[*Very much worth a careful read*.
An extremely insightful analysis.

<<As many have suspected for a while, ***the recent, widespread use of
naked criminal force by both uniformed personnel and non-uniformed thugs
confirms that this is not a regime which ever sees itself relinquishing
power. Whether its Constitution-changing exercises of brutality in Kashmir
or Kanpur, Messrs. Modi, Shah and Ajay Mohan Bisht (aka Yogi Adityanath)
seem to have no worries about being called to account by the voting public.
These men seem to think that the normal brakes of democracy that keep
ruling parties and politicians in check have been disabled.*** [Emphasis
added.] However, their rigged card game has now been caught out, their
distractions and obfuscations have run their course, and the whole sorry
operation has now been challenged by the victims and potential victims
alike. And thus, our grievously assaulted Republic is now at a moment of
reckoning.

... ***The people who voted for them hoping for a centre-right,
pro-business government perhaps with a garnish of Hindutva now see that
that the garnish was the main dish and feel bitterly disappointed and
utterly foolish*** [emphasis added].>>]

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/running-out-of-tricks/article30569026.ece?homepage=true&fbclid=IwAR2r4xzI5kje-zu4234Ubj_uKDpEKE1L69d73spYLeVT_iYbszgYomwqMeU

Running out of tricks

Ruchir Joshi

JANUARY 15, 2020 00:15 IST
UPDATED: JANUARY 14, 2020 23:15 IST

With the government’s obfuscations exposed, the Republic is at a moment of
reckoning
There is a classic American street hustle called Three-card Monte. A simple
description of it is ‘a sidewalk gambling game run by shady operators to
fleece passersby’. The operator sits with a flat surface in front of him on
which he moves three playing cards, their backs facing up. Two of the cards
are of the same kind, and one different. At the start of the ‘game’, the
man shows you the cards before turning them over, telling you to keep your
eye on the odd card. Then he moves the cards around. When he stops, you
have to point out the odd card. In order to draw you in, the man moves the
cards at a slow speed. Then he moves them faster, but you find you can
still manage to keep your eye on the odd card. As you watch, other people
play and win easy money. Once you take the plunge, things change. The
earlier players take their winnings and leave. As you put your money down,
the hands become a blur. You’re still sure you’re tracking the right card,
but somehow you never win. As you bet more and more money, the man varies
his speed and histrionics, occasionally slowing down ‘to make it easy for
you’, and you keep feeling you’re just about to win big but your wallet
keeps emptying.

The perils of questioning
What is happening is that the man is actually holding two cards in one
hand, holding on to the odd card and dropping the wrong one in its place. A
more elaborate version of this has the operator show you the cards he has
in his shirt pocket; here he uses more than three cards, one of them
double-sided (example, joker one side, ace on the other) but deftly changes
them over in his pocket. With either method, the result is the same: your
greed, gullibility and distractability are used to cheat you.

In India and elsewhere, there are similar gambling games, using cards or
walnuts and peas or whatever, all working the same principle. Now, should
you accept your losses and go, the matter ends. However, if you spot the
cheating mechanism and point that out, or if you grab the man’s hand and
demand to see the cards, the friendly patter will cease. Thugs standing not
too far away will suddenly loom over you, possibly the same men who were
‘winning’ when you first got there. You will be told to leave quietly or
face serious bodily harm. If you call for the police, you will likely find
them looking the other way or threatening to arrest you after you’ve been
beaten up, for they too are in the team.

Gambling with a country
You can write off your losses and walk away from a con man on the street,
but how do you walk away from your own country? Over the last five years
and seven months Indians have been subjected to an elaborate version of
Three-card Monte. For those who have had a different view of the card game,
the sleights of hand come as no surprise, but for many millions the moment
of questioning, of doubting the fairness of the ‘game’, of spotting the
double-faced cards has only happened recently. As the questioning and
challenging have spread, the goon auxiliary has descended, openly working
with the complicit police — attacking the people asking questions, the many
who have been calling out the fraud from long before, as well as innocent
passersby.

As many have suspected for a while, the recent, widespread use of naked
criminal force by both uniformed personnel and non-uniformed thugs confirms
that this is not a regime which ever sees itself relinquishing power.
Whether its Constitution-changing exercises of brutality in Kashmir or
Kanpur, Messrs. Modi, Shah and Ajay Mohan Bisht (aka Yogi Adityanath) seem
to have no worries about being called to account by the voting public.
These men seem to think that the normal brakes of democracy that keep
ruling parties and politicians in check have been disabled. However, their
rigged card game has now been caught out, their distractions and
obfuscations have run their course, and the whole sorry operation has now
been challenged by the victims and potential victims alike. And thus, our
grievously assaulted Republic is now at a moment of reckoning.

After watching the BJP-RSS government for over half a decade what becomes
ever clearer is that this regime has never had anything in its bag that
could be mistaken for governance or plans for genuine progress. The people
who voted for them hoping for a centre-right, pro-business government
perhaps with a garnish of Hindutva now see that that the garnish was the
main dish and feel bitterly disappointed and utterly foolish. The less
privileged sections of younger voters, the ones who were aspirationally
impatient, now find their hopes of economic betterment dashed and pushed
back indefinitely. Those who nurtured grandiose dreams of India muscling
its way to becoming a superpower now find that the country is an
international laughing stock after the Balakot airstrike, back in the
regional ghetto, hyphen-yoked to Pakistan, and security-wise far more
vulnerable than it was in early 2014. Those who imagined that the big
election victory last May would allow Mr. Modi and Co. to prioritise
desperately needed measures for the economy and healthcare now see that NDA
2.0 is like a delinquent child in a sweet shop, grabbing and smashing its
way towards its favourite sweets, utterly uncaring of the nourishment
needed by the nation.

Stopping a disease
When a badly applied coat of paint dries, the marks that have been covered
up start to re-emerge from underneath. It is clear, yet again, that this
government has never had any honest vision or master plan; the duo leading
it have always depended on bluff and bluster to capture power and retain
it. It is now clear that they have had an amazing streak of luck, coupled
with their managing to leverage the plentiful weaknesses and hypocrisies of
their opponents.

This regime has leeched on to all that is worst in our society, all that is
most riven and wretched, and put itself in a position where it thinks of
itself as unassailable, immovable. But this kind of a spread has a limit
and sets off a resistance. And perhaps that is what is happening now.

Ruchir Joshi is a writer, filmmaker and columnist
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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