Wow! Didn't know that the scams we used to hear about every day, everywhere from social media to newspapers to TV, were so widespread and deeply rooted in the system. Made me wonder about the movie Holiday: A Soldier Is Never Off Duty, where I got to know the concepts of sleeper cells. The same concept I found here in Scamlands, where the author tells that most of the advertisements we read in newspapers or on pamphlets on everywall of every Indian town, luring people to get a Call Centre job and a salary ranging from Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 45,000, are mostly scams. Here, the author found out for herself in the real world that people are lured in with the offer of a job in a job-scarce country to scam the strangers and even get a commission out of it. A country where my classmates, after being Post-Grad, were offered a mere salary of Rs. 12,000 per month in major Pharma companies, people with just a 10th pass or with a decent knowledge of the English language and persuasive skills can get 4 fold salary by scamming others easily and not getting caught!
This whole section just blew my mind about how deeply ingrained this all has become. Once, where India was famed and known for Truth-speaking, it is now almost submerged in the quagmire of lies. I feel bad when I read this book; it is eye-opening, yes, but bad for all the victims and pawns of this game. Victims for losing what they earned with hard work, and pawns for not getting the fair things they should. In several government schemes, *Can't mention the name or the Holigans might target me*, people are offered free money monthly, not for anything but votes, a different scheme than giving free money openly. Previously, it was called buying votes; now it's called 'Yojna'.
All applause to the author because it is one of those books that really tells you what true journalism is like. She went from researching about it to actually getting to talk to the Scheme organisers and various people who were just as simple as any town person you know, who secretly is one of the scammers. Some are shy or hideous of their work, and some are proudly accepting it as a mere job. As is the famous Bollywood movie dialogue, 'Ganda hai par dhanda hai', 'Though it's wrong, but it's business after all'. I guess it all came down to being in power for the Political parties and filling their pockets with money, rather than actually doing well for the citizens and nation. More of acting like the Termites and not true leaders.