G RAM G - A Small Step Towards Gandhi's Ram Rajya


Let me tell you a story, and pay attention, because it is not just about a movie—it is about a country, its mood, and how the people speak when they are tired of lectures. You remember Dhurandhar? Of course you do. That film didn’t just break records, it broke the old narrative. People lined up, not just to see a story on the screen, but to signal something much bigger: that the endless talk of “Gandhi, Gandhi” was over. The streets, the villages, even the cafes—they started saying “G Ram G.” Loud, clear, and unapologetic.

Now, Dhurandhar itself is extraordinary. In just twelve days, it raked in 600 crore worldwide. That’s six hundred! And by the end of its run, it will probably touch 1,400–1,500 crore, without even counting OTT revenue. Do you know what this tells us? The public is not just watching a film—they are voting with their wallets. They are saying, “No more Mahatma Gandhi NREGA. We want G Ram G NREGA.” And of course, the Congress, in its usual melodrama, is crying that Gandhi ji has been disrespected. Let them wail. The public doesn’t care. The narrative has shifted, and the old secular badge worn by politicians is meaningless. People are done with politically correct talk. They want action, not lectures.

And the name change of the project! Some people faint at this. A project once associated with Gandhi—renamed. Bold, audacious, and yes, historic. But it had to be done. One India, one narrative. Gandhi ji wanted Ram Rajya, and Modi ji is saying it plainly: G Ram G. The Bill marches forward in this same spirit: decisive, practical, unapologetic.

Now, the clever part—the finances. Earlier, 86,000 crore rupees were spent almost entirely by the Centre. The states? Oh, they lounged and watched. No longer. The funding pattern changed from 100:0 to 60:40. States must now match the Centre’s allocation. The project days increased from 100 to 125, inflating total expenditure to roughly one lakh crore. The Centre gives 60,000 crore, the states must spend 40,000 crore. A state like Rajasthan? At least 3,000 crore. Uttar Pradesh, with 25 crore people, maybe 5,000–7,000 crore. Genius, really—an indirect way of curbing freebies. If the states cannot fund it, freebies simply cannot continue. The propaganda advantage? Moves to those who execute effectively. Financial discipline is no longer optional.

And there’s more. Seasonal restrictions. Sowing and harvesting are clearly defined. Labourers cannot skip work, and shortages are addressed. Planning, infrastructure, and execution become the focus. Wage components may shrink, material costs rise, and livelihood security transforms into growth and prosperity.

So here is the point, my friends. Dhurandhar did not just break box-office records; it mirrored the shift in governance. Gandhi ji’s name, the endless platitudes—they are history. Ram Rajya is here. The time for “Hey Ram” is gone. The time for “G Ram G” has arrived. Bold, unapologetic, unmistakably Indian. Growth, prosperity, and decisive governance are now the story. And whenever anyone asks, you remember: it is G Ram G, always.

#VBGRAMGBill #MGNREGA

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