India
BEEF BAN IMPOSES COW-BELT CULTURE
WON’T SUCCEED IN NORTHEAST, ANDHRA
2015-04-02 11:52
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Typically, swear words tell us more about those who speak them than those towards whom they are directed at. Swearing is most effective when the target understands it. Unless the abuser and the target share a common conception, they fall flat – just like the four-letter words that brown cosmo-yuppies shoot at lesser brown folk. To perturb someone by the dig is of essence. When certain kinds of Hindus (especially those with a portable religion that is non-localized and increasingly textual) conceptualize subcontinental homegrown Muslims, at some level they want to believe that these Muslims are wayward Hindus. This “ex-Hindu” conception is something that also has some currency among the brown Muslims themselves. In this, they share a conceptual commonality. Unless a conceptual commonality is shared, the digs, the marking out of differences, don't work. Without a conception of the status of cows not simply as holy or meat but as a point of shared friction, beef bans fails. Beef ban is not so much aimed at protection of bovine species but to remind certain citizens of the Indian Union a simple thing – who's the boss.