The party’s over. The cola war went well. All of them
were proved wrong, especially those who thought I
wont show interest in the polls since I dont have a
stake!
Look who won the bet. In the god’s country, the devil
is still fighting.
Of course I stayed awake the whole WHOLE night.
Despite the fact that I had three classes to attend
the next morning! My Professor pardoned the class and
we did not have to make presentation. But boy! were
everyone sad!
All kinds of exclamations and the university folks
were mourning the arrival of the dreaded.
I thought I will write what I felt. To show
solidarity with the good human beings. And then
thought, being good was not going to be enough. One
needed to be effective as well. And we could not
mourn forever. We got to fight back as well. Not just
the ‘others’ but our self too. Here is what I thought
....
The cola war is over!
I know we should be sorry. We did all that we could.
And we still lost.
But hey, who is this “us”?
Some of us most certainly accepted the Pepsi on the
campus. Even drank Aquafina and ate Lays because
Pepsi was our choice. Of course all that’s Pepsi need
not suck. But what sucked was why Pepsi did not make
us win even when we did not allow Coke to enter the
Stamp Student Union?
And why we feel lost still.
Was it because we sided with Pepsi over Coke and
thought it was important that we support one over the
other?
And what about those of us who thought at least Coke
was red in color and was looking better than the blue
Pepsi? And those of us who thought there were
actually some independent health drinks available in
market that were better, in content, even if not in
taste? And have we counted those of us who thought
all those drinks were anyway available in the markets
because they tolerated each other on purpose and
thrived because of their mutual agreed terms of the
system and hence we did not have to drink any of
them?
So, come to think of it, who is this “us” that we
think we represent? And why should everybody be sorry
about this?
Did we miss the bus if we thought that either Pepsi
or Coke could do the job. And thought we did not have
to look at the economics of the soft-drink industry
to assess if they were legitimizing profits on behalf
of our names? Or that they were simply unhealthy,
made us fat and made us less energetic to fight?
Now we have coke reigning over the country. But not
in the University of Maryland campus still. Because
we wont give up. We will still play by the rules.
Accept the contract and extend the contract. And
fight Pepsi over Coke.
And we think we will win!
Think again!
Have we struggled enough? Well, first of all, no
victory is possible without the required amount of
struggle. And we have not struggled enough. We
enjoyed the popcorn in air-conditioned theatres and
watched Michael Moore making fun of Arabs and we
assumed we had won the war. We let some publishers
make huge money by fictionalizing Bush to a toon
character and arranged the books neatly on the coffee
table, and we thought we had won the war. We
sponsored the Disinformation series by watching
Outfoxed time and again to watch an obvious liar
called O’Reilly and thought we now knew the truth and
hence we had won the war.
We thought by defeating Bush, we will have won the
war. Well, that’s what Bush also thought. By
defeating Saddam, he thought he would win the war.
And we did not still learn from such an assumption
even from borrowed experience.
Its not Bush who is important. He is just someone
people voted to power. In his place it could be
anyone else. Because the post of the president is
sacred and upheld. And in a certain style of
democratic thought, its meant to be permanent.
Its not one person holding office who deserves such
importance we confer. It’s merely a public office one
holds just as anyone holds an office at a public
university or one who recycles the garbage.
We have not won the war. Because there is none. In
this country there is poverty. Poverty of public
knowledge. Knowledge about the homeless, the
uneducated, the unemployed and the marginal groups.
What we need is not a reactionary war, what we need
is an affirmative action to ensure that all of us at
least know of the issues. The issue, that we all
matter. That all of us, despite our nationalities,
sexual orientations, economic classes, religions and
perceived security threats, matter. That there is not
a red state and a blue state. Just like we don’t need
to fight with Pepsi or the Coke. This is just one
country of misinformed public. A public which is not
ignorant, but one which is controlled.
No war against Bush will ever work. It’s not his
fault that he got elected. People deserve the kind of
government they elect. And its not people’s fault if
they genuinely thought that theirs is the only God’s
land and that God has indeed said xy and z.
Its our fault, that we have not been able to reach
out to each and everyone in this country. If there
were half of people in this country who genuinely
believe in the blue, they need to go and interact
with at least one more red each and discuss issues.
One person talking to one person will make two thirds
know of the issues and be able to distinguish them
from non-issues.
That is what we need to do. To talk of issues. To
make a movement. To support the oppressed people and
rise against the oppressors. Bush was voted to power
by the poor, unemployed people who still think he is
a supreme patriot (sic!). Underestimating it would
call for doom. We have to respect the decision made
by the people and then reach out to them to discuss
issues which are important and find ways to solve
them. Party-bashing is a silly game. Issue-raising is
the call of the day.
Enough of the two parties. And their proclaimed
representatives. People need to know why all this
farce if both Pepsi and Coke do the same stuff. Both
the drinks are already available in the grocery
shops. They don’t walk out of the refrigerators to
talk to people. Instead people go and spend on them.
Lets stop being consumers. And lets stop being the
fans. Lets stop being feeling sorry.
We gotta know the power is in the people. Not in
those that are meant to serve them.
Tags: Saswat, USA, Capitalism, Bush