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Truth has been dethroned. It has become chance. When we become sick to death witnessing polical campaigns that sell themselves agressively to the masses while mobilizing intellectuals considered respected and honest, but still speak full of passion and ignore slander and fake news then 'truth' seems to be tucked away somewhere. If we are lucky, we can find it.
But it is not all bad. Because from there we also witness human narrow mindedness and limitation in relating to truth precisely when truth is no longer on its high throne.
Communism is Velutha. In Arundhati Roy's novel The God of Small Things, Velutha is a carpenter in a pickle factory in the town of Ayemenem in Kerala. He is an Untouchable. In the novel, he first appears fleetingly in the midst of a communist demonstration, waving a red flag. Then he disappears.
His life is one of tragic destiny and conviction: he loves Ammu, a high caste woman who he has known since childhood and who is now divorced with two children. Their relationship is scandalous. When opportunity arises, Velutha is falsely accused of having raped and murdered a woman who actually drowned. He is imprisoned; he never returns.
There has probably been a type of pill circulating in Indonesia over recent years, leading thousands of people to renounce their own reason. The tablet, as I recall, is Murti-Bing.
I read about this pill in a story in The Captive Mind, a book published in the 1960s. The author was Czeslaw Milosz, a Polish poet who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1980.
Brutal. Vile. Skilled at killing. Ambitious. Suspicious. The film Game of Thrones is full of such characters. It is hard to think of another film that depicts the tight link between politics and war more explicitly; people are always prepared to kill each other. The wager is total: win or die.
The ambitious and tragic queen, Cersei Lannister, utters the bitter truth quoted above because she experiences it in every aspect of her life. She is a queen who commits adultery with her own brother, who lives under constant threat, and who finally has to witness her son, who becomes a cruel young king, be killed. Cersei assumes the throne, but the kingdom is targeted from outside and betrayed from within. Unsurprisingly, she plays a political role with a heart of stone, as though following Mao Zedong, the leader of the Chinese revolution, who saw no difference between war and politics, 'Politics is bloodless war; War is bloody politics.'
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