The strike took place following months of protest from Indian farmers, a response to three farm acts passed by the Parliament of India in September 2020. According to protesters, the farm acts would leave small farmers, the vast majority, at the mercy of large corporations. Poor farmers were already desperate before the laws were passed - in 2019 alone, 10,281 agricultural workers committed suicide.
Dozens of farm unions began organizing protests demanding the repeal of these laws. After failing to get the support of their respective state governments, the farmers decided to pressure the Central Government by marching to Delhi en masse.
The farmers arrived at Delhi on November 25th, 2020 and were met by police, who employed the use of tear gas and water cannons, dug up roads, and used layers of barricades and sand barriers to try and stop their march.
On November 26th, 250 million workers from all over the country initiated a general strike in solidarity with the farmer's struggle. According to Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, trade unions issued a twelve-point charter of demands which included "the reversal of the anti-worker, anti-farmer laws pushed by the government in September, the reversal of the privatisation of major government enterprises, and immediate [Covid] relief for the population".
Farmer protests continued for more than a year, featuring mass marches, clashes with police, and many failed negotiations between farmers' unions and the government. Rakesh Tikait, a leader with Bharatiya Kisan Union (English: Indian Farmers' Union) stated in October 2021 that approximately 750 participants have died in the protest.
Among the dead was a Senior Superintendent of Police in the city of Sonepat, who committed suicide, saying he could not bear the pain of the farmers. His suicide note read "Bullets fired from the guns kill only those whom they strike. The bullet of injustice, however, kills many with a single stroke... It is humiliating to suffer injustice."
In a televised address on November 19th, 2021, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stated that his government would repeal the three acts in the upcoming winter parliamentary session in December. The national spokesperson of the Bharatiya Kisan Union, Rakesh Tikait, stated the protests would only cease once the laws were repealed.
The film actor Deep Sidhu also joined the protests, and was quoted as having told a police officer the following: "Ye inquilab hai. This is a revolution. If you take away farmers' land, then what do they have left? Only debt."
We Are Grass. We Grow on Everything: The Forty-Ninth Newsletter (2020).
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I feel this literally constantly, comrade. Social atomization, the loneliness epidemic, and the death of third places are all huge sources of psychic pain for more people than are probably willing to admit it or who can even recognize it. Wish I had better answers, but know that this is a pretty ubiquitous need and hole in people's lives.
I totally agree with you. But at the same time, whenever I tell myself this, there's another voice in my head that tells me "this is cope, I'm just a loser".
The system around us wants us to individualize all of the shortcomings of our lives - be they social or economic - and that gnawing, self-defeating voice can be hard to deprogram and turn off. But I'm sure there are many, many people out there who would love you and connect with you and would see all your good qualities if they had the opportunity to do so. The world around us just isn't built for us to discover each other in that way.
The best I've figured is to just try and take risks and attempt to connect with those I encounter within the compromised structures we have to navigate day-to-day (colleagues, neighbors, etc.). You'll inevitably get burned sometimes, but you may also find friendship and community in places you otherwise wouldn't expect.