arjun sai wrote:jabeen wrote:Arunima Singh wrote:Our country lacks in social ethics and responsibility. We grow up without being taught about it and having no role models to follow. We do it because we see many doing it as a norm and so there is no feeling of remorse.
I remember a incident similar to it which will throw some light on social ethics and morality. We were travelling with another family. Children ate banana, my younger daughter kept the peel in one of the plastic bags. She was very sure that she wanted to throw it in a dustbin when she finds one. But the lady of other family persuaded that she can throw it on the road side as it is already so many things thrown and keeping it in our car will make the car dirty. My daughter did not do it. But other children threw after mother threw it out of car window. They even teasingly laughed at my daughter for carrying her peel in a bag for rest 150 km till we reached our hotel and she found a dustbin to throw it. My daughter was actually into tears and I had to actually tell her in front of all that I was so proud of her to use her own brain and do right and not follow others.
Wish there are more people like you who teaches right ethics to the youngsters. Generally, we Indians believe that cleanliness begins and ends with our house. We clean and scrub our houses but has no hesitation in throwing garbage or even spitting on roadsides. Only strict actions deter them from such disgusting habit.
Speaking of which, last week or so, I came across a news item in which it was mentioned that the municipality officials of Pune had made the people caught spitting on public places were fined and made to clean it. Wish such measures are taken up in other places too.
I stay in Pune and still you can find people spitting openly on roads, buildings, malls etc.
No doubt it will take time but at least it will deter some people from dirtying the public places.
suni51 wrote:arjun sai wrote:suni51 wrote:I don't think passengers are doing that barring a few naughty incidents. After all the vendor's staff has to collect all the bedsheets, blankets and towels just before the journey is over. I am sure it's the staff that is responsible for it. Like they say the rats have eaten thousands of tons of grain from warehouses. It's really sad that government staff is indulging in such a mass theft of public property.
While I was sleeping on upper berth once I saw a family. They seemed good financially. He told his daughter-in-law to pack all the towels, blanket and give only hand towel which he wanted to carry in his hands. Even railway employees did not say anything. I did not say anything because I don't wanted unnecessary trouble because train was in UP and his sons appeared more like goon.
Haha-- good reputation of UP. I am from UP (living in UP from childhood although belong to Punjab now in my city Kurukshetra is in Hariyana though). Actually we cannot blame all the quantity that you have mentioned in your post to passengers since most people do not take the railway's property with them. I am a marketing professional and traveled widely but have never come accross anyone doing it so shrewdly.
Some person have habit of stealing. In 1995 I was working in factory. Its owner is milloners. We both stayed at a hotel in Delhi. He told me to pack telephone directory.
jabeen wrote:arjun sai wrote:jabeen wrote:Arunima Singh wrote:Our country lacks in social ethics and responsibility. We grow up without being taught about it and having no role models to follow. We do it because we see many doing it as a norm and so there is no feeling of remorse.
I remember a incident similar to it which will throw some light on social ethics and morality. We were travelling with another family. Children ate banana, my younger daughter kept the peel in one of the plastic bags. She was very sure that she wanted to throw it in a dustbin when she finds one. But the lady of other family persuaded that she can throw it on the road side as it is already so many things thrown and keeping it in our car will make the car dirty. My daughter did not do it. But other children threw after mother threw it out of car window. They even teasingly laughed at my daughter for carrying her peel in a bag for rest 150 km till we reached our hotel and she found a dustbin to throw it. My daughter was actually into tears and I had to actually tell her in front of all that I was so proud of her to use her own brain and do right and not follow others.
Wish there are more people like you who teaches right ethics to the youngsters. Generally, we Indians believe that cleanliness begins and ends with our house. We clean and scrub our houses but has no hesitation in throwing garbage or even spitting on roadsides. Only strict actions deter them from such disgusting habit.
Speaking of which, last week or so, I came across a news item in which it was mentioned that the municipality officials of Pune had made the people caught spitting on public places were fined and made to clean it. Wish such measures are taken up in other places too.
I stay in Pune and still you can find people spitting openly on roads, buildings, malls etc.
No doubt it will take time but at least it will deter some people from dirtying the public places.
It is not only in Pune, most of city have this situations. In cinema hall if we want to putt of your shoes you can't do it because their is small lack of spit.
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