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  • Writer's pictureritafarhatkurian

The Law of Opposites #PM Modiji #RahulGandhi #politics #social #India

The Law of Opposites:

In 2012, the world was hit with economic meltdown. Erratic changes occurred in India due to lashing monsoons where the price of onions went scoring high. Media screamed blue murder at the outrageous prices of vegetables and exorbitant rates in restaurants. Then the cost of petrol when up by one rupee, and India was in hysterics. Anna Hazare rose out of a national fire to ignite Indians to fight a movement to promote rural development, increase government transparency, and investigate and punish corruption in public life and make the government more accountable. Anna Hazare suddenly faded away mysteriously when elections were over.

In that charged atmosphere of frenzied change in India, Narendra Modi, a simple man of humble origins of the son of a modest chaiwala captured Indian hearts. He was The Man to throw out corruption and understand the pain of the poor. Millions of Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists and others voted for Shri Narendra Modi with happy hearts with visions of a flourishing India of a golden era of prosperity, green revolution, rural rise, and economic brightening and joy for all. The poor, urban, rural, middle and affluent rubbed their hands in glee chanting in ecstasy, “Modi hai to mumkin hai!” meaning if Modi is there, then it is possible and chorused “Ache din aane wale hai” meaning good days are going to come.

The mysterious Gujarat model captured “all” in awe though most people were not really sure what it was. They were sure his Gujarat model would implement itself in India’s design as a rising star. The poor were confident that Shri Narendra Modi being the son of a humble tea seller would identify with the pain of the poor and lift them out of troubled waters.

On his first year as Prime Minister, in 2014, the “Narendra Damodardas Modi” pinstriped suit got stunned reactions while his fans rushed to his rescue to defend him, eulogizing his every act. The suit was worth Rs 10 lakh. PM Modiji had not payed a penny for the suit material. The making was done free of cost by Jade Blue, and later, he managed to auction the suit for US$695,000 and contributed the entire amount for Clean Ganga project. Incidentally, however, sadly, the Ganga River is still extremely dirty. He did implement schemes such as housing schemes for the poor, pushed for a cleaner India, aimed for toilets in all villages, though people said the toilets were exempt of water connections hence unusable, he scrapped the Triple Talaq law to help Muslim women, preventing men from casually divorcing their wives, and reportedly kept up an active government which responded quickly, and a vigorously aggressive IT cell which unfortunately worked overtime often many times to create malicious misinformation which actually triggered riots.

Breaking mindsets of the “poor man’s PM” he displayed his extravagant fascination for good brands with his expensive Maybach sunglasses, and favorite Italian branded brands, his Movado watch and Bulgari glasses, fashionable Modi jackets, and lavish suits . Rumors go that he changes his clothes three times a day, which is perfectly acceptable because of course, he is the Prime Minister.

Times were difficult in 2017, as rural India wrestled with impoverishment, immersed in a sea of steep loans they couldn’t pay back, some dying of starvation, committing suicide, and most of the country was saddled with heavy financial burdens largely due to the effects of demonetization. The farmers took to walking hundreds of miles by foot to Delhi expecting that Prime Minister Modi would lend them a sympathetic ear, but he did not come near, and he rushed to Bollywood instead to attend an event at that very same time. The poor farmers were greeted with guns at the Delhi border, some got severely injured and some got arrested. It was then that with eerie chill, many realized PM Modi as not exactly a “poor man’s PM.

It was with eerie chill that they realized PM Modi was not exactly a “poor man’s PM when their exorbitant loans were not waived, their grain was sold for a song in markets, and they had to buy their own grain back at high costs.

It was with eerie chill when people realized he was not a poor person’s PM when demonetization happened at the stroke of midnight and millions of poor lost their life savings and some lost lives.

It was with eerie chill when people realized he was not a poor person’s PM when they stood in serpentine lines for hours in the scorching heat and those with heart problems succumbed due to the strain of demonetization.

It was with eerie chill when people realized he was not a poor person’s PM when he made schemes that would benefit the filthy rich in India, which would cut out of the middle person’s pocket and hurt the poor.

It was with eerie chill when people realized he was not a poor person’s when he met up with sports and Bollywood stars who glorified the PM above the stars, but rarely met up with the middle section or the poor.

It was with eerie chill when people realized he was not a poor person’s PM when people learned that the CAA and NRC would hurt the poor and middle person more than anyone else because they would not have the documents to prove their citizenship in India as many did not have them and would not be able to bribe officers to get their citizenship.

It was with eerie chill that that people realized he was not a poor person’s PM when 25 citizens were gunned down and killed allegedly by police during the protests

It was with eerie chill when people realized he was not a poor person’s PM when the COVID-19 lock-down was declared, without a plan for the poor migrants who were not offered buses or trains to go home during the nightmarish weeks of walking and many died trekking back home.

It was with eerie chill that that people realized he was not a poor person’s PM when factory workers were thrown out on streets during the initial COVID-19 lockdown and thrashed by police for being on streets, but they had nowhere else to be; humiliated by police and made to hop like bunny rabbits, and douched with disinfectants designed for inanimate objects. Allegedly, none of these police were reprimanded.

The gap between the haves and have nots is starting to grow with rising resentment due to the unfairness meted out to the poor during these catastrophes.

It was with eerie chill when people realized he was not a poor person’s PM when the poor migrants during the COVID crisis were finally alloted trains to go home, but during the long 2-day scorching journeys in summer were not provided with food or water and people died in the trains due to hunger, dehydration and heat. The Central Railways and Central Government did not think it important to ensure the people got food and water during the long train journeys home! Videos and pictures of the dead are now haunting most of the people in the nation. Such deaths could have been prevented with care from the Government.

On the other side of the spectrum, a rant was growing against Rahul Gandhi who was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. He was looked upon as the rich man’s spoiled brat who had it all. People accused him of faking his outreach to the poor for surely, how could a guy who was born in the lap of luxury understand poverty? A lucky kid they said he was who had the privilege to study abroad, held a black belt in Aikido, was a licensed pilot, and could dive 75 meters under the sea in a single breath. They placed him as a brand of the Lutyens who did not have a place with commonplace Indians. With a batch of rejection stamped on Rahul Gandhi making him a clown where masses were laughing uproariously whenever his name was mentioned, the wheels in BJP kept rolling the way they wanted that image to go.

We often chose simple leaders feeling they will identify with our causes due to the hardships we face, and they do for a season, but as they rise up in power and meet the “stars”, the glitzy glamour of the shooting orbs captures them and they get lost in a trance under the power of the elite. Many such leaders are entranced by the startling new discoveries and contrasts they encounter, they sail through the galaxies exploring new territories and meeting legends over tables of exotic food and glittering goblets. Mesmerized by the sparkle and glaze, the pain of the poor suddenly turns into a haze. This is what happened to our dear PM Modiji when the poor felt forsaken on many counts.

While it would be a struggle for PM Modi to troop along lovingly with the thronging poor and hug them, this came very naturally to Rahul Gandhi. Rahulji could sit along with the poor at the same table, eat samosas, puri, chai and chat with them freely. He could hug a poor old woman as wrinkled as a raisin with pure love shining out of his eyes, he sought duty cuts on items for blind students, among other dozens of acts of empathy. He could jump boundary fences to join a band of grubby farmers as he extended out open arms to them. He could sit on a cobbled path with the distressed migrant workers during the COVID crisis and firmly keep his promises to all the people he met. During winter, wearing his famous black Burberry quilted jacket each day, he brought in a certain commonplace space during his street outreaches with personalized compassion.

Some of the spectacular acts he did was his secret outreach to Nirbhaya’s family where he specifically instructed them not to tell anyone not desiring publicity. He was a personal benefactor to her brother helping him in his dream to become a pilot. While the family were sworn to secretary, they could not bear to keep silent in the wake of the ridicule that Rahul Gandhi was facing.

Another act of valiance was when Rahul Gandhi narrowly escaped a plane crash during Karnataka polls in August 2018 when his aircraft, en route Hubbali, developed a snag mid-air. During that frightening event when the plane nearly crashed, Rahuji kept calm and comforted the crew. The grateful crew later shared this after the incident. In the face of death, he had no fear for his own life. A true leader always walks along with the people.

On one occasion, a photographer suddenly fell down a flight of stairs while covering Rahul Gandhi’s arrival at Biju Patnaik International Airport in Bhubaneswar. Rahul Gandhi was the first person to rush down the stairs to help the photographer up. There are some things in life one cannot fake, especially in hit and run cases and near death situations and Rahulji proved it. He genuinely cared.

What happened to the alleged Shri Narendra Modi’s love for the poor and Shri Rahul Gandhi’s love for the rich? Were these realities?

In reality, one saw Modji gravitate more to the rich and Rahulji gravitate more to the poor. This does not mean that Modiji had an aversion to the poor or Rahulji did not care for the rich. Rahulji had a natural ability to sit with intellectuals, rich cooperates and the poor all in one breath. Maybe his life experiences made him this elastic. Modiji might like both, but they tend to gravitate more to the other more easily without resistance due to the law of opposites working powerfully. The law of law of opposites does not work by formula on every situation but it is largely a law that works along general principles. There may be rich people who hate the poor simply because their own spirits are murky or it reminds them of some poverty in their own lives, or there may be some poor who hate the rich, such as we saw in the French Revolution. The law of opposites also works according to individual complexities and many people can defy this law according to the design of their own strong personalities so it is not a law of absolutes.

The law of opposites states that two polarized forces negative and positive in energy are attracted to each other and in humans, people who are very different from each other are often attracted to each other.

Modiji could hug the affluent far more easily than the poor. His interactions, schemes, meetings, and outreaches were strongly directed towards the favored opulent crowd.

On the other hand, the man born with a silver spoon in his mouth who had sailed through galaxies of glamour and glaze saw it all and there was nothing new to entrance him. So, his heart readily caught the plight of the poor. Kindness is a natural inborn trait in him, so he is very easily drawn to the penurious masses. Fascinated with their simple lives, so different from his own, he loves to sit and talk to them. He joined the demonetization line to talk to the masses standing there and get a peek into their thoughts in that situation; he sat in a movie hall just to identify with citizens who watch movies and get a glimpse into their daily lives. He is the man that insists that the poor farmers and others get their money transferred directly into their bank accounts to put money into the system without it getting trapped by other grabbing agencies. Somehow over these last years, with all the schemes, the poor and middle section never saw the money that was promised because it got lost in the “system.”

Both are just following the science of the law of opposites. There is a difference here, however. Modiji drawn to the rich and affluent gets overwhelmed and overcome while Rahulji drawn to the impoverished masses, is more elastic due to the exposures of the wealthy affluent and political on his life, and they don’t intimidate or overwhelm him, Rahul Gandhi is used to it, so he can never be compromised and it is important to note this! There is no condemnation to either for this is just a natural part of the law of the Universe that they are drawn into, which works on a large scale though there are always exceptions to the rule.

Rita

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