In which part of the world is not servant class
Answers
Answer:
Among the many reactions arising from the Devyani Khobragade affair one of the commonest, from Americans, has been the question: “But couldn’t she do the chores herself?”
Most middle-class Americans do their own cooking and cleaning. So if middle-class Indians, whether abroad or in India, depend so much on servants then they must be lazy, full of a sense of entitlement and cruelly ready to exploit Indian income differentials.
I’ve been asked if these attitudes come from the caste system.
Many of these Khobragade stories have been running alongside coverage of ongoing battles by supermarket and fast food industry workers to raise their minimum wages which are often barely enough to allow a decent existence.
This only suggests that life is more complex than people asking that question might imagine. A major reason Americans can manage without servants is because so much of what servants do in India has been outsourced to the vast American service and retail industry whose labour practices are fairly dubious.
Cooking in New York City can be a simple matter of picking up a bag of salad (washed, cleaned and only needing added dressing, also probably ready-made) and a steak (neatly trimmed and ready to grill). But behind this is an army of low-paid farm labour – many of them illegal immigrants – who grow, clean and bag those salad greens; abattoir workers, often working in awful conditions, to kill, cut, clean and package the meat so neatly it hardly seems to have any connection with any animal; transport workers to take the food across the country, and supermarket workers to stock the shelves.
When it comes to service, someone somewhere is always being exploited, but Indians may just be more open about it.
Explanation:
मांगा मैंने वेकेशन आई एम फ्रॉम द दीवानी कोबरा गेट आफ्टर वन ऑफ द कांग्रेस पर अमेरिकन हैव बीन द प्रेजेंट बट कोल्ड नॉट सी टू द मोस्ट मिडल क्लास अमेरिकन स्टूडेंट लीडर्स