Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
20 November 2020
The Two Presidents
Why are leaders in democracy
elected and not appointed? When does an elected leader satisfy merit based
criteria of a position?
In his article ‘The Gotabaya Rajapaksa Presidency: Year One’ Dr Dyan Jayatilleke laments
as follows:
[ In
President Gotabaya’s first year, the abandonment of meritocracy has become a
rule rather than an exception. Does anyone believe, can anyone believe, that
the finest available Sri Lankan talent, the best available brains, the human
resources of the highest quality and achievement in the fields relevant to the
COVID-19 virus, have been mobilised and are actually driving the national/State
effort to rescue us from the pandemic? ]
The Sri Lankan President is elected
as per Popular vote. This includes quid pro quo votes. What were the
intellectuals doing when the 19th Amendment went through without
changes to the Presidential voting system? What were the best available brains
doing when the quota system for University entrance was implemented under the
leadership of Mrs Bandaranaike – presented by Dr Jayatilleke as follows:
[The retreat from the
principle of merit – the basis of excellence – in post-Independence Sri Lanka
began with the Sirimavo Bandaranaike Government’s twin measures (in the early
1970s) of the abolition of the independent public service and the introduction
of district-wise and media-wise standardisation at university entrance. ]
The above was the fundamental
reason for the ethnic war in Sri Lanka – with youth connecting to youth. To be
fair to Mrs Bandaranaike,
this was also an extension of democracy by majority thinking. When eventually
war broke out – it was the less educated who fought for their respective sides.
Not many Sri Lankan graduates came forward to protect their community’s
sovereignty. This has now resulted in both sides to the armed war being accused
of alleged war-crimes.
Those
who sought an end to armed war by the less educated, need to expect the
war-crimes parallel in civil administration also. To the extent physical safety
is more important to the common voter, than intellectual achievement, we need
to respect that choice. A good proportion of Tamils wanted LTTE protection
against the Sri Lankan Government’s Armed Forces.
The problem for Sinhalese – as opposed
to Tamils who did allegedly form their belief based de facto government is that
they are officially responsible to uphold laws that they may not believe in.
Law is the first measure of merit known to most of us. We could learn this
fairly quickly but Belief is not so quickly developed. Intelligence needs to be
practiced to become Belief. Belief is however exponential in value and hence
where majority do not have intellectual capability belief based governance is
essential to prevent crimes and strong conflicts with those of different
cultures. Dr Jayatilleke confirms this of the emotionally driven Tamil driven
by ‘looks’:
[Scorning Prime Minister Modi’s reiteration of the implementation of the
13th Amendment as essential, Team GR hopes to constrict the Sri Lankan Tamils
into something smaller and tighter, although the ‘global Tamil brand’ has got a
turbo-boost and every ethnic Tamil everywhere has experienced a quantum leap in
self-esteem, political optimism and emotional energy with the victory of Kamala
Harris (and by extension, her ‘wingwoman’, Rohini Kosoglu nee Ravindran). ]
Through my own
experience with the Tamil Diaspora, I believe they are not merit driven any
more than the Sri Lankan President. To me Kamala Harris is American of global
standards who would have had to overcome prejudices as a coloured woman to get
to the leadership position. There would be thousands of other Americans like
her and to the extent they also fought against unjust discrimination in their
own local environments – they are empowered with ‘insight’ that sees the truth
in any structure / relationship. This is the significance of ‘third-eye’. Dr Jayatilleke expands this to the institutional karmic merit:
[The consequence (of standardisation) was the displacement and
debasement of the term ‘merit’ from that of objective criteria – relevant
educational qualifications and success record – to subjective/normative
criteria. Today, it is presupposed that ex-military appointments across the
state system, and the annexation of civilian functions under the Defence
Ministry headed by a retired General, accord with the criterion of merit,
because the military/ex-military has the collective institutional ‘karmic
merit’ for having performed the ultimate meritorious deed of saving the country
from terrorism. ]
Karmic
merit is truth based. If this were true of the Armed Forces, then Sri Lankans have
little to worry about. As per my insight – if a Tamil woman sought to become Prime
Minister of Sri Lanka – these very same members of the Tamil Diaspora would
vehemently block her path.
Today,
for example, I was directed by a Tamil Professional, to a news video with the
explanation:
[Time is up for the military to
throw Trump out. Enough is enough]
As confirmed by the above image published by
Wikipedia:
[The Electoral College never meets as one body.
Electors meet in their respective state capitals (electors for the District of Columbia meet within the
District) on the same day (set by Congress as the Monday after the second
Wednesday in December) at which time they cast their electoral votes on
separate ballots for president and vice president]
It is therefore disrespectful of
the American Ancestors who gave Americans these laws and due processes – to declare
someone President and effectively dismiss the officially named President
prematurely.
Intellectual merit is brought into
a system of governance through the belief of higher minded persons. Many of
them may not hold office. Like Devathasis / Divine Servers of India some of
them will be exceptionally talented. Their minds connect through the Universal
Franchise of Belief. They uphold Dharma at the wider level.
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