If some random local government politician throws his weight around, assaults someone,
threatens, robs, rapes or engages in some other illegal activity and if that
kind of infringement is rare, we can put it down to character quirk. Indeed, we could even predict that the
individual can forget about re-election.
That may have been the case a long, long, long time ago. Not
now. Hardly a day passes when we don’t
read or hear about a politician who is associated with some form of illegal activity,
some act of thuggery or abuse. It is no
longer ‘news’ and that says a lot about what the ‘usual business’ is.
It is about flawed institutional arrangement exacerbated by
flawed constitution, one might explain.
It’s about bad people doing bad things, would be another
explanation. It is a law and order
problem, pure and simple, another would opine.
It’s all these, in fact. But if
‘culture’ has a role, we need to understand that certain ‘cultures’ flow from
institutional structures and moreover flourish and grow more pernicious because
these structure favor the bad over the good.
It is then about people in key positions not willing to do
anything about it or else are themselves too compromised to intervene. When a minister calls the media and goes on
to tie an official to a tree and gets away without a scratch to political
career, lower ranked politicians take a cue.
Inaction is reward enough and encouragement to boot, after all.
This indicates rank insincerity on the part of those at the
top or else a resolve to ‘let be’.
Letting be, though, has a dynamic of its own. Bad news spreads fast. What big brother does, small brother
considers ‘fair game’. And we so we have
the ridiculous situation of schoolboy rugby matches necessitating riot police
personnel being on hand to step in if things get bad. Players punch players, linesmen weighs in to
add muscle to player-player brawls. Spectators assault referees. Inquiries are announced and held. Through it all ‘pain of punishment’ has not
made its way into the thick heads of thugs and thugs in waiting.
It is not a local thing, mind you. The United States has demonstrated in word
(Madeline Albrights scandalous-but-honest statement that the death of over half
a million children in Iraq ‘was worth it’) and deed (in recent times Grenada,
Panama, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria) that guns-in-booty-out is par
for the course in the New World Odor.
That’s a Double-O license for the rest of the world. If spying on private citizen is ‘ok’ for the
US Government, then that will be ‘ok’ for others, Sri Lanka too. If plunder at
gun point is ok for Uncle Sam, it’s ok for the Mervins of Sri Lanka, doctored
or otherwise. If war is a game and
slaughtering Osama bin Laden or Muammar Gaddafi is ‘ok’, that’s a cue for
nose-punching (and of course ‘thou shalt kneel at my command’) for every
two-bit thug who has by hook or by crook got elected.
How do we correct this?
By objecting. On pain of
punishment. This side of ‘that’ lies
complicity, approval and the risk of being accused of partaking of spoils.
As things stand, with respect to hooliganism, thuggery and
theft, the word in the street is that those mandated to arrest the situation
are silent and therefore have legitimately earned the tag ‘beneficiary’.
1 comments:
Its the 40 thieves who are in the street, plundering, intimidating, assaulting, and killing. Ali Baba is watching from a safe distance and counting the days how to manipulate the next term.
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