hidden image

Behind the Manipur Toothpicks...!

Robert Clements Robert Clements
17 Feb 2025

As I hear about the chief minister of Manipur finally resigning, a sad picture comes to
my mind, of a thin fellow leading a woman who is scantily clad, along the road
somewhere in Manipur.

We hear that he finally raped and killed her.

A skinny fellow, as thin as a toothpick!

Now look behind the Toothpick; you'll see four others with bigger builds, more muscular
Tarzan types. They stand leering while Toothpick leads the poor girl on and assaults
her.

Here's what I want you to do: take an eraser, slowly cut them off, erase them - remove
them from the scene.

Now watch as, in your imagination, Toothpick looks back and notices the four aren't
there anymore. Toothpick's expression changes, uncertainty replaces confidence, fear
takes over courage, suddenly he's aware of his own skinny arms, and Toothpick leaves
the girl and runs!

Toothpick's strength, brazenness, bullying nature, came from the knowledge that those
four toughies stood behind him! And the sneer of those four, their intimidating tactics,
their ruffian roughness came from the next ring behind, of the likes of higher-ups who
continued to rule the state and refused to do much for the people, even though the
whole country wanted the violence to stop.

But from the chief minister to the top, they stood behind Toothpick!

Quite a daunting group, huh?

Yes, dear reader, but in real life, you cannot use an eraser or a pair of scissors to
remove the real villains.

If only it were as simple as clipping away the shadows of power, the hidden forces that
make a mockery of leadership. Imagine if we could erase all the thick-built bureaucrats,
the power-hungry officers, the invisible hands pulling strings from behind the scenes.
Would the Toothpicks of this world lose their spine, crumble under their own fragility,
and finally stop terrorising the innocent?

The sad truth is our eraser remains ineffective. These shadows are not just figments of
our imagination; they are all too real, pervasive, and deeply entrenched. They lurk in the
corners of every system, taking root in the soil of corruption. You cannot erase them
with a swipe, no matter how hard you try. The chief minister's resignation, though a
temporary relief, is only the tip of the iceberg.

The real battle is deeper, more systemic, and can't be undone by simple political
resignation.

Until they are eradicated from the roots, Manipur, and every state like it, will continue to
stagger under the weight of polarisation and division.

No, dear reader, you cannot use a pair of scissors to erase this reality that stares us in
the face. But you can sharpen your awareness, speak your truth, and demand
accountability from those who are behind these scenes.

Use the court, or use the vote, and see the Toothpicks flee..!

Recent Posts

Communal hatred, seeded by colonial divide-and-rule and revived by modern majoritarianism, is corroding India's syncretic culture. Yet acts of everyday courage remind us that constitutional values and
apicture Ram Puniyani
16 Feb 2026
What appears as cultural homage is, in fact, political signalling. By elevating Vande Mataram symbolism over inclusion, the state is diminishing the national anthem, unsettling hard-won consensus, and
apicture A. J. Philip
16 Feb 2026
States are increasingly becoming laboratories of hate; the experiment will ultimately consume the nation itself. The choice before India is stark: reaffirm constitutional citizenship, or allow adminis
apicture John Dayal
16 Feb 2026
Mamata Banerjee's personal appearance before the Supreme Court of India has transformed a procedural dispute over SIR into a constitutional warning—questioning whether institutions meant to safeguard
apicture Oliver D'Souza
16 Feb 2026
This is a book by two redoubtable Jesuit scholars. Lancy Lobo is currently the Research Director of the Indian Social Institute in New Delhi, while Denzil Fernandes was its former Executive Director.
apicture Chhotebhai
16 Feb 2026
The cry "Why am I poor?" exposes a world where fear of the other, corrupted politics, and dollar-driven power reduce millions to "children of a lesser god." Abundance will coexist with deprivation, an
apicture Peter Fernandes
16 Feb 2026
O Water! There is a facade of democracy. In which caste is appropriated As a religious tool, To strengthen the caste hierarchy For touching their water.
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
16 Feb 2026
From Washington's muscle diplomacy to Hindutva's cultural majoritarianism, a dangerous erosion of values is reshaping global and Indian politics. When power replaces principle and identity overrides j
apicture Thomas Menamparampil
16 Feb 2026
In today's world, governance is not merely about policies. It is about performance. The teleprompter screen must glow. The sentences must glide. The applause must arrive on cue.
apicture Robert Clements
16 Feb 2026
From Godhra to Assam, a once-neutral word has been weaponised to stigmatise, harass, and exclude a section of the people. This is not a linguistic accident but a political design wherein power turns l
apicture A. J. Philip
09 Feb 2026