ZoomyNarwhal
ZoomyNarwhal

Why nation fall

What is an extractive economy?

An extractive economy is one where a small elite holds all the power political and economic and uses it to serve themselves. These people don’t build, they extract. Resources, labor, wealth, and even hope from the masses. The rest of the population gets scraps, if anything. The institutions are built not to include, but to exclude. Over time, this creates deep poverty, stagnation, and chaos. It suppresses talent, kills opportunity, and chokes any chance of a better future for the majority.

And here’s where it gets darker.

In extractive regimes, when governments fail to provide the basics like employment, clean water, good education, accessible healthcare then they don’t admit failure. They don’t reflect. Instead, they often manufacture or magnify external threats. It becomes their distraction weapon.

Because when a nation is “on the brink of war,” suddenly your unemployment doesn’t feel that important. Your hunger, your lack of income, your unfulfilled dreams they all shrink in comparison to the idea that “our very nation is under threat.” It works like magic.

And I’ve started noticing a pattern in our country.

September 18, 2016 – Uri Attack

Terrorists entered an Indian army camp and carried out a brutal attack. No one ever figured out how they got in, how they planned it, how it slipped through intelligence cracks. But right after that came the surgical strike, publicized to the point where it felt like Modi ji himself had led the team across the border.

Six months later, UP elections happened. The BJP won with overwhelming support. The narrative was simple: “Yeh naya Hindustan hai, ghar mein ghus ke maarta hai.” “Modi hai toh mumkin hai.”

February 14, 2019 – Pulwama Attack

250 kg of RDX entered Indian soil. How? Nobody knows. A civilian car got near a military convoy and exploded. Again—no clear answers. But soon after came the Balakot air strike. Patriotism peaked. The government took center stage, framing the military operation as its own victory.

May 2019 – General Elections. Guess what? BJP swept again. Why? Because Modi had “done the airstrike,” and Abhinandan was brought back like a national trophy.

March 2020 – COVID Crisis

The country was bleeding. People dying in corridors. No hospital beds. No oxygen. Crematoriums overloaded.

But the headlines?

Sushant Singh Rajput’s suicide. Suddenly, we were all CBI agents. Rhea Chakraborty became the national villain. Weeks passed. Anger diverted. Public pain diluted. Final verdict? Who knows. But the damage was done—distraction achieved.

June 2020 – Galwan Valley Clash

COVID deaths were rising. The system was crumbling. But suddenly, China was at the gates.

Instead of focusing on saving lives, we were busy banning TikTok. Talking about boycotting Chinese goods.

And just when everything felt like it was falling apart…

Rafale jets arrived.

News channels ran 24/7 coverage of fighter jets like they were Avengers joining the battlefield. Meanwhile, people were still dying without oxygen in hospitals.

Now again, another terrorist incident. Possibly a post-raid misreported as a terror attack. But the media is spinning it hard. Visuals. Footage. Narratives. Almost as if the intent is not to inform, but to influence.

Ram Mandir Timing

The Ram Mandir verdict, unresolved for 30 years, suddenly got closure just before the 2024 elections. Fine. But what I can’t understand is why the inauguration happened before the temple was even completed.

Shankaracharyas themselves said it’s inauspicious to do that. But it happened anyway. Just in time to stoke emotions ahead of the vote.

I’m not claiming anything. I’m not saying it’s all orchestrated. I don’t have the proof. But I see the pattern. Again and again.

National tragedies turned into nationalist campaigns. Failures turned into war cries. Real questions silenced under the weight of “enemy threats.”

Why is it that every time we’re close to an election, a tragedy happens, followed by a military response, and then a victory lap?

I don’t know the answer. I’m just a guy observing. But I can’t unsee it now.

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DerpyJellybean
DerpyJellybean

I see many comments here saying "politics aise hi hai or kuch nahi badlega", yes politics is like this until people wants to change how politics should work in India, those some 545 people in LS and 245 in RS can't decide how they can play with billions of people.

As op said we should start by asking right questions.

I mean why are we still so much divided on the religion and cast it's because they want us to be divided and these big media houses work like oil in the fire.

None of the nation grew on the basis of religion and cast divide, why aren't media asking the govt right questions because people here in India loves to watch nonsense drama news.

The real problem here in India is people's mentality of "Jaisa chl raha hai chalne do", until it's personal for them.

Man I can go on and on but don't feel like to write more as people never understand.

PrancingPotato
PrancingPotato

That’s how politics work around the world.

ZoomyBurrito
ZoomyBurrito

around the world or only where the majority is unconscious?

PeppyDonut
PeppyDonut

Agar kuchh conspiracy hai bhi to hum kar bhi kya sakte hain?

PeppyDonut
PeppyDonut

Govt. koi bhi ho…ye sab to hota rahega.

SleepyRaccoon
SleepyRaccoon

I know bro, you are not saying anything substantial.

FuzzyMochi
FuzzyMochi

Don't u think u should change the post title to, "India got freedom from Britishers only because nehru wanted to win the elections and become the first PM"

GigglyBurrito
GigglyBurrito

That’s how the politics works bro

CosmicLlama
CosmicLlama

This is oversimplification of things. like business news channel - If the markets falls, they will say its because of some random news in china, oil prices, or USD/INR prices. etc... next day the market will go up, they will come up with a different answer, while we will be wondering what changed.

Nations fall, when equality of outcome is preferred rather than equality of opportunity.

WigglyMochi
WigglyMochi

Bro just understood politics for the first time.

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