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Gautam's avatar

"ideology reduces itself to three functional truths. Find something to hate viscerally, over-extend the shadow of your ideology to all realms of a citizen’s life and protect yourself by sanctifying a core principle within the ideology that cannot be made profane. "

Profound. How did you distil ideology to these 3 streams (literature)? Is any ideology bound to follow this corrosive path? How can an ideology come to hate some random thing viscerally?...

Many queries arise, pertinent to the times we live in.

Thanks guys for the deep dives. All the best! :)

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Kaushik Suresh's avatar

Gents, this is great analysis as always. One counterpoint. It is appealing and democratic to leave policies on critical issues to be debated and voted upon by citizens. The only issue is that a lot of liberal reforms (and I am biased here) happen because of a small, "enlightened" group legislating/ adjudicating in a manner that a majority might be opposed to (or lukewarm about at best). Over time, these changes often become generally acceptable. Roe vs Wade is a case in point. I'm not sure whether a majority of Indians would have voted for equal rights for women/ lower castes or universal franchise in 1947, or a majority of Americans would have voted to emancipate slaves in the 1860s.

This is obviously a risky argument as it partly violates the rights of people to govern themselves, and short circuits bottom-up societal reform. But progress has often occurred because people have been dragged forward a bit further than they'd have liked.

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