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Lotus to hands: What all should be hidden before the polls

Peter Griffin October 29, 2013, 18:58:23 IST

This post was first published in Forbes in Septemeber 2012 when the EC demanded all statues of elephants be covered before the UP polls. With the Congress making similar demands with BJP’s lotus symbol, we republish the list of things that should be covered up if that logic is followed religiously.

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Lotus to hands: What all should be hidden before the polls

Editor’s note: This post was first published in Forbes in Septemeber 2012 when the EC demanded all statues of elephants be covered before the UP polls. With the Congress making similar demands with BJP’s lotus symbol, we republish the list of things that should be covered up if that logic is followed religiously.  The Election Commission’s order to cover up all statues of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati, and her party symbol, the elephant, has  caused some consternatio n . One sees the logic, and one holds no brief for Ms Mayawati. Nevertheless, in the interests of fair play, one recommends that  symbols of other political parties (PDF, scroll to page 79)  in UP — and elsewhere — be similarly obscured. So: • All lotuses in all ponds should be covered, lest they give the BJP free publicity. (We recommend little gauze bags, so that some air and light get in.) • Sickles should not be used: in cornfields, since that is an obvious advertisement for the Communist Party of India; and near hammers, because that’s a plug for the Communist Party of India (Marxist). [caption id=“attachment_1200661” align=“alignleft” width=“380”] AFP. AFP.[/caption] • All alarm clocks must herewith be banned. They ring for the Nationalist Congress Party. Tell the boss that when you’re late for work. • Also to be kept away from the impressionable public eye, or to be covered with tarpaulin: bicycles, bows and arrows, hurricane lamps, spectacles, rotary dial phones, busses, lions, the rising sun, incandescent bulbs, torches, roosters, conchs, mangoes, weighing scales (the manual kind; you can go ahead with the electric variety), umbrellas, tops, hand-pumps, leaves (in pairs), three-petalled flowers, and a number of other fairly mundane items (see link above for the list). • And, of course, since it just wouldn’t do to let the Indian National Congress get away with it, you, yes, you, every one of you, will, until after polling day, kindly keep your hands in your pockets.

Peter Griffin is Editor, Special Features, at Forbes India and ForbesLife India. He also handles social media for both publications. In previous lives, he was a space seller, PR consultant, advertising creative director, voice-over artist, RJ, TV host, web producer and content architect, freelance travel writer, columnist, consultant to NGOs, some of them simultaneously and often for real folding money. He has blogged since 2003, and has co-founded the South-East Asia Tsunami & Earthquake and Mumbai Help blogs (which, with other similar initiatives later became the WorldWideHelp group and the writers’ community, Caferati. He is a keen student of collaboration and online culture. He also writes poetry, and is inordinately proud of having got paid for a few poems. He is @zigzackly on Twitter.

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