Joe Shearer
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- Apr 19, 2009
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you wish to direct those to me?? please do, by pm i presume.
No, no, for general consumption. I don't quite know how pm works here.
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you wish to direct those to me?? please do, by pm i presume.
No, no, for general consumption. I don't quite know how pm works here.
No, no, for general consumption. I don't quite know how pm works here.
I would like to reproduce some of the remarks made, not on the forum I mentioned, but on a very private restricted Indo-Pakistani mailing list.
well, then the only possible stoppage will be whether that mailing-list will object to their comments being reproduced on this open forum.
maybe you can do it by removing the names.
@Joe Shearer
I'm very aware of the dangerous rise of the nutters and remain deeply troubled by the rising tide of intolerance. I'm also deeply troubled by the answer given by the "liberal"/ "secularists" to every question that crops up, regardless of the nature of the question - that it is all Modi's fault. There is no doubt that Modi's rise to power has led to emboldening of a certain loony fringe among his supporters who also seem to misread the mandate of 2014 as somehow being a victory for their cultural outlook. One needs to be careful in formulating a response to such attitudes & actions resulting from it. However when those opposing the rise of such groups, some of who might have political reasons for doing so, lay everything at the feet of Mr.Modi, they are already guaranteed to lose that battle, and allies. Trying to pin each & every act directly on Modi, who remains not only hugely popular but also thought to targeted excessively & maybe even unfairly, ends up being dismissed as the rantings of "ideological opponents". There may well come a time when Mr.Modi should be held directly responsible for something but none of the incidents thus far qualify. The ranting & railing against Modi does a great disservice in a more fundamental manner, it gives the loony fringe a free pass when Modi & not they are blamed for their actions. It also assures them of a cushion of support which comes their way because of the perception of Modi being unfairly targeted & even those who might be deeply uncomfortable with the incidents wondering whether the real issue is lost in political & ideological mud throwing.
It is with great regret that I have watched you too go down that route. Your antipathy (to put it mildly) to Modi & the BJP is well known but your reactions to incidents happening now seem less to do with the correct apportioning of blame where it is due but more of a visceral reaction to the persona of Modi himself, i.e. of your opinion of him predating his rise to becoming PM and not of his acts of omission & commission now. That is extremely unhelpful & while it is your prerogative to look at any matter through the prism of your choice, may I suggest that it is very unhelpful & renders many of the more valid points made, more easily dismissible on account of an irrational bias.
There are few members here that I hold in greater respect than you, indeed there are few who bring to this forum more wealth of knowledge & experience, but when I saw you, as I did, on another thread defending/dismissing the Godhra incident in the manner you chose, it made me wonder where your compass was & whether a fair perspective was too high an ask. There is too much of the George Bush philosophy at work here, on both sides, - "either you are with us, or against us".
There was an interview of Ramachandra Guha yesterday when he made the point that the "left wing" intellectuals by their actions of being silent and being supportive of the actions of the loonies of another type & of government inaction in such cases gave cause & excuse to the rise of the "right wing".
The right cause for all of us post the M.M Kalburgi murder was to pile on the pressure on the Karnataka government to bring the persons guilty to book. Should have also applied pressure on the government to look at the actions of certain right wing groups & asked for a hard message to be delivered. Not doing that but attempting to bring Modi into it only takes the pressure off from the Karnataka government to do its constitutional duty while turning this into a political & ideological circus. The Maharashtra government has taken some steps in arresting some of the guys behind the earlier murder of Govind Pansare who seem to have connection with the Sanathan Sanstha. The Karnataka government too is looking at that organisation. Pressure would be far better applied & may get results if it was directed at a meaningful target than when thrown, akin to a pissing context at the sky, at Mr.Modi.
We have as a nation been playing this game in the communal cauldron for ages, whether it was Mrs.Gandhi with the Khalistanis or Rajiv Gandhi with the Muslim & then Hindu pandering, whether with caste based pandering of heartland parties or whether the direct pandering of the BJP. When "secularists" / "liberals" stop looking at the caste based parties as being secular, when they oppose the appeasement politics of the soft communal parties like the Congress & the AAP, when they stand up for a Uniform civil code (the SC has given everyone another chance to be rid of this pathetic excuse for people to target the Muslims) and when they oppose all communal politics, only then will there be a chance for India to completely jettison this type of inflammable & dangerous rise of intolerance. Till then, all we will be seeing is a defence of "our" bastards.
@Joe Shearer
I'm very aware of the dangerous rise of the nutters and remain deeply troubled by the rising tide of intolerance. I'm also deeply troubled by the answer given by the "liberal"/ "secularists" to every question that crops up, regardless of the nature of the question - that it is all Modi's fault. There is no doubt that Modi's rise to power has led to emboldening of a certain loony fringe among his supporters who also seem to misread the mandate of 2014 as somehow being a victory for their cultural outlook. One needs to be careful in formulating a response to such attitudes & actions resulting from it. However when those opposing the rise of such groups, some of who might have political reasons for doing so, lay everything at the feet of Mr.Modi, they are already guaranteed to lose that battle, and allies. Trying to pin each & every act directly on Modi, who remains not only hugely popular but also thought to targeted excessively & maybe even unfairly, ends up being dismissed as the rantings of "ideological opponents". There may well come a time when Mr.Modi should be held directly responsible for something but none of the incidents thus far qualify. The ranting & railing against Modi does a great disservice in a more fundamental manner, it gives the loony fringe a free pass when Modi & not they are blamed for their actions. It also assures them of a cushion of support which comes their way because of the perception of Modi being unfairly targeted & even those who might be deeply uncomfortable with the incidents wondering whether the real issue is lost in political & ideological mud throwing.
It is with great regret that I have watched you too go down that route. Your antipathy (to put it mildly) to Modi & the BJP is well known but your reactions to incidents happening now seem less to do with the correct apportioning of blame where it is due but more of a visceral reaction to the persona of Modi himself, i.e. of your opinion of him predating his rise to becoming PM and not of his acts of omission & commission now. That is extremely unhelpful & while it is your prerogative to look at any matter through the prism of your choice, may I suggest that it is very unhelpful & renders many of the more valid points made, more easily dismissible on account of an irrational bias.
There are few members here that I hold in greater respect than you, indeed there are few who bring to this forum more wealth of knowledge & experience, but when I saw you, as I did, on another thread defending/dismissing the Godhra incident in the manner you chose, it made me wonder where your compass was & whether a fair perspective was too high an ask. There is too much of the George Bush philosophy at work here, on both sides, - "either you are with us, or against us".
There was an interview of Ramachandra Guha yesterday when he made the point that the "left wing" intellectuals by their actions of being silent and being supportive of the actions of the loonies of another type & of government inaction in such cases gave cause & excuse to the rise of the "right wing".
The right cause for all of us post the M.M Kalburgi murder was to pile on the pressure on the Karnataka government to bring the persons guilty to book. Should have also applied pressure on the government to look at the actions of certain right wing groups & asked for a hard message to be delivered. Not doing that but attempting to bring Modi into it only takes the pressure off from the Karnataka government to do its constitutional duty while turning this into a political & ideological circus. The Maharashtra government has taken some steps in arresting some of the guys behind the earlier murder of Govind Pansare who seem to have connection with the Sanathan Sanstha. The Karnataka government too is looking at that organisation. Pressure would be far better applied & may get results if it was directed at a meaningful target than when thrown, akin to a pissing context at the sky, at Mr.Modi.
We have as a nation been playing this game in the communal cauldron for ages, whether it was Mrs.Gandhi with the Khalistanis or Rajiv Gandhi with the Muslim & then Hindu pandering, whether with caste based pandering of heartland parties or whether the direct pandering of the BJP. When "secularists" / "liberals" stop looking at the caste based parties as being secular, when they oppose the appeasement politics of the soft communal parties like the Congress & the AAP, when they stand up for a Uniform civil code (the SC has given everyone another chance to be rid of this pathetic excuse for people to target the Muslims) and when they oppose all communal politics, only then will there be a chance for India to completely jettison this type of inflammable & dangerous rise of intolerance. Till then, all we will be seeing is a defence of "our" bastards.
I readily acknowledge the soundness of your criticism, and am addressing it very seriously. Let me leave it at that for the time being. In Herrick's words, which I quoted recently, "Deeds not words shall speak me".
Your frankness and transparency is admirable. That does not mean I agree at all points, but it does mean that I trust your opinion as being objective and intended to be constructive.
Let me now ask you a question of my own.
You have seen the influx of rabid right wing supporters. Why is it that you maintain an austere silence during their rampages and attacks, and why is it that you only find fault with the admittedly excessive responses to them?
Please take this as an honest question, and not as an attempt to pick a fight. I hope I have earned that amount of credibility
i stopped reading at this sentence because the author fails to realize a basic point but also through that failure confirms/answers those his below words...
the so-called democracy ( "representative democracy" ) that is much touted by western governments is not democracy at all but multi-party majoritarian dictatorship, fake-democracy, whether in a generally singular culture society like what britain was in say 1940 or in a multi-culture society like india... what this system leads to is not unifying of people for progressive collective welfare of all citizens but pandering to some vested interest over another.
the ideal political arrangement of society is without any political party, not even the single-ruling "communist" parties inherent to some societies.
once we have such a system and guided by socialism, there won't be sparks of discontent about "majority vs minority" or "rich vs poor".
without this, we can keep talking for the next 20 years without solution in sight.
edit : pre-1947 india did not evolve a truly democratic political system so the partition happened... this was entirely a intellectual failure.
Fair question. You are right that there has been an influx of some very nasty creatures here. You are also right that I generally avoid interacting with most of them. While I usually make my point clear about any incident, I have find it very non-productive to get into a slanging match with all of them. That is been how I have operated here right from the beginning, I remember telling you on PM very early on about pigs & wrestling...and I'm not about to make personal, a debate on the internet , or get into a long discussions, especially with those I have not formed a connection or have a healthy respect for. I have joined issues with many here though I almost never allow any disagreements to influence future posts. This is not just with Indian posters, it is true generally of my interactions with many of the Pakistanis here too.
I have rarely joined issue even with you on matters regarding your opinion, I ask what I ask of you because our larger outlooks (non-political) are more similar than not. I have no objections to any response of yours (have a healthy admiration for your stamina) whether or not I think they are excessive or otherwise. I only brought it up in the context of the discussion here. With you, I can hope to have a debate with, can appeal to a sense of fairness and can ask for perspective not to be lost, many others don't offer that opportunity.
On an online forum, I have found it best to debate the argument, not the person. I also do not consider vitriol an argument, preferring generally to avoid giving such people what they seek & to stick with the topic. I post less & less because there is less space to post as much as before and because the nature of this forum as well as its members has changed. The old Kannada saying comes to mind - "just because you think your head is strong, you can't really go banging it against boulders". I prefer to pick & chose when & where I make my arguments. It is, to me, the only sane way of doing this.
In my humble opinion, you should not have stopped reading there. The premise of the article does not rest itself upon the assumed superiority of Western democracy over the ones practiced in Middle East or Asia. Rather it stresses upon the fact that American constitution, as their founding fathers rightly assured would structure itself on principle of checks and balances of the governing mechanism so that the basic rights of the minorities can be preserved. It took them over a hundred years to perfect this system,as we can naturally expect but in a multi-ethnic society this system is rivaled by none.i stopped reading at this sentence because the author fails to realize a basic point but also through that failure confirms/answers those his below words...
Ironically enough, this is exactly the article was intended to preach. At any cost, to deter a majoritarian rule and to protect the basic rights of the minorities,especially in countries like India and Pakistan. A government won by numbers should not and must not be given power to dictate a policy that is not accepted by those who are numerically inferior. Gorki was just pointing out the visible flaws of Indian democracy, not trumpeting the excellence of western democracy.the so-called democracy ( "representative democracy" ) that is much touted by western governments is not democracy at all but multi-party majoritarian dictatorship, fake-democracy, whether in a generally singular culture society like what britain was in say 1940 or in a multi-culture society like india... what this system leads to is not unifying of people for progressive collective welfare of all citizens but pandering to some vested interest over another.
Light a fire, fuel it enthusiastically, see it grow out of control and get burned, draw back sharply and lick your wounds, meanwhile see the enthusiastically nurture fire spread wider, then sit on your pulpit, backside still smelling of charred flesh, and preach to others about how bad a fire is, how its going to spread, what signs one needs to look out for, and one should do to prevent it.
That, Sir, is graphically poetic and quite true besides!
Need to dispense with the la di da PTH niceties.
Hum to ganwaar thehre. Hum aise hi bolte hain.
Meanwhile I want to post this single, very thoughtful post by one of those whom I like reading the most, even more than Gorki
Pakistani liberals have been longer in this struggle.
I don't think Pakistani liberals are in a position to help Indian liberals other than in an observational and superficial sense.
At a policy level, civil society can get together through workshops and think tank structures in places like Dubai, London and discuss practical initiatives that can help counter extremist and religious nationalist narratives but it's likely to attract ire and confuse the public unless it includes other countries in the region with similar issues.