Thursday, October 19, 2017

The Great Diwali Circlejerk

Every year, Diwali comes around and as is new and fashionable these days, the usual chorus of "ban firecrackers" starts.    It stresses dogs, they say.   It is bad for the environment, they say.   It is noise pollution, they say.

Before we start, let me make it clear that I actually do not like loud firecrackers and personally would be very happy with them being banned.      However, let me tell you about Mr Gonzalez, my math teacher in school.   He would grade even a correct answer as "wrong" unless we showed that the answer was derived using sound principles;  and if the principles were correct, but we made a mistake in the calculations, he would give us partial credit.  

(That sums up the nature of this post, and this blog, incidentally.   This is not about changing your opinion about whether firecrackers should be banned or not, or whatever.   That's your belief, you are welcome to it.   This is about making the thinking a little more rigorous in the possibly-vain hope that someday, atleast a few people will start first assessing facts and then forming an opinion, as opposed to the other way around).

Anyway, back to Diwali.  Let's examine the reasons people have for opposing the firecracker ban

The environment / air quality

Ok, that seems legit, right?  Except that if we were in some sort of environmental triage chamber, this would be the area that everyone would rightly ignore, seeing as how minor it is compared to other, more significant issues.      In Delhi, the air quality is well above toxic for most of the year and spikes a little more during Diwali (although crop burning actually causes a bigger spike).     So is the solution to address the issues that cause the air to be toxic for most of the year, or is the solution to address the one day surge where it becomes a little more toxic?

"Yeah but it is a start" is a common rejoinder, and I for one, Do Not Buy That.   It is not a start.  A start implies that after this, more action will be taken.   If that was the case, I would be all for it.  But we all know that is not going to happen.    This is the entirety of the effort to improve air quality and is so very typical for India:   find some low-hanging fruit and use that to make a token gesture, and use that as evidence of action to appease the public.

All the well-meaning Social Justice Warriors feel that they have accomplished something and thus, all the outrage - which could have been used to actually drive constructive change - gets grounded and neutralised this pathetic, pointless and ineffective gesture.    And they continue to drive everywhere, live in aircon, use plastic disposables, etc.  Token gestures are so much easier to do than actually, you know, fix the fucking air quality of the city.

So no.   This is not "a start".   This is a diversion, and all the sheeple who are preening at the HC ban on the sale of fire crackers in Delhi:  congrats.   You all have just been pacified by a meaningless gesture.   Your air quality is still going to be toxic for the rest of the 364 days and you have just ejaculated your outrage prematurely over something meaningless.

Now imagine what might have happened had you lot had put this much effort into asking the government to actually follow up on the earlier promises to clean up the air.   But after an equally symbolic-but-meaningless 'even/odd' cars thing, everyone forgot about it, didn't they?

Think about the animals

Ok, I love dogs.   I have 3.    And I usually spend my Diwalis with them, keeping them company as they hide under the bed.      So again, personally, I quite like the idea of a ban on loud firecrackers.

But you know what is worse for animals than firecrackers?    Being bred in squalid, inhumane conditions and being killed in horrendous ways so that you can have meat.    Pigs are as smart and as capable of emotional bonds as dogs, and yet are brutalized for their entire lives.     If dogs were treated the same way, you would be on the streets in outrage.    So what gives?    If you care about animal rights, focus on the former first - not the latter.        That would be intellectually consistent and also logical - go after the highest priority first.

Of course, doing so would require personal sacrifice - you would have to give up or cut down on meat (and I love meat as much as the next one).   It is also not easy:  who do you call to address this? Can it even be done?      So of course, it is easier to go for the low-hanging fruit.     And you can always rationalize it with those 3 intellectually lazy words, "It's a start".   But is it?

Is this ban on firecrackers going to lead to better conditions for cattles and pigs on meat farms?   Or is this a salve that soothes the guilt of eating an animal that has lived its entire existence in misery just so the animal lovers can have a nice bacon sandwich?

And this isn't "whatabouttism".    These aren't unrelated issues and the sad reality is that even though it shouldn't be, it has become a this-or-that type of situation.   The impetus to improve animal conditions can and should be channeled to an area where it is sorely needed - and yet it is once again wasted on a token gesture and neutralized.   Sound familiar?

Noise Pollution

Honestly, if people just said "ban firecrackers, they are noisy and they bother me", that would be awesome.    Mainly because this would be logically consistent and honest - and I do not have any issues with positions like that.

Of course, it would be nice if this was also extended to music blaring from temples/mosques and to cars blaring their horns.    Personally, I'd rather live with 364 days of peace and 1 day of noise than the other way around, but I'll take what i can get - and with this argument, I do not disagree.

 Parting Thoughts

There is another aspect to consider.     Social cohesion is a big part of any society - we have not evolved to the point that we can get rid of our tendency to form tribes.   And every tribe has its rituals and symbols that are important to it (be it an anthem, a flag, a turban, a pendant, a book or whatever). Respecting them is a large part of maintaining that social cohesion - especially in times of change, when people want to hold on to things that are familiar as a part of maintaining their tribal identity.

That does not mean these symbols are always sacrosanct.    If there is a good reason to buldoze them, by all means do so.     But there is a cost to doing so - and we need to see if the benefits are worth it.   I have argued above that the benefits are mostly symbolic and not even worth the cost of losing all that precious outrage, which could have been channeled into more constructive areas -  and that is without factoring in the social costs.  

For so many people leading very utilitarian/subsistence-driven lives, this is the one day of celebration they all look forward to, and that is been yanked out from them under the guise of... something (even I dont know what:  social media posturing, maybe?).     And guess what that leads to?  

Yup:   a sense of being attacked and an instinct to circle the wagons against the Other.      And you are already seeing that.   The  calls against firecrackers have already been turned into an attack on religion, and a Hindu-vs-Muslim thing.    Does that sound ridiculous to you?    It does to me as well.   Of course there is no such thing intended.

But do you think the average person in the country is going to delve into the distinctions of why this is so?   No.   To the guy who was looking forward to Diwali, the only thing that he will parse is that HIS cultural expression is being constrained, while others are not.     And thus, another unnecessary wedge is driven into cultural relations by well-meaning elites living in their ivory towers.

You can correctly argue that it was not intended, and that the responsibility for interpreting it in this manner lies with the people who do so, and that "doing the right thing" should not be mitigated by "what will people say".   I agree with that in principle.   But I will also say that people who purportedly speak from a higher intellectual ground should also apply the same higher standards to themselves, and, at the very least, should take into account the ramifications of their actions.     Just because you can justifiably say something doesn't mean you always should.    While there is nothing wrong with NOT taking the high road, doing so is actually admirable.

In short:  my issue isn't with the focus on banning firecrackers:  it is with the opportunity cost associated with it, and what could have been.   We had a chance to use that outrage for something that could have made a difference, and we wasted it.  Tomorrow, we are back to the same toxic air and same noise pollution and the animals that we eat are still living and dying in misery.  

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