Dissent is Democratic, Consensus is Fascist






I still remember those days in my early twenties when I got to read the
novel  `Atlas Shrugged' by `Ayn Rand'  loaned to me by
my cousin sister. Ayn Rand was a born rebel who had her own vision of a
society based on an idealistic objectivism.



If someone mentions `capitalism' to me ,then  Jefferson,
Washington and Ayn Rand only come to my imagination. Such has been her
influence on American society.



Ayn Rand and democracy:



She will tell in one of her works- " Whenever you hear words such as
`unanimity, consensus, etc, immediately know that the organization
is fascist. Democracy has dissent built into it. No two men think alike
and act alike.



So , in a large organization like a business corporation or a political
party, if there is such a thing as consensus, it simply means that views
of one man or a few are pushed down the throats of those down the
hierarchy. The result ? Oppression , obviously.



Think of an organization or society where plurality of opinion is
accepted rather than tolerated and even welcomed. There, my friend ,
democracy blooms. Where the freedom to think, speak and act is inherent
in the society, democracy shows its fragrance.



Suppression is fascism. Liberation is Democracy.



The ideal society



Rabindranath Tagore, in his Gitanjali writes



Where the mind is without fear and the held is high

Where knowledge is free

Where words come out from the depth of truth

……………………



Have you ever heard of a land where these values were actually practiced
? Well, it was the wonderland called Bharat. The sons of Bharat , a
fearless intellectual group, dared to differ from the mundane and
visualized a society based on free enquiry. We see much of it even now
in India though the society lost many of its golden standards.



The village level self management, freedom for self enquiry and self
realization ( as later summarized in the Gita) speak volumes of the
society. It was in Bharat that is India that the 'free education for all
' policy was proclaimed and practiced till 1850 when the indigenous
Gurukuls were destroyed.



An example of a Democratic village:



A small village in the erstwhile Chola Kingdom, Uttiramerur, Tamilnadu,
(which is a temple village),  has a written constitution in the temple
complex devoted to Lord Shiva. This temple is typical of Chola Grandeur
in stone. There , in a mantap, the gram Sabha met and elected its chief.
The tenure was fixed and the election process was by dropping the choice
written on a palmyrah leaf into a pot. The votes were counted and the
winner declared by the village nobles.



The norms were also stringent. The contestant must not have married more
than once, not have had illicit relationship, who has not usurped public
property and so on. This happened thousand years ago under Rajaraja I.



The Present India



The India of present is a mix of honest, pious, religious and law
abiding citizens headed by a few dishonest, deceitful, bigoted ,
nepotist and corrupt leaders. They have perfected the art of dividing
the population on the basis of religion, caste and language in order to
keep the throne for perpetuity.



Democracy was made into a laughing stock when a single family of Father,
Daughter, Grandson, and his wife were all raised to the throne in almost
regular succession. The family employed all the untruthful means to
remain in power thus ridiculing the price of the blood of freedome
fighters.



Undoing of Indians in Democracy



They realized that the only true bond of all Indians is their religion.
So, they employed all means to keep the Indians disconnected from their
umbilicus. To this end, they invented a novel formula of secularism
which meant several things to several people.



The Hindu was taught that secularism meant  sacrificing his rights of
his religion over his motherland. It also meant forgiving of all
oppressions of the past by other religions. It also said that tolerance
even in the face of grim oppression was secularism.



The Muslims and Christian were free from such indoctrinations. For them
secularism meant they were free to practice their religions and convert
anyone to their religion by whatever means. They could even use force on
Hindus who had to be complacent as a rule.



The Hindu, by such vicious inculcation of untruths, became indifferent
to his society. His temples were nationalized and their lands and
properties were stolen by the government. He dare not show off his
religious affliction as it is a sign of aggression. If he formed a
party, he was termed as communal. But the other religions were free from
such injunctions and they were as secular as ever.



The average Hindu is longing for real democracy. His plight is his own
making. He simply has to look back in time and realize what a tradition
he belongs to. His tears will vanish and so will the suppressive ,
fascist , secularistic bondage.

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