The Anger of Defeat..!

Many of us grew up hearing a sentence repeated by parents, teachers, coaches and even old uncles sitting with cups of tea after a cricket match. “Learn to lose gracefully.” We were told that being a good loser was as important as being a good winner. Shake hands. Smile. Accept defeat. Move on.

But as I watch leaders like Mamata Banerjee and M. K. Stalin reacting angrily after political defeats and decisions they believe are unfair, I do not see mere bad sportsmanship. I see something else. I see the anger that comes when people feel they have not lost fairly.

There is a huge difference.

A man who loses honestly may be disappointed, but somewhere deep within, he accepts the verdict. But a man who feels cheated carries a different kind of fire inside him. It burns longer. It burns harder. And it refuses to go away because the issue is no longer defeat. The issue becomes injustice.

Today accusations fly thick and fast against institutions that were once considered untouchable. Questions are raised about the Election Commission, about government agencies, about the courts, and about whether democracy itself is being tilted in favour of one side. Whether these accusations are fully true or partly true is for history to judge. But what cannot be ignored is that large sections of the country believe something is wrong.

And when people stop trusting institutions, the damage is frightening.

Because no winner should ever want citizens whispering, “You did not win fairly.” That is not a victory garland. That is a shadow hanging around the neck of power.

Yet what is worrying is not merely the accusation, but the silence that follows. Instead of addressing concerns openly and convincingly, those in power often seem to simply march ahead as though criticism itself is irrelevant. There is a dangerous thick skinnedness growing in politics today. A belief that numbers alone create truth.

But history has never been kind to rulers who stopped listening.

Every empire that collapsed first lost the ability to hear uncomfortable voices. Every powerful leader who fell first began believing criticism did not matter.

And so when opposition leaders sound angry today, perhaps it is simplistic to dismiss them as sore losers. Perhaps they are expressing what many citizens quietly feel. That somewhere, something precious in democracy is slipping away.

Because finally, the people who may have been cheated are not politicians.

It is us.

Our democracy does not belong to political parties. It belongs to us. And if this feeling of helplessness keeps growing, slowly you will find good candidates unwilling to contest because they know there is no use. And then it is we who will witness the collapse of democracy itself, as a one party system quietly takes over!

So don’t laugh at didi, support her..!

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6 thoughts on “The Anger of Defeat..!”

  1. The democratic system in our country is stumbling and is headed towards chaos and disintegration.
    The SIR effect in West Bengal is evident of one sided result in the elections. Course correction is the need of the hour.

  2. Support Didi? Really?
    If one only cared to listen to all those who suffered rape, torture, murder and burning down of their homes and businesses under Didi’s rule you would not say this.

    Just look at the celebrations in the streets, listen to the women speaking up …. finally free from fear of terrible repraisels.

    The scenes look more like the liberation of a people from a tyrranical ruler rather than merely a state election. I have heard so many Bengalis say that Bengal doged a bullet and that one more term for Mamata would have seen W. Bengal turn into another Bangladesh.

    Bengal needs a Truth Commission like South Africa had after the end of aparthide to heal the deep wounds.

    Modi has already set the tone when he declared… we need Badlav ( change) not Badla ( revenge ). But TMC goons are already killing people out of hate and revengefor losing power.

    I personally feel the perpertrators of the rape and murder and mayhem need to be brought to book and punished in an exemplary manner with the help of special courts.

    1. This applies 10x to Modi right from Godhra to hathras and unnao…his list is the same, much much longer and the malice more widespread This is not about politicians, none like to be accountable, it’s about the damage to institutions which protect our democracy and its misuse which makes it an unfair contest.

  3. Yes ,Mamtha is not the loser. It is the people of India who suffer the loss . She only reacts to the unfair & even foul means employed by the B J P to win the election by any means fair or foul. It is a sad day for Democracy in our country. If peope remain inert & silent , India will experience anothrr doom of despair. God save us all.

  4. Badlav not Badla. Just a single added letter. Where was this Badlav in the notorious Bilkis Bano rape case ?
    Or for that matter in the atrocities at Manipur?
    Alas! As Bobby puts it, in our country today there’s a belief that numbers alone create truth.

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