15.12.15

Ajitabh Das @huffington goes for the low-hanging fruit

This is in response to an addressal by Ajitabh Das towards Arundhati regarding her alleged hypocrisy.

Since Arundhati has not dabbled in politics, spectators and rabid political lackeys use this excuse of non-participation as an excuse to undermine her criticisms of present Indian governance. The author states in his rant;

"On one hand, you keep pointing fingers at all the organised institutions (nation-state, democracy, free-market economics and religion) that govern society, but on the other, you never have an alternate path to offer." 

By his own admission, the author thus brings about a new criteria for anyone to critique any event, or matter of public concern. Basically what he says is that you have no right to critique a movie unless you make an even better one. Non-participation in an event, or activity organised by corrupt individuals basically nulls your right to criticise their actions. This is all just convenient rules created to stifle any sort of dissent that may arise against powerful organisations and institutions.

Rabid zealots of jingoism christen dissidents of Indian governance with labels such as 'pseudo-intellectualism' and 'brown sepoy'.

Here is a piece of advice, Ajitabh Das, whenever you need to bring to the front the hypocrisy in a person's thought process, do it with cross-examining the person's statements and actions in a valid manner instead of resorting to name-calling like school-children. In the end, you just make it apparant just how essential individuals like Arundathi Roy are in a society where politics is shrouded in a black mist of jingoism and manufactured patriotism, ready to strike down any sort of dissent against inept governance.



 
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