The radicalised misinformed unemployed people of this country await just this lovely sermon to spread peace and harmony on the streets after the pandemic ends.
P.S. What this country suffers from as a humanitarian crisis is called Majority Radicalisation, not "Hindu-Muslim hate"
This reminded me of the first time I saw posts like, "This pandemic is an equaliser and will bring everyone together irrespective of caste, religion, class, etc."
Same feels of maaro mujhe maaro.
This country will see a storm of communal hate through sarkaari media and social media after this pandemic ends. In the coming year itself there's UP elections. How will we prevent one violent incident after another, is the question one must be tackling on an urgent basis instead
Khair, aam logon ko chand dukaanon se hi aayi shakkar ki pudiya chaatne ki aadat hai. Inki bhi koi ghalti nahin. Logon ki bhi koi ghalti nahin. Yahi hai. Aisa hi rahega. Isi mein sambhaal ke guzar kar sako, to chalo.
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Instead of maskhari on Suhaagraat Doodh waale spaces, listen to the insidious and slick hate-peddling by Swati Goel Sharma, that sounds like thorough reporting.
Serious suggestion.
Swati Goel Sharma and Sanjeev Nehar community profiled Muslims as rapists, groomers, kidnappers in the ENTIRE SESSION.
And when Yousuf countered them, they flipped saying they are NOT doing that at all. Suddenly became innocent sheep that were being hounded.
Aur suno doodh.
Swati Goel Sharma is clearly understanding very intelligently that now it is being heard by all, and that may hurt her "credibility" as a "thorough journalist".
She is very smart. Pushes communal agenda in a very assertive and legal-factual sounding tone.
Spaces of RW tonight are cloaking their words as they express desires of violence in WB: "We need someone who can get their hands dirty". Apart from that, few said, "people and party members to get armed; militia like VHP, BD is weak there".
Oh, the sweet radicalisation :)
There is no doubt that TMC workers need to stop the violence. STOP IT IMMEDIATELY, IT IS BARBARIC!
But listening to this sounded like they are sad that they cannot plan a riot and unleash violence, unlike in other states where they can.
Unlike most left-liberal or Muslim spaces (Twitter and physical), violence is NEVER discussed. I have seen a total of ZERO discussions in my life where violence is a positive suggestion.
Here, I heard Dharna being mocked at, and be called as leepa-poti. "We need action."
I just want to say that this looks like bullying, and the language and RT quotes have disturbed me.
These are respected and senior professionals. And yet, instead of dialogue and discourse with a young activist, they chose ad hominem to RT quote and call him a "terrible person".
Here, I am not commenting on what Sharjeel said. What genuinely scared me here, is that someday I may lose my cool and say something haphazard on Twitter, and I will be pulled down by respected senior progressives of the majority—who have more social and financial capital too.
That no one will initiate a dialogue or discourse with me and simply attack as a "terrible person", means that my life's work, credibility and demeanour as a well-meaning person will come crashing in a day. That if I have a strong "disagreeable opinion", I may simply be quashed.
For three years of my job in the healthcare sector I looked at the infinite shortage of beds as nothing but government apathy and the possibility of a great business model. It took this absolute hell ride to truly understand what a thin rope we were all dangling on since forever.
Make no mistake, this is still all government apathy. They are not mismanaging it; the not doing anything and not letting it out through media IS the management of it. This is how it's done year after year after year.
This is not a collapsed system.
This is a single broken teacup that is being made to serve a party of a thousand guests with gallons of wine.
Also, not an exposed system.
The margins who've seen it have always known it is where they always end up, and many times only to die.
When one attacks a person as a Muslim, what happens is reduction of identities to merely that of a Muslim.
The attacked can defend as a Muslim. But the many communities that the person belongs to—that sees the person in different identities—can remind all of the other identities
For instance, when an Irfan Pathan or a Wasim Jaffer is attacked as a Muslim, the cricketer community can remind the world of who they are professionally: Cricketers. The college friends can remind of who they are educationally: Alumnis. And so on.
This not only balances the fight—which is initially many against one—to many against many, but also reminds the attacked person to not lose sight of who they are in entirety as a person: a sum total of many different identities. And addresses the core issue of reduced identity.