Intellectual Cowardice Dismantling Community
Humans, who simply show
up, are indispensable
Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao
The Hans India
(10-08-2025)
{Zealous indifference
and psychological complexes are the norm. Indifference is now worn with zeal
and even with aggression. People fiercely defend their right to ‘not care, not
intervene and not contribute.’ When someone dares to step forward, they are
mocked. This toxic mockery, and moral apathy, can silence even capable
individuals} – Editor Synoptic Note
There was a time when
commitment spoke louder than hesitation. In contrast, today’s prevailing
culture instinctively retreats, quietly and habitually, from responsibility,
decision-making, ideas, risks, and truth. Responsibility is no longer embraced
but avoided, perceived as a burden born of fear, phobia, timidity, shyness,
ignorance, self-doubt, overconfidence, false humility, superiority complex, inferiority
obsession, indifference, incompetence, incapacity, evasiveness, tactical
silence, intellectual stagnation, and blame-shifting.
Shifting and shirking
responsibility has evolved into a peculiar art. It has become a game of hot
potato, that no one wants to hold it long enough to be held accountable. The
absence of ownership is astonishingly Cloaked in Cleverness, Justified by Familiar
Fears, Paraded as Strategy, or Diplomatically Excused in the name of Pragmatism.
Interestingly, even those long retired from positions of power often seek the
limelight, though not always with a sense of continued accountability. There
are however, admirable exceptions.
‘Retreat’ simply
means not stepping up, not owning, not trying, not responding when response is
most needed. ‘They will figure it out’ is the common Attitude and
Mindset of Retreater which in other words, passing the burden to others.
While these moments may
seem isolated or personal, collectively they signal the slow decay of a
community, not through visible crimes, but through silent neglect and a chronic
allergy to responsibility. Sadly, such evasive instincts are often mislabeled
as cautious wisdom.
The ‘Culture of
Intellectual Cowardice’ has crept deep into the community. Original
thinkers are those, who own and defend fresh ideas are increasingly rare. Quoting
others or discreetly borrowing ideas has become the safer path, often seen
among recently retired civil servants, legal veterans, and self-styled
intellectuals labeled as ‘Think Tanks.’
A powerful former
bureaucrat, serving in an advisory role to the government post-retirement,
reportedly blocked a transformative welfare digitization proposal, not due to
flaws, but because it was not his idea. That reflects a discomfort with new
thought. Such tendencies appear even in NGOs. Yet, inspiring exceptions still
uphold the spirit of innovation.
Zealous indifference
and psychological complexes are the norm. Indifference is now worn with zeal
and even with aggression. People fiercely defend their right to ‘Not Care,
Not Intervene, and Not Contribute.’ When someone dares to step forward,
they are mocked. This toxic mockery, and moral apathy, silences many capable
individuals. Add to that are the dangers of superiority and inferiority
complexes. Some do not act because they think others should. And others believe
they cannot. Both create the same societal vacuum. These are not just lapses in
judgment, but deep ethical and social fractures.
Another pressing issue
is the pretense of intellect and lack of renewal. A subtle yet damaging trend
in public service and social spaces is the presence of, though not all, but
significant number of, self-proclaimed intellectuals, retired bureaucrats, former
CEOs, senior executives, in NGOs or Public Society Platforms, joining with
initial enthusiasm, and contagious energy. But when real challenges demand
relevance, the unraveling begins. Rather than evolving, they remain trapped in
outdated ideas and vintage vocabulary. Instead of acknowledging stagnation or
personal limitations, they begin to grumble, never directly, always through
veiled discontent.
Such intellectual
stagnation, when disguised as prestige, breeds passive resistance, stifles
innovation, and dampens the morale of others. Worse, it plants seeds of
cynicism right at the conception stage of community initiatives.
At the root lies a
deeper truth: most people are not raised to live lives of inner authorship.
They live borrowed lives, with borrowed ambitions, language, and courage. They
consume, imitate, and perform, but do not originate, engage, or build. This
leads to a societal flatness where no one is truly bad, but no one is genuinely
good either. Everyone is merely present, functioning, but not shaping.
Who is responsible?
There is no single villain. The rot is systemic. But it must be called out: The
individual, for choosing ease over courage. The family background and brought
up which valued conformity over character. The education system that trained
memory but not minds. The workplace for rewarding obedience over ownership. The
society, for punishing failure more harshly than dishonesty. The media, for
amplifying drama while muting substance. Every system rewards retreat. Every
ecosystem discourages depth. And so, we arrive at a society that has forgotten
both the burden, and the beauty of ownership.
Let this not be
mistaken for despair. It is a mirror held gently, but firmly. Responsibility is
not some heroic act reserved either for young or old; it is a deeply human
calling, especially for those who have lived long enough to know its weight.
Courage, at every stage of life, is not in loud declarations or grand gestures,
it lies in quietly staying the course when giving up or staying silent feels
easier.
Elders, more than
anyone, must set the tone, not by merely instructing, but by embodying a life
of integrity and engagement.
A small, thoughtful act
from any senior member in any organization, can inspire generations. Fear,
imitation, or indifference cannot become the second nature, just because age
permits retreat. In a world obsessed with quick fixes and shortcuts, it is the
lived wisdom that must light the longer road of responsibility. In the end, the
opposite of cowardice is not flamboyant heroism, it is quiet, honest ownership.
And that is where renewal begins.
Here lies yet another
social paradox worth reflecting on. It is ironic how some, despite being
healthy and capable, show more enthusiasm in spreading news of others’ illness
than in offering help. They eagerly circulate such updates within families and
social groups, yet when it comes to lending a hand or stepping up for
collective responsibility, they retreat into silence. Worse still, when someone
else dares to act or pursue meaningful work, these same individuals turn
critics, grumbling in private, questioning intentions, or belittling efforts.
But such cynicism does not require confrontation, it calls for quiet clarity.
One must neither
indulge nor imitate them, but simply continue with sincere conviction. In time,
their noise fades, and consistency shines. True engagement speaks for itself, needing
no defense or validation from those who have long chosen comfort over
contribution.
A Closing Word from the
Mirror. This article is not an indictment, it is an invitation. To pause.
Reflect. See ourselves. Many carry these inadequacies not out of pride, but
through silent suffering. Why hold back when could have spoken. Shrugged off
when should have stood up. Imitated when despite having seeds of originality,
lacked the courage to nurture them. Blaming others or circumstances, knowing
deep inside, that it was their own retreat. To those silently wrestling with
this, not for lack of ability, but because something inside hesitated, this is
for them.
One need not prove
anything to anyone. Yes, one owes it to oneself, not to shrink, not to coast,
not to disappear behind old titles or past excuses. The world does not need
perfection. It needs people who try. Who own. Who stand up, not because they are
certain, but because they care. Redemption is not about erasing the past. It is
about acting differently in the present. Responsibility is not a crown. It is a
quiet promise: to be present, to be truthful, to be accountable.
Heroes are needed, but
Humans who simply show up are essential. Let that be enough. Let that begin.
Across age groups, from
their 40s to even their 80s, many retreat into shells like cautious tortoises not
for peace, but to escape the piercing gaze of genuine minds. To them,
questioning friends, family, or society now feel like threats to comfort.
They withdraw not just
from strangers, but even from the once-familiar voices of truth, choosing
isolation over introspection, as if truth-tellers have become unwelcome guests
in their lives.


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