Ever since Modi delivered a resounding
victory- the Left, the Liberals and the Islamists (all collectively against
him) have turned into an angry lot instead of introspecting.
They are now spooked by the Modi-man who
has initiated a renaissance of sorts, one of aspiration drawing from the
nationalistic zeitgeist of our present and seeking cultural inspiration from
India’s ancient past.
Let's understand the unintended but
comical congregation of the Left, the Liberals and the Islamist trinity despite
the very distinct ideologies each has from the other.
The Indian Left champions the cause of
the working masses, wishes to revive socialism, presses for a strong public
sector and consists of atheists for the most part.
The Indian Liberals often belong to the
elite group who hold open borders, women empowerment, LGBTQ rights and
capitalism dear to them. Religion plays second fiddle to their identity, and
they take a rather ambivalent ‘to each their own’ stance as a means of
exhibiting their broad-minded thinking.
The Islamists are identity centric who
seek solace from religious pursuits and are regularly guided by the orthodox
clergy. They draw strength by huddling within their respective sect and by
adhering to its value system inexorably.
Although each group has little in
common, they all fit very snugly in the intersection of the anti-Modi Venn
diagram. They put aside their diametrical differences and often bring about an
entente with one another.
The Left hate Modi because to them, he
appears to have taken up the lion’s share of the ambit of influence on the
working class and rendered them insignificant.
The Liberals dislike Modi as to them,
he appears anti-western, a region from where they derive and espouse their ideals.
The Islamists abhor Modi as they view
him as a unifying force of the otherwise Hindu divided family and denigrate his
actions as anti-minority and ones that diminish their grip in public matters.
Dislike for the man alone is their
binding glue.
If they were to put up a candidate
collectively, they would win.
Minority as they may be, they are a politically
conscious group who vote in large swathes and given that a third of the country
doesn’t vote, a major victory for them isn’t far-fetched.
However, were this to
happen they would either get unstuck faster than one can blink or bring about
mayhem on the economy and create an irreparable fracture in the nation's social
fabric.
The exact thing they condemn Modi of doing; one might ask how and why?
Their primary grouse is that Modi's
further rise will lead to a situation where the insignificant opposition will
count for less than it already does. In other words, they fear that he'll have
powers akin to that of a dictator, preventing anybody (read themselves) to oppose
him or flourish under his regime.
At best it is a figment of their
imagination and at worst, it is fear mongering to propagate their warped
agenda.
The Left draw their inspiration from
communists and any attempt to demonstrate the virtue of their policies, which
frankly destroy more than they create, is meretricious at best since China
today is communist only for namesake. The Liberals appear to be living in a
bubble of idealism, who question everything in the real world but provides no
workable solutions. The Islamists seem to be frozen in time and so their
inflexibility facilitates their claims of perpetual victimhood in the
ever-changing modern world.
What this motley mix of anti-Modi
brigade can't seem to fathom, is that the rise of right-of-center nationalistic
powerful leaders is not just India centric, it's a global phenomenon.
Across the geographies there is both,
fatigue and loss of faith in 1) Democracy, 2) Globalization and 3) Liberalism.
All three phenomena were seen as the antidotes to the past, where human spirits
were quelled and the citizens were downtrodden. They were seen as an ushering
in of a new era of uplifting the last citizen of society and placing them
first.
The reasons were the following:
- Democracy had demonstrated how America, the nation with no monarchy could unleash the human spirit and keep rising. In this meritocratic and ability driven society, anyone could participate in the nation’s growth since there was equal opportunity for all. However, with time the democratic process has sadly come to mean as the least evil form of government and not necessarily the best one. Today, it is one in which the opposition’s preset agenda is to simply oppose the ruling party irrespective of the merits, including in matters of national development or international prestige. Partisan acrimony across the aisle has reduced the aspirational term “democratic progress” into an unfortunate oxymoron. This applies as much in America - the world’s first democracy, as in India – the world’s largest democracy.
There is adequate empirical evidence
that can be drawn from modern governance to show that less “demo-crazy”, if you
will, equates to a happier and healthier population.
Impatience bubbling, people no longer
seek solace in the slow handy work of law, they demand a quick fix in order to
ensure stability. And that can only be delivered by an agile, responsive and
less interventionist democratic system. Finance and investment seem to prefer
the same, as even foreign direct investment from democratic nations is seen to
be heading faster in favor of those stable but less democratic. The examples of
phenomenally high growth during the decades long rule of a nearly one-party
monopoly in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia under powerful leadership is worthy
of praise. The efficient royal management of Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Qatar, Oman,
Kuwait – all have delivered similar results. China, which was lagging far
behind on all progressive counts unleashed its potential energy into such a
powerful force, having swallowed many nations’ GDP equivalent worth of wealth
in the past three decades. It is now become a challenger to the US and is vying
for the throne as the world’s superpower, rescuing a whopping 900 million
people out of abject poverty in the process.
In today’s context, those ‘pernicious’
dictators whether living or dead appear to be far and few in relevance and are
viewed as an aberration in the past.
- Globalization was at first seen as a novel idea, where one could source the best and cheapest products from even the furthest or remotest distant lands. And so, outsourcing of goods by wealthy nations and exporting of products by the developing ones took a firm grip on the imagination of respective economy planners and became a key component of national strategy formulation. However, when special economic zones were created, the unintended consequence beyond just the cheap products coming in was of critical value contributing factories moving base to foreign lands. Many blue collared men lost their jobs in rich nations and a sense of over dependency of poor nations on wealthier ones was created.
With the advent of technology, distance
became of piffling importance and the inevitable happened - services followed
the goods. And that meant not only outsourcing goods but services and finance
as well. This now hurt white collared jobs too and as a backlash, immigration
controls were put in place. The e-commerce and automation induced efficiency
was the clarion call for departure of jobs everywhere. The gap between the
wealthy and the many less fortunate widened with each passing year and reached
a point where the top 3% of people owned 70% of the wealth. Across geographies,
shrill screams against the privileged wealthy and for job protection measures
were heard by every politician in both the western and eastern hemispheres.As
an offensive-defense response, tariff and non-tariff trade barriers, currency
manipulations and revisit of trade agreements were introduced in the game. The
champions of free trade were losing in their own game. Thus, through trade
wars, they set off the slow poisoning of the globalization Frankenstein that
they had once created.
- Liberalism needs a special mention as it was a much-needed ether in Europe, after the execrable excesses of the 2nd World War. That conservativism leads to xenophobic and nationalistic tendencies with eventual wars amongst nations. But liberalism leads to brotherhood and trans-nationalism was a convincing argument then. Due to the wide spread of the British Empire, the English language had become a ticket to prosperity. In light of westernized education in erstwhile colonies and the witnessing of the mesmerizing all round rise in a classless America, nations across the world eschewed conservatism and embraced virtues of liberalism. And so, liberalism and its inalienable must haves such as respecting everyone’s individuality, extolling plurality, freedom of expression and using internet as an open unrestricted and uncensored resource by all took the fancy of the world's opinion makers and continued to do so for over half a century.
Nevertheless, over time liberalism
turned extremely naive and unconscionable having moved away from realism. It
continued to project a narrative beyond the use-by date, one that was
hyper-moral as if set in some benign wonderland. That human evolution had not
reached a point where every group can demonstrate maturity and good-natured
reciprocity and above all a mutual respect for differences seemed to bypass the
comprehension of the liberals.
The liberals continue to bestow the
rather appealing to the senses title of ’moderates’ upon themselves. They
believe that they are the balanced rationalists. They may have made sense in a
different milieu, but today there’s a dire need for rationality’s center of
gravity to shift. What the lily-livered liberals seem to not get is that
world-over, new problems under democracy and globalization have mushroomed
domestically or have travelled in from abroad just like the goods and services
- without passports. Key among them is a motivated anti-establishment culture
festered by interest groups and lobbyists, dissemination of fake or
manipulative news, power brokering by minorities, culturally incompatible
immigrants, foreign NGOs and sovereign funds posing as fronts with vested sociopolitical
and financial interests and finally terrorism. And now these concepts or
entities are visibly seen to be thriving due to unfettered support of the
myopic liberals, who continue to assert a fool’s equanimity no matter how
evident the risk posed by these approaching hostilities.
When called out, the problem makers
would be heard taking shelter behind feckless arguments like – discrimination
and subjugation and the feeling of being completely misunderstood, knowing full
well that the liberals shall come rushing to provide succor at every instance.
In their zeal to protect the supposedly
disadvantaged, the often limousine liberals have made any mainstream indigenous
ideology, heritage or cultural pride of those in the majority look overbearing,
unseemly and therefore at immediate fault. Instead of assimilating with the
mainstream, mischief makers keep becoming defiantly assertive in their own
deviant ways, with the encouragement of the liberals. Picayune squabbling of
politicians on these matters clamoring for vote banks does no favors either.
The liberals continue to sermon the mainstream population to unilaterally and
unwaveringly go out of their way and be accommodative to them.
The proverbial tail had begun to wag
the dog.
So clearly all the three phenomena have
run their course and the pendulum has now swung away from them. And to rein in
the impact of the same, strong leaders are being put into power from all and
sundry world-over.
Written at 9:11, Kevin has impact on the contents and conclusions of your blog.
ReplyDeleteReading your writing reminds me of difficulty I use to face whilst reading Shakespeare during my younger days when neither my language nor my comprehension was good enough to fully understand in one go.
I think one of the biggest reason for rise of Modi is complete Dritrashtrization of Sonia’s mind. Neither her Duryodhan delivered nor she gave up Putra-moh.
I hope n wish Modi gets credible opposition that is equally committed to the country, philosophies and routes can differ but not the end objective of Country First.
While there is some truth in what the author is asserting, I wish it were better argued. For instance, the view that most lefties are atheist - no backup. That Islamists adhere inexorably to their values - seems like a tautology, not a description of a group. There are terms without explanation - "balanced rationalism". Overall, it reads like an opinion piece. It could be improved by reducing the span (e.g., do you really need to bring up post war Europe into the picture?), and tightly weaving a fact base to justify the assertions.
ReplyDeleteComplex topic such as this needs an incisive mind and good communication. Kevin exhibits both in this piece you may not subscribe to the points mentioned but can you wish it away
ReplyDelete