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The period of extended lockdown has been one of virtual interaction with loved ones after years. The biggest bonus for me has been reconnecting with my school mates – many of them women – spread all across the country, after over 30 years. We barely spoke to each other then, but we don’t shy away from cracking jokes or making fun of each other now. For me, it is almost like a revolution as girls and boys used to live completely different lives during our school days.
Even in such informal groups with newfound bonhomie after years of separation, whenever I post something critical of how the government has tackled the coronavirus pandemic and ensuing crisis, the common response is invariably “But PM Modi remains our best bet to take us out of the current crisis.”
I have drawn their attention to issues which, I think, could have been handled better. Here are some of them:
My friends, relatives and acquaintances have fortunately tried to give my pointers a patient hearing.
I can, however, gauge from the response of my family and friends that they believe that hundred percent compliance with the total lockdown is the only credible fight against corona. Why? Because the prime minister has said so.
The government must have a plan in place to rescue the economy and must determine whether or not going for more testing is a matter of detailing that can always be adjusted should the need arise.
Google data suggests that following the lockdown announcement, visits to public places plunged by a whopping 77 percent, which remains one of the highest in the world. And according to reports, movement of people between satellite towns, Delhi-Ghaziabad and Mumbai-Thane, which are almost like conjoined twins, dropped in excess of 90 percent following the lockdown.
These are some of the many data sets suggesting that the compliance with the PM’s call for social distancing and staying at home, and not crossing the proverbial ‘Lakshman Rekha’ has been almost total. This compliance has been unquestioning. And the sections – urban poor, daily wage workers, people employed with the unorganised sector – which are otherwise considered vulnerable, have also followed the lockdown in letter and spirit. Migrant workers have shown defiance in pockets, but their ire has been directed mostly against the local administration and not so much against the lockdown decision per se.
We have seen the demonetisation days, when people were struggling to keep body and soul together. Jobs were lost, businesses shut overnight, marriages got postponed, people spent hours waiting for their turn to withdraw and exchange their own money, and many precious lives were also lost. We are yet to see any of the projected benefits of demonetisation. Yet people believed PM Modi and shushed all his critics.
We are witnessing an action replay of the same, that is, the mass’s support for the PM despite crisis. Why is this the case?
I don’t have a definite answer. My guess is Modi represents, to use Karl Marx’s theory, the anti-thesis to what was an established thesis before him. The thesis was top-down, elitist, and only partially democratic, in the sense that it did not represent the aspirations of a vast majority who did not have access to liberal and anglicised education.
While the ways and means may seem undemocratic, Modi is at the forefront of leading a democratic revolution. And the kind of audacity he has shown when it comes to taking tough decisions, has built his image as a change-maker, bent on creating a new order. Thus, the constant applause for him when chips are down.
After all, tapasya (penance), that great Indian trait worth pursuing, involves pain before one attains all of one’s goals.
(Mayank Mishra is a senior journalist who writes on Indian economy and politics, and their intersection. He tweets at @Mayankprem. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed in this article are that of the writer’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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Published: 22 Apr 2020,04:40 PM IST