| Drifter |
05-06-2014 01:30 AM |
Re: New Reality Seeds
Quote:
Originally Posted by scc
(Post 1758564)
Drifter, I'm not too sure on the timeline, but I'm guessing that Gandhi would have advocated non-violence only to get killed, that means that groups would TRY non-violent solutions, but the moment someone attacks them things get REALLY nasty
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A quick look at nonviolence and civil disobedience shows they were around before Gandhi, so taking him out of the picture just stops him being a focal point and effective advocate for these ideas.
Ahimsa is a concept in Jainism, an Indian religion. So if Indian culture is being transported across the oceans, along with their wealth and power, there is a better chance the ideas of nonviolence are more widespread and acceptable. Side note - hippies, or at least beatniks with Indian influences, appear in the 50s instead of the late 60s. Maybe even the 40s if India is a big industrial supplier by the end of the war, so you get Oddball from Kelly's Heroes.
Civil disobedience was used against the British Empire in Egypt in 1919. Thoreau wrote about it in 1848. Gandhi was formulating his ideas about it in South Africa by 1906, contrasting it to "passive resistance" which was known and used (to no great effect apparently) for some time. So when Gandhi is assassinated in 1933 he had a following and a body of work, if not completely developed. He closely linked nonviolence with civil disobedience, but without him maybe that link isn't too solid.
So you get two post-Gandhi camps. One that took his undeveloped ideas of nonviolent civil disobedience, and the other (with less Indian/Jain influence, so likely British, American, other non-Indian) that just took the ideas of civil disobedience but used "violent, intimidatory, coercive disobedience" as more effective. Somewhere in here is an anti-Gandhi, someone who took his ability to organize c.d., but is happy enough to blow things up. Maybe this person is Czech or South African. His philosophy of organized violent disobedience to the state can be so effective and dangerous that ISWAT has banned its export.
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