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by dragonmum
3019 days ago
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> Tharoor sits at the sharp edge of nascent Hindu nationalist resurgence The link you gave does not substantiate that claim at all. > is known to have a bit of an axe to grind where the Raj was concerned. I would not be surprised that someone who is a victim has an axe to grind with a genocidal expropriative regime. What is surprising is that there are colonial apologists still around and pushing typical justifications for slavery, genocide and other crimes against humanity. |
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No, which is why I didn't [link] it - I gave it as an example of internal criticism which postures an alternate reason for some of India's woes.
> I would not be surprised that someone who is a victim has an axe to grind with a genocidal expropriative regime
Thank goodness we're not resorting to hyperbole here. I'm not sure how much of a victim he is given his status and the historical gulf of time before his birth and the period in question.*
> What is surprising is that there are colonial apologists
Zzz, I think I tried to state I wasn't comfortable framing my response in terms endearing towards some of The Empire's worst excesses. A shame criticism must remain so rigidly polarised - I am sure that's how history was too, hard aligned and absolute.
[edit: * as a Scot with family originating from the Highlands am I ok to play the victim card for much of my ancestry moving to the other side of the Atlantic?]