http://www.dnaindia.com/analysis/1870425/editorial-spewing-venom-on-the-internet

Spewing venom on the internet
Tuesday, Aug 6, 2013, 6:00 IST
[image: Dilip D'Souza]
Dilip D'Souza <http://www.dnaindia.com/authors/dilip-dsouza>


Good governance is a distant dream in India.

Here’s something for a man and his party to deal with, if they care. One
big reason I won’t vote for the BJP — and their presumptive PM nominee,
Modi — is the way their fans behave, in how they present to me this thing
called Hindutva.

Meanwhile, from some corner of the Web, a Modi-bhakt sends me this gentle
comment: “You bloody bastard, [you] have no sense of humanity and
patriotism and have the guts to mess with the Hindus.”

Yes, somebody seems to have persuaded the BJP’s loudest champions that the
way to power in this country is to abuse everyone who does not fully agree
with them. So we have the phenomenon that so many of us Indians are so
familiar with: a legion of party supporters, ranging from young
professionals all the way to Rajya Sabha members, whose idea of argument
and dialogue is a flood of angry invective and illogic, period.

So if you criticise the BJP, you’re part of the “paid media” and
undoubtedly a “Congi stooge”. That’s where it starts. Like the
self-proclaimed “policy expert” who once told me ponderously: “If you’re
not for Modi, you’re for the Congress.”

Now even a policy expert, it seems to me, should be able to comprehend that
there might just be folks who are fed up to the teeth with both our major
parties. Who might just want to stay far from both. But no, that amount of
straightforward logic is too much for this man. So invested in Modi is he,
so blinded by his glare, that the world becomes black and white. Black, the
guys like him who are as invested. White, the Congress, with the rest of
the world obviously its fans.

Luckily the world is not black and white. But as I said, that’s where it
starts.
>From another corner of the Web, another BJP fan fires off these friendly
sentences to me: “[You] show [your] true colours, that of a rabid
communalist blinded by Hindu-phobia. You are a colourful character hitting
on those wimmen folks in slum.”

In a recent article (What about 1984?), Mukul Kesavan wrote thus about
these parties: “The Congress, by a kind of historical default, is a
pluralist party that is opportunistically communal while the BJP is an
ideologically communal (or majoritarian) party that is opportunistically
‘secular’”.

As Kesavan himself underlines, this is at best faint praise for a Congress
that is moribund and bereft of ideas. But it explains why Kesavan and many
more of us find nothing attractive in the BJP.

And that’s the point. Take me: As far back as the 1975 Emergency — in many
ways my political awakening — I grew frustrated and disgusted with the
Congress party. Let me count the ways: its sycophantic grovelling before
Indira Gandhi, her easy slide into autocracy, her deliberate undermining of
our institutions, the growing culture of corruption, the “foreign hand”
bogeyman that was used to evade tackling any number of real Indian
problems, the “garibi hatao” slogan which was never more than a slogan, the
obsession (even then) with this family dynasty … need I go on?

These were the reasons so many of us welcomed the rise of the Janata
coalition in 1977. Here, for the first time in 30 Independent years, was
the first realistic chance to rid the country of the suffocating sickness
of Congress rule. This is why so many of us campaigned for the Janata.

My always apolitical Aunty Pat was one, remembered even today for tramping
around Versova urging her neighbours to vote Janata. That the coalition
fell apart and Indira returned to power in 1980 was another matter, if a
terribly disappointing one.

And we didn’t know it in 1980, but there was much more to come to damn the
Congress for: Bofors and even more egregious corruption, the violence in
Punjab and Kashmir, and let’s never forget the blood of 3,000 Indians
slaughtered in 1984.

Meanwhile, a Modi supporter in some Web-istan enclave dispatches these
affable thoughts about me: “You are a minority so would not be surprised if
you owed your allegiance to the god-damn Church rather than Indian
Constitution. People like [you] should be burnt alive for trying to
destabilize India. I am confident that you bloody Semites, Muslims and
Christians are in this together to target Hindus.”

What the BJP forgets is that people like me — I believe much of the nation
— turned to the BJP as an alternative precisely because we were fed up of
the Congress. But if we were disappointed in 1980, that was compounded
after the BJP’s rise a decade and more later. Congress “garibi hatao”? BJP
“mandir vahin banayenge”. Congress Bofors etc? BJP coffin scam etc. Worst
of all: Congress bloodstain of 1984? BJP bloodstain of 2002 (not forgetting
the 1992-93 bloodstain its ally, the Shiv Sena, sports).

Here’s the disappointment: in power, the BJP proved itself no different
from the Congress, and in ways Kesavan wrote of, plenty worse. Here’s the
disillusionment: with this BJP proof, we voters who yearn for merely good
governance are left with no alternative any more.

So I think I know why the loud supporters of the BJP are so free with
abuse. They know the same truths themselves — they may even be OK with them
— but are too fearful to publicly admit as much. Easier to paint the other
guy in terms that, oddly enough, say most about the abusers themselves.
That speaks loudest of their own irrational fears and hatreds.

On which lines, I have this congenial message from a Hindutvawadi: “Damn
the Islamic world, damn the Western Christian crusader nations. You cheap
anti-national bastard!”
I’m supposed to vote for this stuff. Right.

*The author lives in Bombay and writes so he can keep his cats Cleo and
Aziz fed. Send your response to [email protected]*

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Peace Is Doable

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