The author appears to be quite anxious in finding faulty with the Govt. systems, which has positive contribution to the nation rather than negative contribution as the author paints it !
Hos comments are like those originated from AAP persons, who are showing that they are only Reaction mongers and not the actual performers.
Time and again they have proved that.
The same way, the author is bent upon digging into the BJP govt. performance or unwarrantedly inclined into finding fault with the positive approached in which the PM has started taking initiative.
Another author is bent upon finding some inventions in the OBC category of the PM.
So Free lance writing has become a fashion now which basically is not oriented at correcting the systems but to earn fame by criticizing the govt.
Somehow or the other they are working as leg pullers to the govt.
Are they really doing any social service by raising some biased issues ??
I have very vocally written about this in my novel, The Brown Sahebs, which was published earlier this year. The IAS is clearly a continuation of the imperial past which India musty get rid of in order to reinvent itself. It also needs to get rid of Lutyens' Delhi and the imperial symbols which are now synonymous with the grandeur of the government of the poor Indians.
.....replaced with a fresh administrative structure of our own......unfortunately, it suited the congress traitors who were served power on a platter to carry on with a system which would henceforth salute the nehru-gandhi parivar.....no wonder everyone from the peon to the president ended up shamelessly doing 'jee-hujoori' to an italian housewife even in the 21st century... till the new generation hindustani voter chose to exert herself and brought in an entirely home-grown outfit in the form of RSS-BJP combine to govern! One can be confident that the average BJP politician is more nationalist and therefore less tolerant of colonial mentality of the bureaucracy....and would therefore support replacement of IAS with an entirely new government administrative structure.
This is where the civil service comes in handy. Making of rules is a typically bureaucratic industry; unmaking it or finding a suitable exception to suit every contingency is an art form of which they are the greatest exponents. The inbred system resists injection of fresh blood and stifles creative possibilities. The appointment of even class four employees is strictly regulated but the governments have arrogated to themselves huge powers to appoint such functionaries many of which do not require any parliamentary oversight or consultation.