Civic sense is not an inherent trait that people are either born with or without. It is a training programme that society runs and in India, people are constantly getting mixed signals.
For the last many months, there has been a lot of conversation about how Indians lack civic sense.
There is certainly no paucity of evidence, whether in instances of alleged misbehaviour abroad or in everyday life in India, which abounds with examples of this lack. Traffic rules are flouted frequently, littering seems to be second nature, queues are not sacrosanct, and public urination is an easy reflex. On social media, this is bemoaned with the diagnosis that unless ‘we’ change as a people, nothing can be done about it.
There is certainly no paucity of evidence, whether in instances of alleged misbehaviour abroad or in everyday life in India, which abounds with examples of this lack. Traffic rules are flouted frequently, littering seems to be second nature, queues are not sacrosanct, and public urination is an easy reflex. On social media, this is bemoaned with the diagnosis that unless ‘we’ change as a people, nothing can be done about it.