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The SEEEPC Caste Ledger: Why Telangana's New Data Breaks the Myth of "Casteless Poverty"

By Nagesh Bhushan April 24, 2026 For decades, a comforting refrain has echoed through India's policy corridors and political rallies: "There is no caste, only poverty." The argument, seductive in its simplicity, suggests that once income is equalized, the ancient hierarchies of birth dissolve. If a Dalit farmer and a Brahmin landlord both earn ₹50,000 a year, the logic goes, they stand on equal footing. The state, therefore, should target the poor, not the caste. But a new, sprawling dataset from the southern state of Telangana threatens to shatter this comforting illusion. The  Socio, Economic, Educational, Employment, Political and Caste (SEEEPC) Survey 2024 , released by the state's Independent Expert Working Group, does not merely count heads; it dissects the anatomy of inequality with a granularity never before attempted in India. Covering 35 million people across 242 distinct caste groups, the report delivers a stark verdict:  Poverty is not casteless. In f...
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9 Ways to Divide India — One Country, Many Realities

A single border can contain an entire world. On the map, India appears as one nation. But through the lens of geography and human patterns, it can be “divided” in many different ways — each revealing a new layer of identity. 1. Geography: From the Himalayas in the north to coastal plains in the south, natural boundaries shape regions. 2. Temperature: Harsh winters in the north contrast with tropical heat in the south. 3. Religious Landscape: A mosaic of Hinduism, Islam, Sikhism, Christianity, and more — varying by region. 4. Language Demography: Hundreds of languages and dialects, with major groups like Hindi, Tamil, Bengali, and Telugu. 5. Population Density: Dense urban centers versus vast rural spaces. 6. Regional Climate Patterns: Monsoon-driven rainfall creates sharp contrasts between wet and dry zones. 7. Physical Terrain: Mountains, plateaus, deserts, forests, and river basins — all within one country. 8. Food Preferences: From wheat-based diets in the north to rice-...

Telangana’s SEEEPC Survey: How Courts Treat Such Reports

 Will the courts entertain such reports? A detailed breakdown of how courts treat such reports and the legal strategy involved: 1. Precedent: Courts Have Used Similar Data The Indian judiciary has repeatedly relied on empirical data to adjudicate reservation cases. Indra Sawhney Case (1992):  The Supreme Court emphasized that "backwardness" must be based on  social and educational backwardness , not just economic status. It mandated that the government must collect data to identify "creamy layers" and backward classes. Jarnail Singh v. Lachhmi Narain Gupta (2018):  The Supreme Court upheld the need for  quantifiable data  to justify "catch-up" mechanisms (like the creamy layer) in promotions for SC/STs. E.V. Chinnaiah v. State of Andhra Pradesh (2004):  The Supreme Court struck down the sub-classification of SCs by the Andhra Pradesh government, ruling that only Parliament could do...

Padmashali Community — SEEEPC Survey 2024, Telangana

Basic Profile The Padmashali community (also recorded as Sali, Salivan, Pattusali, Senapathulu, Thogata Sali) is classified as Backward Class BC-B in Telangana. Their surveyed population is 11,82,252 — representing 3.3% of the state's total surveyed population, making them one of the larger BC-B communities. Their traditional occupation is weaving . Composite Backwardness Index (CBI): Score 67 The CBI is the survey's master index of multi-dimensional deprivation across all parameters. The state average is 81 (higher = more backward; maximum = 116). Community CBI Score SC Dakkal (most backward) 116 State average 81 BC-B Padmasali 67 BC-B Perika 63 OC Brahmins (least backward) 22 Padmashalis are ranked 67th among 242 castes — placing them in the moderately backward tier, below the state average backwardness level, meani...

Composite Backwardness Index: Socio-Economic Profile of Padmashali Community in Telangana

The Padmashali community (also known as Sali, Salivan, Pattusali, Senapathulu, and Thogata Sali) is categorised under Backward Class (BC-B) in Telangana. According to the 2024-2025 Socio-Economic and Caste Survey, they represent 3.3% of the state's total population . Overall Backwardness Profile The community is classified as "Less Backward" than the state average. They have a Composite Backwardness Index (CBI) score of 67 , which is significantly more developed than the Telangana state average of 81 (where higher scores indicate greater backwardness). Among the 56 major castes in the state, they are positioned towards the least backward end of the spectrum. Education and Literacy The Padmashali community demonstrates strong performance across various educational parameters: Higher Education: They rank 10th out of 56 major castes in the share of people attaining a diploma or higher degree , performing better than many other BC groups and ev...

Strategic Integration of Intelligence, Academia, and Media for National Narrative Management

1. The Primacy of Narrative in Modern Statecraft In the contemporary geopolitical theater, the center of gravity has shifted from kinetic warfare to narrative dominance. While military and economic capabilities remain the hardware of state power, the software—the "conditioning of the mind"—is what determines long-term strategic success. We must recognize that in international relations, "truth" is rarely an absolute; it is a malleable commodity managed to serve the state. The ultimate goal of modern statecraft is to project a "superiority of nobility" so profound that the nation’s actions are perceived as inevitable or morally necessary, regardless of the underlying reality. The dichotomy between truth and narrative is best observed in how history is curated. For decades, the Western narrative has successfully claimed credit for the victory in World War II, effectively erasing the strategic reality that the Soviet Union bore the brunt of the conflict ...