After successful landing of rover on Mars, the NASA scientists
are planning an ambitious mission to launch a robotic probe inside Indian
Parliament to search for signs of probity in public life.
Christened as NETA (New Experiment in Troubled Asia), the
research project seeks to find answers to the age-old questions like whether
honesty ever existed in the precincts of the massive circular edifice or
whether it ever offered conditions favourable to sustain civility
However, some sceptics within the NASA establishment have questioned
the rationale behind the exploration. “The chances of this mission proving successful
are as bright as finding a twin of Sunny Leone on Mars,” said a dissident
scientist.
“This is the most complex and challenging experiment ever
undertaken because we are out to explore something that many believe is
non-existent,” a top NASA scientist said. Even a feeble sign of integrity in nano
dimension will be picked up by the advanced radars fitted to the
nuclear-powered rover to be lowered inside the Sansad Bhavan using a complex set of manoeuvres.
The sophisticated rover will thoroughly survey the barren and
lifeless six-acre area of the Parliament House including its famed sandstone
columns, looking for “upright souls”. Its robotic arms will collect the samples
like copies of government bills and statements, abandoned by the MPs on their
tables or dustbins, and parcel out
these samples into analytical laboratory instruments inside the rover.
The high resolution images of the members’ antics inside the
House, particularly in the central hall, will be relayed to the NASA control
room for psychological evaluation of their conscientiousness or lack of it. The
rover will use its on-board instruments to analyse the gibberish speeches and verbal
duels to understand whether there was any period in the Parliament’s history that
was conducive for honesty to survive.
“The scientific objective of this mission is to understand how
the world’s largest democracy has come to be governed by two simple yet elegant
instruments---deception and falsehood,” the project director said.
The Indian-origin scientists, who constitute a major chunk of
the workforce at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, are excited
about the experiment. “Look, we finally
have an opportunity to prove that our decision to leave our lousy country was right,”
said a young Indian-born scientist.
Back home, the politicians across the board, on a predictable
note, found the title of the project provocative. “This is yet another display of
American imperialism and a blatant interference in the internal affairs of our
country,” thundered the CPI (M) General Secretary Prakash Karat. The BJP and its saffron affiliates saw the NETA
mission as an affront on Indian sensibilities. They went a step further and claimed
that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was in fact a “robot” planted by Americans
as part of their larger agenda to capture the Indian market.
The Congress spin master Kapil Sibal, however, said that the
impact of the NASA experiment on India’s image was only “notional”.
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