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"If equality of opportunity for every
person in the country is the
constitutional guarantee, a candidate who
gets more marks than another is entitled
to preference for admission. Merit must be
the test when choosing the best, according
to this rule of equal chance for equal
marks. This proposition has greater
importance when we reach the higher levels
of education like post-graduate courses.
After all, top technological expertise in
any vital field like medicine is a
nation's human asset without which its
advance and development will be stunted.
The role of high grade skill or special
talent may be less at the lesser levels of
education, jobs and disciplines of soical
in consequence, but more at the higher
levels of sophisticated skills and
strategic employment. To devalue merit at
the summit is to temporise with the
country's development in the vital areas
of professional expertise. In science and
technology and other specialised fields of
developmental significance, to relax
lazily or easily in regard to exacting
standards of performance may be running a
grave national risk / because in advanced
medicine and other critical departments of
higher knowledge, crucial to material
progress, the people of India should not
be denied the best the nation's talent
lying latent can produce. If the best
potential in these fields is cold-
shouldered for populist considerations
garbed as reservations, the victims, in
the long run, may be the people
themselves. Of course, this un-relenting
strictness in selecting the best may not
be so imperative at other levels where a
broad measure of efficiency may be good
enough and what is needed is merely to
weed out the worth-less."