Thursday, September 3, 2009

YSR dies in a helicopter crash...and raises a few questions

The abrupt death of YSR in a helicopter crash curiously parallels the death of many congress politicians in the past. Madhavrao Scindia, Rajesh Pilot, Sanjay Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi, and Priyanka Gandhi's husband Robert Vadra's own brother, sister and father are some of the names that come to mind.

Madhavrao Scindia and Sanjay Gandhi died in airplane crashes, while Rajesh Pilot and Robert Vadra's brother and sister died in bizarre 'accidents,' while Robert's father allegedly commited suicide (Robert Vadra's European mother seems to have somehow escaped the family jinx). Rajiv Gandhi of course was assassinated in full public view by a LTTE suicide bomber, so what happened to him is not exactly a mystery, but who else were involved still continues to be a big one to this date.

Curiously, what was YSR doing near a forested region? What was this secretive mission he was undertaking? Is it possible that he was on some mission to work out a secret deal with the Naxalites to further the interests of the current regime and the Americans. After all, it would not be the first time the christians in a country have collaborated with communists or maoists or other militants to further their own interests.

Is this why the US government immediately steps in with an offer to help find YSR when his helicopter went down? There have been countless number of Indian politicians, public figures and personalities in the past that have met with accidents or were struck down by some calamity or the other, and yet there has never been such immediate offers for help from the US embassy in India. Why so in the case of YSR?

Could it be because he was considered a critical vital part in what is seen as the current regime's, and the US's, grand design to christianize India, destabilize the country, and expand and strengthen their political and economic interests in the country? Could it be that he was carrying some important documents with him that might reveal all, which the Americans are keen to get their hands on before the Indian search party does?

As for the misfortune itself, could it be that he was posing too much of challenge to someone in the current regime, or in other words, becoming too important or big for his own good...Or was it merely a freak accident, a sudden mechanical failure of some sort that put an end to the politician's burgeoning career.

The incident is a mystery that needs unraveling. The Indian public deserves to know the truth about what happened to one of its politicians who goes wandering off into the forest one fine day and doesn't return home.