Political Science, asked by Hopeee, 4 months ago

given the present condition of the country and based on your own observation brainly

Answers

Answered by reddy7728
0

Answer:

Your country is best country. It is the developing country.But now the Corona effect is going on

Answered by Shamz30
1

Mark me as brainiest, I spent soo much time on this

India:

PoliticsThree Observations From India's Past to Contextualise the Present StruggleAt a time when many of us are on the barricades, either physically or politically, it is important to put our apocalyptic moment in long-term perspective.

Jan 10, 2020 | Arjun Appadurai

We are witnessing India’s first mass movement since the movement for national Independence, which began in the 1880s and ended in 1947. At no time since 1947 have we seen such an inspiring show of democratic dissent, bringing together students and workers, old and young, Hindus, Sikhs, Muslims, Christians, Parsis and other faiths, Marxists, liberals and traditional nationalists, government servants and corporate leaders, men and women.In this mass movement, women, students and youth in general are the leaders, with Muslims speaking their minds with a courage born out of the sense that other options are non-existent. The Emergency had some of these features, but the broad opposition to Indira Gandhi then recognised that she had some ability to listen, learn and respond, by comparison to the current regime.At a time when many of us are on the barricades, either physically or politically, it is easy to be caught up in the news of the day, the week or the month. At such times, we need to bear India’s long history in mind and put our apocalyptic moment in long-term perspective. In this light, I have three observations to offer.Gujrat’s history and today’s IndiaMore in Politics :Raising 'Love Jihad' Bogey, Yogi Threatens Death for Men Who 'Hide Identity, Disrespect Sisters'Centre to Import Potatoes from Bhutan as Retail Price Reaches Rs 45 Per KgTo Mock or Not to Mock Religions, That Is the QuestionFormer Finance Secretary Subhash Garg Alleges Nirmala Sitharaman's Role Behind His TransferBJP Leader Who Called Gandhi 'Father of Pakistan' Appointed Professor at IIMCKamal Nath Moves SC Against EC Over Removal of His 'Star Campaigner' StatusThe first has to do with the long history of the connection between Gujarat, the state which nurtured the careers of Narendra Modi and Amit Shah over decades, and the Godhra train burning of 2002, a connection which helped them to leverage a national platform for their vision of a polity cleansed of Muslims.Also Read: Disturbing Similarities in Modi’s Journey from Godhra, 2002 to Pulwama, 2019But these events in Gujarat have a deeper history which goes back to 1956, when the Gujarati-speakers of Bombay lost the city to Maratha regionalists and the states of Maharashtra and Gujarat were born. From the Bombay Gujarati point of view, Bombay was the city built by Gujarati and Parsi capital, but was also the long-term home of many Marathi-speakers (whom the Gujarati mercantile elite stigmatised as lowly domestic workers and factory serfs) and Muslims (whom they already feared and disliked because of the long Gujarati and RSS historiography of the Muslim ravaging of the Hindu temples of their region). Thus, the loss of Bombay in 1956 was a double loss for many Gujaratis, which was only redeemed in part by the ascendance and royal status of people like the Ambanis.

The southern end of Gujarat meets the northern end of Maharashtra on the Arabian Sea, in a belt that runs from Mandwa to Daman and Diu, always a zone of struggle between Gulf pirates, coastal Marathi-speaking magnates and state functionaries, and Gujarati merchants and smugglers. Though many in Gujarat do not identify strongly with Bombay (and its loss in 1956), for ideologues and strategists like Shah and Modi, the mutual traffic between them, the Adanis, the Ambanis and other smaller Bombay tycoons, is the key counterweight to the power of Maratha regionalism, which has become openly anti-BJP and anti-Gujarati again, in the weeks since Udhav Thackeray became chief minister of Maharashtra.In short, the Modi-Shah regime is built on its whipping up of regional angers and hatreds in Gujarat from 2002 to 2014, and this Gujarati power base for Modi is a key part of the current BJP effort to impose a reign of terror on much of the rest of India. Gandhian non-violence is not simply a product of the deep strain of Jaina ahimsa in Gujarat. Rather, Gandhi flew in the face of the massive propensity of Gujarati populations in Surat, Baroda, Ahmedabad and other cities in Gujarat to turn to violence against Muslims since at least the late 18th century. The Modi-Shah combine has leveraged this long-term Gujarati history into a national programme for ethnic cleansing.A view of Mumbai’s financial district. Photo: Reuters/Danish SiddiquiThe RSS-BJP’s organisational structureThe second observation about the long-term history of the subcontinent pertains to the nature of caste, class and power in this region over two millennia.

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