Distraction as Governance: How a Scripted National Song Debate Shielded the SIR Controversy
Distraction as Governance: How a
Scripted National Song Debate Shielded the SIR Controversy
Watch this video: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/5jj6tmNYs20
Hindi Version: https://rakeshinsightfulgaze.blogspot.com/2025/12/sir_11.html
Two days ago, India witnessed a
moment that will not be remembered for what Parliament accomplished, but for
how deliberately it avoided its responsibilities. Ten hours were spent debating
Vande Mataram and reminiscing about 150 old songs, not because Parliament had
run out of issues, but because the ruling party needed a distraction.
Crucially, this spectacle unfolded just before the scheduled national debate on
the Special Summary Revision, a process already mired in allegations of mass
voter deletions and electoral manipulation.
Seen in context, the timing was
not random. It was strategic. It was engineered.
The BJP leadership understood
that the SIR debate could expose disturbing patterns: unexplained deletions,
duplicate voter entries, unexplained additions across constituencies, and
procedural decisions that already raised constitutional concerns. So instead of
facing these questions head-on, the government deployed a familiar tool of
political management: emotional saturation.
Before the public could hear
data, they were given sentiment. Before numbers, nostalgia. Before scrutiny,
nationalism.
The ten-hour national song
performance was not a debate. It was an inoculation designed to condition
public emotion so that the SIR discussion would either be drowned out,
dismissed as unpatriotic, or overshadowed by patriotic theatrics. This is not
speculation; it fits a pattern used throughout history by governments that fear
institutional examination.
Meanwhile, unemployment remains
acute, farmers continue to protest for survival, and millions of women and
children endure daily insecurity. Yet Parliament, the country’s most important
democratic forum, was commandeered to manufacture a mood. The cost was not just
financial, though crores were spent. The cost was moral: a national legislature
willingly acting as a stage set for partisan manipulation.
The BJP has long relied on
invoking “Ram Rajya” to justify its choices, but the historical and literary
references do not support the fantasy being sold. Traditional accounts portray
a kingdom under constant pressure, Rishis calling for protection, and complex
dilemmas that required real governance, not symbolic theatrics. Today, the
narrative has been reduced to marketing. It is no longer about history; it is
about mobilization.
This strategy echoes patterns
from India’s social past. Brahmins were once guardians of knowledge, entrusted
with the integrity of teaching and scholarship. Manu was clear that those who
commercialized knowledge moved into the Vaishya identity, bound by a different
ethic. Over centuries, economic power learned how to use intellectual authority
to shape public consciousness. Today, media networks, corporate-backed
commentators, and political operatives perform that role. Their job is not to
inform; it is to steer.
The Vande Mataram marathon was a
perfect demonstration. BJP scholars and speakers framed the debate. Corporate
media amplified it. And the public conversation was successfully diverted exactly
when scrutiny of SIR was most needed.
This is not a coincidence. This
is choreography.
It worked because the strategy is
centuries old. Emotional triggers have always been used to overwhelm critical
thinking. As long as a nation is kept arguing about identity, rituals, and
symbolic pride, it becomes easier for governments to bypass accountability.
What was once done through temples, oratory, and folklore is now done through
prime-time, Parliament, and political messaging.
But the consequences remain the
same. The unemployed youth who watched Parliament debate lyrics instead of
jobs. Farmers are waiting for resolutions that were pushed aside. Women and
children lived without security while lawmakers debated nostalgia. A democracy
cannot claim strength when its core institution is used to divert, rather than
deliberate.
The BJP leadership achieved what
it intended that day. By the time the SIR debate finally came, much of the
country had already been emotionally primed, overwhelmed, or disengaged. The
distraction had done its job long before the facts could reach the public.
This episode was not just a waste
of ten hours. It was a warning. It showed how easily national attention can be
manipulated, how quickly democratic debate can be replaced by patriotic
theatre, and how sensitive the government is to any discussion that threatens
its electoral machinery.
India has seen many forms of
governance, but history is clear: when distraction becomes policy, decline
becomes predictable. The challenge now is whether citizens recognize the
strategy before it becomes permanent.
NDTV practically waved a white flag and admitted Rahul Gandhi had a point about Amit Shah’s trembling hands. Their rescue attempt came with impressive creativity: apparently, Shah was giving his Parliament speech with a 102-degree fever. A fever so stealthy that even high-definition cameras couldn’t detect it. I watched the video twice. Shah didn’t look sick. He looked like a man suddenly realizing the “difficult question” button on his political console had stopped working. The shaking wasn’t feverish. It was philosophical. NDTV may claim temperature trouble, but the clip tells its own story. When you are dodging answers at high speed, your hands sometimes file a complaint. Even biology refuses to cooperate. There is one person no politician can lie to: himself. And when that truth knocks on the inside of your skull, sometimes the first thing to panic is your hands.
ReplyDeleteToday, BJP MP Piyush Goyal claimed that the opposition supports “illegals” and that the BJP won in Bihar because these so-called illegal voters were removed. The problem is simple: even the Chief Justice of India has asked the Election Commission to provide the list of illegal voters removed from Bihar, and the ECI has produced nothing. Not one name. If I had been in the audience, I would have demanded the same thing out loud: Show the list. Because the only irregular voters that appear in Bihar’s records so far are the ones the opposition has pointed to, legal voters from other States who were moved into Bihar by political operatives, and the vote swing consistently favors the BJP in those pockets. Goyal’s accusation deserves a public challenge, not silence. Anyone making such claims should be required to present evidence, not rhetoric. The truth is catching up. Lies never stand for long, and the ruling party’s growing discomfort is becoming visible. Amit Shah’s shaking hands inside Parliament were not a dramatic effect; they were a signal. The party in power is rattled, and the political balance may shift sooner than they expect. The public is watching, and the excuses are running out.
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