I appreciate the Indian perspective. To my knowledge, India is one of the few places that have have communist governments (at the state level) which respected electoral democracy. So, more power to them to figure out a form of democratic communism. I'm sure it falls short of communist ideals, but so do all systems.rotting bones wrote: ↑Sat Dec 13, 2025 3:58 am My experience has been very different from those in the West.
In my childhood, I grew up under a government that claimed to be weakly ideologically Communist. How Communist they were is up for debate, but they did redistribute land and for a long time, the state had chief ministers who were publicly atheist. (To this day, "advanced" Americans say they will never accept atheist politicians.) This was a time when Hindu-Muslim tensions (called Communalism in India) were somewhat under control.
Then there was an anti-industrialization movement that opposed the Communist government's plans to acquire land to build cars locally, creating industrial jobs. The center-left party Trinamool ("Grassroots" or populist) represented the agrarian interests. They won, and as a result, there are no jobs in West Bengal. The state has become India's Nigeria, with tons of people operating international scams to get money. The farmers got to make their precious flour, but because of the general lack of spending power, they are also feeling the squeeze.
As you describe it, the problem in West Bengal sounds like a problem of opposing interests. According to Wikipedia, 15,000 farmers were displaced, though the jobs created by the factory would be only 1,000. People always think importing an entire factory will produce Developtment™, but it really doesn't, for reasons Jane Jacobs explained decades ago.