The article, Majoritarian project sees a backdoor opening by Vishal R. Choradiya examines how recent legislative measures in India, particularly the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), represent a systematic erosion of fundamental rights for marginalized communities, especially Muslims. While public attention focused on the Covid-19 pandemic and economic challenges, the author argues that exclusionary policies rooted in Hindutva ideology have advanced through bureaucratic channels. Rather than withering away, these measures have evolved into more sophisticated forms that threaten the constitutional foundations of Indian citizenship and belonging. The NRC-CAA combination marks what Choradiya describes as a dangerous shift in Indian constitutional jurisprudence. For the first time, religion has become a determining factor in citizenship under the CAA, undermining the secular bedrock of the Indian Constitution. This represents a fundamental depa...
This New York Times article by Peter Baker examines President Trump's systematic approach to suppressing unfavourable information and promoting his preferred narrative, particularly regarding employment statistics and government data. The article begins with an old Washington principle: while officials are entitled to their opinions, they are not entitled to their own facts. However, Baker argues that Trump has consistently violated this norm throughout his presidency, citing his tendency to attack intelligence reports that contradict his views, dispute cost estimates for his policies, and even delete mentions of inconvenient truths from government websites. The central incident discussed occurred when Trump fired a Labour Department official responsible for compiling employment statistics, apparently because recent jobs reports showed economic performance that contradicted his claims of success. Trump dismissed these numbers as "phony" and declared the data was "hi...