http://www.business-standard.com/article/opinion/sreenivasan-jain-a-tweet-away-from-trouble-115122101095_1.html

Sreenivasan Jain: The rise of high-level majoritarianism
It's not necessarily intolerance that has been rising. It's something else
Sreenivasan Jain
December 21, 2015       Last Updated at 21:48 IST

It's been an exasperating and amusing (mostly exasperating) past few
months watching those gripped by the feeling that All Was Not Well
With The Realm struggle to find the terms to describe their unease,
and the arguments to justify it. At some early point, now lost in the
fog of countless news cycles and online ridicule, consensus broadly
crystallised around the term "rising intolerance" to describe the
degradation in the state of affairs since the advent of the new
regime. The arguments advanced to give this somewhat inchoate
assertion a harder, more empirical edge rested, sadly on unwieldy and
easily challenged props. The murder of rationalists in Maharashtra and
Karnataka? Began during the Congress regime. The murder of Mohammed
Akhlaq in Dadri? Law and order is a state subject. A spike in the
number of communal incidents over the past year? Data shows otherwise.
>From here, the debate was only a tweet away from referencing the
intolerance shown by Pterodactyls towards Gondwana Man.

Which is of course not to say that something bad is not rising. But
it's not, in the strictest terms, intolerance. What has shown a marked
jump in the past year and a half is the extraordinary number of
instances of high-level functionaries of the ruling establishment
-from the chief executive himself, to Cabinet ministers, to ruling
party MPs, governors, party bosses, chief ministers and MLAs speaking
in a language that covers the full spectrum of majoritarianism - from
outright bigotry to soft communalism. To illustrate: the prime
minister's abrupt insertion into the Bihar campaign of a conspiracy to
carve out a quota for minorities from the reservation pie (which he
added, not at all in a provocative manner, that he would oppose with
his life). The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president's reference to
the bursting of crackers in Pakistan should his party suffer a loss at
the hustings. The Haryana chief minister's suggestion to India's
minorities of the dietary changes they will need to undertake should
they wish to stay in this country. The external affairs minister's
hint of an alteration of the status of our national book. The
ever-expanding list of communal no-balls by BJP-appointed governors,
particularly the Twitter timeline of the Tripura governor which reads
like it was telegraphing hot flashes directly from the brain of a
certain Republican frontrunner [for example: @tathaghat2:
"intelligence should keep tab(s) on all (except close friends and
relatives) who assembled before Yakub Memon's corpse. Many are
potential terrorists"]

One could go on - we haven't even got to the invective of the "fringe
elements", the Mahesh Sharmas and Giriraj Singhs and Niranjan Jyotis -
but for the increasingly stingy word count allowed on these pages
(aha! Intolerance!).

It is certainly not my case that a sharper definition of what we are
facing will provoke a reassessment of the cost of such dangerous high
jinks, but it may, if nothing else, reduce the scope of the ruling
regime and its supporters to shrug off culpability. In simple terms,
you can't fight what you can't name.

The revaluation - if at all there will be one - will naturally pivot
on political calculations. The Bihar defeat appears to have prompted a
lull, at least at the very top. It's unclear whether the ceasefire
will extend to, say, the Assam election, which comes with plenty of
scope for communal dog-whistling. Regardless, the BJP's more toxic
adherents, notably on social media, may not take kindly to a shift
towards a saner conversation. There is no better recent example of
this than the case of a BJP MP who was forced to issue public mea
culpa for challenging the influence of right wing Twitter on
government decision-making. This is not good. The same home ministry
report cited to argue that there has been no increase in communal
incidents since a change in government had an important but overlooked
footnote - social media, it said, was a key driver in communal riots
this past year.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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