HISTORY DOES NOT MOVE IN STRAIGHT LINES
The Morning Standard
|December 31, 2025
Seeds sown in 2025-political, economic, ecological-will bloom or wither in 2026 and beyond. What is beyond doubt is that neither India nor the world will return to familiar certainties
WE have just completed a quarter of a new century. Twenty-five years that feel less like a milestone, more like a quick look at the clock while in the midst of a long march through exhaustion-war-torn, punctured by instability, marked by an unrelenting sense of uncertainty. All around is a landscape of rubble and unrest: Bangladesh dangerously combustible, Gaza flattened, Ukraine bleeding, Afghanistan erased from the global conscience, Sri Lanka economically battered, Pakistan politically paralysed, Myanmar crushed under military boots. Some societies lie in devastation, others struggling merely to crawl out of it.
The world itself appears directionless. It lurches between technological euphoria and existential dread-between dreams of space colonisation and the looming reality of ecological collapse, pandemics and war. We are no longer sure where humanity is headed: utopia or catastrophe. Either could be of its own making.
The disorientation runs deeper. Even language, once a stable anchor of identity, has become unsettled. Only artificial intelligence has no identity crisis. At least it admits it is still learning! Human societies, by contrast, often pretend certainty while hollowing out meaning.
Words that once bound civilisationsmoral, ethical, constitutional-sound increasingly archaic. Old ideas are dismissed as inconvenient or elitist. In their place stand shock and silence. Children are killed in conflicts with numbing regularity-in Gaza, in Ukraine, in Sudan-and the world debates semantics rather than accountability. Both words and bullets open fire on unarmed civilians, mow down holiday crowds or worshippers. Things like that barely disrupt the news cycle. Fear exists but selectively, or fleetingly.
Dit verhaal komt uit de December 31, 2025-editie van The Morning Standard.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN The Morning Standard
The Morning Standard
Sharply confrontational political landscape in '26 likely
THE year 2025 was far from calm for India.
1 mins
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
People hope for a pollution-free sky. Will the New Year be happy?
AS 2025 draws to a close with another disappointing winter of hazardous air, residents of Delhi are pinning hopes on 2026 as a pivotal year in the capital's long struggle for clean air.
1 mins
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
Low pay, long hours push gig workers to the edge
Protest sees limited impact as Zomato, Swiggy roll out higher payouts
1 mins
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
PACKING UP THE YEAR
AS THE YEAR WRAPS UP, TMS SPEAKS TO EMINENT DELHIITES, WHO BROUGHT INTERESTING FILMS, BOOKS, MUSIC, ART AND CULTURE INTO OUR LIVES IN 2025, FOR A PEEK INTO WHAT WENT BEHIND THE SCENES, AND THEIR PLANS FOR THE NEW YEAR
4 mins
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
Jaishankar's 4-hour condolence diplomacy in Dhaka
IN a gesture highlighting India's political outreach amid a period of transition in Bangladesh, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Wednesday handed over a personal letter from Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) Acting Chairman Tarique Rahman during a brief meeting in Dhaka, while conveying India's deepest condolences on the death of former prime minister Begum Khaleda Zia.
1 min
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
CENTRAL CONTROL, DEVOLVED DUTY
THE repeal of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's NDA government and its replacement with the Viksit Bharat - Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission Gramin (G RAM G) Act is not merely a policy change.
3 mins
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
Over 70 injured in head-on collision between ‘trains’ in Chamoli dist tunnel
OVER 70 people were injured, eight of them severely, after a head-on collision between two 'trains' on the same track of an upcoming hydroelectric power plant tunnel in Uttarakhand's Chamoli district.
1 min
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
NO HEADWINDS, MODI POLITICALLY STEADIER
Oppn was upbeat after 2024 Lok Sabha election results, but that died down soon. NDA's Bihar win reset the narrative, paving way for PM's centrality & BJP's dominance
2 mins
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
Abhishek takes on CEC, poll panel asks TMC to not threaten officials
Won't accept list if discrepancies found: TMC; Bengal asked to release hiked pay for BLOs
2 mins
January 01, 2026
The Morning Standard
Women want in '26 what they wanted in '25 &'24 & always
AS we step into 2026, women across the city continue to place safety at the top of their expectations from the government.
1 mins
January 01, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

