The mid-2020s in India were a period of profound contradictions. On one hand, the nation thrummed with the vibrant energy of a young populace, a burgeoning digital economy, and aspirations of global leadership. Smartphone penetration had skyrocketed, bringing hundreds of millions online, connecting them to information, commerce, and each other in unprecedented ways. A narrative of inevitable ascent, of India taking its rightful place on the world stage, was actively promoted and widely believed.
It was an era of bullet trains promised, ancient glories invoked, and a muscular new nationalism that brooked little dissent. Yet, beneath this glossy veneer of progress and confidence, deeper currents of unease were stirring. The digital revolution, while connecting, was also creating new arenas for conflict. Social media platforms, initially hailed as tools for democratization and free expression, were rapidly morphing into battlegrounds.
The public square was no longer a physical space for debate but a sprawling, often anonymous, digital arena where nuanced discussion was drowned out by performative outrage and tribal loyalties.
The mid-2020s in India were a period of profound contradictions. On one hand, the nation thrummed with the vibrant energy of a young populace, a burgeoning digital economy, and aspirations of global leadership. Smartphone penetration had skyrocketed, bringing hundreds of millions online, connecting them to information, commerce, and each other in unprecedented ways. A narrative of inevitable ascent, of India taking its rightful place on the world stage, was actively promoted and widely believed.
It was an era of bullet trains promised, ancient glories invoked, and a muscular new nationalism that brooked little dissent. Yet, beneath this glossy veneer of progress and confidence, deeper currents of unease were stirring. The digital revolution, while connecting, was also creating new arenas for conflict. Social media platforms, initially hailed as tools for democratization and free expression, were rapidly morphing into battlegrounds.
The public square was no longer a physical space for debate but a sprawling, often anonymous, digital arena where nuanced discussion was drowned out by performative outrage and tribal loyalties.