People will talk about his different contribution to economy and philanthropy. However, my favorite is the story where he instructed his hotel employees to treat stray dogs well if they enter the premises. For a man of his wealth and power, to care about a stray dog truly speaks to his humble nature. RIP Sir, you were a crown jewel of the post independence India.
On one hand, stray dogs are a joy for many Indians. For many months the highlight of the day was going to a cafe at 10 pm in middle of work and throwing bones to the assembled dogs. On the other hand, they enter homes and kill babies, attack children and adults and carry rabies epidemics. Right thing to do is to prevent more strays from happening.
I worked for a company with people in India and they were available through like ten am eastern time. That’s about seven thirty pm which isn’t so bad but if there was any problem my manager would not hesitate to reach out to them even at three pm eastern.
Crunch and 12 hour days are pervasive at tech companies. Also people got meetings with clients or overlap with client timezones (like 2 pm to 11 pm). Hence the office complexes and eateries are still busy at 10 pm. Sorry the "day" was confusing.
It’s pretty typical for many Indians with any sync-up with the US (which is a lot) to work 12 hr day type schedules starting around 10-11am, with a long break in the middle for dinner/family time. Otherwise, it just doesn’t work eh?
Yes, of course and definitely I considered as I mention if he/she meant 2nd job, etc. Just the phrasing threw me off as it says 'day', then '10pm' and it's written as if it is a normal occurrence for the majority of the population (which would imply night shift/2nd shift is normal working times for the majority). Just wanted to get clarification from OP on exactly what was meant to satisfy my own curiosity.
> they enter homes and kill babies, attack children and adults and carry rabies epidemics
Are you talking about monkeys or dogs? I guess if you were talking about monkeys you forgot about how they raid the fridge and pretend to do laundry sometimes.
Not sure about entering houses, but a friend’s 5 year old just got bitten by a stray dog on the stomach during a month stay in India, she had to go through a course of rabies shots in the stomach.
Haha wtf that's not what I was going for at all. I was talking about hunting within the context of animal population control. Shelters perform animal population control with a few added steps. Not sure why everyone thought it was about eating animals when the whole danger of strays is because of a lack of animal population control.
I guess most people think of hunting as a recreational activity, followed by hunting for food. Hunting for population control is usually called culling. Regardless I didn't downvote your original comment. I just found it puzzling.
Additionally, animal shelters don't just sterilize animals, they find them new homes. A sterilization-only effort would be more like "hunting (culling) with extra steps"
The Indian subcontinent is so densely populated, very few areas can support hunting. It does happen in some rural areas. Sport hunting is not really a thing though.
Most Indians (statistically) are vegetarian, and essentially obligate vegetarian due to the population density (also enforced by religion), though ‘vegetarian’ can include eggs, fish, and sometimes chicken depending on the person, time, etc.
Indian Muslims are the notable exception (~13% of the population) and it does cause some serious friction at times - like riots.
A favorite rage bait topic is someone killing a cow. It gets people killed pretty often.
This one says 39% are ‘pure vegetarian’, with 81% ‘limiting meat’ (aka ‘mostly vegetarian’). If just a few percentage points shy of the total non-Muslim population, notably.
Which lines up with what I’m saying.
And looks like 84 killed in lynchings related to cow killings in this table [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_incidents_of_cow_vig...]. I didn’t say a lot died, just that it is a good rage bait topic when someone gets accused of it - and people do get killed over it.
No comment on the specifics of these issues, but I find the Wikipedia pages illuminating.
The “cow lynching” one has details about every incident. Whereas the “terrorist attacks” one simply has summaries.
The “cow lynching” is treated as far more important where each incident needs to be explained, but the much more numerous and impactful terrorist incidents are treated as less important.
Like Stalin said, 1 death is a tragedy, 1 million deaths is a statistic.
Also, in India a cow killing is both blasphemy/violence against a god figure, and an attack on an important source of renewable protein for the population.
Where terrorism is, uh. Business as usual.
I remember once when a political party in Bangalore bombed their own headquarters - but got caught doing it. Oops. Within a day or two, the scandal was out of the headlines to be replaced by yet another issue. Trash disposal problems, I think.
I’ve been vegetarian all my life because I’ve eaten plants with almost all my meals. One time I was a pure carnivore and eat a meat platter but most of the time I’ll manage at least one olive or something.
> though ‘vegetarian’ can include eggs, fish, and sometimes chicken depending on the person, time, etc.
What is the purpose of the word vegetarian if one uses it to mean consuming some animals but not others?
Vegan = no animals used to make food
Vegetarian = no animals consumed
Ovo lacto vegetarian = vegetarian that eats eggs and dairy (I guess additional clarifiers in case someone thinks vegetarian does not include eggs or dairy)
Pescatarian = fish + some flavor of vegetatian/vegan
For most people Vegetarian means no animal is killed - so eggs are ok.
In fact, some people claim egg is veg to convince people to consume eggs as protein source.
For proper clarity, some people use eggetarian for eggs allowed.
Seafood as veg, I guess is more a concept outside India, as consuming seafood is not seen as killing animals.
Depending on how the question was interpreted, Vegetarian might mean:
May eat outside, but will not cook non-veg at home
May eat non-veg only if veg option is not available.
Kind Advice for the meat eaters when lunch is brought in office:
-- Do not finish the only 2 vegetarian sandwiches because you wanted to see what the impossible burger tastes like.
-- Try not finish the cheese pizzas first and then touch the pepperonis later, if there are people who will come to the lunch table later
It is for this reason I always say Veg so that there is still some count available for people who need it.
Fun Facts:
Food packaging (and restaurant menus) in India show "signal" of green or red circle to indicate veg or not.
Airlines have a menu option of Hindu meal and Veg meal. Hindu meal can have chicken and omelet (or may not). Veg meal could be just salad and fruits. Many Indians pre-order Hindu and get confused when they get chicken. For me it is easier to pre-order Hindu and get cooked food with spices, and I can skip if it is chicken (or ask for veg).
[Jain meal is further restricted to veg grown above ground]
Veganism = no animals "used" to make food or whatever (soap, shoes, invivo testing...)
Many people here seems to make the confusion that veganism is about the food. It's not, it's about the animals.
> What is the purpose of the word vegetarian if one uses it to mean consuming some animals but not others?
Languages are not like mathematics, one word can convey many meaning and nothing is stone-defined (dictionaries are only an interpretation of a language). In the Indian context there's a BIG part of the population that have a diet that does not have a definition in the Official Oxford Dictionary.
> In the Indian context there's a BIG part of the population that have a diet that does not have a definition in the Official Oxford Dictionary.
How does omnivore not cover most people’s diets in India? (in the context of a discussion about populations of people that avoid eating animals)
It seems like Indians use vegetarian to describe frequency or proportion of one’s diet that is animals. Seems like there could be better terminology used to avoid confusion.
Omnivore word does cover post people diet and is indeed more accurate, but how is it useful to know that 99.9% of Indians are omnivore? « 40% avoid eating meat most of the time buy may consume it once a month » is more informative but not very practical to repeat each time someone ask your diet.
By the way its the same for veganism : most vegans have at least once washed their hand with animal glycerin in a public bathroom soap or used a non vegan cloth washing soap while traveling. Are they less vegan? For some dictionary maybe, but most people don’t care about definition absolutism and prefer focus on the motivations and the results.
> How does omnivore not cover most people’s diets in India?
The dimensions of dietary regimes are even more complex in India than "omnivore" can capture. Some very religiously orthodox groups won't even eat onions and garlic because they are believed to encourage behavioral and spiritual "tendencies" that they seek to avoid.
Some meat eating Hindus will avoid eating an animal that hasn't been killed with a single strike (in contrast to the Islamic Halal practice of bleeding animals when slaughtered).
> It seems like Indians use vegetarian to describe frequency or proportion of one’s diet that is animals.
Vegetarianism has a strong group-identitarian function in India. When it is used as a self-description, it generally is a claim to be 100% vegetarian (per the traditional definition).
The extent to which vegetarianism is proportional to an omnivore's diet is often based on social context, not percentage. For example, in religious contexts most Hindus adhere to vegetarianism, even if they are not vegetarian in secular and daily life contexts. There is a fair amount of dietary code-switching, and it's considered normal in the contexts where it occurs.
This is quite similar to the pattern seen in many other countries from Asia through to Christian Europe and Africa, where fasting often involves abstention from meat consumption.
India also has major differences in vegetarianism rates by region. The peak rates of vegetarianism are in the west and northwest (~70% in the states of Gujarat, Rajasthan, and Punjab), and the lowest rates are to be found in the south and east of India (~2%).
That really isn't that common, IMHO and speaks volumes about his empathy. Its true that my 6-month backpacking experiences are 14 and 16 years old and India is rather a continent on its own, not only population wise but also culturally and geographically so don't want to generalize here.
I've seen utter ignorance from ie older girls to stray dogs dying in the middle of the street, while I was reeling from mild shock sitting on the curb. I guess after few years there I would be desensitised too. Cows have it easy there, other animals not so much by western standards.
Its true that stray dogs specifically are also a potential threat, the picture ain't black & white.
There is more to the story than I can tell here, unfortunately, but at least I can write this:
During my work for Bentley Motors I was at one of the Geneve Motor Shows in the 2010s. During my stay at the fair, a new (1500 USD) Tata car was introduced. I visited the Tata stand with a friend, looking at their new car, which was quite the contrast in product philosophy, design and target group to the Bentley models. Thanking our host at the Tata stand for our personal tour, I gave him the invitation to return him the favour and show him the Bentley models and stand.
To my great surprise later that day Ratan Tata came to the Bentley stand with what appeared to be his family (some male and female family members) - and I was able to show him around. We could not talk much due to the bodyguards and press, but he seemed distinct in demeanor to his sons and entourage. Apart from the colourful and diverse customer group, I met Piech, other industrial magnates of our time, but Ratan managed to retain a humble and human aura. I sympathized with him.
Yes, I had the chance to meet him once because he invested in our company and paid a visit. He walked around the office and met folks, was warm and approachable even more so than our own executive team. Massively underrated guy.
Throwaway account here, but I think we should be cautious about hero worship.
While it's true that Tata has contributed positively in many areas, there are also significant controversies surrounding his legacy—like leasing coal mines for just 25 paise for 999 years before independence(1), among other issues(2)
It's important to consider both the positives and negatives to form a well-rounded opinion. Let's aim to be informed and objective rather than blindly idolizing anyone.
I too am a big fan of not supporting hero worship. But what we should recognize is the deeds that they perform and the values that they uphold rather than supporting them in everything they do.
Having met the guy multiple times growing up he always stood out to me as a very humble man that loved the people and the institution he built. His love for dogs was something that helped me be closer to animals.
With regards to the comments about post-independence industrialization, most countries go through that phase where industrialists of the time stand to gain very lucrative opportunities to build value.
> Despite repeated reminders, the company (Tata Steel) didn’t comply with the rules,” the confidential letter reads.
> And when threatened with recourse to the law, “the company started submitting the correct royalty.
IOW they continued doing what they had always been doing, and ignored a bunch of letters saying they should pay more. When the government took a more serious approach they started paying the royalty they were supposed to under the new rules.
So Ratan Tata was responsible for leasing coal mines in 1946 when he was 9 years old? At those prices, the guy was a **ing prodigy.
This is like aiming for the trees and missing the forest - the corrupt entity here is the Indian government which facilitates such corruption and monopolization and makes it hard for new entrants to compete.
I have no doubt that we humans would find fault with Buddha as well, so I am a little intrigued by this criticism (as someone mentioned he would be 9 years old when coal mining incident happened) but not totally surprised
But yeah, lets find fault with everyone to form a "well-rounded opinion", because that is what we should strive to achieve
Arguably black-bar material. Outside view, it seems like he served a tenure atop a group comparable to Disney, in breadth, scale, and market share across many industries in India, as a magnate. Notably, in the period of massive telecom rollout in India.
Largest wholly owned and most advanced subsea fibre network, carrying around 30% of the world’s internet routes
- Brave.com's Llama, sourced from Tata sites
Note "30% of the world’s internet routes" is BGP burden to other operators, but by the same token, a sign of widely distributed control of networks.
As an investor, "first Indian to buy a stake in Xiaomi" among dozens of startup investments. "Some senior executives from Xiaomi were quoted saying that they would seek Ratan Tata’s advice on how to expand globally."
As a philanthropist, perhaps larger still in relevance to seeding, supporting, & growing the hacker community, his philanthropy on US college campuses in tech, biotech & genetics, and scholarships, serve to support more bright, hungry, creative individuals to learn in the US.
I'm finding it really tough to understand your comment across the flipflopping of formats.
Here’s a clearer and more concise version of your text:
Comment from mcint on HN:
From an external perspective, he can be viewed as a magnate who led a group comparable to Disney in terms of breadth, scale, and market share across multiple industries in India. His leadership was particularly notable during the massive telecom rollout in the country.
He oversaw the largest wholly owned and most advanced subsea fiber network, responsible for carrying around 30% of the world’s internet routes (source: Brave.com’s Llama, via Tata). While the "30% of the world’s internet routes" signifies a burden on BGP for other operators, it also highlights the distributed control of global networks.
As an investor, he was the first Indian to acquire a stake in Xiaomi, among many other startup investments. Some Xiaomi executives even noted that they sought Ratan Tata’s advice on global expansion.
As a philanthropist, his contributions are even more impactful. He has supported the hacker community, donated to US college campuses in tech, biotech, and genetics, and funded scholarships to foster talented, driven individuals who come to learn in the US.
Sorry about that. It's not autogenerated beyond the quoted claim, and articles quoted at full sentence length. It was a brief exploration of making the case, intermixed with reflections relating the claims to my more direct experience, e.g. of routing table sizes when running BGP yourself.
Many Indians (esp entrepreneurs) don't realise it, Ratan Tata's conduct is the default expectation how the successful and hyped people in India are to behave (not taking a moral stand, rather a factual one) in the society. He was known to be humble and kind and never made headlines for the wrong reasons. Many would do extensive PR, while he stayed away from the limelight. It's remarkably difficult in a country where the heroes are few and get a huge coverage if they want it.
Whenever a big brand wants to enter India and (due to FDI rules) has to partner with an Indian brand, invariably they go with Tata (Starbucks, Foxconn). The image of being upstanding, clean, and good at execution is hard earned.
The default expectation here means "doing the right thing while no one is looking". Ambanis is far far away from it.
I am sorry. Ambanis are not everyone's favourite. Definitely not even comparable to the Tatas. I can see why the hustle culture folks and fast money folks like ambanis. But that is not Shri Ratan Tata or Tatas at all.
I will quote Shri Ratan Tata himself:
"They are business men(Referring to Ambanis). We are industrialists."
That quote properly differentiates the differences between them IMO. Not just the perception about them. But also how they think.
In Indian society terms, I meant there is a behavior a society will approve of and expect from successful people. If they do not follow this norm (so to speak), they will be criticized for whatever they are doing.
Ambani's wedding was a huge talking point in India, and most people did not like the display of spending power. It's not legally wrong obviously, but it's not an accepted social behavior. We expect the uber successful people to do the right thing by other people all the time, work towards uplifting the society, and be cognizant of other peoples' lives and challenges, not show off when you know other people are suffering, and be empathetic. A tall order, but this is pretty much how Ratan Tata would be described. He is not alone, there is Choksi family (Asian Paints) who are also similarly humble and upstanding, and quite a few others who built business from British times to the socialist times and then the liberal era.
Opulence in societally sanctioned rituals is not considered “bad” in India. In fact it would be “bad” if they didn’t throw an opulent wedding commensurate with their wealth.
Extremely saddening to hear this, he was an inspiration growing up as a technologist and entrepreneur. Tata does a lot of philanthropy and does a lot of free cancer treatments, aside from all the great industries he has built.
He had a great life. Is dying at 86 really unexpected or sad? It seems to me like an expected end. Exactly how long should he live for his passing to be normalized?
It is. But it is also perhaps interesting to note that most people seem to rate deaths differently depending on the age of the person. A young person cut down in their prime is a special kind of tragedy, so is the death of toddlers and young children. The passing of an old person, who by all accounts have outlived most other people on earth as far as we can tell, is saddening, especially to the people in the near family. But perhaps not shocking and traumatizing, as the other examples might be.
Just observing, not saying that this is how it should be.
I guess we are in agreement here. As far as I understand, the word shocking is used, in this context, at the unexpected happening of the event; not that the event happened. If I remember the sequence of events correctly, he was admitted to the hospital for a routine checkup and on Monday, his team had released a statement on his behalf that he was recuperating.
Another reason that a lot of Indians found this news shocking is because of the value and emotions attached to the name, "Tatas". Post India's independence, they were instrumental in helping India industrialized; the other were the Birlas.
For some context, this is the end of an era for the Tata family.
They've had an odd pseudo nepotistic passing-on-the-torch framework for 100+ years now. The Tatas adopt promising children in the extended family, instead of passing ownership by birth order. Ratan Tata's father was adopted into the extended family, and Ratan later got adopted by the main line of the family to be groomed into heir apparent. Keeping up with the tradition, Ratan never married or had his own children.
Cyrus Mistry, the head of another billionaire family, became one with the Tatas through marriage & mergers. Cyrus was groomed to be the next heir apparent. Unfortunately, he met an untimely death from a car accident in 2022.
2022 marked move away from the century long tradition of keeping it in the family. The new CEO is a self-made man with no relations to the family or the Tatas' shared religion (Parsi). Usually this merit based system would be cause for celebration, but the Tatas hold a paragon-esque reputation among well-run old-money family-owned institutions.
It'll be interesting to see if the company loses it's heart as it slowly morphs into a faceless conglomerate.
I am personally feeling bad that he died. Can't remember any time in recent history when a person with whom I have no personal connecting died, and it is impacting me so much
As someone who stays far from politics, ratan tata and tata group in particular are the extraordinary entities who do opposite of enshitification.
They dont cut corners (like everyone) and are highly regarded as being genuinely good.
Case in point. From a tax perspective, historically reliance indistries was always known for being sneaky around taxes, dodging taxes, finding loopholes and such.
Tata OTOH, they are historically regarded as being much more honest and trustworthy in this regard.
Tata could have been much, much bigger. But to the extent they could get away with it, they refused to pay bribes to politicians and government employees (they couldn't refuse to pay "any and all" bribes, for they would have been shut down completely if they took that posture).
well yeah. if you put it that way, i can talk about indirect taxes and corruption is from even smallest of government employees all the way to the top.
we call it "service charges".
the officer has discretion to impose taxes, interest or penalty and on payment of service charges, discretion to look away, not mention the issue for later on.
in case the issue arises, or goes to litigation, service money ensures the officer will say yes its good to any reply you give.
Huh. I wonder what this man “staying away from politics” using the infamous lobbyist Nira Radia for? Oh I remember lobbying and manipulating the telecom licences.
It’s okay to like this guy but Tatas are considered saints because not many know their history.
Have you heard the Radia tapes? I have, in their entirety. They're out there to listen to, if you want. Fascinating piece of the zeitgeist.
My listening suggests he lived up to his legacy of above-board, gentlemanly conduct.
Compare Radia's phone calls to Ratan, with her conversations with the rest of the lot.
Ratan is a master class in, well class and restraint.
I think when you're that big and are so hard-wired into the real economy of a country as huge and populous as India, you can't not "play the game", so to speak.
The question is do you remain human despite every incentive to turn into a self-serving gluttonous tyrant?
The TATAs weren't and aren't saints. They are humans we should have more of, in those positions of wealth and power.
Have same thing to say. I worked for a very large e-commerce company in India, who when they were building their DC, contracted TCS. TCS gave a nightmarish experience on execution and ethics. They were horrible.
Not to mention all of US jobs that we said "Ta ta" to as they went to India. I worked for GE during that time and the US divisions were pretty bad as well. The handwriting was on the wall with the future of the company. I'm sure someone in the C-Suite wrote a Kaizen to shift that inefficiency overseas and probably got a bonus for it as well.
This is all I ever had heard about Tata consulting as well so I have to say it's been an education seeing how sad everyone is to see Ratan Tata pass away.
It does make a kind of sense to me now though - if Ratan Tata's goal was to pull money into India, he was massively successful. How he got there might be a different story. But that's just as true of all previous great capitalists as well.
The scale of the outsourcing I am talking about is far greater than whatever you're imagining.
We brought teams of people from India over to the US, housed and fed them, so they could be able to work with their counterparts overseas. On the India side we found their operating infrastructure to be woefully inadequate, so we helped them build entirely new facilities with perimeter fences, proper security, the works.
After all was said and done, the skills of the people we were getting were on par with someone with no programming experience that skimmed a java book in their spare time. The code quality was abysmal at best, and this was in the days before source control was popular.
One of the other huge problems was just the time zone difference. You get into work in the morning to have a meeting with some second-shift team in India, and find out about all of the work that didn't get done because they didn't know what they were doing .. spend the time to correct them, they say they will fix it the next day .. next day comes, same issues, no progress, repeat ad nauseum.
He was one of the few industrialists who gave capitalism a good name. He was never one to do ostentatious displays of wealth or buy islands. He used his vast wealth and influence in the best possible way.
I don't think people outside India understand what Tata means. Who Ratan Tata was. He was not some random rich person who did some philanthropy. ~66% of everything that Tata companies make goes back to philanthropy and the people of India. And these days to people where Tata companies operates (I presume). To the TATAs, people are of primary importance. They are a behemoth of a group comparable to Samsung or other big companies/conglomorates.
They don't deceive, they don't put money over people. Because their mission IS to the people. You can buy a Tata product with a level of trust that no other brand can provide. Seeing TATA along with a product is more than enough. They are the best definition of capitalism I have ever come across.
This is why you don't see Ratan Tatas in billionaire's list or rich people's list.
Everything India is because of the Tatas. They single handledly is responsible for building India's foundations. Whether it is in Health, Nuclear, Tech or anywhere. You will see Tata's presence everywhere.
I genuinely shed a tear today morning because of his passing. And I am not sure I would do the same for any other business man.
The reputation of the Tata group is not as stellar as it was under the leadership of JRD Tata.
Nonetheless, it is one of the few large industrial groups in India to go above and beyond their commercial interests to look at the interests of Indians as a whole.
I remember the day JRD Tata died. I was still in college then and I had an overwhelming sense of grief over his death. It was a huge loss to lose a man of his caliber and my grief was for the country. With Ratan Tata, it is similar but not on the same scale as JRD.
Probably. I don't think it's possible to please everybody.
Also, under Rata Tata, Tata went truly global.
I can only presume that it means increased responsibilities & increased issues. JRD Tata didn't go through the same problems as Ratan Tata did.
And I don't mean that JRD Tata struggled less. Or more for the matter.
The problems were simply different.
There is also the fact that we humans are connected 24/7 unlike previous generations.
This also means you don't hear the negativity or problems like we do today about someone.
This is the norm these days. If you need to find the same for older generations, you really need to dig through it.
I say this cos everyone I admire from yester generations come out with a lot more mistakes and issues as I learn more about them. I find it humane. It just makes them human. What I admire about Ratan Tata is that he tried to be better person. As much as he can. And he was one of the nicest human as well. That is enough. :)
For better and for worse this man left a massive impact on his country, and in many others surrounding.
Maybe my favorite is their JV with Starbucks, which had just enough Indian touch to be special. I'll take an Indian Starbucks location over an American one anyday. RIP.
This is a huge blow. For those not familiar with the history of Tata group of companies and their influence over India, they will not understand the significance of this death.
JRD Tata and Ratan Tata are among the most honorable men with pure hearts, never affected by avarice or hatred. Tales of their generosity and kind hearted nature will continue to inspire me.
They are shining examples of how capitalists can help uplift society.
He was very humble person , never showed off his wealth, and mostly followed responsible capitalism, these are the reason why many indians see him as an inspiration.
RIP sir
That being said, it always irks me when people worship "philantropic" billionaires. I'm sure he's done good things. But there are no ethical billionaires in capitalism. TATA is a giant corp with a lot of influence, I can't believe that they're a 'honest company which doesn't bribe, pays their taxes and are otherwise clean'.
Would probably be the first case of an ethical corporation/billionaire :)
Certainly cool that he helped stray dogs and people with cancer, but come on people, see through the corpo propaganda. Sounds the same to me as "[INSERT US BILLIONARE] has donated 5 milion dollars to [CUTE CAUSE], what a hero! (ignore the atrocious things done by their corps and themselves)."
Sure, yeah. My reactionary, immature answer to this is, "someone who has murdered a single person is not that bad when compared to a serial killer", but i certainly get what you mean :)
That point is subjective. Now, this anecdote is from almost 30 years ago and pretty sure things have changed. But when I went to get my India DL you can go directly to the RTO or you go thru a “driving school”. I went thru the school - why? Because they grease the skids to get the DL. Did I bribe? No. Does the school share “profits” - I’m pretty sure they do.
So like everything else with the government in India, if you’re using agents to get your work done you’re technically not bribing. But you are.
> That being said, it always irks me when people worship "philantropic" billionaires.
I hate that people are using philanthropic to describe Tatas. The western description about it is some random guy who made a lot of money and then later in life decides to do some charity BS for good PR.
66% of everything of revenues from Tata Group of companies goes to Tata Sons - which is a charity trust. Not to the boardroom. This is not some random billionaire paid some money for PR.
This is also why you are wrong. He was never a billionaire because the majority of the money didn't come to him. But to the different charities which opens high class cancer treatment hospitals and other charitable endeavours.
You should read up more about Tata. How they operate. Then you will understand Tata - the brand and the Tatas the people behind it.
Not Indian and not personally affective. I came from a society quite similar in terms of cultural e socio-economical background with India and maybe there’s a missing point.
I got your point and you’re right in terms of worship philanthropic people with a lot of money.
However, there’s one aspect that is overlooked when a person that helped and/or serves as reference for a bunch of people that is the “emotional gratitude” or “sense of reference” that those people has in some peoples mind and no matter how much of objective and maybe correct post-mortem criticism will change people’s mind.
At the limit, any public figure can, with little scrutiny, be framed as bad.
One example from my country: Ayrton Senna (deceased F1 Driver) even being a millionaire, coming from a very privileged background in 80s in a country that used to have at least 40% of its people below the poverty line.
Even not doing (during life) objectively nothing for poor people, a lot of folks (me included) consider the guy as a reference, in some cases as a hero. When he died a lot of folks felt that they lost their “hero” and actually he had a state funeral that no other Brazilian will ever have again [1].
My point is that there’s more nuance and layers around that topic when someone with a lot of money dies, and there’s no right or wrong since we’re al humans.
You have a chance to speak eloquently or clearly against his life, his work, or his impacts. I'm curious to hear a contribution to conversation, but I find it easiest to guess a dislike the idea of very wealthy individuals.
https://m.economictimes.com/magazines/panache/ratan-tata-ins...