Let’s be honest. When you read and hear all those homilies today celebrating 78 years of freedom – from the top of this pink page or the ramparts of the Red Fort – you’re not really going to be thinking of freedom fighters or White people in black-and-white film reels, but of the value of the free-dom. Not liberation, emancipation, non-dependence – no, no, but the other variety of free-dom: that phenomenon where you can get something free. Don’t you believe the cynics – or the economists – when they say that there is nothing called a free lunch. Rubbish! When you’re standing in front of a spread of office samosas, biscuits and coffee that you’re not paying for, economic theories seem a bit academic, don’t they?
Even today, on Independence Day, despite it being a dry day, you must be going in the evening to a friend’s place – for drinks and khana that you won’t have to pay for. Ergo, free. The trick to enjoying a free lunch is to embrace the guilt-free delight of getting something for nothing. No need to consider that maybe the ‘tandoori treat’ could be the bait for yet another ‘team-building’ exercise. Or that a free I-Day gift will mean listening to a bureaucrat speak about the nation, or – god forbid – the future of this country. But free things do exist, even in an India’s generosity that is dependent on your credit worth and standing.
Related posts:
Arise Sir Lewis Hamilton, Formula One Champion Gets His Knighthood
Post-pandemic, India’s most industrialised states have started falling behind as UP and MP...
Opinion | Timothy McVeigh’s Dreams Are Coming True
Exports need a hand from handsets PLI
Ferrari Get First Pole Since 2019 Mexico, Similarities to Michael Schumacher Show in 2006....
India's green revolution: Leading the way in durable carbon removal to combat climate...
Bundling is back, in the streaming era
Lewis Hamilton to Race in Abu Dhabi GP after Testing Negative for Coronavirus
The AI piggyback ride India badly needs
Opinion | Trump Is a Poor Model of Masculinity