Two incidents and a vitriolic exchange of words between two interest groups kept the media space filled towards the second fortnight of April. The one at the national level was the high fuel price and closer home it was the Puri Heritage Corridor Project.
The fuel price kerfuffle was centred around whether the centre or the states should reign it in by reducing the percentage of taxes that they are collecting per litre of fuel. The rigmarole of Puri was around the huge opacity around what is being planned to be done to the heritage site – people demanded facts be presented. The presenters were paraded but none were believed. The HC intervened in the Puri incident and all the parties including the ASI were asked to submit their statements under affidavit for the HC to take the final call.
The credibility of the court is also not above public suspicion.
Statements
in dozens – each contradicting the other; political blame games, efforts to
create a controversy and take political advantage, an allegation of trying to
earn a political dividend by creating controversies flew around engaging the
common man and leaving him more confused. It was quite like when the two local
stray bulls locked horns and pushed each other. The bystanders get startled,
some shout in amusement, traffic comes to a halt, dogs bark in unison, a few
cyclists topple injuring themselves, women run to safety, smart bikers sneak
past, and to everyone’s surprise, they suddenly choose to stop. Life settles to
normalcy in just a few minutes. And those two jostling bulls stand masticating
their cuds as if nothing had happened between them.
No
one gets to know what it was about and why the fight was started in the first
place.
The
poor common man is destined to see such exchanges either coming from the
politicians or the bulls whenever and as long as both parties choose to
fight. When they stop the common man would be still groping in the dark to know
what exactly the fact was.
The absence of a sane credible
voice was never felt so much by our society.
Let’s go back to the recent
few decades. That need was served by editors of important newspapers,
columnists whose independent voices were much sought after, and academicians
whose personal conduct and academic track record added credence to what they said
in public space.
We have seen how Late Harekrushna Mahatab in the 80s wrote one editorial in The Prajatantra urging people to stop the practice of animal sacrifice in temples and that resulted in a mass movement and a hundred temples joined voluntarily. Such was his understanding of the pulse of people and his influence over the society of that time. We have seen how RK Laxman’s daily cartoon lampooned the people in power and depicted the situation of the common man of Mumbai which struck a chord across the country. People like Arun Shourie, and Ramnath Goenka not only were the voices people listened to but believed to a large extent. Such was the weight of their opinion and influence over people that the politics of that time was influenced and configured around those voices.
They
were high on credibility.
Similarly, we have had
academicians adorning various discussion panels in the TV shows of the 90s
whose voices and opinions were just not insightful but impeccably presented and were surgical in many ways. They had their decades-long research, field trips,
meetings, and observations as their strengths to bolster their arguments. Their
deep understanding of their subject, their neutrality, and their aloofness to the
political dispensation gave them the power to call a spade a spade.
That brings us to my core concern, in the age of information explosion, why it’s still difficult for a common man to access facts (truths)? Why the messenger of truth is weak to stand up and speak? In other words, who now is the credible voice in our midst who is well-informed, politically neutral, selfless, and has the guts to tell the facts?
The problem is the source of truth or the dearth of carriers of truth?
Institutions like newspapers and universities had nurtured free thinkers and built their talent by providing them security. If there were fearless journalists, there were strong management of the news outlets who stood strongly up to the political powers. If an academician could work on his subject freely and deeply, there was a strong leader of that organization who saw merit in such people and gave them the resources, space, and liberty to voice the facts.
Where are we now?
How
practical it is to expect news outlets to be free from political influences
when most of them are owned by various political parties by proxy. If few
traditional newspapers who haven’t sold their ownership yet, are doing their
best to be in the good books by crawling when they are expected to bend to the
wishes of the government to curry financial or political favours. If we believe
in the adage ‘Nothing
succeeds like success, then we
surely have many winners and many waiting to join the game. The academic space
has long ceased to be a place of intellectual pursuits. It has chosen two to
play second fiddle to the coaching centres that dot the landscape for various
competitive examinations. It’s now a playground of personal interest and
political one-upmanship. Lustreless, faceless and anonymous leaders are not
given responsibilities to build institutions on principles and values but are deputed to
stand guard and carry out official instructions.
We are seeing an unprecedented situation in our democracy where the earlier credible voices have either fallen off their pedestal or have been effectively silenced. Now manufactured truths are presented to the homes of the hapless public through various social media channels like Twitter and WhatsApp by faceless authors who are not accountable for defending their stories. Though this strategy of silencing the sane voices of society seems to be working in favour of achieving immediate political goals, its long-term impact on our society is far deeper and much more damaging than it meets the eye.
This loss will take a few generations to regain.
Society and its institutions that don’t recognize talent
and nurture it; silence the free-thinking and truthful voices will be
desperately searching for a capable leader and a credible voice when it would one day be standing on the edge of the cliff facing dystopia and crying to be rescued.
Wonderful analogy drawn, absolutely got me thinking and so pertinent of the times.The dystopia in the society has existed from ever since human civilization has existed..but in today's time it is such a predicament to be caught in the crossfire
ReplyDelete..between reality,truth,half truths and blatant lies.Thanks for a wonderful read which invokes our consciousness ✨
ReplyDeleteI wonder where the slides lead to. Can situation be redeemed?
ReplyDeleteOnly if we reach an existential crisis point.
DeleteNice 👍 on some issues
ReplyDeleteIn India common men will remain common, happy with their tommy full of gossips, as it's a flawed deomcracy drawn in a hurry
ReplyDeleteDecimation and emasculation of Institutions is leading us to a definite catastrophe. But sane people will always outnumber insane and we will bounce back someday. JP
ReplyDeleteThis is a thought provoking article. Introspective. Regards.
ReplyDelete