The pouring of Indian capital into our country for political reason, has shattered the Naga people into a society of wild money. Its accumulation in the hands of the reactionary traitors and the rich has accelerated the process of exploitation and suppression of the people. The appropriation of the vast means of production, distribution and exchange and other means of profit-making by this exploiting class and by the Indian parasites had drawn a distinct line between them and the people. The struggle between the two classes, bound as it is, would ever assume greater magnitude with the exploiting class and the Indians defending all the times the untenable status quo and the people directly opposing it. The antagonism is not a small problem and no Naga would be free from it. In addition, the involuntary influx of Indian nationals from the over-populated India into our country has set all Nagalim under constant threat of eventual submersion. In this connection, it may be recalled that before the year 1947, there was not a single Indian in Nagalim. It is now with more than two hundred thousand Indians. If, with a greater ratio of influx, another twenty years would go let alone a generation, what would be the state of affairs one could imagine? The exploitation of vast tracts of public land and other means of capital making everywhere by the exploiting class by using the Indian nationals as laborers, and their votes in the election contest have given a clear aspect of the constant and rapid exploitation of the Naga people at large by the reactionary traitors and the Indians. The massive exploitation of mineral resources by the Central Government of India with the bureaucrats and the exploiting reactionary traitors in the puppet State and the constant flow of swarms of Indians into the little surface of Nagalim, will in short period of time completely overwhelmed and uproot Nagalim depriving thereby the Naga people of all functionaries, of all their just due and of their means of life, because all their just due and of their means of life, because exploitation has no temperance. This is how a people is exploited to the worst of fate -- the fate of becoming the helpless exploited foreigners in their own motherland. What this lost world holds for the Naga people? Nagas are, indeed, faced with the irreconcilable fate from which we are to deliver ourselves. But deliverance from such imminent doom decisively calls for a revolutionary force.