Updated On: 15 June, 2024 06:54 AM IST | Mumbai | Lindsay Pereira
The government should consider allocating resources for a department that can teach us to be more selective about outrage

Smoke rises in the Al Fara’a refugee camp in the occupied West Bank following an Israeli military raid on June 10. Pic/AP
I thought of a Department of Genocidal Affairs over the past weekend. The clarity of that thought surprised me because of how sensible it seemed, given the state of our world and the way emotions have been spilling over everywhere one turns.
The department in question doesn’t exist, of course, but the reasons for its existence continued to appear, the more I considered it. I imagined a group of qualified men and women tasked simply with documenting atrocities around the world and letting us know whom to support and when. I imagined a department we could turn to for guidance while trying to figure out what flags to add to our Facebook posts and what emoticons to include in WhatsApp status updates. It would make our lives so much simpler because millions of confused Indians trying to express their anger towards the right target would receive all the guidance they needed.