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  1. Jacob Jonker
    February 16, 2017 @ 9:19 PM

    Admirable.The use of violence in any shape whatever is due to ignorance going back to the dawning of human society.Before that, one can only speculate.If humans evolved from animals, violence existed amongst the animals from which humans evolved or violence evolved as a concomitant in the process of evolution from animal to human consciousness.Myths relate that humanity was perfect to begin with and fell into sin, or ignorance, somehow sometime.This is unconvincing.It stands to reason that perfection is a state of incorruptibility.More plausible is to posit a state of innocence lost and as a consequence ignorance made an entrance.
    Since ignorance begets ignorance, the only way from a disturbed state of innocence is a slow journey of learning through suffering to gain insight, understanding, wisdom and, ultimately, Enlightenment.
    Ahimsa is a curious concept.It is a utopian idea which can be useful only to yogis and like people who are prepared to have everything taken from them, even their very lives, in support of the belief that to defend one’s “property” and one’s life against encroachment by others constitutes violence in one form or another.
    Yoga references Natural Law as the highest law in the Universe.The law of nature as observed by wise people and as genetically endowed is clear.Competition in life is a given.People compete for food if there is scarcity of that which is necessary.Next they compete for that which is more desirable and not overly plentiful.Males compete for the affection and/or possession of females.Then there is struggle for land and water, competition for the better lands and water supply, etc., etc.
    Non-violence is concept which cannot survive in a world where human society exists.Even within isolated family groups and singular tribes anthropologists have found that violence is visited upon the weaker members by the stronger and/or aggressive members of such family groups or tribes.
    There is a natural balance at work which eleminates by means of natural selection they who are unable to defend themselves against attack on their person or on their sources necessary for their survival.The strong survive, up to a point.Ultimately, the most intelligent survive longer than the strongest, but they who are intelligent enough to survive the onslaught from the strongest of humans able to organise for survival will need to cooperate intelligently in order to survive.
    I wish the author well in his endeavour to seek resolution of conflict, wherever, but wise counsel must needs take heed of certain contingencies, the facts of life.Once the mindset of a person is beyond the reach of reason, especially when such a person is captured by group-think under the influence of ideology, ahimsa is counter-productive and will, indeed, invite violence from such quarters as are bent on subjugating, enslaving, exploiting and, ultimately, destroying the other.
    Although the psychological sciences and arts as practiced by the mainstream have evolved towards the science and art of amassing power and profitability, enough can be understood from the knowledge gained in the pursuit of psychology and related practices to allow one to come to an understanding about the workings of the human mind, severally and collectively, combining such knowledge in conjunction with facts gleaned from the other, true, sciences and pure philosophy.
    There is a moving equilibrium in human affairs.The parts affect the whole and vice-versa.At any one time the survivors remain to survive another day by a combination of intelligence, strength, wit, perseverance,etc.A struggle in which cooperation within cohesive units is paramount, yet must such cohesive units allow for competition within to maintain an edge, lest competitors get the advantage.
    Utopian idealism is not fit for survival in this our manifest world.This applies to the more spiritual realms no less than the more obviously material one.Salvation in the sense of bodily survival, therefor, only applies to yogis, and only then as long as they are able to find refuge from those inclined to do violence to the other.
    The answer is obvious for everybody else.One must find ways to organise and cooperate for self-defence.The best unit for such sociopolitical endeavour is the nation-state, either big enough to see off any state or federation which might be a threat, while being not too big as to be in danger of falling into disarray, or as a smaller nation-state cooperating with like-minded in a defense pact of sorts.
    The breaking up and joining up of sociopolitical units, however, will not cease until all the world has become the preserve of the wise, led by the enlightened, served by such as are docile/without any competitive spirit whatever.

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  2. Navin Chand Gupta
    February 16, 2017 @ 9:42 PM

    Dear Chief Editor
    I have read the preview of the book on ground reality.
    Fact is that Our Rashtrapita Mahatma K Gandhi was more than sure in his heart that Congress has compromised Freedom with British at the cost of Partition of India. To save Muslims lives who in any case would not have migrated to Pakistan he supported Muslims cause. He paid the price with his life. He was also sure that
    Congresses will go corrupt with time as a price/ reward for their sacrifices. And they have a burning desire to become Rulers. Worldwide innovations and adoption of new technologies right from the use of one nuclear arsenal in Japan has given more stimulus to the development of the global world. China has gained the maximum and India is just struggling to survive, grow as much possible, changing Governance ideologies and Individualistic dictatorships. Maoism is the worst ideology and Terrorism is the adoptive format of coercion.
    I look forward to read your book.
    Regards.
    Navin Chant Gupta

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  3. Dr. Leo Rebello
    February 16, 2017 @ 10:48 PM

    VERY GOOD OPENING PARAGRAPH.
    When the book is ready it will be my pleasure to write a Foreword to it.

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  4. Sankara Narayanan
    February 17, 2017 @ 5:56 AM

    To quote Gandhi: To kill for freedom will legitimise killing after freedom

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  5. Dr Debal Deb
    February 18, 2017 @ 7:00 AM

    Dear Vivek-ji,
    I read the prologue of your book on Bastar with deep interest.
    While I find many new and interesting insights into the issue of “communism” as practised by many, I was dismayed and disappointed to find the whole writing as an apologetic of the heinous state terror.
    I am not going to deal with many of your controversial points in your analysis of “communism”, except the most prominent misunderstanding that ‘communism is state capitalism’. However, my chief concern is that it’s not, as you describe, the state’s reaction to the communists/ Maoist insurgents in Bastar. This position actually absolves the state of all its responsibility and commitment to the people of the country. This also suppresses the fact that the prime motive of the state terror is only to capture the land of the indigenous people solely in order to facilitate industry.
    The biggest mining companies have been trying to capture the land rich in minerals, and destroy the pristine forest tract, which is the habitat of the indigenous people, and the major resource for their livelihood. Since the British forestry regime in the 1860s onwards, the resident tribals have been denied of their traditional customary rights over their own forests, and now the Indian government only exacerbates the same forestry reign of enclosure of the commons. This has given rise to a series of protests and unrest in the region, each time cruelly quelled by the government, which only represents the interests of what Madhav Gadgil and Ramachandra Guha call “the clique of big industry, bureaucracy and politicians”. The Indian government in the recent decades has launched a war against its own indigenous people in Kashmir, Meghalaya, Manipur, Chhattisgarh, southern Odisha and Jharkhand – and in each instance unleashed terror by its Security Forces.
    I hope you are aware of the frequent episodes of gang rape of tribal women by our “heroic” Jawans, and gratuitous murders of innocent villagers, including children – all in the name of “counter-insurgency” action! Numerous ‘non-communist’/ non-Maoist intelectuals and activists – from the famous Gandhian activist Himanshu Kumar to Prof. Jean Dréze of Delhi University to Prof. Felix Padel to the writer Arundhati Roy – wrote and spoke in protest against this state terror, and exposed the lies propounded by the mainstream media. In retaliation, Himanshu Kumar, Prof. Padel and Prof. Dréze were incarcerated. Padel and Roy continues to receive threats from the Home Department for speaking against the government’s action. In the Niyamgiri villages, where there is no trace of any Maoist activism for the past 10 years, the Security Forces raid the villages, gang rape some women before killing them, and kill even little boys below 12 years when they want to save their mothers and sisters. I ask you, if you were in this position, would you accept this state violence as benevolent? Would you consider violence from the state acceptable and just, but any retaliatory violence – or even for self-defence – unacceptable, “wrong” and “biased”?
    It’s amply clear that this widespread terror in Bastar in Chhattisgarh and Niyamgiri hills in Odisha is geared only to push bauxite and iron mining by Vedanta, Ambani and Tata companies. The government is also orchestrating to evaporate the minimum requirements of environmental impact assessment (EIA) and rehabilitation measures, by repealing certain legal provisions! The government has already waived hundreds of millions of rupees of bank loans to all these mining corporations, and also giving enormous tax exemptions to the same companies.
    Anyone who opposes these shameless acts are being labelled “anti-national” and “terrorists”. The pretext of “war against Maoism” is an easy stratagem for the state to legitimise terror. Volumes of reports from PUCL, APDR and Amnesty International have complied enough evidence. I am dismayed to find no mention of these pieces of reality in your entire prologue.
    Hope you will consider this error in your analysis, and be careful to record these ground realities in your rounds of “social wayfaring”.
    Amicably yours,

    Debal

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  6. Dr. Roger Kotila
    February 20, 2017 @ 11:02 PM

    Seek permission to publish Vivek’s “Prologue” (part, or in whole) to his new book. If Maoist revolutionary thinking allows and encourages violence against the innocent, then this spiritual/moral evil needs to be addressed. The Earth Federation movement is designed for nonviolent solutions from the top to the bottom, and from the bottom to the top. It’s Constitution for the Federation of Earth has been drafted to replace the failed UN Charter. The UN is of little help when it comes to war and other violent conflicts. The Maoism that Vivek describes is psychopathic, and gives communism and socialism a bad name.

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  7. Dr Robert J Burrowes & AMcKone
    February 21, 2017 @ 5:03 PM

    Dear Vivekji

    I enjoyed getting a clear sense of your own efforts. Many thanks for this distribution my friend.

    In love and solidarity; Robert

    Reply

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