Of debates and its corruption: Burning issue
Dear Arnabji,
I am fully aware of the ‘argumentative Indian’ epithet given
to us Indians by none other than the Nobel laureate and apart from the book
though, always wondered whether it is more compliment or a sarcasm.
I do believe with aging I have come to conclude that the
term argumentative is less of a compliment, generally though of course to argue
as in a court of law is not a negative term, but is in the sense of presenting
one’s case forcefully and convincingly and with logic.
Like many things in India which are on top of the other for
instance the traffic where one lane is on top of the other, judging the way
people drive, the cyclist, the two wheeler, the three wheeler, the four
wheeler, six wheeler or any wheeler chooses himself to be in any of the lanes
they sweetly prefer to be which make me wonder one lane is on top of the other.
Not to mention the pedestrian and cattle preferring a perpendicular lane and
now a days the new gen bikers with a definitive
preference for a ‘crass – cross’ lane amidst the other lanes. Some foreigner even
took it to the extreme of commenting that the Indian road chaos is nothing but
a way of max optimising the road usage with any little empty space at any given
time, used irrespective of the rightful lane though with scant regard for crossing the lane ‘left, right and centre’
which happens to be the name of a similar programme on another channel. His argument
was that the number of accidents, given the chaos, was too little as to be
ignored while the system worked nonetheless with a certain efficiency.
I am reminded of the same argument while trying to listen to
watching your programme ‘Burning issue’ with the ominous flames on the screen.
Every speaker speaks away at his own sweet convenience irrespective of and
disrespective of whether someone else is speaking or not. True other channels
also show similar tendencies, but your channel has taken it to an artful din a
la ‘artful dodger’ of Oliver Twist fame. I wonder at the role of the journo at such a
juncture. Is your job to provoke further din by poking them adding more argumentative
fuel to the melting idiot cauldron. I am not convinced ‘the nation has a right
to know’ when what is being said to be known is barely decipherable in the cacophony.
In fact I always thought may be wrongly, the job of the
journo is to be a moderator a la debate in such circumstances for the benefit
of the decorum and the listener and for the process and for the outcome which
is a truth, a perspective or more clarity and conclusion on the matter at
discussion.
The argumentative Indian or the debater on the idiot box speaks
away a priori argumentative axiomatic truth with nary a budge from the original
position. Where is the debate then? Shouldn’t there be a withholding of a
priori posturing and an openness to the views, a respect for the opposition and
above all a respect for the opposite party’s right to disagree, a cornerstone
of liberal democracy itself? Shouldn’t
debate be dynamically adaptive to the views of the other debaters and to the
insightful comments of the moderator?
Instead ‘we the nation’ has to listen to the debater and the
moderator ‘one on top of the other’ in the evening time a la chaotic traffic of
the daytime. When the one who is supposed to be the moderator of the burning
passion is the one hogging the most time in which case it might as well be a
speech or a lecture, why do you need a debate to display the debating skills of
the moderator. Isn’t it like the traffic warden joining the chaotic traffic
down from his pedestal?
I am not surprised at the admirers of the show who all
belong to the class ‘argumentative
Indian’ now that we cannot escape the epithet, but I wonder what they admire other
than the chaos. Even the rashest driver in the country wishes secretly for the
day when our traffic is streamlined and less congested and orderly a la the
developed countries. Isn’t moving towards more sobriety, especially in the public
space, a sign of maturing and isn’t moving the society towards more maturity a
journalistic endeavour too?
Or is there a primeval instinct in us to enjoy chaos on the box
and on the streets? I was reminded of the large retail store that did research
and found that the Indian consumer actually wanted and preferred the store to
be chaotic a la local kirana store and
hence the artificial chaos adopted in some of the new gen stores.
Have you also done your homework and found that the Indian
listener would rather listen to many voices at the same time and speak at the same
time with two hoots to the other speakers? If so then what is being debated, what
is the conclusion or synthesis when the one who is supposed to be the synthesiser
also joining the din with apparently legitimate journalistic right? We the listener
has a right to know…. Alas…
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