Anna Aap Hazaro Ke Hai - A Song By Thomas Easaw

Musician writer and philosopher, Thomas Easaw appeals to Anna Hazare to end his fast and follow the democratic process and releases his new song, 'Anna aap hazaro ke hai'.

Thomas Easaw, musician philosopher and author of the book, 'Justice Theory and the Ten Amendments', Thomas Easaw appeals to Anna Hazare to end his fast and follow the democratic process. The singer feels that Anna is allowed to fast and protest only because India is a democracy and so, he should be open to debate as in any democracy.

The song appealing to Anna Hazare titled 'Anna aap hazaro ke hai' can be viewed at Youtube.

The singer opines that prevention of corruption is necessary, but it is only enough to tweak our existing system which is almost as good, than to create another Frankenstein, without proper thought or parliamentary debate.

For instance, just removing the "Action taken in good faith" clause from the law books, as stated in the book 'Justice Theory and the Ten Amendments', will automatically affix accountability on every officer, big or small and will sort out 90% of the problems of our present system. The Lokpal Bill may be able to reduce corruption, but it cannot eradicate it nor guarantee justice or peace.

Presently, the very concept of judicial accountability is at fault and the running campaigns are crying for punishment against corruption, declaration of assets, methods for impeachment etc - which are only minuscule changes which cannot assure anything at all in the long run, for new ways will always be discovered to avoid accountability and absolute justice will remain a distant reality.

The book "Justice Theory and the Ten Amendments" is a philosophical treatise which explains in simple logic, the concepts of justice unlike any treatise before it. It clearly explains what the present day judicial evils are and how it can be rectified. This simple black book of justice with just about 2000 words, comprehensibly covers all the problems of the legal system and its rectification and has taken 25 years of thought and debate for its present simplified form. The book can be read at Scribd.com