Wednesday, 27 May 2026

The Ragdolls Of Rubber Revolt

When evidences pile up

like dead flies around a flicker,

feelings rush through criminal crevices

like leaking drains in monsoon cities.


Words, they insist,

have the power to hurt,

but only when those words

refuse to kneel at their imagined altars.


Not when they sculpt them into effigies

and set entire lives ablaze

for public spectacle.


Feelings, they say,

are what make a country democratic.


So they mourn its death

while torching every textbook

that ever mentioned judiciary.


And when the scales of law

curl into a constitutional middle finger

shoved down their audacious thoraxes,

they howl about failed systems

like arsonists

calling the fire brigade.


Because every mob

believes itself wounded.

Every slogan

thinks itself sacred.

Every fanatic

calls his reflection persecution.


That is how countries rot:

not when hatred arrives screaming,

but when cruelty learns to sit straight

in a fancy dress of feelings.


And every arsonist becomes

a historian of smoke,

insisting the fire

was a misunderstanding of light.


What a remarkable privilege it must be,

inside an ironclad republic

of damning defections,


to become

a freedom fighter

for candyfloss feelings.

No comments:

Post a Comment