@SabaMahjoor ‘A hungry person needs food & a troubled person needs https://t.co/7RRrNaBBxB you think any god,any god for that matter,would be offended by what nourishes the soul of his follower?’
Just thinking aloud. No claims made.
This is a Time Magazine Cover from 2011. I reposted @RahulSeeker's tweet yesterday.
I have not been able to stop thinking about this cover.
15 years ago, the world was watching two countries and genuinely could not decide which one would lead the future.
One of them does now. The other has spent the last decade and a half fighting over whose god is bigger.
I am writing this as a common citizen who grew up in this country, who continues to believe in what it is capable of, and who finds it genuinely dificult to explain the drastic economic downturn in these past years through poor governance alone.
India in 2011 was a country that had grown at consistently high rates for two decades, had a young demographic profile, and was positioned as a genuine superpower in the making.
We were leading the IT revolution at a time when the world had just figured out that technology was the new currency of power. An Indian spotted abroad was asked one common question: "Do you work in IT?"
It wasn't a stereotype so much as a signal. The world had noticed. It had clocked which direction we were moving in, and it had started to take us seriously. We weren't just a large country anymore. We were a country with momentum. And momentum, in geopolitics, is the most threatening thing of all.
And then there was the one thing that makes powerful nations genuinely nervous. India is an independent nuclear power. Not a dependent state. Not a country whose arsenal exists because someone else permitted it. Ours. On our terms. Answering to nobody.
A large, young, fast-growing, technologically ambitious, independently nuclear nation with a democratic mandate and a civilisational confidence. That is not a country you want going fully unchecked.
Putting on my tin foil hat, here is the thought I cannot entirely shake: that what has happened to India over the last many years is not simply the consequence of bad governance, corruption, or misfortune. (That of course, is a very real issue laughing in our faces every single day)
That some portion of it has been engineered, or at minimum exploited, by actors with a strategic interest in ensuring that India never becomes what it was projected to become.
There are powers that have done this before. They don't need to invade a country. They just need to find a wound in it and not let it heal - through tools of debt, dependency, tariffs, and narratives shaped by controlled media or manipulated social media algorithms. And then stay out of the way while it consumes itself.
"Just keep the wound open", as they say.
Mismanagement of a population's growth trajectory, and its basic needs which is this consistent and directional, feels almost scripted.
Let me also say - the fractures in Indian society are not new. Religious tension, caste hierarchy, linguistic division: these have existed for centuries. No government manufactured them from scratch.
A country whose population has been allowed to be preoccupied with questions of communal identity, whose minorities are economically anxious and politically marginalised, and whose civil society is increasingly reluctant to speak plainly, is a country whose productive capacity is diminished.
A nation fighting itself cannot look outward with coherence.
They couldn't tame the dragon. So they slowly fed the elephant poisoned food. Enough to keep it from breaking its own shackles. Enough for it to be grateful to be fed. The elephant didn't die. That was never the plan. A dead elephant attracts attention. It is still standing - tall above others, swaying, looking busy, occasionally making noise, hoping to get better, some day.
Someone needed only one new superpower to emerge. Not two. Someone did not want a second China.
And someone got exactly what they needed.
A note to journalists around the world:
If the PM of India visits your country, please ask him questions, because in India he has not faced a press conference for the last 12 years.
For the sake of the journalistic community, please do us this favor.
RT for good karma.
Modi asked you to eat less oil, skip gold, work from home.
Sitharaman told you to eat out less and watch your expenses.
BJP IT Cell told you “India is the fastest growing economy.”
Meanwhile, Indian Express’s Udit Misra just filed the autopsy report:
🔴 Rupee: ₹86 → ₹96 in ONE year. Quietly.
🔴 Net FDI gone NEGATIVE; Indians building factories abroad because they don’t trust this government’s economy
🔴 BOTH current account AND capital account in deficit; simultaneously. First time. Ever.
🔴 Per capita income = ₹20,000/month. MOST Indians earn below even that.
🔴 Exports? Almost stagnant and flat; after 12 years of “make in India”,
And Misra confirmed, the government KNEW this for 2 years. They hid it during elections. The call only came once votes were counted.
This isn’t bad luck. This isn’t Iran. This isn’t Trump.
This is what 12 years of suit-boot economics, crony capitalism, and GDP optics actually looks like underneath.
Rahul Gandhi called it in July 2025: “Indian economy is DEAD.”
The Indian Express just put the post-mortem report on the table.
They didn’t mismanage the economy.
They HID the mismanagement from you; until after you voted.
That’s not incompetence. That’s a betrayal. 🇮🇳 💔