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Romeos to rakshaks: How violence became normal

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prasad1

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Three years after he became Prime Minister, Modi made his second statement against the vigilante violence unleashed by cow hoodlums in different parts of the country. The speech, welcome though it was, lacked conviction primarily because Modi heads a government in which ministers have openly lauded such 'gau rakshaks', and given them state financial assistance. Just a week ago, home secretary Rajiv Mehrishi said hate crime was not new in India and that the only thing new was its over-reporting.


This kind of casual dismissal of targeted brutality over the past three years flies in the face of the Prime Minister's claim to have finally taken a stand against such crimes.Now what neither the Prime Minister nor Mehrishi will acknowledge is that hatred in human beings needs only a small trigger to turn violent — and the most effective violence is often self-righteous. So all the provocateur needs to do is provide a platform — it could be the train in 2002 or the cow in 2014. Once set in motion the instigator can easily disown his role in the affair.



A casual look at the emergence of new leaders of Bharatiya Janata Party over the past three decades reveals that violence has been the most effective stepping stone for many of them. There seems to be a pattern here whereby violence against disadvantaged groups, normally minorities, helps bring the individual to the notice of the party. Once the goal is achieved, overt violence is renounced by the individual and we start to see the individual as a 'normal politician'. The violence doesn't end, however. It just gets outsourced to those lower in the hierarchy.
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In 2017, Yogi
Adityanath was made UP chief minister. The first month of Adityanath's rule was a period of terror for the minorities with his outfits like Romeo Squads and Hindu Yuva Vahini running amok. Yet, a few months later, the process of normalisation was on, and the media was full of celebration of a hundred days of his rule. The process of Adityanath's gentrification had begun.

Meanwhile, the Parishads, the Dals, the Vahinis, the Senas, the moustached Generals, the Romeo Squads and, of course, the Gau Rakshaks wait their turn. They need to be noticed. They need to be upgraded when the next opportunity arises. Who can ask them to hold back and not partake of a model that assures success? They are savvy enough to know the Prime Minister has to make occasional noises every now and then. They will ride this out as did 'their fathers before them'.


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-times/all-that-matters/romeos-to-rakshaks-how-violence-became-normal/articleshow/59403719.cms
 
A casual look at the emergence of new leaders of Bharatiya Janata Party over the past three decades reveals that violence has been the most effective stepping stone for many of them. There seems to be a pattern here whereby violence against disadvantaged groups, normally minorities, helps bring the individual to the notice of the party. Once the goal is achieved, overt violence is renounced by the individual and we start to see the individual as a 'normal politician'. The violence doesn't end, however. It just gets outsourced to those lower in the hierarchy.

While I do not hold a candle for the BJP, I can not but smile and remember the now infamous comment "When a big tree falls there will be tremors"justifying the Delhi riots in which a particular community was targeted. And those who prominently participated in the rioting later became leaders/ministers in a party which ruled our country before BJP came to power.
 
Before we came civilized human being we were Savages. But that is not an excuse to become savage now.
It is tiring to justify tyranny today just because we were ruled by tyrants before. It is that simple.

Why waste others time by justifying tyranny today. The educated who turn to tyranny today are equally to blame for this explosion of violence in civil society.
 
Democracy is itself a tyranny of numbers. Majoritarian is the name of the political philosophy that drives a democracy. Checks and balances are inbuilt. But it needs some lead time to get triggered and counter act. Ofcourse we will have a melee and a mess to clear up.

I wanted you to read my first sentence first and then the following sentences - not the other way around. Just to remind, I said "I do not hold a candle.....".

LOL.
 
I think this copy pasted post by Kala Bairavan from another thread here is the right answer to the post #1 here.
  • As much as I believe that BJP has not been any different when it comes to pampering minorities (to this day it continues all the invidious schemes initiated by UPA favoring Xtians and Mus), it is equally true that the appeasement policy of BJP towards minorities has not really changed the partisan attitude of media, both domestic and foreign, towards it. Goes to show that even if BJP bends backwards to please the minorities, the hit job against it will continue.


    https://swarajyamag.com/ideas/dear-m...st-truth-again


    “The most brilliant propagandist technique will yield no success unless one fundamental principle is borne in mind constantly and with unflagging attention. It must confine itself to a few points and repeat them over and over. Here, as so often in this world, persistence is the first and most important requirement for success.” Having heard the terms ‘intolerance’, ‘fascism’ and ‘Emergency’ being bandied fast and loose, not on fair grounds of suspicions but on whims of some journalists fancying themselves as ‘liberals’ and ‘seculars’, it appears that they have learnt their lessons in propaganda from Hitler’s manual.Not bothering to wait for the veracity of the facts to be ascertained or considering restraint in the usage of certain terms, this section of media has thrown all caution to winds. But, as the manual elaborates, “In propaganda, the aim is to influence a whole people, we must avoid excessive intellectual demands on our public, and too much caution cannot be extended in this direction.”

    The tragic killing of 16-year-old Junaid—after a quarrel over a seat in a train—was sadly used an opportunity by the propagandists in media. The proximity of Ballabhgarh to Delhi and the fact that the murder took place during the holy month of Ramzan was used by these sections to push their narrative further. That the quarrel took a communal turn and religious barbs were traded is not denied, but as reprehensible as the incident was, such tragedies are neither new nor directed at Muslims alone. In fact, such occurrences which undermine the rule of law can end up either way depending on the turf and armoury at hand.

    In one such incident in Muzaffarnagar, just a few days back, another young man Akash lost his life. His father and four others were admitted to hospital after receiving bullet injuries. None in the media saw it as a Muslim assault on Hindus. No calls to protest wearing black bands were announced either from the Jantar Mantar. The incident was rightly treated as a criminal offence involving a group of people whose religious identity happened to be incidental.

    But since the propagandists in media understand the importance of confining themselves to a few points, they have kept looking for words such as ‘beef’, ‘Muslims’ and ‘lynching’. Poor Rahul Yadav from Etmadpur in Uttar Pradesh and Kaushik Purkayasth from Diamond Harbour in West Bengal were also victims of mob fury. Both of them were lynched for suspected cattle theft, but the death of neither passed the media’s outrage test.

    The desperation of the propagandists was also noted earlier when a journalist tried to present murder and dacoity in Jewar, Bulandshahr as a beef-related crime because the victims happened to be Muslims. Anand Ranganathan, a noted columnist, has compiled a long list of ‘lynchings’ in the recent past which include crimes initially given communal colour by media but later confirmed as intra-Muslim affairs. In the list are also mentioned cases where the identity of victims was suppressed because they happened to be Hindus killed by Muslim mobs.

    If there was one clear case of a person being lynched for his suspected religious identity in the last few days, it was the brutal killing of a Deputy Superintendent of Police, Mohammed Ayub Pandith in Kashmir, during Ramzan. Ayub was mistaken for a Kashmiri Pandit by a mob which stripped him naked and lynched him to death. No hearts bled for Ayub, and none among the ‘eminent’ journalists lamented the radicalisation which has consumed Kashmiri Muslims in the valley.

    A deceitful narrative being built by some propagandists attempts to blame the ascendancy of the Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP) in the Centre and States for the ‘growing intolerance among majority Hindus’ and for the ‘Muslim minority facing increased threat because of a changed political climate’. The fraud is given away by the fact that it is BJP and Rashtriya Swayamseva Sangh (RSS) cadres being murdered all through the country, and that this macabre list includes many murders carried out by Communist Party of India (Marxist) workers. If there was politics to be blamed for killings, these are the cases to look upto.

    Outside the echo chambers of ‘liberal seculars’, it is evident that the Indian majority remains as tolerant or intolerant as ever. It is, however, the agenda of propagandists in media which has got more and more shrill and brazen. As is the case with liars elsewhere, propagandists masquerading as intellectuals lack ingenuity and simply attribute their follies to their opponents. Seen in the light of this precept, it makes sense where the terms ‘intolerance’ and ‘fascism’ come from. This section of media and intelligentsia has thus far brooked no dissent. It has either stifled the voices which disagreed with them or viciously muted the ones it could not ignore. That it has ruthlessly suppressed cold-blooded political murders and distorted suicides and criminal incidents to set up a narrative speaks volumes about its integrity.

    What we are witnessing today is not an era where of bigoted majority but perhaps the darkest period of journalism in India. The deceit by a section of media is being complemented by bigotry and intolerance of its captive constituency which targets the Indian Army, slaughters cows on streets and cheers Islamist calls for dissection of India. Though the tendencies were latent, never before did we see them becoming acceptable and it is the propagandists themselves who work to reinforce in this constituency their anti Hindu, anti Indic prejudices.

    The real intolerance, as we can see, is the refusal to accept the 2014 mandate. It is the intolerance to Indic idea of India. The daily charades such as #NotInMyNameare to discredit a dispensation which ascended to constitutional power in the face of their imperiousness.

    To come back from where we started, the Nazi propaganda manual continues, “Propaganda must not investigate the truth objectively and, in so far as it is favourable to the other side, present it according to the theoretical rules of justice; yet it must present only that aspect of the truth which is favourable to its own side.” As words carry significant connotations, one should be wary and circumspect in using terms such as fascism or Nazism, but weren't these journalists positing the same idea with their ‘Post-Truth’?







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Diverting attention of people who are suffering due to economic distress to non issues such as cow protection to please the majority is as bad as pampering the minorities.

No sense in engaging in discussions on this subject.

Equally whipping up emotions on hindi imposition in southern states can at best be taken as a ploy to get a few votes in the next election.
 
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