कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
When Violence Is Built Into Logic Of Policy
The Morning Standard
|April 10, 2025
In social triage, the logic of numbers and idea of efficiency become more dominant in defining progress than death and displacement. We need to reinvent ethics for this age

I remember teaching a class of post-graduate students, many of whom were potential IAS and IPS officers. My lecture was part of a course on development. I asked them what they thought was the genocidal count of an officer. They were aghast at the question. They saw themselves as a crusading group representing elite values. I asked how many people would they eliminate or displace through their careers: 10,000, 50,000 or a few lakhs. I added that the potential genocidal count of the class—in displacing villagers through dams, urban dwellers from slums and tribals from forests—could easily be 50,000.
The class was aghast at the potential report card of their future careers—that is, till I told them their social science was still innocent. It had no sense of the changing nature of violence. Their sense of violence was still the comic book idea of bully-meets-victim, without a sense that violence today is part of the very ontology of action, normalised to look like table manners.
This point was brought out poignantly by political philosopher Hannah Arendt in her book Eichmann in Jerusalem. Watching Adolf Eichmann, a Nazi Holocaust organizer, stand trial like an anonymous clerk made Arendt wonder how he could be responsible for the death of millions. Arendt quotes sociologist Bruno Bettelheim saying that he was less normal than Eichmann after meeting him. Eichmann explained he was merely taking orders as part of a hierarchy following a plan of action.
यह कहानी The Morning Standard के April 10, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 9,500 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
The Morning Standard से और कहानियाँ

The Morning Standard
Pilots’ body asks ministry for judicial probe into Ahmedabad plane crash
THE Federation of Indian Pilots (FIP) has written to the Civil Aviation Ministry demanding a judicial probe into the June 12 Air India flight AI171 crash in Ahmedabad that claimed 260 lives.
1 mins
September 24, 2025
The Morning Standard
Top Chinese scientist detained in corruption case
A top Chinese scientist, who specialised in developing semiconductor chips for weapon systems, has been detained by anti-corruption authorities, his company Zhejiang Great Microwave Technology said.
1 min
September 24, 2025
The Morning Standard
Gujarat at forefront of startup surge, Shah hails GST reforms
UNION Home Minister Amit Shah on Tuesday kicked off the Startup Conclave 2025 with a fiery pitch, declaring that India's innovation engine has roared to life under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's vision.
1 mins
September 24, 2025
The Morning Standard
Swiggy exits Rapido, rakes in ₹2,400 crore
FOOD tech firm Swiggy has divested its entire 11.8% holding in Rapido, selling shares to Dutch investment firm Prosus NV and WestBridge Capital.
1 min
September 24, 2025
The Morning Standard
SHRIRAM KENDRA'S RAM LIGHTS UP NAVRATRI
Delhi's much-loved Navratri tradition is here again: the annual staging of Shriram Bharatiya Kala Kendra's celebrated classical dance-drama Ram.
2 mins
September 24, 2025
The Morning Standard
MHA to firm up norms for panel on demography and security challenges
THE Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) is in the process of soon finalising detailed contours of the High Level Committee (HLC), comprising members drawn from the centre and the bordering states and terms of reference, to deal with issues relating to change in demography, security and other challenges posed by illegal immigrants in different States and Union Territories (UTs), sources said on Tuesday.
1 min
September 24, 2025

The Morning Standard
23-year-old gangster 'Maya' inspired by Bollywood film held after shootout
A 23-year-old man, inspired by the character 'Maya' from the Bollywood film Shootout at Lokhandwala, was arrested after a shootout with the police in southeast Delhi's Amar Colony area.
1 mins
September 24, 2025
The Morning Standard
FOR A COURT THAT STANDS FIRM
The Supreme Court has been revisiting too many of its own orders, affecting the principle of finality. The rising number of revision, review, and curative petitions is evidence of a malady that affects certainty and adds to pendency. Structural reforms from within the judiciary are called for
3 mins
September 24, 2025
The Morning Standard
Jimmy Kimmel set to return after ABC lifts suspension
JIMMY Kimmel is set to return to late-night television Tuesday after a nearly weeklong suspension that triggered a national discussion about freedom of speech and President Donald Trump's ability to police the words of journalists, commentators and even comics.
1 min
September 24, 2025
The Morning Standard
Uniform and simplified rules for film production soon: Vaishnaw
MINISTER of Information and Broadcasting Ashwini Vaishnaw on Tuesday announced that the Government would soon introduce model state cinema regulations to streamline outdated rules and bring uniformity in approvals related to filmmaking.
1 min
September 24, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size