Bulldozing Issues

Dr Suresh Mathew Dr Suresh Mathew
25 Apr 2022
Editorial - Bulldozing to instill fear

“Do you want petrol price to be brought down?” asked Narendra Modi, then Prime Ministerial candidate of the BJP, in the run-up to the general elections in 2014. “Yes,” the people shouted back, in rally after rally. “Do you want black money to be brought back to India?” “Yes,” the response from the audience was even louder. “Do you want more jobs?” “Yes,” people’s voice got shriller. Thus, Modi used to be in his oratorial best, raising people’s issues, one after another, that struck a chord with his audience. 

Cut to 2022. Those very issues raised by Modi and his colleagues have been buried. They have failed completely in fulfilling the promises. Fuel and gas prices have sky-rocketed; neither the black money nor the fraudsters who fled to foreign lands have been brought back; unemployment is at its peak; inflation is inching ahead; farmers and small and medium traders are at their wits end. Governance is drifting from the goal of people’s welfare. Unable to tackle the issues, the government is on its backfoot. Taking a cue from the dictum ‘offense is the best defence’, the government is unashamedly denying the existence of price rise, unemployment, inflation, unrest among farmers and traders, social disharmony, etc. The Ministers in the Modi government are proving to be experts in unapologetically defending the administration for its omissions and commissions.

The worst part is the bid to camouflage people’s real problems by raising communal and divisive issues. After putting a lid on the real issues, the government and the ruling party have let the communal genie out of the bottle, thereby diverting people’s attention to non-issues. We have seen hate speeches occupying public spaces leading to riots. Violence has become the norm of the day. Every religious festival is accompanied by stone-throwing, rather than showering of flower-petals. Unfortunately, the hate-mongers are getting special government protection. Those inciting violence are out on bail in no time, making a mockery of law; it gives them the feeling of impunity and encourages them to indulge in more violence.

Issues like hijab, halal and demand for ban on loudspeakers for azaan have come up one after another, like a deluge, and diverted public attention from the pressing problems of the people. Purely personal issues like what to wear, what to eat and how to pray have eclipsed people’s existential problems. Adding fuel to fire, the ‘bulldozer raj’ is spreading from one state to another, all ruled by the BJP, as if ‘rule of law’ has been replaced by earthmovers. It is frightening to see them razing down houses, shops and other establishments of those who have allegedly violated laws of the land. Two things make this government move dreadful: one, the administration doesn’t give a damn to even the orders of Supreme Court and deploy bulldozers; two, they are used to flatten structures in areas mostly occupied by a particular community. 

Here lies the magic of taking care of people’s issues by making them disappear in thin air. Instead of tackling an issue, make it disappear from the public domain. Inject people with communal poison and make their attention totter around. What better way to rule a country of 150 crore people of which a quarter of them live below poverty line?
   

Narendra Modi Prime Minister Fuel Prices Hike Petrol Prices Hike Inflation in India Unemployment in India Hate speeches Jahangirpuri riots Riots in India Bulldozer Raj Indian Currents Indian Currents Magazine Issue 17 2022

Recent Posts

The courtroom chuckled.
apicture Robert Clements
26 Jan 2026
From 1926 to 2026, the Salesians of Kolkata celebrate a century of dignity and service—forming educators, empowering school dropouts, and nurturing leaders across Bengal, Sikkim, Bihar, Nepal, and Ban
apicture CM Paul
26 Jan 2026
O Article Fifteen!
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
26 Jan 2026
Everyone is running scared! The trade unions are quiescent; the mainstream media are hedging their bets when not grovelling; the students have lost their voice; the middle-class collaborators are acti
apicture Mathew John
26 Jan 2026
From Rahul Gandhi's warning against a "culture of silence" to crises in foreign policy, elections and institutions, India is drifting into fearful compliance. Great nations are not built in silence; t
apicture G Ramachandram
26 Jan 2026
As Budget 2026 nears, minorities—especially Christians—remain invisible. Real spending on welfare has shrunk, scholarships slashed, NGOs crippled by FCRA cancellations, while thousands of crores flow
apicture John Dayal
26 Jan 2026
Delhi's taps and skies are failing together. With over half of the groundwater unfit, uranium and faecal contamination detected, and only partial testing done, the capital is gambling with lives. The
apicture Jaswant Kaur
26 Jan 2026
Republic Day should honour the Constitution, not parade power. From Emergency to today's alleged electoral autocracy, critics see secularism, rule of law and judicial independence eroding. Ambedkar ha
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
26 Jan 2026
Supreme Court quoting the Manusmriti, a text that sanctifies caste and patriarchy, to decide modern cases, opens a dangerous door. A humane outcome cannot justify a regressive source. Constitutional r
apicture A. J. Philip
26 Jan 2026
From Somnath to Ayodhya, history is being recast as grievance and revenge as politics. Myths replace evidence, Nehru and Gandhi are caricatured, and ancient plunder is weaponised to divide the present
apicture Ram Puniyani
19 Jan 2026