hidden image

The Kamala-Trump Debate!

Robert Clements Robert Clements
16 Sep 2024

It was a jaded old man called Donald, spewing the same mouthfuls of hate and anger against immigrants and foreigners I'd heard during his tenure as the President. He'd divided the country with his rhetoric on building walls, both physical and mental, and had finally been thrown out by the voters.

But here he was back, but his thoughts, this time, sounded like a broken needle on an old record player, while his opponent Kamala Harris, literally like the old song on boxer Mohamud Ali, 'floated like a butterfly and stung like a bee!'

It was a knockout. The debate was. But election pundits said that the man on the floor could still win the polls in November. How?

Because, all the distasteful things he said about immigrants eating pet cats and dogs of the American people, and other lies like that were believed by a huge section of the Americans.

They were not bothered about debates, or knockouts or walkovers; they wanted to believe what they already believed in their hearts.

They believed in white supremacy because they had a reserved place in the nation and did not have to compete with immigrants who were more hard-working.

They believed in racial discrimination because it helped them feel superior even if they had no intellectual knowledge but only the colour of their skin to show.

And these people looked at the man on the floor and cried, 'Winner!'

But enough about America. Let's come home and look closely. Are we surprised to see that we have huge chunks of the same here?

People who want to pick the best seats in school, college, government jobs and now even in the private sector, through trying to get more and more reservation quotas for themselves.

People who believe leaders who say their religion gives them the right to rule over others who worship in a different way, even if the others are as Indian as they are.

People who actually believe that their daughters will be wooed and won over by those from another community, not realising that their daughters are discerning enough to shun the advances of any man they dislike.

Trump lost the debate to a woman, but that didn't matter to many who felt that a woman was not equal to a man and so should not occupy the White House.

Trump was floored in the debate, but that didn't matter to many who looked at Kamala as one of mixed heritage, having both Indian and African blood in her and not white skin like themselves!

An old man lay on the floor beaten, but his thoughts, his policies, his ideas; ones that have divided and polarised a once great nation, resonated in the minds of his followers, so much so that even as he lay beaten, they cried, "He won!"

Sounds familiar, doesn't it?
 

Recent Posts

Pope Francis is bowing out in this special jubilee year of hope, which he has been leading from the front even as he has braved prolonged health concerns. As he passes on and the world bids goodbye to
apicture George Plathottam
28 Apr 2025
Francis' legacy can be summarised in four keywords that reflect powerfully and prominently in his writings, discourses, actions, and life: joy, hope, mercy, and peace.
apicture Bp Gerald John Mathias
28 Apr 2025
Pope Francis redefined leadership through humility, inclusion, and service. He stood with the marginalised, prioritised mercy over judgment, championed ecological justice, and called for reform rooted
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
28 Apr 2025
By mocking Muslims as 'puncture repairers', the Prime Minister reduces a vibrant community to a stereotype. This isn't rhetoric—it's a calculated attempt to stigmatise identity, distract from real iss
apicture A. J. Philip
28 Apr 2025
We hear people saying that the President of India is there to sign on the dotted line prepared by the ruling party. We refuse to believe it because the President is the Constitutional head of the nati
apicture P. A. Chacko
28 Apr 2025
Tamil Nadu's autonomy resolution is yet another spark in the recent federalism debates, challenging central authority over education, finance, and representation. As BJP seeks to tighten its claws, th
apicture Dr John Singarayar
28 Apr 2025
In Manipur, once-united communities now bleed at each other's hands, their bonds severed by narratives crafted far away. As homes burn and futures vanish, the real victors are those who profit from di
apicture Estelle Kipgen & Leishilembi Terem
28 Apr 2025
At a time when India seeks to attract global investment and project itself as a transparent business destination, such incidents chip away at investor confidence. International investors are already w
apicture Jaswant Kaur
28 Apr 2025
Many big children who accompany their parents to their workplaces also join the labour. But until they migrate, they roam around in the village or go to plantations. They become child labourers.
apicture F. M. Britto
28 Apr 2025
Police assaulted children and priests with lathis and beat and molested women belonging to the tribal community as they barged into Juba Catholic Church in the Gajapati district, Odisha, on March 22,
apicture Sujata Jena
28 Apr 2025