Saturday, 9 May 2026

BETTER TO REIGN IN HELL THAN SERVE IN HEAVEN

 Since these are tricky times, let us begin this week with a trick question: what do the following events have in common with each other ? :

* The huge, and sometimes violent,  protests in NOIDA last month by factory workers and domestic help over increase in minimum wages.

* The refusal of a High Court judge to recuse herself from a case in which her children are employed by one of the parties, and she herself is reported to have attended functions organised by that party's affiliates.

* A "gherao" of judicial officers (appointed as adjudicators in appeals by deleted voters) by thousands of such disenfranchised voters in a district of West Bengal.

* The deletion of names of almost 3 million voters in West Bengal, who had voted in previous elections and possessed all the required documents, because of an opaque, algorithm driven "logical discrepancy" feature not provided in any law or used in any other state.

* The holding of polls without deciding the pending appeals of these 3 million unfortunates, and the callous indifference of the Supreme Court to their constitutional right to vote, saying that they could vote in the next election!

* The imposition of a casteist bail condition on Adivasi Dalits accused (but not convicted) by an Odisha court to the effect that they should clean police stations every morning for two months, demeaning their dignity and making a mockery of the law.

* The defection of seven Rajya Sabha MPs, led by one Raghav Chadha ,from the AAP to the BJP.

* A poor tribal in Keunjhar district of Odisha being compelled to carry the corpse of his dead sister to a bank in order to prove her death, just so that the meagre balance in her account could be transferred to him as the heir. The KYC converted from Know Your Customer to Know Your Corpse.

* The dismissal of cases of hate speech against leaders of a political party by a court on the grounds that their utterances did not amount to expressing hate or inciting violence. One of these speeches included the now infamous exhortation: Desh ke Gaddaron ko, goli maro salon ko. The other was a video of a Chief Minister pointing a rifle at a target with a picture of a Muslim man.

The incidents noted above differ in context, content, import and location, but they all contain one common element: the complete collapse of what makes a developed country- of governance, common law, societal values, empathy, the rule of law, trust in the government or its institutions, the idea of equity and even-handed justice. Taken together, they point to the breakdown of something cumulatively more precious- democracy itself. They vindicate the far-sighted and cautionary words of Dr. Ambedkar: that democracy in India was only a thin layer of top soil which could be blown away easily and should not be taken for granted.

A Devil's wind is blowing through the country these days, removing Ambedkar's top soil and exposing the outcrop of powerlust, greed, religious bigotry, casteism, violence that have always under-pinned our society. We had expected that progressive governments, democratically elected, would over time erode and disintegrate these negative features of our civilisational landscape, but the opposite has happened. Successive governments, more so the one we have had for the last twelve years, have only reinforced these flaws and fault lines; they have been made the driving force behind national (even international) policies, they are being embedded in laws and educational curriculum, they have become unapologetic instruments of state policy, they are the agenda on which elections are now being fought.                                                                                                    The defection of Raghav Chadha only confirms this terminal decline because it shows that a liberal upbringing and London education is no shield against the unscrupulousness of India's politics, and it  vindicates the mounting distrust of politicians in general. The executive has even managed to brutalise our society to a point where the top 10% care only for their own comforts and privileges, leaving the other 90% to survive as best as they can. We are among the most inequitable countries in the world, and proud of it. Democracy is the last thing which can emerge from this witch's cauldron.

We had naively expected that when the executive went on a rampage our judiciary at least would reign it in and preserve the rule of law. That hope has been belied and now lies trampled in the dust, as some of the above episodes demonstrate. We have today plumbed depths lower even than the ADM Jabalpur moment of Emergency days. Then at least there was a constitutionally legitimate state of Emergency in place, today we do not have even that fig leaf to cover the government's naked pursuit of absolute power. Then there was one ADM Jabalpur judgment, today we are being shredded by a thousand judicial cuts every day, whether it be on denying bail, allowing elections to be stolen from under magisterial noses, redefining hate to suit a particular ideology, spurning any notion of accountability, throwing overboard any restatement of judicial values.

A Constitution alone cannot make a democracy, or ensure that a democracy survives. For that to happen the top soil has to be tended carefully, its nutrients lovingly added and preserved, the negative infestations and weeds kept away; the gardeners have to be men of wisdom and empathy, people who love what they are doing, not mercenaries seeking the maximum payouts. Sadly, it is the mercenaries and carpet- baggers who own our patch of land today. What remains of the top soil will be blown away soon, leaving a rocky outcrop, a civilisational desert of no value to anyone but these rapacious seekers of power and their hirelings. They will rule over a wasteland, but then, as Satan mused: "It is better to reign in Hell than to serve in Heaven." 

23 comments:

  1. The crux artfully crystalized!

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  2. Very true but sad that our country has been totally scared by power hungry politicians with no empathy

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  3. So true: We're being shredded by a thousand judicial cuts every day

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  4. Truth is bitter and sad if the future foretold is one of a bleak landscape but that is what it looks so

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  5. Wow! Unto what heaven of freedom we woke in 1947, until that fateful election in 2014 when that Gujarati came to power and proceeded to destroy this haven of peace! Do you really believe that? In that case you are more naive or believe that your readers are stupid. Oh, sorry, I forgot. You are preaching to the converted.

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    1. No, Mr Sukumaran, only some readers are stupid, and it's not difficult to see who they are.

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    2. Fully agree with Mr Sukumaran. These baboos are the ones primarily responsible for the state of affairs today. Nice to give moral lectures, but corrupt ho the core. Everything happened only after 2014. We were so peaceful with bomb blasts every week, riots etc.
      Blame the present dispensation for the system created by them.

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    3. Human being is inherently evil. Appeals to nobler motives take time to sink. I think you should ignore the perverted among your readers. Until the blows land closer to home, they will not realize.

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  6. One of the critical elements of a society is it's members. We as citizens need to be more active. Recall the freedom struggle was a peaceful people's action. Now we require to fight for our liberty from our own people, to clearly reflect WE THE PEOPLE from the preamble to the Constitution

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  7. The outcome of the 2024 lok sabha elections were a jolt for the ruling party. Thereafter, every state election has been fought by them with the approach of "the end justifies the means" or "win at all cost" mostly foul. The latest Bengal state elections are a game changer. We are now hurtling towards a one party autocracy. Once all the state & the centre are in one iron grip, the constitution will be rewritten & Hindu Rashtra declared. That's the goal.

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    1. When congress was playing this game, did you object? NO

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  8. Personal abuse is the first response of the herd.
    Despite Mr. Nariman's justifiable distress, I think there is hope emerging from those whose conscience is made up of more than filth.
    Bengal is a two ended shaft. Not because TMC lost but because the innards of evil have been exposed.

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  9. Brilliantly written. As always, Avay Shukla!

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  10. Yep we are now a established Banana Republic and one has to learn how to cope with this reality. All Institutions are compromised. New role of Judiciary is to defranchise the citizens of their Fundamental Right No redemption in sight so lye back and be a spectator and do intermittent cribbing.

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  11. The Nation now ruled by emotions and pragmatism has taken a back seat.
    Adding to woes is the media both Electronic and Print have sold their Soul to Devil.
    So called best minds have also lined to get some cushioned posting and as such keeping quiet. Jadugiri continues in Bartan Jhadu Poocha party.(BJP).

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  12. Democracy that is predicated on religion is meretricious in its execution and specious in its logic. In India, secularism - the bedrock of democracy - is being upended by majoritarianism. The ruling regime and its alma mater the RSS make no bones about conflating Hinduism with democracy.
    When unthinking foot soldiers of this government rush to its support, they open their standard playbook of whataboutery and personal invectives. They mirror the revanchist passion of the current disposition to “restore" what it sees was taken away from its ancestors. No wonder their comments drip with arrogance and aggression in opposing a well-structured blog.

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  13. A pliant judiciary, packed institutions with RSS functionaries, finally a bloodless genocide of voters in the name of SIR ,are ways to tighten final turn of the screw! Democracy is dead. Long live the Democracy!

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  14. Protesting against religious bigotry and misgovernance is not "intermittent cribbing",.Mr Ghose, it's creating awareness and raising one's voice against tyranny. Do try it sometime- I'm told it can straighten the spine a bit.

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  15. Mr Avay Shukla, your views on
    https://www.opindia.com/news-updates/madhya-pradesh-ias-officers-buy-argricultural-land-approve-bypass-projects-reclassify-land-as-residential-corruption-details/
    Bet you will not respond, after all it's your brothers

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    1. Lost the bet.
      I was hoping you would win it.
      You had already lost the debate and face with your irrelevant challenge.

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  16. Happy to puncture your presumption, Mr Ajoy. Our group- Constitutional Conduct Group- has decided to write to the CM of MP asking for a judicial inquiry into these charges. We are not trolls like you, we act on our convictions.

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  17. Thank you for taking up the matter. Let's hope action is taken. I'm not a troll, but state facts which the baboos cannot digest.

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  18. We are orphaned now with the collapse of governance

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