Why should I not vote for Narendra Modi in 2019 elections?


I can see few reasons why you should not:

1) A Chai Wala doesn't deserve to be the PM

As some of our respected ministers think, why should a poor man be a PM. It is a honored post reserved for one family. 

2) Good Administration = Nazism

No one can be a good administrator without being a NAZI. You should know this. Congress constantly reminds me of this.

3) Quick Decision Making & Progress = Hitler

Hey remember, Hitler = Progress + Genocide. 

Therefore, Progress = Genocide + Hitler.

I know this math sounds weird but hey, importing a PM from a country thousands of miles away to rule over a country with 1.2 BILLION people is weird too, right? RIGHT?

4) He sweats a lot and drinks lots of water

As our respected Bihari CM Shri Nitish Kumar mentioned a PM candidate should not sweat or get thirsty. Well, why should he?

According to Nitish Ji, PM's should be sitting in an AC office sipping coffee, not sweating it out in the public (trying to control PANIC and hence saving hundreds of lives). Naah, that is for the common man to do.

A PM candidate should not sweat or drink water in public. What is he, a COMMON MAN?? 




This is the performance card present on transforming india website containing data to till today. It contains all the initiatives taken by Modi Government and it's data. Don't follow media, supporters or anyone for that matter, just believe in facts : Performance dashboard
National Ujala Dashboard
  • 8,913 Villages have been electrified till today and more to come. (GARV Dashboard)
  • 1,03,82,353 people have given up their subsidies to benefit those who couldn't afford LPG and use firewood for cooking. (My LPG.in | Home)
If this doesn't persuade you or make you vote Modi Government then think of this : BJP will lose the election and UPA will win it, most probably Rahul Gandhi will be our new Prime Minister and whole India will suffer from stupidity.

I don't know about you but I am definitely going to vote for him. Following are the few of reasons I am totally Modi-fied.
1. He is talking the talk: Love him, hate him, you have to credit him. He is a phenomenal orator. Since ten years, every Indian’s ears had been longing to hear the leadership talk. For a country plagued with scams, crimes against women and corruption, the silence from the top quarters was heart-breaking. Enters Modi, and we have a leader who is not just talking the talk, he is saying all the right things. Things every Indian has wanted to hear.
2. He is walking the walk: Inviting SAARC country’s including Pakistan to his swearing-in ceremony was a master-stroke in diplomacy as well as establishing India’ leadership role in the region. Inviting FDI over brunches with top CEOs in US to initiating Adarsh Gram Yojana (Model Villages) for the poor, Modi has shown that he believes in action. Finally, we have a leadership that is giving out a road-map for a better India and its focus is on solutions, not promises.
3. He is motivating the youth to take ownership: Instead of showing people rose-colored dreams, and offering them freebies, he is asking them to be a partner in the nation’s development. No government can usher a revolution until its people take ownership and responsibility. Modi is doing exactly what Mahatma Gandhi demonstrated 65 years ago — harnessing people power!
4. He is accessible to the common citizens: The social media savvy PM is accessible to anyone who wishes to write to him on pmindia.gov.in. Through the website mygov.in, for the first time ever, it seems that someone up there is interested in knowing what ‘We, The People’ think about policies and each one of us has a chance to not just voice our opinion but also contribute towards nation-building by taking on small tasks.
5. Modi has grabbed the world by the eye-balls and no one is complaining: (Well, except certain sceptics) When was the last time an Indian leader left an impact on a global platform? Even his distracters and those who are making spoofs — fact is you have had to acknowledge him. The world is looking towards India with renewed interest and as filmy as it sounds, for me and many others like me, 19,000 people yelling Bharat Mata ki jai on a foreign land (in Madison Square) was nothing less than a Chak De moment!
6. Development, development, development.
Remember that line Vidya Balan says? “Entertainment, entertainment, entertainment.” Jokes apart, even if Modi is taken out of the equation, making the media blitzkrieg that the elections have turned into, about development – is the right thing to do. Around August 2013 there was a debate between Amartya Sena and Jagdish Bhagwati where the two argued which should come first: development or redistribution of growth. I certainly take the side of Dr. Bhagwati – growth first, redistribution later.
Not to mention, India is a country where discrimination is rampant, based on every single thing you can imagine. I think propelling the masses towards development will do its bit to take discrimination out of the equation to some extent.
7. Decisiveness, ahem.
What loyalists call decisiveness, critics would call authoritarianism. Doesn’t India need someone who has the political will and the capacity to guide the country through the troubled phase we are passing through? Narendra Modi certainly can be that someone.
8. The economy, the market needs the positive sentiment.
Think of positive market sentiment and think of Modi and Vibrant Gujarat. Like anything Modi, VG is a topic of debate too. Critics say it is a marketing gimmick. I say, if it brings in dollars one way or another, why not?
In an episode of Devil’s Advocate, Karan Thapar interviewed RBI governer Dr. Raghuram Rajan. Dr. Rajan was of the opinion that India can grow at 10% for 20 years, the word of emphasis – CANIF the right steps are taken. Dr. Rajan highlighted four significant factors that would propel India’s growth: 1) Infrastructure, 2) Human Capital, 3) Business Regulation and 4) Finance. The second, India has in plenty. The last is the job of the RBI. The first and the third can be done only by the government.
The market runs on animal spirits, according to him and according to  another very old economist that a layman wouldn’t know of – Keynes; and what investors feel about any situation drives a lot of decisions. Now because I think UPA threw away the opportunity, and because Modi has proved he is good with infrastructure, and more or less also good with business regulation, I’d say why not?
9. Who else?
Rahul baba? After frankly speaking with Arnab Goswami? After not having help a single portfolio for ten years when he had the chance to? No please. However, I do not dismiss UPA, that would be stupid. Why? You’ll read in just a minute.
Of one thing I am certain, I don’t want a mishAAP to happen to the country like it did in Delhi. Despite the love for limelight that Kejriwal and the AAP have shown, which seems to be the one big thing they are really great at, and the connect they apparently have with people, I would not want a party with no clear ideology (anti corruption is an issue, it does not say how to run a country that’s the world’s largest democracy).
I am not saying Kejriwal is stupid, clearly he is not. But I would be happy to consider them at the helm of the country after a successful stint at the state level. India is a big country and politics here is never going to die. AAP will get a chance to run the country when it deserves to.
Should I talk about the third front? Suffice to say, it disintegrated faster than it formed. Also, I don’t think it is wise to delve into everyone else who has suddenly expressed his/her wish, desire, ambition, whim to be the country’s PM, not here at least. Midnight’s summer dream, eh?
These parties have regional popularity which will fetch them the deserved votes and give them a healthy number of seats to keep the head party at the centre under leash, so to say.
So to summarize,
Pehli baar kuch acha ho raha hai, let’s be a part of it’(For the first time something nice is happening, let’s be a part of it).


I hope you got the answer. These should be enough to convinve you not to vote for Modi. 

If you need more answers, listen to Sanjay Jha every day on Times Now. See how desperately he tries to find meanings in the blabberings of Rahul Gandhi. There has to be something in the man for Sanjay Jha to try so much, right?


Update of 9/2/2018






Power capacity of INDIA
Before Modi sarkar ( till 26th May 2014) - 2.65 GW
After modi sarkar ( till 31st March 2017) - 12.89 GW

According to me this is the biggest achievement of modi sarkar. As this is ground work and everybody can see it.




A revolutionary Transparent Taxation system, making every tax into one single Tax. A lot of chaos and corruption are reduced.

Some products experienced a dip in prices some experienced a hike, some were moderated. But, the chaos in taxation is reduced in a drastic way, which also reduced the accumulation of taxes (Cumulative taxes).



- Quora Compilation 

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