When your country is run by “politicians”

I got motivated to create this image after hearing about the recent news that Chris Magnus, the Border Chief appointed by the Biden administration, fell asleep through meetings on the migrant crisis.

I reminded myself that history is full of examples where politicians fell asleep during major events. In order to share some of my memory regarding this subject I created the following image which includes examples from the last 10 years.

sleeping politicians

Information about each of these images:

1st image concerns Desmond Swayne, a British lawmaker who was caught asleep during a House of Commons debate in 2018.

2nd image (on right) is from 2021 when an aide woke up US President Joe Biden after he napped at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland.

3rd image (below the 1st) is from 2012 when Canadian MP Rob Anders was removed from the House of Commons committee after he took a nap during a presentation by homeless veterans.

4th image is from 2013 when Rep. George Holding was caught sleeping while he was overseeing the House floor.

5th image is from September 2022 when the Revenue Minister of the state, R Ashoka, was caught sleeping at a flood review meeting in Bengaluru, India.

6th image is from July 2014 when Vice President of Congress, Rahul Gandhi, was caught napping in Parliament.

7th image is from 2017 and mainly concerns South African President Jacob Zuma (in red tie) who was sleeping in the parliament.

8th image is from March 2013 when delegates were sleeping while listening to a speech during the National People’s Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

Overall, we can safely say that the figures in these images are mere career politicians with little or no concern about the public they claim to represent.

Remembering Paul von Hindenburg on his 175th birthday

I remember Paul von Hindenburg (1847 – 1934) every year on this day of 2nd October mainly because I share my birthday with him.

He is one of the biggest names in modern German history. He was among the leading figures in Prussian-Austrian War (1866) and Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871). He was appointed to the General Staff under Otto von Bismarck. He was a Field Marshal of East Prussian forces throughout World War I (1914 – 1918).

He later became the 2nd President of Germany in 1925 and remained so until 1934.

By 1929, the GDP of Germany was already much higher than before WWI and it doubled its exports compared to merely a few years ago. Germany was later hit by the great depression.

In 1930, during an interview with TIME, he said: “I have always been a Monarchist. In sentiment I still am. Now it is too late for me to change. But it is not for me to say that the new way is not the better way, the right way. So it may prove to be. I am not a pacifist. That is not my attitude. But all my impressions of war are so bad that I could be for it only under the sternest necessity – the necessity of fighting Bolshevism or of defending one’s country.”

Hitler and Hindenburg
Hitler and Hindenburg

In January 1933, under pressure from his colleagues, he appointed Adolf Hitler as Chancellor.

He died one year later, on August 2, 1934.

I saw people mostly had a positive view of him when I used to discuss him some years ago.

But if we talk about him today, then for some reason, people’s reaction toward him is now becoming increasingly negative.

The main reason behind this modified reception is that Berlin honorary citizenship was revoked by Germany in 2020, citing his decision to appoint Adolf Hitler as Chancellor.

This reminded me of a prophetic insight by Hindenburg’s own colleague, Erich Ludendorff, who wrote a telegram to Hindenburg, in reaction to Hindenburg’s appointment of Hitler. Lundendorff wrote: “You have delivered up our holy German Fatherland to one of the greatest demagogues of all time. I solemnly prophesy that this accursed man will cast our Reich into the abyss and bring inconceivable misery upon our nation. Future generations will curse you in your grave for your action.

It seems unlikely that the telegram was ever shown to Hindenburg but something that was predicted more than 88 years ago is apparently becoming true.

Celebrating 3 years of Monarchist Party

Monarchist Party is celebrating 3 years of its journey.

The domain names, MonarchistParty.org and MonarchistParty.com, were both registered on 26 September 2019, about 1,100 days ago.

In these three years, efforts have been made to popularize monarchy as the ideal form of the governing system under the name “Monarchist Party” across the internet and in real life.

We expect to continue this performance and spread the word about monarchism.

Solidarity with Iranian government against Mahsa Amini protests

There are protests going on in Iran over the death of a 22-year-old girl named Mahsa Amini who died in police custody after being arrested for wearing an “improper” hijab against the country’s hijab law.

On this occasion, I would like to extend my support to the Iranian government not because I admire their administration but because this protest seems fishy and it is beyond clear that these protests are being carried out with the support of foreign countries.

It makes no sense to anybody that a country with nearly all of its population as Muslims would oppose Hijab. It simply makes no sense. According to a Pew Research poll from 2012, about 83% Iranians support Sharia law. As such, I don’t think it would be possible to see such a huge protest in Iran without any foreign support.

I wonder why counter-protests are not getting coverage in mainstream media.

Now that the United States has already registered itself as a party in these protests against the Iranian government by providing internet to the protests, then I would expect the Iranian government to crush these protests, thus creating a new defeat for the United States which is once again pretending to be caring about the Asian civilians right after ditching the Afghanistan population.

‘Decolonization’ in the BJP style

Indian ruling party, Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP) appears to be having its own way to decolonize India from a colonial mindset.

On 8th September 2022, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that “Rajpath was for the British for whom the people of India were slaves. It was a symbol of colonialism. Now, its architecture has changed, and its spirit has also changed”.

However, on 9th September 2022, Indian Ministry of Home Affairs declared a 1-day mourning over the demise of Elizabeth II. It declared: “On the day of Mourning (11 September), the National Flag will be flown at half mast throughout India on all buildings where the National Flag is flown regularly and there will be no official entertainment on the day.”

Is the Indian government attempting to speed up its efforts to finalize free trade agreement (FTA) with the United Kingdom or just attempting to appease British critics of the Indian government?

Whatever the reason might be, it is entirely unjustifiable to mourn the death of Elizabeth II since she did nothing in her life for India other than wasting money that her parents stole from India during the brutal colonization of South Asia.

Monarchist Party condemns this upcoming mourning event as nothing but a completely unnecessary and unjustifiable move.

On #Abolishthemonarchy gang

A small number of online users, mostly normies, have started to spread a weird hashtag, #Abolishthemonarchy, in the fake death of the United Kingdom’s Queen Elizabeth II.

Apparently, the point these users appear to be missing is that the United Kingdom is not a true monarchy. It’s a crowned republic that is run by the country’s parliament and the monarch does not hold absolute powers in the UK.

That’s why there is nothing meaningful in promoting such a hashtag which in fact promotes a misleading notion.

Why Ukraine must be defeated by Russia

There are many good reasons why Russia must win the ongoing war with Ukraine in which Ukraine is apparently asking the whole world for help against Russia but failing to address the fact that Ukraine is responsible for the ongoing war.

1. Ukraine is lying

It is absolutely clear to anyone that Ukraine is lying to the entire world about its military strength, Russia’s casualties, and ultimately the overall threat of Russia. If this is wrong, then how come Ukraine claimed to have killed 2,800 Russian soldiers by the 2nd day of the war, yet they were asking the world for help? It makes no sense. And where are Ukraine’s 900,000 military members? We only see civilians and the recruitment of normal female citizens in this war by the Ukrainian government.

2. NATO’s hypocrisy

Everyone is well aware of the human rights violations committed by NATO or the US in Iraq, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan, Northern Pakistan, and other places in the last 20 years. Their claim that Russia is causing “terrorism” and “genocide” in Ukraine just reflects their hypocrisy. Some awakening is important at this stage so that NATO’s hypocrisy can be finally called out on an international level.

3. Betterment of Ukraine

It is likely that Ukraine has failed to govern itself due to rampant corruption, racism, antisemitism, economic decline despite their apparent willingness to remain independent. Once they become a part of Russia or at least see themselves governed by Russia, they will be better off than what they currently are.

4. Avoid WW3

If Russia wins the war, since they absolutely will should no other country interfere in the matter, then the world would succeed in preventing WW3 from happening. If NATO or a western country launched their armed forces to fight Russia then WW3 will break out.

5. The fate of Asia

Since Asian countries like China, India, and UAE have abstained from condemning Russia in the war, it seems that the credibility of these nations would represent the credibility of the entire Asian continent in general terms. These three nations are already being criticized for their actions with regards to the conflict and if Russia failed to win the war then these countries will have to carry the baggage of embarrassment.

6. Lesson for the western world

It is necessary for the western world to understand that they can face consequences over their neo-colonial mentality. Surely the defeat of Ukraine in this war will encourage the western world to reassess its colonial mentality.

Name of Sleemanabad should be changed because “Thuggee” was colonial imagination

I am somewhat surprised that it has been more than 70 years of Indian independence and people of India are yet to realize that “Thuggee” was nothing more than a concept invented by British colonizers to justify their brutal rule over India.

But since someone has to start telling Indians about it, and also raise a voice against the recognition of colonizers who were the part of brutality against India, I guess I should be the one to do it.

We should start with Sleemanabad, which is the name of a village in Katni district on Jabalpur.

I would like to start with Sleemanabad, because as a person who was born in Jabalpur, this was most likely the first place which I got to know about to be a populated location named after a British colonizer.

William Henry Sleeman was a British colonizer who was credited with suppressing a violent group called “Thuggee”. Even though nobody ever heard about such a group ever before, Sleeman’s writings and efforts led him recognition in the Indian society that a village of nearly 6,000 people was named after him as Sleemanabad.

To start with the fact that Thuggee didn’t exactly exist but the whole concept served a justification for British to oppress Indians can be easily described in these very few words:-

  • The invention of thuggee was part of the orientalization of India, and a source of seemingly endless fascination to Europeans. As late as 1891, a handbook for travellers advised a visit to Jabalpur Jail to see ‘the last of that terrible tribe of murderous devotees’. Yet colonial representations of thuggee were always paradoxical. Though colonial images of thuggee seemed certain, the offence remained remarkably vague because the authorities never really defined it. Rather, it encompassed all sorts of criminal acts, notably those committed by itinerant communities. These even included poisoning and the kidnapping of children. Neither was there ever a clear distinction between thuggee, murder and gang robbery (dacoity)….

    – Clare Anderson, “Legible Bodies: Race, Criminality and Colonialism in South Asia“, 2004.

Professor Clare Anderson is clear that how ‘thuggee’ was a invention of the colonial regime. I agree that the lack of distinction between murderers, gang robbers and the so-called ‘thuggee’ was never clarified. This could be a part of British creation of this imaginary concept.

  • “In yet another study of British representation of India, which directly refers to Teltscher’s argument, Amal Chatterjee describes how the British invented Thuggee which ‘so convinced the propagators of the fiction that it began to be recorded everywhere. First came the highway Thugs who used children in their schemes [….] River pirates came next.’ Later on, Chatterjee elaborates on the construction of Thuggee at the hand of the colonial authorities [….] Having read this, one is left with the impression that Thuggee was wholly and thoroughly a product of British imagination. The same argument appears in several other scholarly works, including that of the late Rajnarayan Chandvarkar, according to whom, ‘it was the British attempt to establish their sway over large tracts of mobile and strife-torn countryside which led to the invention of Thuggee in the 1830s.”

    – R. Roque, K. Wagner, Engaging Colonial Knowledge: Reading European Archives in World History, Springer, 2011

The above analysis with the findings of Amal Chatterjee which he made in his book is spot on.

If the concept of “thuggee” was something more than construction by British colonizers, then I would really like to know how it remained unheard and undiscovered for such a long time.

India has a rich history of literature. Surely such crimes could never go unnoticed for this long.

The dubiousness of the entire issue is broader than that. “Behram”, who was executed in 1830 or 1840 has been claimed to have strangled more than 931 people is not recognized by any third-party source. While there are a number candidates such as Elizabeth Báthory (claimed to have murdered over 600), Bonifacio Morera (murdered about 300), Pedro López (murdered more than 300), for recognizing a single serial killer with the highest known victim count, however, there is no recognition of Behram as one. This at least shows that the claims by British colonizers lacked substance.

  • “Thuggee,” defined by the British as ritual murder on behalf of Kali by certain robbers called “thugs,” is part of a broad colonialist discursive agenda elaborated in the first few decades of the nineteenth century. This discursive agenda aimed at sketching out the appropriate administrative shape of the growing British presence in India. By the third decade of the nineteenth century, as is well known, the British had completed the conquest of most of the territory that became a part of their Indian empire. It is in this context that the extensive discourse on “thuggee” was elaborated. The person who did the most for the elaboration of this discourse was William Henry Sleeman (1788 – 1856) Sleeman arrived in India as a cadet of the Bengal army in 1809 and then went on to spend forty-seven years in various capacities. He is credited with having “suppressed” “thuggee” in the period between the mid-1820s and the early 1840s. Contemporary scholarship, however, is increasingly skeptical of “thuggee” as described by the British and questions whether such a phenomenon ever really existed.

    – Subramanian Shankar, Textual Traffic: Colonialism, Modernity, and the Economy of the Text, SUNY Press, 2001.

Scholar Subramanian Shankar correctly explains how “Thuggee” is not something taken seriously by the modern scholarship.

With these many conclusive quotations from the academic publications above, we can safely conclude that there is absolutely nothing controversial in accepting “thuggee” was a mere fabrication over which Indian people need to overcome.

To sum it up, William Henry Sleeman was nothing more than a sign of oppression and deception for basic humanity. It was much because of his fabrication that many Indians lost their lives and faced brutal treatment by British colonizers. We should no longer provide the recognition to Sleeman which he has been receiving for this long.