 People of a nation elect a government today. Tomorrow morning somebody is saying, we must pull it down. What is this? In Andhra Pradesh, we are working in the education sector. So I have a joint Telugu Desham party. With the Rally for Rivers, we are very active with the Karnataka government right now. You think I've joined JDS? It's not so good. Some media houses every now and then they report on your association with the BJP. Could you please comment on that? My association with Bharatiya Janatha party, I've never been associated with any political party, nor will I ever be associated with any political party. But when people elect a government, I think it is my fundamental duty as a citizen who is living in this country to do everything possible to support that government, to do their best. It has become a disease. People are trying to throw away one of the greatest gifts that we have in modern society, which is democracy. Democracy means that one among us could stand up and become a leader of the nation. We want to throw this away. Everywhere this is happening, not just in India. I saw this happening seriously in the United States of America after this election happening in India. Today you people of a nation elect a government today. Tomorrow morning somebody is saying we must pull it down. What is this? You have forgotten that 100, 200 years ago if power had to shift from one person to another, how many heads rolled on the street, how much blood flowed on the street, you've forgotten this. Today by casting a ballot without a drop of blood flowing, power is shifting from one group to another, which is not a small thing. Even within a family, blood will flow if power has to shift. That's how it is. If there is enough property and wealth, if power has to shift within the family, blood will flow. But somehow we evolved a system where we can shift power of an entire nation without blood flow. Do not underestimate this and do not throw this away. It is the business of every citizen to understand that democracy is a functional democracy only when every individual votes according to their judgment of what it is. Not because of religion, not because of caste, not because of creed, not even because of party. No matter what, I will vote this party. You are a bloody fool, you're destroying the democratic fabric of a nation. What it means is, what I see as right, who I feel is best for this country right now, to him I will vote, to her I will vote, not the other way round. So people are saying, because the central government is Bharatiya Janata Party, of course I will do everything possible to support this because it matters for the country. I am not supporting Bharatiya Janata Party. My commitment is for nearly 1.3 billion people, half of them in a very bad state. Well in Tamil Nadu, we are working with the local government. So you can say I have joined AIDMK. In Andhra Pradesh, we are working in the education sector. So I have a joint Telugu Desham party. With the Rally for Rivers, we are very active with the Karnataka government right now. You think I've joined JDS? Yes, I have because, because I want you to understand, if you do not bow down to the people's will, you think your opinion, what I think is more important than what the people have elected, this means you don't believe in democracy. You want feudalistic nonsense once again. That's what you want. So a whole lot of people, essentially people who have nothing else to do, but to comment on other people's lives. This has become a full-time job for a whole lot of people. Now because central government is on and I think last four years have been very effervescent governance. Are they all right? No, we can disagree with them on many things. But we have elected them, it's our business to support them. When the next election comes, it's for you to evaluate whether they've done well or not. If you don't like them, get somebody else. Yes, that is so with every government. That's what democracy means. So this is for Bharat, not for Bharati Janata Party.