untouched by death. The Search: Kisa Gotami goes door-to-door, discovering that while people have mustard seeds to share, every family has lost a loved one. The Realization: She realizes she is not alone in her suffering and that death is universal and impermanent. The Lesson: The story teaches that death is an inevitable part of life, and accepting this universality helps alleviate the intense suffering of grief. Key Themes Universality of Death: Death is not a personal punishment or a unique tragedy; it is the fate of all mortals. Impermanence: Everything in life is impermanent, and clinging to loved ones causes suffering. Acceptance and Coping: By accepting the inevitability of death, one can find peace of mind and overcome the paralysis of grief. The story highlights that the only way to manage grief is to accept the natural, cyclical nature of life.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

The Great Displacement -- Meta plans 'Biggest Layoffs in History'

See All Articles on Layoffs
<<< Previously


TECHNOLOGY · ECONOMY · FUTURE OF WORK

The Great Displacement

Big Tech is no longer just cutting costs — it is rewriting the rules of employment itself. Welcome to the age of AI-driven layoffs.

April 2026  |  5 min read

The numbers are staggering. Over 73,000 technology jobs vanished in the first quarter of 2026 alone, wiped across 95 companies in what is fast becoming the most consequential restructuring the industry has ever seen. And the common denominator running through every boardroom memo, every polished press release, every carefully worded internal announcement — is artificial intelligence.

This is not the familiar story of a sector tightening its belt during lean times. The companies executing these cuts — Meta, Amazon, Snap, Oracle, Salesforce — are profitable. Their share prices are healthy. Their revenues are growing. The layoffs are not a symptom of distress; they are a deliberate architectural decision. The new blueprint for Big Tech is leaner teams, autonomous AI agents, and a workforce deliberately kept small.

Meta is preparing what could be its largest-ever reduction in headcount. The first round, expected around May 20th, targets roughly 10% of its global workforce — close to 8,000 employees in the initial phase, with more cuts potentially to follow. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been explicit: he is building AI systems capable of writing code and executing complex tasks without human direction. For a company that cut 21,000 jobs in its 2022–2023 "year of efficiency," this fresh wave signals something more systemic. Last time, the crisis was existential. This time, the motivation is transformation.

Snap is cutting approximately 1,000 roles — nearly 16% of its workforce — while also eliminating hundreds of unfilled positions, effectively calling off future hiring. Amazon has already shed around 30,000 corporate jobs. Oracle has cut between 20,000 and 30,000 positions as it redirects capital toward AI infrastructure. Fintech firm Block, software company Adobe, and crypto exchange Crypto.com are among dozens of others following the same script: cut headcount, fund AI, repeat.

The framing from executives has been revealing. Adobe's co-founder described AI and people working together as delivering "the best outcomes." Crypto.com's CEO spoke of eliminating roles that "do not adapt in our new world." The language is careful — optimistic, even — but the underlying message is clear: the workforce of yesterday does not fit the operating model of tomorrow.

"This is not the familiar story of a sector tightening its belt. The companies cutting jobs are profitable — the layoffs are a deliberate architectural decision."

Facts & Figures

Company Jobs Cut % of Workforce Stated Reason
Meta ~8,000 (Phase 1) ~10% AI transformation & autonomous systems
Amazon ~30,000 Undisclosed Streamlining & AI investment
Oracle 20,000–30,000 Undisclosed AI infrastructure pivot
Snap ~1,000 ~16% AI automation of repetitive tasks
Adobe ~1,600 ~10% Self-funding AI investments
Crypto.com Undisclosed ~12% Roles not adapting to AI era
Block Inc. Undisclosed Undisclosed AI-driven efficiency gains
Industry Total (Q1 2026) 73,000+ 95 companies

The Silent Toll: Mental Health in a Disrupted Workforce

Behind every headline figure is a person — often young, often carrying student loans and EMIs, often months into a career they worked years to build. The psychological fallout from this wave of displacement is increasingly difficult to ignore.

Employee health platforms are reporting a four-fold spike in telehealth consultations for mental health concerns. Strikingly, 77% of these cases involve employees between the ages of 21 and 30. Among IT professionals specifically, up to 80% report significant workplace stress, while over 70% show symptoms consistent with depression, insomnia, or anxiety.

And the damage is not limited to those who lose their jobs. Those who survive cuts report a phenomenon increasingly recognised by workplace psychologists: survivor's guilt. The fear of being next. The pressure to produce more with a gutted team. The cognitive weight of watching colleagues — friends, mentors — quietly exit the building. It is a form of chronic stress that rarely makes the earnings call but quietly corrodes productivity, creativity, and trust.

Perhaps most telling is a 2026 study finding that 44% of Gen Z employees admit to actively resisting or sabotaging AI initiatives at their workplaces — not out of ignorance, but out of fear. Fear that cooperating with the very tools displacing their colleagues would accelerate their own obsolescence.

Key Takeaways

  • 01AI-driven layoffs in 2026 are not recession-driven — they reflect deliberate strategic pivots by profitable companies.
  • 02Early-career professionals, especially Gen Z, bear a disproportionate mental health burden from this transition.
  • 03The elimination of unfilled roles alongside existing ones signals a fundamental rethink of team sizing, not just cost cuts.
  • 04Survivor's guilt is emerging as a significant and underreported workplace mental health challenge in AI-disrupted organisations.
  • 05Companies that ignore the human cost of AI transitions risk resistance, low morale, and long-term productivity losses.

A Question Worth Sitting With

The future of work will not be determined solely by what AI can do — it will be shaped by what we choose to do with the people it displaces. Technology has always disrupted labour; what is different this time is the speed, the scale, and the surgical precision with which entire categories of work are being rendered redundant. The question for business leaders, policymakers, and societies is no longer whether AI will change the workforce — it already has. The question is whether we can get the human part right.

Nokia set to lay off 14,000 employees, Indian teams likely impacted

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Finnish tech giant Nokia is planning a major round of layoffs across its India operations, as part of a broader strategy to cut its global workforce by up to 20 per cent.

Finnish giant Nokia, once the largest phonemaker in the world, is preparing to drastically reduce its workforce. The company has begun preparing for layoffs across its India teams as part of a broader restructuring plan to reduce its workforce by as much as 14,000 employees.

The company said, "Any regional headcount reductions are part of Nokia's global cost-savings program, which the company announced in 2023. As stated in the past, the target for this program is to make between EUR 800m-1.2bn cost savings by reducing headcount globally between 9,000-14,000 by the end of 2026." The Finnish giant insisted that India remains an important part of its plans. The statement read, "Nokia has not announced any specific regional guidance in India on headcount reductions. India continues to be an important hub for Nokia."

As per a report from Moneycontrol, Nokia is expected to reduce its global workforce by 20 per cent. The Finnish giant currently has a workforce of over 74,000 employees. Nokia has just over 17,000 workers in India.

This comes at a time when various companies such as Amazon, Microsoft and Google, have laid off thousands of workers. Meta is also rumoured to be planning to layoff over 15,000 employees.

Nokia's India performance is said to be in decline. The company's net sales dropped 15 per cent year-on-year to 393 million euros (roughly Rs 4,290 crore) in the fourth quarter of 2025. In comparison, the company had reported India net sales of 463 million euros (roughly Rs 5,000 crore) in the same quarter a year earlier.

Nokia begins India restructuring

The report states that Nokia has begun changes in its India leadership. Samar Mittal was appointed as India Country Business Leader and Vibha Mehra as India Country Manager from April 1, 2026. Former India head Tarun Chhabra has exited his role amidst the organisational changes.

Under the new structure, Mittal will oversee the entire customer portfolio end-to-end, a role with greater operational control than his predecessor.

The latest restructuring is expected to result in job cuts across various functions in India, including common and global roles. It is believed that the merger of Nokia's Cloud and Network Services, with Mobile Networks, in 2023, has created duplication. The layoffs are expected to also tackle this issue.

Nokia workforce reduced by almost 30,000 in 8 years

Nokia's global workforce has gone through a steady decline over the years. The company was said to have around 103,000 workers in 2018. A figure that now stands at 74,100. In the same period, the head-count decreased by 500 in India.

The company is said to have been planning for additional job cuts in Europe. As per reports, around 1,400 jobs across its teams in Greece, Italy, Germany, and France.

Nokia's telecom rival Ericsson has also been reducing its workforce. The company laid off around 5,000 employees last year, with more layoffs likely planned.

Dated: Mar 27, 2026
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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Story of How a Kingdom is Built... And Lessons About Financial Freedom


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A Parable on Wealth & Freedom

The Kingdom
of Freedom

How one unlikely king built an empire from nothing — and the 7 financial lessons hidden inside his story

— ◆ —

Most people dream of a windfall — a lucky break that finally hands them the life they deserve. But what would you actually do if fortune dropped power into your lap for exactly five years, and then took it all away? That question is at the heart of a story that has quietly altered the way many people think about money, freedom, and time.

It is a story set in a kingdom called Andhar — a word that means darkness. And it begins, as all the best stories do, in the middle of despair.

The Kingdom of Darkness

Andhar was outwardly magnificent — rivers brimming with fish, triple-harvest farmlands, mountains standing guard on every flank. But beneath the glitter ran a dark secret. Generations of famine had once brought the kingdom to its knees. Mothers burned leather to boil broth for starving children. The elders, in desperation, struck a deal with a shadowy force beneath a banyan tree: a demon called Kaal Bandhan — the Binding of Time.

The price of prosperity was peculiar. Every five years, a new king would be chosen by lottery. For those five years, he would receive absolute power, boundless wealth, and every luxury imaginable. But when the clock ran out, he would be dragged into the wild forest surrounding the kingdom — to meet whatever fate awaited there. The previous kings, predictably, spent their reign in decadent abandon. Why plan for a future that ended in five years?

And so the cycle continued — king after king feasting while the clock ticked.

"Every king before him had treated those five years as his last. Sameer treated them as his first."

The Unlikely King

When the lottery was drawn this time, the name that emerged surprised everyone — including its owner. Sameer, called Sami by those who loved him, was nobody of consequence. Not rich, not powerful. But he had a quality rarer than both: he was genuinely good, and genuinely curious. Teachers and elders quietly adored him for it.

When Sami took the throne, the palace prepared lavish feasts in his honour. He declined all of it. He ate the same simple food he always had. The court was bewildered. But inside that quiet mind, a plan was already forming.

Year 1

Sameer spent his entire first year learning. He pored over the kingdom's finances — every coin earned, every coin wasted by his predecessors. He walked among his people, asking questions no king had bothered to ask. By year's end, he had complete clarity: Andhar was wealthy enough to fund an entirely new kingdom. It just needed someone willing to invest instead of spend.

Year 2

He began sending people out — quietly, in small groups. A few each day. Skilled farmers, blacksmiths, teachers, healers. Nobody noticed because nobody was looking for a slow, steady trickle. But over twelve months, more than five hundred people had slipped out of Andhar and begun clearing a wild forest beyond its borders.

Year 3

The cleared land needed more than settlers — it needed capability. Sameer now focused on training. He created systems: farming guilds, teaching circles, construction crews. He did not tell the people their destination. He simply made them ready, and they came willingly.

Year 4

By now, the new land had a life of its own. People grew different crops, made tools, built homes, traded with one another. Sameer began buying their goods with his royal funds — seeding the economy from the top down while it grew organically from the bottom up. A real kingdom was taking shape.

Year 5

When the final year arrived and the crowd in Andhar wept at Sameer's departure, he did not weep. He smiled. He walked willingly into the forest — and on the other side was not death, but a kingdom that had been waiting for him. Moksh. Freedom.

"I didn't prepare for an ending," Sameer told Arjun. "I was preparing for a beginning — one that everyone else mistook for goodbye."

7 Lessons Hidden in the Story

Sameer's kingdom is a parable, but the lessons inside it are ruthlessly practical. Here they are, drawn out of the story like ore from rock.

01

Clarity Before Action

Sameer's first act wasn't spending — it was understanding. He mapped every asset, every liability, every leak. Financial freedom never begins with hustle; it begins with an honest audit of where you actually stand.

02

Live Below Your Means

A king who could eat from gold plates chose a clay bowl. The gap between what you can spend and what you do spend is exactly where wealth is built. Every rupee not consumed is a brick in the next kingdom.

03

Build Systems, Not Just Savings

Previous kings hoarded gold; Sameer created infrastructure. Savings protect you. Systems generate for you — indefinitely. The goal isn't a pile of money; it's a machine that produces money while you sleep.

04

Multiple Streams of Income

Sameer didn't send only farmers. He sent blacksmiths, healers, and teachers too. Diversification isn't caution — it's architecture. If one stream dries, others flow. Income resilience is built by design, not accident.

05

Skills Over Status

Status is borrowed; it can be revoked on someone else's timeline. Skills compound. A person who can farm, build, or heal carries their wealth inside them, immune to the whims of any lottery. Invest in capability first.

06

The Compound Effect

A few people sent each day looks like nothing. Five hundred people over a year looks like an army. The compound effect is invisible at first — and then suddenly, overwhelming. Small, consistent actions are the most underrated force in finance.

07

A Fixed Commitment Window

Sameer had no choice but to act within five years. That constraint was his greatest gift. Deadlines kill procrastination. If you give yourself a non-negotiable window and treat your financial plan as no less binding than a king's decree, you will surprise yourself.

Takeaways

  • Start with an audit, not an ambition. Know your numbers before you make any move.
  • The size of your lifestyle is a choice. The less you consume today, the more you can compound tomorrow.
  • Drip strategy works. Small, daily actions are invisible — until they're unstoppable.
  • Skill is the most durable asset class. Markets crash; a capable mind doesn't.
  • Five years will pass either way. The question is whether you'll have a new kingdom waiting on the other side.

"Five years will pass regardless — the only question is what you build while they do."

Conclusion

Sameer didn't escape darkness through luck — he outworked it with clarity, patience, and relentless compounding. The forest that looked like an ending was, all along, the beginning he had been quietly building for years. Your financial life is no different: the Andhar you're in right now is not permanent — unless you choose to stay.


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