No dude. This is good that you guys are fighting and discussing things. It actually helps you to solidify your stances by subjecting them to tests that the other guys throw at you.
Btw it is not true that the people decide. Decisions are taken by leaders and leaders only. People just express their trust in leaders or their gratitude for the notes. Leaders are the ones that counter each other and compromise.
I would rather have you guys argue more and more. I would like to hear more from KS about what to do with Indian muslims who refuse contraception, about those Indians who don't want to be Indians(some of them muslim) and about what he thinks should be a solution to Kashmir.
I returned from a day trying to get so rich that I would never have to work again to find this collection of posts and their comet's tail of attendant comments. Some of the naivete and irresponsibility on display is saddening.
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rubyjackass, decisions are taken by leaders as they sense their constituencies want those decisions to be taken. Karunanidhi does not decide to take a stand against Indian training of Sri Lankans on his own; he does so because he senses that he will lose numbers to Vaiko and such-like, and the nascent pro-Tamil Eelam groups which are slowly trying to return to effectiveness. Jayalalitha does not pre-empt him and make louder noises in the matter because she has any negative views about the military arrangement, but simply in order to ensure that her own constituency remains convinced that her heart is in the right place.
Think about history, Indian or other, and look at the leaders who come to your mind. Think about what they decided. Gandhi took a confrontational approach and distracted the natural trajectory of devolution of government that had started with the Morley-Minto reforms; according to some opinions, this may actually have retarded the Indian cause by decades. Jinnah took to representing the inchoate feelings of resentment and insecurity of the minority Muslims (as opposed to the majority Muslims of the later-designated homelands). The result was confrontation and communal strife magnified many millions of times beyond what there had been before.
Was it Winston Churchill or his counterpart, Hitler, that you had in mind? Look at their records, and tell me that their decisions were not what the people they led themselves wanted, and if they were in any way very much more than symbolic of those popular urges and wants.
This craving for a father-figure that will tell us all what to do, after which we can happily follow orders flies in the face of 2,600 years of recorded history. But then, there are those, like Carlyle, who have derived from this record their considered view that heroes form the turning points of history, rather than representing much deeper urges and wishes of the collective. It is just disillusioning to see this point of view persist into the 21st century. Along with religion, jingoism, and exaggerated attention to symbolical social structures.