I usually write threads about early second millennium Buddhism, but my MA (my first step into Sri Lanka Studies) was about contemporary Buddhist nationalists coopting US “war on terror” rhetoric. Something similar has recently targeted #GotaGoGama and the අරගලය
I’ve also written these rather hasty thoughts up on my website, if you prefer that format to a Twitter thread! brunomshirley.com/writing/lootin…
In my MA, I argued that groups like Bodu Bala Sēnā don’t just invoke LTTE-era narratives about the Mahavamsa, Dutugemunu or the need to protect Buddhism.
In their English-language media they also draw heavily on more global tropes of “Muslim extremism” and “the war on terror.”
They’re not alone in this! China has similarly cast Uyghur separatist movements as “terrorists,” drawing directly on post-9/11 rhetoric as early as 2002 jstor.org/stable/2003323… (paywalled)
Why might both the Chinese state and the BBS position themselves as part of a war on terror?
Because in the post-9/11 world, this has become an easy way of painting one party as righteous and the other – almost always Muslim – as a threat which cannot be dealt with within normal politics link.springer.com/chapter/10.100…
This is what Buzan, Waever and de Wilde call “securitization”: a rhetorical claims that certain threats are beyond the capacity of ordinary politics, justifying extraordinary measures. books.google.com/books/about/Se…
We all know that “terrorists” are bad guys, after all. And it’s very difficult to actually *define* terrorism in concrete terms. But it’s something that justifies and requires a “war” to defeat.
So what’s the link to Sri Lanka today? “Looting.” adaderana.lk/news.php?nid=8…
We all saw how effectively this word was deployed against Black Lives Matter protests in the US. In the twisted calculus of neoliberalism, damage to or theft of property outweighs the legitimacy of any grievances.
So any hint of property damage “justified” police violence towards the people protesting police violence.
To be clear on my own politics: I care a lot more about human dignity, about the right to protest, and about outrage against corruption than I care about any damage to property.
After all, economic mismanagement has caused infinitely more damage to property than any (righteously angry) protest could ever achieve.
Juliet Hooker, building on Angela Davis, beautifully inverts this “looting” rhetoric against the State: doi.org/10.1177%2F0090…
And, once again, similar rhetoric is being deployed here in Sri Lanka. adaderana.lk/news.php?nid=8…
Note that the headline warns of “violent incidents,” when the actual charges are “curfew violations” (not violent), “looting” (“violent” only towards things), “assaults” (the only true violence on this list), “public and private property damages” (surely just “looting” again?).
The State seeks control of the narrative by painting protesters as “looting”; this looting can only be prevented by the extraordinary, extrapolitical means of deploying the army on every street corner with orders to shoot.
property > life; propriety > dignity.
These are deeply entangled webs. My gesturing towards them does little to sweep them aside. But fewer and fewer people seem to be on the side of the spiders, and the aragalaya continues.
Importantly, the ends of these webs extend beyond Sri Lanka: into American, into Europe, into my own Aotearoa, with all our rhetorics of terrorists and looters. We are accountable for them, and we must cut them off.
If you’ve reached the end of this thread, and you’re outside Sri Lanka, you can help! @_vajra Chandrasekera maintains a list of the most immediate needs here:
@_vajra And, more importantly: talk to your governments, talk to your MPs and Congresspeople, let them know that that we overseas are part of these webs, and we have an obligation to help stamp out the spiders.
@_vajra Sri Lankan friends, please tell me to pull my head in if I'm overstepping or attempting unhelpful analyses here.

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More from @brunomshirley

Nov 11, 2021
Humanities friends, stop using Google Maps screenshots in your presentations! Thanks to Technology™ it's easy and free to make maps from scratch that look professional (or at least professional enough), even with my level of extremely limited technical skills. A tutorial thread!
Disclaimer: I’m not a cartographer, this probably isn’t best practice in many ways, but IT’S EASY and that’s my main priority. Also, all of my screenshots have hideous hand-drawn arrows on them, I appreciate the irony that this is about making images look more professional.
Step one: download QGIS. It’s a big programme and it might take a while, but it’s open source and free forever. You can find the latest versions at qgis.org/en/site/foruse…. It doesn’t matter which version, since we’re just going to use super basic features.
Read 32 tweets
Nov 9, 2021
I would add (to this excellent comment on an excellent commentary) that the term "Brahmin left" itself is *also* historically inaccurate. Here "Brahmin" operates as a shorthand for intellectuals without praxis (cont)
But as @SikotiHamiltonR shows for the NZ left, this distinction between "theorists" and "practitioners" is rather artificial. The Brahmin varṇa was made up of hereditary priests and scholars, yes, but that doesn't mean they were homogenously apolitical (aloka)
@SikotiHamiltonR Individual Brahmins throughout South Asian history served as court officials, as royal ministers, and even as military leaders. And while we think of religious institutions as fundamentally "non-secular," in reality many were significant economic and administrative centres
Read 5 tweets

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