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Rise of the uncouth politician

None of us bat an eyelid when confronted with disgusting behaviour by people who ought to know better. How and why did this happen?

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Today, men in power - and, in case you havent noticed, it is always men - think nothing of assaulting someone, abusing them in public, or spreading outright lies about rivals. They accept this as part of what it means to be a politician in India, where th

Today, men in power - and, in case you havent noticed, it is always men - think nothing of assaulting someone, abusing them in public, or spreading outright lies about rivals. They accept this as part of what it means to be a politician in India, where th

Lindsay PereiraHere are two things that happened over the past month alone that should have made us angry but didn-t do much beyond inspire a bit of outrage on Twitter. The first incident involved the son of a politician, who thought it perfectly okay to attack a civic body official with a cricket bat during a demolition drive. He didn-t apologise, obviously, because politicians and their family members are routinely trained to believe that they owe none of us anything, least of all an explanation.

When asked about why he did what he did, the young man claimed his party had taught him to "first request and then attack". If we were to all adopt that twisted logic, our jails would have overflowed a century ago.

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