Prøve GULL - Gratis
Making Ethical Sense of Too Many Deaths
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
|July 10, 2025
While posing as a peacenik, Trump has supported 'collective death'. In his worldview, migrants as well as indigenous people are dispensable. Bureaucratic neglect can lead to a similar apathy
Over the past month, newspapers have been packed with reports of death. Death, in effect, haunts the newspaper. And the individual reading about it feels a sense of futility and helplessness. The citizen—as a reader, spectator, or critic—feels the importance of ethicality. He realizes a mere act of fury will not be enough; one has to rework one's concepts and move towards action.
While discussing this, a philosopher friend of mine made an important distinction. He distinguished between individual death and collective death. Individual death, in search of structure and meaning, has found its symbolism and its philosophers. It fits into the philosophy of everydayness and the concept of rite of passage. It fits into the cosmos. Collective death, on the other hand, offers no such possibility.
It is in this context that we shall analyze five recent events—the Iran-Israel war, the question over the Gaza strip, the Pahalgam incident, the Air India accident, and the stampede in Bengaluru.
Haunting the first two events stands the figure of Donald Trump, the American president seen as a clown, a jester, a monster. He is always a caricature. Despite all the attention given to him, Trump has not acquired a full semiotic effect. Symbolically, he represents a new wave—he has not only created a new politics beyond the Cold War, he has provided it with a new sociology of death.
Trump has become the master of collective death while playing the deceitful role of a peacenik. He pretended to arbitrate between Iran and Israel while getting ready to bomb Iranian installations. There is a sense of machismo—a technological superiority—about Trump. He feels he and Israel are mature enough to be the masters of nuclear death. Iran and most of the Third World are immature for nuclear development.
Denne historien er fra July 10, 2025-utgaven av The New Indian Express Vijayawada.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The New Indian Express Vijayawada
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Two dons-turned-politicians draw battle lines on Mokama poll turf
BATTLE lines have been drawn in Bihar’s Mokama assembly constituency ahead of the first-phase polls on November 6, as two don-turned-politicians, Anant Singh and Surajbhan Singh, prepare for a high-octane electoral clash.
2 mins
October 22, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
A RIVER REMEMBERS: MEANDERING MEMORY OF WATER
BENEATH the calm surface of a river lies an ancient intelligence — one that remembers every bend, flood, and wandering path it has ever carved through the Earth.
2 mins
October 22, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
AQI MODERATE No spike in pollution levels in State
THE overall air quality across Andhra Pradesh remained largely moderate after Diwali, with no major spike in pollution levels recorded.
1 min
October 22, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
FIR against former Punjab DGP, ex-minister wife over son’s death
FORMER Punjab DGP Mohammad Mustafa, his wife and former minister Razia Sultana, along with their daughter and daughter-in-law, have been booked for murder and criminal conspiracy by Haryana Police in connection with the death of their 35-year-old son, Agil Akhter.
1 mins
October 22, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Speaker appoints lawyer to assist panel probing Justice Varma graft case
LOK Sabha Speaker Om Birla has appointed advocate Karan Umesh Salvi as a consultant to assist the judges’ inquiry committee investigating allegations of corruption against Justice Yashwant Varma.
1 min
October 22, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
ROBUST LAW AND ORDER IS ESSENTIAL TO WIN INVESTORS' CONFIDENCE: CM
CHIEF Minister N Chandrababu Naidu on Tuesday emphasised that a robust law and order environment has instilled confidence in global IT giants like Google to invest in Andhra Pradesh.
1 mins
October 22, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
TTD receives staggering ₹918.6 cr donations this year
THE Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD), the governing body of the revered Sri Venkateswara temple, has recorded an unprecedented surge in donations for the year 2025, marking a significant recovery in its financial landscape post-Covid-19.
1 min
October 22, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
EC: Print ads a day before or poll date need pre-certification
AHEAD of assembly polls in Bihar, the Election Commission of India (ECI) on Tuesday issued an order saying to ensure a fair campaign environment, no party, candidate, organisation or person shall publish any advertisement in print media on poll day and one day prior to the poll day, unless the contents are pre-certified by the Media Certification and Monitoring Committee.
1 min
October 22, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Paraglider from Canada found dead, Australian rescued in HP
A 27-year-old Canadian paraglider, Megan Elizabeth, was found dead after going missing from the high mountains of the Dhauladhar range, while a 47year-old Australian paraglider, Jacob, was rescued in the last 48 hours.
1 min
October 22, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
10 months on, NMC yet to act against 30 docs for 'sponsored' foreign trips
THE National Medical Commission (NMC) is yet to take any action against 30 doctors who accepted free trips to Monaco and Paris worth ₹1.91 crore last year, despite the Department of Pharmaceuticals (DoP) recommendations that action should be taken against them for violating professional misconduct.
1 mins
October 22, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size