@ManojNaravane Lasting peace and successful negotiations stem from a distinct asymmetry in power—where a dominant "war machine" dictates terms to a subordinate one. It posits that absolute clarity in power dynamics prevents miscalculation and enforces stability.
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Since communist protest tactics are in the news, here’s a reminder of how dangerous they are for any productivity:
Till 1970s, if you had asked which three cities formed India’s industrial backbone, the answer would have been Bombay, Calcutta, and Kanpur.
Yes, Kanpur! Kanpur was once called the “Manchester of the East,” a roaring industrial hub where mills like Lal Imli, Elgin, and Victoria ran day and night, exporting cloth and leather, supplying the Indian Army, and creating jobs and wealth for all of North India.
Enter the Communists! And the momentum collapsed as militant trade unionism choked productivity. Under leaders like Suhasini Ali of the CPI(M), mills descended into constant strikes and wage wars, turning factories into ideological battlegrounds where shutting down production became the default mode of protest.
Over-unionisation meant even minor decisions needed political approval; the smallest dispute triggered hartals; productivity fell, losses rose, and investors fled. As mills died one by one, thousands lost their jobs, markets collapsed, skilled workers migrated out, and the once-proud industrial city decayed into an industrial carcass.
I’m not against labour rights, but they should have been pursued sensibly, through dialogue and legal means, not through constant shutdowns. And what was the outcome? Leaders like Suhasini Ali became famous, and decorated, while the workers they claimed to represent lost their jobs, factories closed, the city’s economy crashed, and thousands more suffered as collateral damage.
@SubhashiniAli You must be proud as u are 'Thanos for the Kanpur City'. U and ur ideology just ruined a growing city and made it a place that perfectly resembles ur ideology.
@GuGGu_07@IndianTechGuide U will lose 70% of the free market and without that it is just another Srilanka with more fault lines. South of India is developed because of pan India free excess, ports, early industrialisation (by Brits) and less volatile (no disturbance from northern invaders).
@ajeetbharti Revolution is overrated and stability is highly underrated and boring. Violence and arsons is the easiest part of any forced regime change. Bangladesh will learn this the hard way.