| > engage with whataboutry, If you really want to discuss with civility, don't start with an accusation. I agreed with the commenter that there is definitely political motive to these demolitions and it is definitely not right to not follow procedure even if these are illegal. My point is against this belief that this is something recent. It has been always like this, no matter who is in power. It might have increased or decreased; that I don't know without stats. I am old enough to have seen media being used to create narratives like WMD in Iraq to know not to go forward with the narrative pushing in media. > The reason that this has become significant enough > The scale is enormous and is not showing any signs of decreasing. There is also a narrative in media that these communal incidents have increased recently. When I looked at data on this the last time in 2020, the crime record data pointed to much higher rates of communal violence in 80s and 90s than 2010s, so I will not be sure if it has increased or is it just fanned more in media. I am also aware it can very well be that cases are being registered less that's why the stats seem lower. > that too targeted towards a specific community This is something I am concerned about though. There seems to be definitely increase in overt bigotry. |
It's almost as if you're trying to find a previous period with same communalism rates going back as far as you need to to prove point.
In terms of trends in the 20th century, there's been a clear noticeable jump after the current government came in, which is what should matter.