The Costume of Control: How India Was Trained to Obey the Robe
The Costume of Control: How India Was
Trained to Obey the Robe
Social engineering doesn't start
with laws; it starts with perception. It begins the moment we stop seeing the
person inside the clothing and start believing in the power of the clothing
itself. Over time, the dress becomes more important than the man.
A judge's robe, a priest’s saffron cloth, a graduate’s gown, these weren’t just
clothes; they became coded signals of truth, intelligence, virtue, and
authority. But when the person inside is unqualified, corrupt, or manipulative,
those clothes don’t stop being respected; they just become more dangerous.
India is a society where this
visual conditioning has been running for thousands of years. We've been trained
to obey appearances. We’ve been conditioned to surrender before the sacred
robe, not because of what it represents, but because we've forgotten to
question who’s wearing it.
In ancient and medieval India,
the powerful didn't need to conquer with weapons; they used symbols. A certain
caste, a certain color of cloth, a seat near a temple or a fire, they were all
strategically positioned to manipulate public faith. The spiritual hierarchy
was engineered by the elite, using ritual and costume as tools of control. The
Brahmin was not always the wisest; he was just dressed like the wisest. The
rituals were not about truth; they were about obedience. And the gods? They
were slowly turned into profit centers.
This manipulation wasn’t
accidental. It was institutional. It taught people to follow men in robes, even
when those men offered no reason, no reform, no knowledge just repetition,
ritual, and rule. And now, this same system is being repackaged and deployed at
the highest levels of Indian politics.
Today, the ruling BJP is not just
using religion; they are using the machinery of centuries-old social
engineering to reshape the nation. They are not leading India forward; they are
dragging it backward from a knowledge-based society to a faith-based state.
Saffron is no longer just a color; it’s a political weapon. Holy men are no
longer just spiritual guides; they are power brokers. And the robe is no longer
a sign of renunciation; it’s a marketing tool for the party.
The new Sadhu-politician hybrid
is being used to erase scientific reasoning and replace it with mythology.
Schools are being influenced by religious ideology. Public policy is being
shaped by temple networks. And ministers speak more about gods and rituals than
about innovation or critical thinking. This is not a revival of Indian heritage;
it’s the reactivation of an old control system under a new name.
Compare this to what’s happening
in functioning democracies. In New York City and Virginia, voters are choosing
leaders based on competence, not costume. Religion, ethnicity, or immigrant
status is not a barrier to leadership if the candidate has a vision for
development and governance. That’s what logical societies do: they prioritize
results over robes.
When voters think critically,
democracy thrives. When they ask for policies instead of blessings, they get
schools, hospitals, and jobs not temples and sermons. When people demand
answers instead of rituals, leaders are forced to lead not perform.
India has the intellectual
capacity to do the same. But it is being held hostage by a system that rewards
performance over substance. The godmen and ritual conductors we see on TV are
not isolated figures. They are the front end of a larger machine funded by
oligarchs, protected by politicians, and promoted by media that profits from
the spectacle. Behind every televised blessing is a calculated distraction.
Every televised prayer is a signal: don’t ask questions, just believe.
This is not about disrespecting
religion. Faith, when personal and genuine, can be a force for good. But blind
faith, engineered faith, politicized faith that is a trap. It is designed to
shut down thought and elevate obedience. It’s how people end up worshiping
their oppressors and attacking the truth-tellers.
We see it every day: a man who
sells tea gets ignored, but the same man in a monk’s robe is treated like a
prophet. That’s not divinity. That’s conditioning.
The tragedy is not that people
believe. The tragedy is that they no longer ask why they believe or who
told them to. The price of that blindness is a nation losing its grip on logic,
science, and progress. The country that once led the world in mathematics and
philosophy is being told to bow to slogans, statues, and ceremonies instead.
India stands at a turning point.
Either it will wake up and reclaim its identity as a society of thinkers,
inventors, and reformers, or it will continue to fall under the spell of those
who wear power like a costume.
The robe is not the truth. It’s a
uniform. And when we stop questioning who wears it, we stop being free.
Isn’t it amazing? Dress like a poor man, and people ignore you. Wrap yourself in saffron, mumble a few holy words, and suddenly you're a saint or, better yet, a Prime Minister. Men in godly robes have been pulling scams in the name of faith for centuries, and people still fall for it like it’s a magic trick. The list of criminals hiding behind divine costumes is endless. But sure, let’s keep bowing to the costume while mocking the guy who actually served the tea. Modi has just perfected the act, turning it into a global headline.
ReplyDeleteOh, absolutely hard to keep track when the list of “holy criminals” just keeps growing. From Ram Rahim to Asaram, Baba Ramdev's wellness empire, and those ever-pious priests with a history of abusing children, divinity sure has an interesting résumé. And then there’s Modi, the man who upgraded the game. Not content with robbing the nation for his billionaire buddies, he went full "Vote Chor" mode just to stay in power. He’s not leading a democracy; he’s running a masterclass in ruling the socially engineered blind. Sad? Yes. Shocking? Not anymore.
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