The empire of reckless depoliticisation

CK Lal is a writer and columnist based in Kathmandu.

Published on

When allegiance to Power was demanded,
Those who said 'yes' and those who said 'no',
Were both considered offenders.
—Faiz Ahmad Faiz

To build and hold their empire, Romans built roads. Portuguese spice-traders and Spanish speculators became emperors by exploring shorter and safer sea lanes. The defeat of the Spanish Armada might have helped the rise of Pax Britannia, but to hold itself together, it had to extend its shipping inland, which it did by river navigation and later by girding the globe with railways. Along with swords and sermons, empires of yore needed effective transportation network to entrench itself in distant lands. But the dominance of these emperors of the Old World came to be challenged with the laying of submarine cables. The need of a volunteer colonialist to rough it out in the sweltering heat throughout the year suddenly disappeared.

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