There’s a reason why there is the Golden Rule of doing unto others as you would have them do unto you. If, as a politician, you were to make rules with the assumption that one day you will have to live under these very same rules, you’d build a much more equitable, just, and fair society.
However, one of the cardinal mistakes politicians in power in democratic countries make while accumulating more and more control over the lives of the citizens is forgetting the simple fact that the rules they make whereby they infringe on the rights of those not in power will, at some point in the future, be applied and used against them by the next person, party, or organisation to win elections.
The problem with this is that when they sense that they are likely to lose, or even have a small chance of losing, their status as the ruling majority, instead of urgently loosening the rules that give them such unbridled power over others and making it more difficult to accumulate such authority, they panic and go the exact opposite way of trying to consolidate even more control in their hands, to the point where some of them are known to have committed the fatal mistake of appropriating for themselves the power to rescind or deny elections, or to hack & manipulate them, or to control the counting or results, or in some way tamper with the democratic processes. This, far from making them stronger, makes the next regime (almost) unassailable!
It should be a lesson to those in power today that if you make rules that take away fundamental rights from citizens, intrude into their daily lives, remove any reasonable expectation of privacy, and create institutions to keep any dissent under check; that if you corrupt institutions and manipulate justice, if you browbeat and bend your sword arm into submission, if you coerce the media and other independent organisations into kowtowing to your whims & fancies, if you create a system where dissenting citizens are gagged, incarcerated, bullied, and even killed, then you are not just concentrating power in your hands, but in the hands of whoever follows you on that chair.
And one day, when you are weak (and you will be), when you are powerless (and you will be), when you are the supplicant (and you will be), when you are the one whose rights need protection (and you will be), and someone else is sitting on the very chair you occupied with such arrogance and misplaced confidence, you will have enough opportunity to regret it. But it will be too late by then.
And it will hurt. It will hurt even more so because the reason the people in power then will give you for appropriating and concentrating all the authority in themselves will be, “You did it too when you were in our place.”
Why would that hurt more? Because when you were in power, this was the exact same excuse you threw at those that objected to your words and actions.
Indeed, this would be the unkindest cut of all, when your own arguments will be used to stuff your mouth and gag it so that you may suffer the same humiliations in silence as you heaped upon others once. Nothing shames and breaks a human as much as a caning received from the switch from the branch of the very tree one planted.
So, while you create newer and newer avenues to crush the opposition and focus all the authority on to yourself, you might do well to remember that one day, you could, nay you will, find yourself on the other side of the table. Nothing lasts. Not even Gods themselves.
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This is my space. To ramble, rant, or ruminate. You are welcome to join me. You can see more of me here. I am an IAF+Air India brat (my father and my kid brother, both have donned the wings of the Indian Air Force) growing up in cantonments across the nation, and attending 12 schools before graduating as an Electrical Engineer from Pune University in 1994.
I speak, read, and write English, Hindi, and Marathi (in that order of proficiency), and am very active on social media (mainly Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn and lately, Threads and YouTube too), though I do not engage beyond first or at most second level comments. My philosophy for writing can be found here.
Professionally, I am consulting with young people heading their own startups. If you are a startup and need an impartial Entrepreneur-in-Residence to bounce your ideas off, get practical advice from, and basically have around for the 33 years of hard-earned experience in starting up, running, and even shutting down companies, then I am your man. To start a conversation, mail me here.
Personally, I am deeply and passionately engaged in educating (and learning with) my daughter (who was born on my 42nd birthday!) in a non-formal setting and chronicling her (and my) journey. Indeed, unlike most kids who want to become pilots and firemen, actors and doctors, and so on, during my childhood, when I was asked what I’d want to be when I grew up, I’d always answer, ‘Father.’ So, in a way, I am living my dream. I consider myself the luckiest man on Earth (until life is discovered on other planets).
In my spare time, I love to ride/drive, travel, try different foods, watch movies (I love murder mysteries, war movies, and heists), read (mostly non-fiction), debate, and sometimes play golf or squash, or if it’s low enough stakes, poker.
I am politically promiscuous, in the sense that I do not follow a specific political or social party or leader but, from instance-to-instance, choose the argument (and hence, the side making that argument) that best suits my ideological stance of secular humanism. You can find my posts about politics here.
I love dogs and horses (though it’s been a rather long time since I rode one) and am an avid biker with a Royal Enfield 650 Interceptor, who I call BattleCat III. Follow my travels and travails on the bike here.
About my opinions, they are how I like my morning tea: extra strong, piping hot, somewhat dark, grounded in earthy aromas and spices, something that instantly wakes you up, and served without standing on ceremony.
Try me. Start a conversation! What have you got to lose?
Was to ride to Kolapur for a meeting. Motorcycle punctured. So, back home to change and take the car. Misbahji says she'll come. So, passing time on Reddit as I wait for her to be ready.
Am amused at the youth today. We were so much more relaxed. And our parents so much cooler!
Dear @PuneCityPolice, I tried creating a login to lodge an online complaint on http://citizen.mahapolice.gov.in, but your system is not letting me do so. When I called the number, it connected me to CID, who said they could not help. Why give citizens a facility they can't use?