SP National General Secretary Shivpal Singh Yadav has given a big statement in Mainpuri. Shivpal said that there should be no politics of throwing away. He might be hinting at shoe hurling or ink throwing. Both incidents have recently brought out the fastly instant attention of the public as well as politicians as a whole.
This would argumentatively be a clean-cut case of venom or malignancy in a very open aspect. Regardless of whatever happened suddenly the misguided throwers were a little bit more feeling a sense of remorse. By the way, their submission remained timely after they had proceeded to finish off this sort of entirely mistaken rendition. Why do bothered elements or motivated individuals stoop to follow undemocratic manners to register their denouncing ill-prepared resort by indulging in such sort of activities without consideration?
As a seasoned politician, the much-known Samajwadi Party’s senior leader takes up a very appropriate and a tad bit more straight term Phenka-Phenki ki Siyasat for rather the ignoble deed if compared on all available or defined normals.
He showed his maximum generosity in condemning both varieties of incidents rising above the party line. If a shoe was thrown at his party leader Swami Prasad Maurya, the black ink was tossed up at the BJP politician Dara Singh Chauhan.
It may be said that by far the exceptionally practical term Phenka-Phenki appears too amalgamated leaving no chance to specify exactly whether the flawless usage of the above-mentioned term was only for a shoe hurling. No sieve can part away one from another. Just as shoe hurling was not good so the ink throwing was also unacceptable at the given moment.
It has now been seen the throwers leaning further and further into nonsensical drama that gathers every kind of information into illogical utterances that simultaneously repulse and attract people inwards – the eccentricity of it somehow a mental turn-on, or an exhibition of the aptly boisterous idiosyncrasy.