Saturday, May 31, 2014

LOGIC THING

CAN INDIA AND PAKISTAN CO-EXIST? 
LOGIC SAYS NO

{This piece is written from a long durée perspective of history on the interrelations between India and Pakistan}

Many of those who are born after the partition of India into India and Islamic republic of Pakistan, and almost all those who will be born in coming hundreds of years, would find this division as nothing less than historical madness. A state was carved out on the basis of religion (though its founder called and wanted it to be a secular state), crazily in west and one of its part in the eastern side, with hinterland states like Hyderabad intent on joining in. The religion defeated geography. It divided humans on the basis of formal religion, ignoring the shared past, food, dress, language, culture and spirituality.  More than this, it sowed a seed of an inherent contradiction that would always lie at the base of unstable India and Pakistan (including Bangladesh).  As more history would flow, the coming generation would find this act as no less ridiculous and stupid. It may perhaps be high in top of the chart of human blunders of last three thousand years or so.
 Peace shall not come to the sub-continent unless this logical contradiction is resolved. Till then, relations between India and Pakistan would only be that of crisis management and one ridden with regular violence interspersed with war each twenty years. The inconsistency in the dialectical moment of the partition is that a modern nation state was created on the basis of religion out of a civilizational mass that was inherently mixed and sustained life only on the strength of shared co-existence.  Logic would have required or by extension would always require resolving this contradiction with following conditions:
1.      India should have been partitioned as Islamic Pakistan and Hindu India. Or now, India should become a Hindu nation, peace will come, by sheer removal of logical contradiction.

2.      Pakistan becomes a secular state like India with no mention of Islamism in its existence, but then it is a difficult position to achieve as it would mean denying the entire history of the very creation of the Pakistan, the very basis of its birth. In fact, this is the logical position Pakistan has been trying to achieve in its struggle within the discourse of being Islamic, yet modern, yet secular, yet feudal, yet ethnic. It is a protracted option, and portents are not encouraging as it is fast slipping into an illogical chaos of secular state in religious society.

3.      Third option is non-existence of Pakistan. This logic can be achieved by a decisive war on field between a religious (contextually illogical state) and a logical secular* State (build up on the logic of co-existence of a people for thousands of years), followed by the defeat of the “idea” of Pakistan and reconciliation of the misdirected movement of history. In case the forces of ill logic win and the idea of Pakistan reigns, the India would be forced to become a religious state-Hindu/Islamic. In other words, it would mean non existence of India as a state and idea of a secular India.

What history has in its womb for the region is for history to show, but whatever it is; it would be mostly a chronology of the choices among three logical options. Lasting peace shall not come unless the logical choices under logical option are not exercised or played out.

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* Secular state is conceived here neither in the manner a Westphalian state proposes it, nor it has its moorings in the political secularism that is under debate in India in terms of its domestic polity. Here, it is only used as a counter juxtaposition to the religious idea of Pakistan and relies on the characterization of shared past of people of Pakistan and India. 

WisdomThing

What is the objection to Smriti Irani on being the minister of Human Resources for the country?

Opposing an appointment for having a less of paper degree, I think, is not the contention of most when they have opposed appointment of Mrs. Smriti Irani as HRD minister. Less so, when a woman is involved who discovered her success through sheer grit and self confidence. The opposition is more so on substantial ground of how wisdom operates. At the outset, it needs to be clarified that it is not to argue that Smriti Irani is not wise; that she sure is; her IQ score, it is hoped would vouch for that, scientifically; which empirically is visible any day whenever she has appeared on TV through her articulation. Rather, it is about fit-ability of the general wisdom that she possesses into the ministry that she is going to run and minister in person that she is going to be. It is about the contextual wisdom that is required to endow a vision to the ministry that has craved for attention for many a long years now. No doubt that many an earlier ministers in the same department must have been misfits on this similar count, or even the current ministers in other departments. But she has become a test in case, and because of degree of misfit-ness she has become receptor of severe criticism, that even runs the risk of critiques bordering on elitism and sexism. But the case still needs to be stated. Concession may be made as to have this critique on contextual wisdom applicable to all and sundry who happen to occupy the high chairs of public office. In private offices, the contextual wisdom is the altar on which the appointments are always made.  It is in the distribution of public office that the occasion needs to be staved off from a situation akin to distribution of spoils of electoral victory, on the basis of incidents of personal loyalty and moments of chivalry for the party and the leader.



Wisdom in the current case?
          Wisdom is gained though knowledge. Only two sources of knowledge are, education and experience. A wise person has both in adequate quantity. A visionary soul is generally one that has good knowledge through reading books, dialogues, discussions and importantly, the reflection. A wise leader necessarily have this knowledge tested in the field that reveals the legendary gap between the theory and practice, and making the one who is making policy for the entire country a little sensitive to this wedge when the discussions and decisions are made in large air conditioned walls. Now, Smriti has neither of them-by education or experience. Unlike many other middle class Indians who just acquire degrees after degrees—because they are so free and jobless—She had no time for any degree as she was into modelling and acting profession. She was successful. She made feeble attempts at getting a degree, but messed up in finalizing an Arts or a Commerce degree for herself. She lost interest. She then lied in her affidavit in order to cover up for her lack of formal education. She perhaps never felt the need for knowledge, she was bothered only about the curriculum vitaé. There is no demonstrable effort by her to either evince interest in the field level implementation of the educational deficiency of this vast nation be it in primary or higher education. She articulated for the party, she forcefully noised her points on the TV. She was fiercely loyal to the leader, like a vassal to the lord, she spoke good body language too that gelled well with the inspirational youth. She just acted, shallow mostly.
 Because of this, she does not qualify to be wise to decide on the policy matters concerning education. she might qualify for a youth affairs or similar ministry, where her experience, if not education would be qualification sufficient to decide for the course the nation might have to follow, yet it would be far from visionary. But education, no! Far from a visionary leader, she appears unwise to guide HRD ministry. She just may run it, like everything and anything is just being run in this country.

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