M.J. Akbar |
The ancients knew their metaphors. They
classified the state of a human mind into four categories, or “humors”, based
on bodily fluids: blood, phlegm, melancholy and choler [or bile]. It struck me
that criticism, or opposition, in a democracy can also be usefully divided into
these four conditions. As the second anniversary of the NDA government
approaches, all of them are coming into play.
Blood is the first. Like any other body, the body politic also cannot
function without free flow of blood, and if the heart and mind of a democracy
are in the charge of government then the arteries of opinion are with the
estates that can stand up to authority. An Opposition has every right to see
everything wrong in any government; exaggeration and twist are part of the
weapons of the duel, with Opposition given some indulgence. Government always
has the means to smoothen any warp.
Phlegm denotes calm. This is the humor of independent analysts from the
sciences of economics or politics. Their verdict will tend to tilt
towards the negative, but that only enhances the credibility of the positive
when they do praise a government’s performance. Those in power appreciate
criticism that is not motivated by self-interest.
Melancholy is probably the best description of media’s attitude towards
power. Journalists like to be sardonic; it gives their queries a sarcastic
frisson, and their challenge a combative edge. This is true of perhaps 80
percent of media; the rest are, unfortunately, on the take, and therefore
should not be taken seriously. The debate about yellow journalism began with
the birth of a free press in the United States and will not end as long as there
is freedom of speech. We imagine that censorship is the only solution, but that
is not strictly true. The audience also has the ability to reject such
journalism: it can stop purchasing a rag, cutting circulation, or turn off a TV
set, reducing TRPs. The big problem lies in the fourth humour, bile.
Bile is the bitter, slimy fluid secreted from the liver, and
stored in the gall bladder. When bile enters an individual’s mind, it
turns vicious, and poisons nurtured in frustration creep towards the tongue. An
infected person begins to rant instead of respond, accuse instead
of argue, vilify instead of explain, froth instead of talk. One
television station has already aired a vicious personal attack on Prime
Minister Narendra Modi in which accusations were paraded without proof, cloaked
in barely disguised malice. Fortunately, such hatred becomes its own enemy;
vilification makes a villain of the accuser rather than the target.
It is notable that the proper noun just after bile, in the Concise
Oxford English Dictionary, is bilge.
But there is a fifth, and new, humor in democratic Opposition which the
ancients never considered, possibly because the theater of the absurd is a more
modern phenomenon. Witness, for instance, Congress reaction to the conviction
by an Italian court of Agusta-Westland helicopter company executives for
giving bribes in the VIP chopper deal with India.
If bribes were given, they were taken. The money was not handed over to
any missionaries of charity. It is axiomatic that cash went to those with
influence in the UPA government; men with money are not fools. So far,
investigators have reached only those Indians at the lower end of the bribe
chain, and not the big bananas. But protest trumpets from Congress seem more
reminiscent of the Biblical Last Judgement than an Italian first judgement.
Mrs. Sonia Gandhi accused the present government of “murdering
democracy” during a demonstration in Delhi, at which incidentally, the duopoly
at the head of Congress officially became a triumvirate: Robert Vadra’s picture
was placed amidst that of Sonia and Rahul Gandhi. How precisely does an
Italian judgement murder Indian democracy? Is democracy safe only
if a particularly powerful Congress “family” [this term is from the judgement]
is allowed to keep the bribes it took? So far, we only know that it is a
“family”; hopefully we will get more specific information after further
interrogation of suspects. How do you crush democracy by asking police to
do their duty?
I suppose this is what happens when a party leadership loses its good
humor, or balance. Nothing brings the Congress to its feet faster than any
threat to the family that is now in permanent control of the party. If the
alleged recipient of the bribe had been any non-family Cabinet minister, he
would have been abandoned with a shrug. The shrill outcry is telling us
something.
M. J. Akbar is an eminent Indian journalist and a national
spokesperson of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Write to him at:
letters@covert.co.in
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