Sometimes you can have all the evidence you want but I think one changes
one's mind based on how one feels at a certain moment (as the Oatmeal comic
points out)

My personal example has to do with the Preamble to the Constitution of
India and a current political debate around it.

For context - during the Emergency (for non-Indians: suspension of civil
liberties and elections) between 1975 and 1977, the Indira Gandhi led
government drastically amended the Constitution to try and neuter any
independent institutions and limit civil liberties. As part of the 42nd
amendment, the government amended the preamble to the Constitution of India
to insert the words "socialist" and "secular" to make India a "Sovereign
Socialist Secular Democratic Republic." This was in addition to other
wholesale changes to the Constitution limit judicial review, right to
property, et al.

Large parts of the 42nd amendment were undone by subsequent governments and
a little by the courts, but the fact remains that India's preamble reads
"Sovereign Socialist Secular Democratic Republic".

Cut to the present and there's a government at the Union which chafes at
the idea of anything "secular" and "socialist". There's a slightly extreme
wing of the ruling party that would want to get rid of the words "secular"
and "socialist".

The good faith basis to remove the words "socialist" and "secular" would be
to say that India's constitution was secular and socialist even before
these words were added to the preamble. After all, the preamble also
promises to "secure justice social, economic and political", and "liberty
of thought, expression, belief, faith, and worship". That apart, the
fundamental rights parts expressly guarantee non-discrimination on
religious lines and the freedom to practice religion. Not to mention the
guarantees of equality of opportunity and affirmative action for oppressed
communities. So maybe, just the two words "secular" and "socialist" added
by an illegitimate government in a bid to cling to power permanently
shouldn't hold much weight.

On the other hand, removing the words "secular" and "socialist" from the
preamble seems like the first chip blow against these ideas that undergird
the Constitution. Especially so since the ideology of the current ruling
party is anything but socialist or secular. This is a ruling party which
believes that India should be for Hindus only and the state should
prioritise Hindus over all others. And this is a party which has, in the
past, promised to dismantle social justice programmes and currently
oversees an India that's more unequal than it has been during independence.
So, one feels, removing "socialist" and "secular" is just the beginning of
a larger project of dismantling these ideas (and not just the words) from
the Constitution itself and should be resisted at all costs.

I must admit I hold both views in alternating quarters of the year. I can
make either argument with passion and all the relevant facts. A few months
ago I had a passionate debate with a colleague about why I believe it's ok
if "secular" and "socialist" are removed from the constitution". At the
height of elections now, I believe the opposite.

This maybe a peculiar case of extreme waffling but I seem to change my mind
about this every few months.

On Mon, Apr 29, 2024 at 5:53 PM Udhay Shankar N via Silklist <
[email protected]> wrote:

> On Mon, Apr 29, 2024 at 5:18 PM Udhay Shankar N via Silklist <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
> What is a deeply held belief of yours that you think you would change if
>> presented with data that contradicts the belief?
>>
>
> In the context of this question, this is essential reading (even if you're
> already familiar with it)
>
> https://theoatmeal.com/comics/believe
>
> Udhay
>
> --
>
> ((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))
>
> --
> Silklist mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://mailman.panix.com/listinfo.cgi/silklist
>


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Alok Prasanna Kumar
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