First published: 31 March 2021 | Times of India+
Showing posts with label Narendra Modi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Narendra Modi. Show all posts
Sunday, 4 April 2021
Sunday, 10 November 2019
Column: All men brown as soil

First Published: Mirror | 30 October 2019
Link: https://mumbaimirror.indiatimes.com/opinion/columnists/all-men-brown-as-soil/articleshow/71811782.cms
Friday, 4 January 2019
Baithak: Video interview with actor, politician Anantnag (Parts 1, 2 & 3)
First Published: The State | December 2017
Is it false moral equivalence that ails the media today?

First Published: SouthWord | June 2018
In recent times many have attempted to draw up a long list of what ails the Indian media. Quite often, the endeavour to build a rhetoric makes them pull out a cliché from the Emergency years (‘When they were asked to bend they crawled’) and redeploy it in a rather lazy inversion to say: ‘They crawled even when nobody asked them to bend’ or ‘They no longer know if they are standing, bending or crawling’. A slightly more damning version would read: ‘They are not bothered anymore if they are standing, bending or crawling.’
There is an essential problem
in invoking a phrase from 45 years ago, from a time in history when not just
politics, but the ‘beast’ too had a predictable demeanour. There were
essentially four or five big newspapers to deal with and one didn’t have problems
with radio and television since they were government-controlled and hence
automatically aligned. Therefore, recalling this phrase, in a way, means constantly
recycling an old memory to perpetually lock the Congress in guilt. While doing
this there is an attempt to cleverly hide behind the victimhood of the
Emergency the illiberalism of the present as well as the current regime. Nobody
has ever demanded the victims of the Emergency to put out a more liberal
manifesto for the media and society than what existed in the 1970s. The
Congress obviously is hesitant to demand that, the BJP exploits this
hesitation, and the others conveniently speak about it through the convenience
of an old phrase that has no forward moment.
The media as well as the political
and government apparatuses are infinitely more complex today and one needn’t
reckon the number of round-the-clock news and entertainment channels, daily
newspapers, radio stations, social media tools and digital outlets to drive
home the point. There is a parading obviousness to this fact as well as to the complex
control and circuitry of information and news.
All this aside, there is a
new problem that afflicts the Indian media, one which the old phrase does not even
imagine or capture. Let’s be sure, the media today displays full-blown symptoms
of a false moral equivalence. In the name of being ‘objective’ (a word that
none has so far convincingly described), in the name of maintaining ‘balance’
(a quasi mercantile term) it tries to do ‘both sides’ journalism. It tries to be
value-neutral, representing alternate sides of an argument equally. It
ingeniously inserts the ‘other’ point view to remain preciously non-committal. In
fact, journalists get paranoid about getting everybody in, be it in a piece
they are writing, a prime time debate they are moderating, or tweets they are
putting out.
This trapeze act they
attribute to the fundamentals of journalism. Agreed, but journalism does not
tell you to be blind to right and wrong, to justice and injustice. In fact, to
be alive to this distinction is its true mission. Yet, there is no outrage about
falsehoods. There are only blind facts from both sides, carefully arranged in a
manner so as to not ambush you. They try to sell the idea that this, that and
the other are all eminently possible. The game of corporate cancelling out of
any negative effect there may be to a position that you may take today is obliterated
by a position that you may take the day after. Editorials may change from
edition to edition in the name of editorial federalism. The game may be even
more tightly knit if you are a bigger player. If one media outlet you own takes
a certain position, the other may be on exactly the opposite side. The
cleverness will ensure that your business never suffers. But sadly, this
deception has made media impact-less and less credible. Readers and viewers
have stopped worrying about this endless manipulation because the mainstream
media does not inform their opinion anymore. For the media, not to state its
opinion with a ringing clarity has become a pragmatic option.
In recent weeks, be it
elections, opinion polls, exit polls, Dalit violence, the Cobrapost sting,
Pranab Mukherjee’s visit to the RSS headquarters in Nagpur, the economy’s
growth figures, Rahul Gandhi’s speeches or the Congress’ intervention on some
issue of national importance, media organisations and editors quickly develop two
correct views to suit two opposing clientele. Hedging the bet was so obvious
during the Karnataka polls when one TV channel put out two exit poll numbers from
two different research agencies it had commissioned! It was caught out because
it was unintelligent and brazen, but others do it slyly. They don’t play around
too much with fact but sing a duet with opinion. Even when it comes to fact,
they have a helping hand always from a decontextualised historical setting. Figures
like Nehru, Jinnah, Patel, Ambedkar and Indira Gandhi are recruited with
nimbleness.
For someone who may say that hedging bets is an old art, editors and
journalists have perfected, and have with a chameleon‘s precision changed from
regime to regime, I would like to say that almost everything has existed in
some form or the other for a long time. But, the surge of this tendency that we
witness today, and in the last few years, it’s alarming guile and guiltless
display, should make it contend as a defining feature of our times.
This false moral equivalence
was called out during the Trump election too. Margaret Sullivan, the Washington Post’s media columnist said
in her 16 August 2017 column: “During the 2016 presidential campaign, the
national news media’s misguided sense of fairness helped equate the serious
flaws of Hillary Clinton with the disqualifying evils of Donald Trump… In
short: Clinton’s misuse of a private e-mail server was inflated to keep up with
Trump’s racism, sexism and unbalanced narcissism – all in the name of seeming evenhandedness.”
In a reaction to this column Christiane Amanpour of CNN had tweeted then: “We
must always be truthful, not neutral. I learned from the Bosnian war never to
draw false moral equivalence.”
My former editor Vinod Mehta
in his nonchalant prose would often say that one ‘can’t be an ideological
eunuch’. He was prognostic about the situation we live in today. In an atmosphere
of carefully engineered fear journalists are indeed afraid of expressing their
opinion without thinking genius means of neutering it themselves. That the Emergency
was 45 years ago is merely a fact.
Karnataka Polls: Questions for Locals

First Published: SouthWord | February 2018
As the Assembly polls approach, expectedly, there is a huge surge of interest in Karnataka. Droves of reporters, researchers, psephologists, astrologers, politicians, satta-baazar-wallahs, who were until recently deeply invested in the fortunes of Gujarat, are now slowly turning their gaze towards Karnataka. Their parachute gear is being readied. They know one or two broad things, but they desperately fish for nuggets of nuance (an oxymoronish postulation) to be able to make or begin intelligent conversations in their drawing rooms, newsrooms, office rooms, restrooms, walking tracks and lift cabins. So, what are the questions we, locals, get asked most times. Here’s a gem-pick of sixty-five:
1.
Why
is Karnataka so different? Why are cinema actors not big in politics here?
2.
Is
Kannada really the official language, but we heard some other tongue being
spoken in Kodagu and Mangaluru?
3.
Why
does Siddaramaiah have no initials or a surname?
4.
Is
Siddaramaiah an atheist?
5.
Why
is the chief minister’s wife never seen in public, and why has no newspaper
published her picture?
6.
What
is the difference between Left and Right Dalits?
7.
Is
Mallikarjauna Kharge Left or Right Dalit?
8.
What
is this whole Lingayat religion controversy?
9.
What
is the real difference between Lingayats and Veerashaivas?
10.
Does
religion work here or caste?
11.
Why
do Kannadigas also fight with Tamilians over Cauvery river water?
12.
Now,
why are they fighting with Goa over Mahadayi river?
13.
Why
did Narendra Modi and Amit Shah pick Yeddyurappa despite he having a image
problem?
14.
Why did Modi and Shah pick a little known MP
like Ananth Kumar Hegde as a minister?
15.
Are
Ananth Kumar Hegde and Justice Santosh Hegde related?
16.
Is
Siddaramaiah really anti-Hindu?
17.
Where
have the Reddy brothers vanished? Why is nobody speaking about them?
18.
Are
the Reddy brothers quietly funding the BJP? By the way, where have they hid
their money?
19.
Why
are only Congress leaders being raided in Karnataka by the IT department?
20.
Is
Yeddyurappa married?
21.
Does
Yeddyurappa stay with his sons and daughters?
22.
Do
the father and son, H D Deve Gowda and H D Kumaraswamy, get along?
23.
Does
Deve Gowda favour his other son, H D Revanna?
24.
Is
there rebellion in the Gowda family and JDS(S)?
25.
How
many from the Gowda family will contest this time?
26.
What
feeds Deve Gowda’s political stamina?
27.
Does
Kumaraswamy still have filmi interests?
28.
Will
JD(S) go with Congress or BJP if there is a hung Assembly?
29.
Who
will be the BJP’s CM candidate if Yeddyurappa ends up like Himachal’s Dhumal?
30.
What
is the difference between Uttara Kannada and North Karnataka?
31.
Why
is it called Hyderabad Karnataka and Bombay Karnataka? By the way, what is Old
Mysore?
32.
Why
is there this Hindutva frenzy only in Mangalore?
33.
Is
the ‘URS’ in the name of former CM Devaraj Urs like the ‘URS’ in a Sufi
context?
34.
Why
is Yeddyurappa’s old foe Parliamentary Affairs Minister H N Ananth Kumar so
quiet?
35.
Will
Ananth Kumar be a dark horse as CM or do Modi-Shah despise him?
36.
Why
did S M Krishna leave the Congress? Has it got something to do with his
son-in-law?
37.
Was
Congress strongman D K Shiva Kumar close to SMK?
38.
Is
KPCC President Parameshwar still close to SMK?
39.
Will
Nandan Nilekani be BJP MP from Karnataka?
40.
Why
has Rajeev Chandrashekar not been made a minister?
41.
Why
was Digvijay Singh taken off Karnataka?
42.
Is
the current AICC in-charge Venugopal better than Digvijay Singh?
43.
How
close is actor Ramya to the Congress high command?
44.
Will
minorities vote en bloc for the Congress this time?
45.
Is
BJP trying to split the Muslim vote?
46.
Who
is floating all the new parties coming up in the state, and more importantly, who
is funding them?
47.
Can
Kejriwal ever dream of a seat in Karnataka?
48.
What
chance does Swaraj India have? Or, is it seen as an NGO in an advocacy space?
49.
Who
really is the Karnataka in-charge of BJP: Muralidhar Rao, Piyush Goyal or
Prakash Javdekar?
50.
Do
BJP leaders in the state dislike or fear Amit Shah?
51.
At
what stage are all the cases against Yeddyurappa?
52.
Does
Karnataka government function at such a low commission rate of ‘ten percent’ as
Modi accused?
53.
Why
is Yogi Adityanath being fielded as a campaigner in Karnataka?
54.
How
much will Hindi work in Karnataka?
55.
Will
Rahul Gandhi contest from Karnataka in 2019 like his grandmother?
56.
Is
it important for Rahul Gandhi to visit temples and seminaries in Karnataka?
57.
Whatever
happened to Socialist leaders in Karnataka? One a hotbed of socialist politics.
58.
Is
Siddaramaiah closer to Rahul Gandhi or Sonia Gandhi?
59.
Does
Siddaramaiah retain influence over his former JD(S) colleagues?
60.
Is
Siddaramaiah like Amarinder Singh?
61.
Why
wasn’t Siddaramaiah active for the first four years of his term?
62.
Does
Siddaramaiah still suffer from sleep apnea?
63.
Is
it true that the chief minister is good with numbers?
64.
What
is this Kuruba community that the CM belongs to? How big are they? Are they
bigger than the Gowdas? Are they a tribe?
65.
Is
caste more important in Karnataka or religion?
Am sure there are more
questions. So, keep this list growing until the campaigning ends. In fact,
until the results are out! Make it a hundred. Why not a thousand? Whoever
answers these questions will have to have some pretense of a
political/historical/sociological/cultural/anthropological/ethnographic
understanding of the society.
In Karnataka, Siddaramaiah gives a defeated Congress some hope
Link: https://caravanmagazine.in/vantage/karnataka-siddaramaiah-gives-defeated-congress-some-hope
Saturday, 14 March 2015
Beached: How Hindutva lost its stronghold in coastal Karnataka
First Published: The Caravan | June 2013
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