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116 points wslh | 38 comments | | HN request time: 1.667s | source | bottom
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amatecha ◴[] No.42162344[source]
The degree of wisdom and truly "evolved" thinking demonstrated in this letter is deeply inspiring. Simultaneously, it conversely seems to support the idea that you can't really reason with fascists because their hunger for power (and destruction) is essentially insatiable and they won't stop because someone spoke some convincing words.
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1. throwaway10oct ◴[] No.42162476[source]
I respectfully disagree because Gandhi's approach may seem idealistic, but in reality, nature functions on the basis of survival of the fittest.

Nonviolent methods often require the possibility of violence as a backdrop to be effective. Otherwise, they might not yield the desired results.

While Gandhi's philosophy sounds nice in theory, it may not always be the most practical in real-world scenarios.

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2. tomohelix ◴[] No.42162504[source]
Indeed, if you are pragmatic and want actual, certain results, violence and force are the surefire methods.

That is why the GP put the "evolved" in quotes. It takes something more than the basest human instincts and the animal sides of us to take this approach. Some may consider it naive. I personally think Gandhi was smart enough to deduce this on his own yet still chose the nonviolent approach regardless. That alone shows he was a greater "man" than most, in my opinion.

replies(2): >>42162564 #>>42165753 #
3. callmeal ◴[] No.42162558[source]
>nature functions on the basis of survival of the fittest.

And we have to watch out for thinking that "fittest" implies "strongest". "Smartest" or "most devious" as in the Cuckoo (https://www.discoverwildlife.com/animal-facts/birds/facts-ab...) also meet the criteria.

replies(2): >>42165388 #>>42175314 #
4. Bancakes ◴[] No.42162564[source]
Kudos for putting man in double quotes, following the theme.
5. iwantgandhi ◴[] No.42162601[source]
"While Gandhi's philosophy sounds nice in theory, it may not always be the most practical in real-world scenarios."

You do know his philosophy worked, right?

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6. quietbritishjim ◴[] No.42162633[source]
It did not give him the united India he wanted, and an independent India was on the cards for other reasons, so I don't think you can conclude that.

Mandela initially followed Gandhi's example of nonviolent resistance to end apartheid but later abandoned it when it became clear it was ineffective.

7. 0x1ceb00da ◴[] No.42162682[source]
Yes it did, but it was a mistake to think hitler could be talker out of what he was doing. Nazi germany was to british rule what the american psycho would be to a thief. Britishers freed india when the income stopped justifying the expenses. That's what gandhi's plan was all along (non cooperation movement). This kind of reasoning doesn't work on people who are following an ideology.
8. 7bit ◴[] No.42163163[source]
You know it worked only due to vastly different circumstances, right?
9. 7bit ◴[] No.42163166[source]
Hitler would have killed Ghandi on the spot, and continued his breakfast.
10. ConfiYeti ◴[] No.42164288[source]
We gained independence when it was inconvenient for the British to continue their rule over India. While his work can not be understated, you also can't deny that it took a very long time. During that long period: Indians fought under British banners and died, and Indians were systematically starved to feed frontlines of war we had nothing to do with.

Just imagine getting independence 5 years earlier by nationwide violent uprisings and non-cooperation moment together. Britain was already fighting on multiple fronts during WW2, it was a plausible path to early independence.

Sure we saved some lives that would've been lost in violent uprisings, but we lost just as many if not more from inaction.

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11. whatshisface ◴[] No.42164513{3}[source]
The kind of organization that operates like the ANC (violent cells oriented around loyalty and survival) governs like the ANC (networks of cronies that are loyal to the country but in every other way ransack it). I think India is a lot better off for having gone into the hands of someone like Nehru, which would not have been possible if the first person to hold the reigns of power had also been the head of a nationalist terrorist organization.
12. corimaith ◴[] No.42165388[source]
The fittest are by definition those who reproduce the most.

In our modern world, the "smartest" and "devious" are headed to a dead end with below replacement birth rates while the "dumb" rednecks and religious are set to eventually become the majority.

replies(2): >>42165510 #>>42188597 #
13. PhasmaFelis ◴[] No.42165510{3}[source]
The Idiocracy theory. The trouble is that the traits behind the birthrate differences you're observing aren't genetic but financial: it's not genetically "dumb" people who have more kids, it's poor people, and genetic lines that transition out of poverty generally see commensurate birthrate drops.

If poor people were going to "outcompete" and wipe out rich people, it would have happened a long time ago.

Also, "religious" have been steadily declining for a while, so that theory doesn't work out. (Of course, the idea that most bad behavior stems from religion, and everyone would be nice to each other without it, is another fallacy.)

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14. odux ◴[] No.42165581{3}[source]
Independence itself is a point in time thing. When there is a movement that results in something the movement doesn’t suddenly disappear after the success. The movement continues to influence power and how things are shaped.

If a movement of violent uprising resulted in Indias independence, the British may have packed their bags but the armies and militias would stay and given the nature of militias, will probably not suddenly turn peaceful. The British was the enemy yesterday, the other <religion, language or another faction> would the enemy today. See any African country.

What the nonviolent movement achieved in India is not just independence. Like you said there were other ways for independence, arguably faster. What the nonviolent movement achieved was long term stability and lack of civil wars /internal conflicts(for the most part).

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15. throw0101b ◴[] No.42165691[source]
> While Gandhi's philosophy sounds nice in theory, it may not always be the most practical in real-world scenarios.

In her book Civil Resistance: What Everyone Needs to Know:

* https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/44096650-civil-resistanc...

* https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/10056014-why-civil-resis...

Erica Chenoweth has an appendix listing six hundred movements dating from 1900 which are classified in how violent they were. She found that those that used violence (more) succeeded in achieving their goals 25% time, but those that did not use violence (at all, or much less) succeeded over 40% of the time: you almost double your odds by eschewing violence.

Further, movement that were violent and succeeded were more likely to be oppressive/authoritarian (possibly because the movement leaders internalized the possibility that the same methods would be used against them: the overthrown often don't end up in pleasant places in those situations), while non-violent ones were less likely to be (though no guarantee, with 1970s Iran being the main outlier).

So it appears that the general historical record seems to support Gandhi's philosophy.

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16. throw0101b ◴[] No.42165753[source]
> Indeed, if you are pragmatic and want actual, certain results, violence and force are the surefire methods.

The historical record says otherwise:

* https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2019/02/why-nonviolen...

* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SeLKfPdP0E4

* https://www.vox.com/podcasts/2020/1/3/21048121/ezra-klein-er...

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17. deadlydose ◴[] No.42165834[source]
> Nonviolent methods often require the possibility of violence as a backdrop to be effective.

You and I have a different interpretation of the parent's comment.

18. wslh ◴[] No.42165846[source]
> So it appears that the general historical record seems to support Gandhi's philosophy.

The world has been shaped by power and wars, an undeniable fact that stands without the need for statistical gymnastics.

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19. throw0101b ◴[] No.42166045{3}[source]
> The world has been shaped by power and wars […]

Yes it has.

It has also been shaped by non-violent methods, e.g., one of the biggest being the fall of Communism, which was done without wars and those without power in: Poland (Solidarity); the Baltic countries (Singing revolution); Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia (Baltic Way); Czechoslovakia (Velvet Revolution).

It was done in the Philippines (People Power Revolution), etc.

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20. wslh ◴[] No.42166154{4}[source]
> It has also been shaped by non-violent methods, e.g., one of the biggest being the fall of Communism, which was done without wars and those without power...

That said, I believe you are tackling some highly complex topics here. Have you explored well-researched studies, such as “The Strategic Defense Initiative and the End of the Cold War” [1]?

[1] https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/36697931.pdf

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21. throw0101c ◴[] No.42166425{5}[source]
Communism is just one example, and is multi-faceted (e.g., internal Soviet/Communist economies), which is why I also mentioned People Power. Chenoweth's book has a myriad of peer-reviewed references and a list of ~600 movements since 1900.

There are a lot of folks in this discussion—many of whom I suspect are Americans and may have a particular (historical) view of how to gain "freedom"—who seem to jump to the 'violent struggle' path. I'm simply pointing out references that support the possibility that is not the only path, and other ones may actually be better, especially in more recent decades (as opposed to what happened hundred-plus years ago).

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22. BoingBoomTschak ◴[] No.42166464{3}[source]
You're using different meaning for the word violence (even easier to see since he said "violence and force").
23. BoingBoomTschak ◴[] No.42166509[source]
> but in reality, nature functions on the basis of survival of the fittest.

You probably meant that the animal kingdom follows the law of the strongest, or "might is right".

Time to post that legendary soundbite from Starship Troopers, I guess:

One girl told him bluntly: “My mother says that violence never settles anything.”

“So?” Mr. Dubois looked at her bleakly. “I’m sure the city fathers of Carthage would be glad to know that. Why doesn’t your mother tell them so? Or why don’t you?”

She said shrilly, “You’re making fun of me! Everybody knows that Carthage was destroyed!”

“You seemed to be unaware of it,” he said grimly. “Since you do know it, wouldn’t you say that violence had settled their destinies rather thoroughly? However, I was not making fun of you personally; I was heaping scorn on an inexcusably silly idea—a practice I shall always follow. Anyone who clings to the historically untrue—and thoroughly immoral—doctrine that ‘violence never settles anything’ I would advise to conjure up the ghosts of Napoleon Bonaparte and of the Duke of Wellington and let them debate it. The ghost of Hitler could referee, and the jury might well be the Dodo, the Great Auk, and the Passenger Pigeon.

Violence, naked force, has settled more issues in history than has any other factor, and the contrary opinion is wishful thinking at its worst. Breeds that forget this basic truth have always paid for it with their lives and freedoms.”

24. nradov ◴[] No.42166667{4}[source]
A movement of violent uprising resulted in the USA's independence. The standing army and state militias stayed. It was mostly peaceful, until the slave-owning faction tried to revolt. We've only had that one real civil war, so overall the violent movement seems to have worked out pretty well for us.
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25. abhiyerra ◴[] No.42167007[source]
I agree with you. No one seems to remember the Quit India movement during WW2 which was led by Gandhi which was violent. Or that Gandhi was not the only Freedom Fighter and others like Subhas Chandra Bose were working with the Axis powers to fight against the British.

Or that the soldiers that actually fought for the British in WW2 western theater came back with the ideas of democracy that didn’t really exist in India because of the various puppet governments that people actually interacted with.

This is also true in the USA where you have figures like MLK who had complementary aggressive forces like Malcom X.

It is interesting also because India has turned from Gandhi in a lot of ways. A lot of my own family now think that Gandhi was a useful idiot. Useful at the time, but long past his due and that there needs to be a refocus on a more assertive Hindu identity like Bose.

26. dmafreezone ◴[] No.42167072{4}[source]
Arguably it also led to a complete lack of change, with the civil machinery simply being renamed and now serving a different master. The military and police now work for those in power, not the people. An autocracy pretending to be a democracy.
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27. ◴[] No.42167287{4}[source]
28. 47282847 ◴[] No.42167760[source]
> survival of the fittest

You are aware that Darwin as the originator of that phrase specifically pointed to non-violent cooperation as the “fittest“ strategy for survival?

29. paulryanrogers ◴[] No.42169370{5}[source]
IDK. I prefer peaceful transitions of power over escapades like January 6.

Violence should be a last resort.

replies(1): >>42170107 #
30. nradov ◴[] No.42170107{6}[source]
That's a total non sequitur. The USA has had less politically motivated violence than India since 1947. While the January 6 incident was appalling, only one person was killed and power was transferred peacefully as scheduled. President Biden didn't have to storm the White House at the head of his personal militia.
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31. randomcarbloke ◴[] No.42171278{3}[source]
>Indians were systematically starved to feed frontlines of war we had nothing to do with

By a cyclone, accidents, and japanese blockades, the independent states suffered more because of poor infrastructure, lastly it was only known to Britain come August '43 whereupon 150,000 tonnes of wheat were redirected from Iraq and Aus.

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32. paulryanrogers ◴[] No.42171776{7}[source]
174 people were injured. It was a massive assault. Power was ultimately transferred, yet it certainly wasn't peaceful.

Just because other countries have had more violence doesn't make the incident any less shocking or less applicable to the argument.

33. wslh ◴[] No.42175116{6}[source]
Non-violence as a guiding principle is noble and inspiring, but it doesn’t eliminate the need for robust defensive measures.
34. cholantesh ◴[] No.42175314[source]
As well as 'those who play well with others'.
35. cholantesh ◴[] No.42175413{4}[source]
This is the view advanced by Churchill and his hagiographers but it's false; there is correspondence from 1942 that warned that the ramifications of policies going all the way to March of that year had been dire, and the war cabinet simply dismissed them.
36. callmeal ◴[] No.42188597{3}[source]
as PhasmaFelis pointed out, it's not the "dumb" and "religious", it's poor people, and the reason is simple - children are a source of "mostly free" labor, as the capitalist class here has (re)discovered.

https://fortune.com/2023/05/25/labor-shortage-child-teenage-...

37. dennis_jeeves2 ◴[] No.42196705[source]
Do does this mean that when confronted with an armed burglar who has just killed one of of your family members, instead of gunning him down right away (assuming you can do it safely ), you approach it non-violently?
38. dennis_jeeves2 ◴[] No.42196804{5}[source]
True, happens in all other places where they achieved 'independence' from their colonial masters. Animal Farm ( by George Orwell) is a script that rulers use to govern the peasants successfully.