I remember my father assuring me, with a smile, “If you’re not a socialist at 21, you have no heart. If you’re still a socialist at 41, you have no head.” It was 1970, and I had just completed three years at Oxford, exposed to unremitting leftwing agitprop, mainly focussed on the Vietnam War. Having been a loyal supporter till then of Father’s Swatantra Party, I had finally swung to the left, encouraged by events in India, where Indira Gandhi had split her Congress Party, defeated the old guard’s candidate for president, nationalised banks, abolished princely titles and purses and appealed to the masses in the name of GaribiHatao (Abolish Poverty).