Friday, May 29, 2026

The Republic of Suspicion

 How the Supreme Court Sanctified Disenfranchisement Through the Special Intensive Revision

By Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

The Supreme Court’s 2026 judgment upholding the Election Commission of India’s (ECI) Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls may go down as one of the most consequential constitutional decisions in contemporary India. Beneath the language of “electoral purity” and “institutional expertise” lies a deeper constitutional rupture: the transformation of universal adult franchise from a guaranteed democratic right into a conditional administrative privilege.

The judgment has effectively legitimised a mechanism that enabled the exclusion of millions of citizens from electoral rolls in Bihar, West Bengal, Assam, Tamil Nadu and Kerala through opaque procedures, arbitrary documentary demands and algorithmic suspicion. The Court not only ignored fundamental constitutional concerns regarding citizenship determination and voting rights, but also endorsed the Election Commission’s assumption of powers that constitutionally belong elsewhere.

This essay critically analyses the Supreme Court’s endorsement of the SIR process, situating it within the broader political trajectory of democratic centralisation, majoritarian nationalism and institutional capture. It examines the constitutional history of adult franchise in India, the legal precedents on voting rights, the emergence of “logical discrepancy” and bureaucratic disenfranchisement, the transformation of the ECI from constitutional sentinel to executive instrument, and the growing judicial tendency to legitimise executive excess after irreversible political damage has already been done.

The SIR judgment marks not merely an electoral controversy but a constitutional turning point. The question before India is no longer whether citizens choose governments. It is whether governments will increasingly choose their citizens.

“We, the People” — Or “We, the Approved”?

When India adopted universal adult franchise in 1950, it did something revolutionary. A poor, partition-scarred, deeply hierarchical society entrusted political sovereignty equally to the peasant and the prince, the labourer and the landlord, the Dalit and the Brahmin, the illiterate villager and the English-speaking elite.

At a time when many Western democracies still imposed literacy barriers, property qualifications or racial exclusions, India made voting a universal democratic entitlement. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar called political equality the moral foundation of the Republic. Jawaharlal Nehru described adult franchise as an act of civilisational faith in ordinary Indians.

That faith now stands shaken.

The Supreme Court’s judgment upholding the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls has not merely endorsed an administrative exercise. It has legitimised suspicion as a governing principle of democracy. It has approved the idea that every citizen may be forced, at any moment, to prove their legitimacy before the State merely to remain a voter.

The constitutional promise of universal adult franchise has quietly been converted into a probationary status.

The Court’s ruling effectively tells citizens:

“You may vote — but only if the State remains satisfied with your existence.”

This is not electoral reform. It is constitutional inversion.

The SIR: A Process Without Constitutional Foundation

The first and most glaring issue buried beneath judicial rhetoric is this: the Representation of the People Act, 1950 does not contain any provision called “Special Intensive Revision.”

The law recognises revision of electoral rolls under Section 21 of the Representation of the People Act, 1950. Section 21(3) states:

“The electoral roll for each constituency shall be revised in the prescribed manner by reference to the qualifying date.”

The phrase “prescribed manner” refers to procedures laid down under the Registration of Electors Rules, 1960. Rule 25 provides for intensive revision and summary revision. Nowhere does the law contemplate a nationwide quasi-citizenship verification regime of the nature imposed through SIR.

Yet the Supreme Court transformed this vague administrative authority into an unrestricted constitutional mandate.

The Court effectively held that because the ECI possesses supervisory authority over electoral rolls, it may undertake any mechanism “as it may think fit,” even if that mechanism fundamentally alters the relationship between citizen and State.

This interpretation is profoundly dangerous.

Constitutional democracies survive not because institutions possess unlimited powers, but because their powers are carefully restrained. The Court abandoned this principle and instead elevated “institutional expertise” above constitutional scrutiny.

The judgment repeatedly invoked the need for “purity” and “integrity” of electoral rolls. Such language has disturbing historical parallels. Throughout history, regimes seeking exclusion have always spoken in the language of purification.

The Constitutional Fraud of “Limited Citizenship Inquiry”

The Court attempted a curious balancing act. On one hand, it acknowledged that the Election Commission cannot determine citizenship — a power vested under the Citizenship Act and exercised by the Union government. On the other hand, it permitted the ECI to conduct what it called a “limited inquiry” into citizenship for electoral purposes.

This distinction is intellectually dishonest.

If an authority can remove your name from electoral rolls because it is “not satisfied” with your citizenship, then it is functionally exercising citizenship determination powers regardless of legal semantics.

The consequences are immediate and devastating.

A citizen whose name is removed loses:

the right to vote,

the ability to politically participate,

access to democratic representation,

and often social legitimacy itself.

The Court’s attempt to separate “electoral exclusion” from “citizenship determination” is like saying imprisonment is not punishment because conviction may still be appealed later.

Rights lost in the present are not restored by theoretical remedies in the future.

The Burden of Proof Has Been Reversed

One of the gravest constitutional injuries caused by SIR is the reversal of democratic presumption.

Traditionally, inclusion in electoral rolls carried a presumption of legitimacy. This principle was recognised in Lal Babu Hussein vs Electoral Registration Officer (1995), where the Supreme Court held that electoral authorities cannot arbitrarily strike off names merely on suspicion of citizenship status.

The Court observed that once a person is enrolled as a voter, there exists a strong presumption regarding eligibility and due process protections become essential before deletion.

That principle has now been hollowed out.

Under SIR, voters became suspects first and citizens later.

The burden shifted from the State proving ineligibility to citizens proving worthiness.

This reversal disproportionately targeted:

migrant workers,

Muslims,

Dalits,

Adivasis,

landless labourers,

urban poor,

elderly women,

internally displaced populations.

The wealthy citizen with archives, lawyers and inherited documentation faces inconvenience.

The poor citizen faces political erasure.

The Politics of Documentation

The documentary regime imposed under SIR revealed its political character from the beginning.

The ECI initially prescribed eleven documents while excluding the most widely available identifiers possessed by ordinary citizens. Aadhaar — possessed by the overwhelming majority — was excluded until petitioners forced the issue before the Supreme Court.

This exclusion was not accidental.

The documentation architecture was designed around exclusion rather than accessibility.

Millions of Indians possess:

Aadhaar,

ration cards,

voter ID cards,

welfare records,

MNREGA records,

electricity bills,

pension documents.

Yet these were either initially excluded or treated with suspicion.

The irony is breathtaking:
The same State that distributes welfare through Aadhaar suddenly claims Aadhaar is insufficient when citizens seek to vote.

The State trusts you enough to tax you, police you and surveil you — but not enough to vote.

“Logical Discrepancy”: Algorithmic Disenfranchisement

If Bihar exposed bureaucratic exclusion, West Bengal revealed digital authoritarianism.

The invention of the category called “logical discrepancy” represented one of the most disturbing developments in Indian electoral history.

Through opaque software-based scrutiny, more than one crore voters reportedly came under suspicion. Around 27 lakh eventually lost voting rights despite judicially supervised appellate mechanisms.

No transparent explanation was provided regarding:

algorithmic criteria,

data standards,

matching thresholds,

software reliability,

audit mechanisms,

or error rates.

Citizens were reduced to data anomalies.

A democracy that once trusted people began trusting algorithms over human existence.

This is governance through suspicion technology.

The Judicial Theatre of Appeals

The Supreme Court attempted to legitimise SIR by constructing an emergency appellate structure involving serving and retired judicial officers.

This was projected as judicial compassion.

In reality, it became administrative theatre.

Millions of appeals were expected to be heard within weeks. Numerous reports suggested that each case received barely two to three minutes of attention. Citizens often lacked legal representation, documentary support or adequate notice.

And yet more than 90% of appeals reportedly succeeded.

That statistic alone exposes the farce.

If overwhelming numbers of appellants were eventually found genuine, what justified their initial exclusion?

The answer is simple:
The process itself was designed around mass suspicion.

Justice delayed is dangerous. But justice compressed into assembly-line adjudication becomes mockery.

Justice Bagchi’s oral observation that those unable to vote “may vote next time” captured the constitutional tragedy perfectly.

Democracy does not operate on deferred citizenship.

A lost election cannot be retroactively restored.

The Timing Was the Strategy

Perhaps the most politically revealing aspect of the entire episode was timing.

The Court deliberately avoided final adjudication before electoral damage occurred.

The SIR exercise proceeded through Bihar, West Bengal, Assam, Tamil Nadu and Kerala before constitutional scrutiny concluded. By the time the judgment arrived, the political consequences had already unfolded.

This pattern is becoming increasingly familiar in India:

executive action first,

irreversible consequences second,

judicial approval later.

The Court thereby avoids immediate confrontation while eventually legitimising faits accomplis.

This is not constitutional review.
It is post-facto constitutional laundering.

From Citizens to “Ghuspathiyas”

Political rhetoric surrounding SIR exposed its ideological foundation.

Repeated speeches by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah invoked the language of “ghuspathiyas” — infiltrators.

The term carries deliberate communal and ethnic overtones, especially targeting Bengali-speaking Muslims and migrant populations.

The irony is devastating:
despite massive exercises across multiple states, no substantial evidence of organised foreign voter infiltration emerged.

The “infiltrator” narrative was politically useful precisely because it did not require proof.

It only required fear.

This mirrors developments in the United States under Donald Trump, where migrants were branded “illegals” and “invaders.” Trump-era discourse repeatedly framed immigration as civilisational contamination.

In India, “ghuspathiya” performs the same political function.

The objective is not administrative correction.
It is psychological othering.

A Muslim citizen from Bengal becomes perpetually suspect.
A migrant worker becomes electorally disposable.

The ECI’s Transformation: From Constitutional Guardian to Executive Instrument

The framers of the Constitution designed the Election Commission as an independent constitutional authority precisely because elections form the moral foundation of democracy.

Article 324 vested extraordinary authority in the ECI so that governments could not manipulate electoral processes.

But institutions derive legitimacy not merely from constitutional text, but from public trust.

That trust has steadily eroded.

The changes to the appointment process for Election Commissioners — removing the Chief Justice of India from the selection committee and replacing judicial balance with executive dominance — fundamentally altered institutional independence.

The new structure effectively allows the ruling government to dominate appointments.

This matters enormously because institutional behaviour follows incentive structures.

If post-retirement accountability weakens and appointment mechanisms become politically aligned, neutrality erodes structurally rather than individually.

The SIR episode exposed precisely such erosion.

The ECI no longer appeared as an impartial referee.
It increasingly resembled an interested political actor.

The Supreme Court and the Crisis of Constitutional Courage

The deeper tragedy lies not merely in the Election Commission’s conduct but in the Supreme Court’s surrender.

Courts exist to protect constitutional morality against majoritarian excess.

Instead, the Court repeatedly deferred to “institutional expertise,” “administrative necessity” and “electoral purity.”

But constitutional rights are designed precisely to restrain administrative convenience.

The Court ignored crucial questions:

Can voting rights be suspended through suspicion?

Can citizenship scrutiny occur without statutory framework?

Can algorithmic discrepancy justify disenfranchisement?

Can poor citizens realistically satisfy documentary burdens?

Can electoral exclusion precede citizenship adjudication?

These questions were buried beneath procedural endorsement.

The judiciary transformed from constitutional sentinel into constitutional spectator.

Adult Franchise and the Constituent Assembly Vision

The tragedy becomes clearer when viewed against the debates of the Constituent Assembly.

Universal adult franchise was not inevitable in India. Many argued that illiteracy, poverty and social backwardness made it premature.

Yet the framers rejected elitism.

Ambedkar insisted political equality must precede social equality because democracy itself could become an instrument of transformation.

India adopted universal franchise not after prosperity — but before it.

That was revolutionary.

Today, however, the Republic appears to be retreating toward graded citizenship:

documented citizens,

suspect citizens,

verified citizens,

provisional citizens.

The constitutional imagination of equality is being replaced by bureaucratic filtration.

Important Supreme Court Judgments on Voting Rights

1. Lal Babu Hussein vs Electoral Registration Officer (1995)

This landmark judgment held that electoral authorities cannot arbitrarily remove names merely on suspicion regarding citizenship. The Court emphasised due process and recognised prior inclusion in electoral rolls as creating a presumption of legitimacy.

Ironically, the 2026 SIR judgment diluted the spirit of Lal Babu Hussein by permitting large-scale re-verification despite prior enrolment.

2. Mohinder Singh Gill vs Chief Election Commissioner (1978)

This foundational judgment described free and fair elections as part of the basic structure of the Constitution.

Justice Krishna Iyer famously observed:

“Democracy is government by the people. It is not a gift periodically handed down by rulers.”

The SIR regime undermines precisely this democratic premise.

3. Indira Nehru Gandhi vs Raj Narain (1975)

The Supreme Court held that free and fair elections are part of the Constitution’s basic structure.

The judgment recognised that electoral integrity is inseparable from democratic legitimacy.

Yet electoral integrity cannot exist where mass exclusion becomes institutional policy.

4. PUCL vs Union of India (2003)

The Court recognised voters’ right to information as integral to democratic participation.

The judgment expanded democratic rights jurisprudence rather than restricting it.

The SIR ruling moves in the opposite direction — shrinking democratic participation through bureaucratic barriers.

5. Kuldip Nayar vs Union of India (2006)

The Court reiterated that democracy rests fundamentally on electoral participation and representation.

The spirit of this judgment conflicts sharply with exclusionary electoral suspicion regimes.

The Long Shadow of NRC and CAA

The SIR exercise cannot be viewed in isolation.

It emerges within a broader ideological project involving:

NRC,

CAA,

citizenship verification politics,

demographic anxieties,

and majoritarian nationalism.

The Court’s direction that deleted names may be referred for citizenship adjudication effectively creates a shadow NRC without parliamentary debate.

This is administrative constitutionalism replacing legislative constitutionalism.

Policies rejected politically are being introduced bureaucratically.

When Governments Choose Voters

The most frightening consequence of SIR is structural.

If electoral participation becomes conditional upon administrative satisfaction, governments acquire indirect power to shape electorates.

This transforms democracy itself.

Traditionally:
citizens choose governments.

Under suspicion-based verification regimes:
governments increasingly influence who remains politically visible enough to choose.

That is democratic inversion.

The Silent Normalisation of Exclusion

Perhaps the gravest danger is not immediate disenfranchisement but gradual normalisation.

Every democracy collapses incrementally before it collapses dramatically.

First comes suspicion.
Then exceptional procedures.
Then targeted exclusions.
Then institutional endorsement.
Then public fatigue.

Eventually exclusion becomes routine.

Citizens begin carrying documents not as administrative necessity but as political survival kits.

Democracy shifts from trust to verification.

A Republic at the Crossroads

India now stands at a constitutional crossroads.

One path preserves the founding vision:
citizenship rooted in dignity, equality and democratic trust.

The other path embraces permanent suspicion:
where voting becomes conditional,
citizenship becomes probationary,
and constitutional rights survive only at administrative pleasure.

The Supreme Court had an opportunity to restore democratic confidence.

Instead, it constitutionalised executive suspicion.

Conclusion: The Day Democracy Became Conditional

The SIR judgment may ultimately be remembered not for its legal reasoning but for its political consequences.

It marks the moment when the constitutional architecture of universal adult franchise began yielding to bureaucratic nationalism.

Millions of Indians now understand a terrifying truth:
their names on electoral rolls no longer guarantee democratic existence.

They may be asked — anytime, anywhere — to prove they deserve political recognition.

And if they fail?
They disappear from democracy first, and perhaps citizenship later.

The framers of the Constitution imagined India as a republic of equal citizens.

The SIR regime imagines India as a republic of verified citizens.

That difference may determine the future of Indian democracy itself.

As institutions retreat from their constitutional responsibilities, the burden shifts back to citizens.

The question before India is no longer whether democracy survives formally.

The question is whether democracy survives morally.

Because when courts legitimise suspicion,
when institutions weaponise documentation,
when voting becomes conditional,
and when governments begin choosing voters—

the Constitution does not die dramatically.

It dies administratively.

References

1. Lal Babu Hussein vs Electoral Registration Officer, Supreme Court of India, 1995.

2. Mohinder Singh Gill vs Chief Election Commissioner, Supreme Court of India, 1978.

3. Indira Nehru Gandhi vs Raj Narain, Supreme Court of India, 1975.

4. People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) vs Union of India, Supreme Court of India, 2003.

5. Kuldip Nayar vs Union of India, Supreme Court of India, 2006.

6. Representation of the People Act, 1950.

7. Registration of Electors Rules, 1960.

8. Constituent Assembly Debates, Volumes IX–XI.

9. Granville Austin, The Indian Constitution: Cornerstone of a Nation, 1966.

10. B.R. Ambedkar, Constituent Assembly Speeches on Political Democracy and Franchise.

11. Christophe Jaffrelot, Modi’s India: Hindu Nationalism and the Rise of Ethnic Democracy, 2021.

12. Election Commission of India notifications on Special Intensive Revision, 2025–26.

13. Supreme Court judgment on Bihar SIR, May 27, 2026.

 

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

The Market of Desire: Capitalism and the Manufacture of Suffering

 A Historical Materialist Critique of Desire, Suffering, and the Social Construction of Happiness

By Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

Modern civilization continuously equates happiness with the fulfillment of desires. The global culture of consumerism promises that beauty, fame, luxury, pleasure, comfort, and endless consumption will ultimately lead humanity toward satisfaction. Yet psychological suffering, anxiety, alienation, depression, loneliness, and social fragmentation continue to intensify across the world. This contradiction reveals a deeper truth: happiness cannot be understood merely as an individual emotional state detached from social and material conditions. Human desires are historically produced, socially conditioned, economically manipulated, and unequally distributed across classes. Through the lens of psychology, sociology, neuroscience, and historical materialism, this essay critically examines how inequality shapes human consciousness, how capitalism manufactures perpetual dissatisfaction, and why peace of mind becomes increasingly inaccessible in unequal societies. The essay argues that happiness is not simply a personal pursuit but a social question rooted in the organization of resources, labor, and power.

The Civilization of Endless Desire

Human beings have always sought happiness, yet every age has defined it differently. Ancient spiritual traditions often viewed happiness as inner peace, moderation, and freedom from excessive attachment. Modern capitalist civilization, however, increasingly defines happiness as the satisfaction of desires. The successful individual is portrayed as one who possesses wealth, beauty, fame, status, influence, sensual gratification, and unrestricted consumption.

This belief dominates contemporary culture. Advertising industries, social media systems, entertainment platforms, and market economies continuously reinforce the idea that fulfillment lies outside the self and can be purchased, consumed, displayed, or socially validated. The individual is trained to believe that happiness exists in acquisition.

Yet modern societies simultaneously experience unprecedented psychological distress. According to the World Health Organization, depression and anxiety disorders have increased globally, especially among populations exposed to economic insecurity, social isolation, and intense competitive pressures. Scientific studies repeatedly show that despite technological advancement and increased consumption, emotional well-being has not proportionally improved.

This contradiction reveals a profound philosophical and sociological question: if humanity possesses more commodities than ever before, why does suffering continue to deepen?

The answer lies in understanding desire not merely as an individual impulse, but as a socially organized force shaped by historical and material conditions.

Desire and the Psychology of Dissatisfaction

Modern psychology has extensively studied the instability of human satisfaction. One of the most influential concepts explaining this phenomenon is the “hedonic treadmill,” developed by psychologists Philip Brickman and Donald Campbell. Their studies demonstrated that individuals rapidly adapt to pleasurable experiences. Material gains, promotions, luxury purchases, or social achievements produce temporary pleasure, but the emotional effect soon fades, returning individuals to their previous psychological baseline.

This means that desire constantly regenerates itself. Satisfaction becomes temporary while craving becomes permanent.

Neuroscience further supports this understanding. Research on dopamine systems shows that the brain responds more intensely to anticipation than possession itself. Human beings are neurologically stimulated by pursuit rather than stable fulfillment. Consumer culture exploits this mechanism by continuously producing newer objects of desire.

Social media platforms intensify this cycle. Validation through “likes,” visibility, status symbols, and curated lifestyles creates perpetual comparison. Psychologists increasingly observe that digital culture transforms self-worth into public performance. Individuals become emotionally dependent upon recognition from others.

This condition reflects what sociologist Erich Fromm described as the shift from “being” to “having.” Human identity becomes tied to possessions and external validation rather than authentic selfhood. A person no longer asks, “Who am I?” but “What do I own?” and “How am I perceived?”

The consequence is chronic dissatisfaction.

Happiness is Not Universal: It is Materially Conditioned

The dominant discourse often presents happiness as a purely personal choice, ignoring structural inequalities. Yet desires themselves differ according to material conditions.

For the wealthy classes, happiness may involve prestige, luxury travel, exclusivity, influence, and aesthetic refinement. For working populations struggling for survival, happiness may simply mean stable employment, nutritious food, healthcare, shelter, rest, and freedom from debt.

Thus happiness cannot be understood abstractly. It emerges within historically specific social realities.

A laborer deprived of food security cannot pursue happiness in the same manner as a billionaire investor. A child suffering malnutrition experiences desire differently from a corporate executive pursuing social prestige. Material deprivation shapes consciousness itself.

Historical materialism, developed by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, provides a crucial framework here. Historical materialism argues that human consciousness is fundamentally shaped by material conditions — the organization of labour, ownership, class relations, and distribution of resources.

According to this view, desires are not eternal human constants. They are historically constructed.

Feudal societies organized desire differently from industrial capitalism. Tribal societies understood fulfillment differently from consumer societies. Capitalism transforms human beings into consumers because endless consumption is necessary for endless accumulation of profit.

Therefore, capitalism does not merely produce commodities; it produces desires themselves.

Inequality and the Architecture of Suffering

Modern inequality is not accidental. It is structurally embedded within economic systems. A small global elite controls enormous concentrations of wealth while billions struggle for basic survival. According to reports by organizations such as Oxfam, wealth inequality has reached extreme levels where a tiny minority owns more wealth than vast sections of humanity combined.

This inequality profoundly affects psychological well-being.

Research by social epidemiologists Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, particularly in The Spirit Level, demonstrated that highly unequal societies experience greater levels of anxiety, depression, violence, addiction, obesity, mistrust, and social fragmentation — even among relatively affluent populations.

Why?

Because inequality intensifies social comparison.

Human beings are deeply social creatures. Our sense of dignity, self-worth, and identity is shaped relationally. In unequal societies, individuals constantly measure themselves against others. Status anxiety becomes widespread. Failure is individualized while structural injustice is hidden.

The poor are blamed for poverty.
The unemployed are blamed for unemployment.
The mentally distressed are blamed for their inability to cope.

Thus systemic inequality becomes psychologically internalized as personal inadequacy.

This is one of capitalism’s greatest ideological achievements: transforming structural suffering into private guilt.

The Hierarchical Division of Society and Manufactured Desires

Every hierarchical society produces distinct forms of consciousness. Under capitalism, society becomes divided into economic classes whose experiences of happiness fundamentally differ.

The ruling classes possess the resources to shape culture itself. Through media, advertising, cinema, education, and digital technology, dominant institutions normalize elite aspirations as universal aspirations. Luxury lifestyles are projected as symbols of success even when inaccessible to the majority.

The working classes therefore internalize desires that their material conditions cannot realistically fulfill.

This creates permanent frustration.

Sociologist Pierre Bourdieu explained that social classes reproduce themselves not only economically but culturally. Taste, language, education, consumption patterns, and aspirations become markers of class identity. Individuals unconsciously absorb the standards of dominant groups and evaluate themselves accordingly.

Consumer capitalism therefore manufactures emotional insecurity because insecurity fuels consumption.

A person satisfied with simple living contributes little to endless market expansion. But an individual made insecure about beauty, status, body image, success, or social recognition becomes an ideal consumer.

Thus desire becomes economically profitable.

Alienation and the Loss of Human Essence

Marx’s concept of alienation remains one of the most powerful explanations of modern unhappiness.

Under capitalism, workers lose control over their labour and the products they create. Labor becomes mechanical survival rather than meaningful self-expression. Human creativity is subordinated to profit.

The worker becomes alienated:

from labour,

from the products produced,

from fellow human beings,

and ultimately from oneself.

This alienation produces existential emptiness.

A society organized around competition rather than cooperation gradually erodes collective solidarity. Human relations themselves become transactional. Friendship, love, identity, and even self-worth become entangled with economic value.

The tragedy of modern civilization is that people increasingly possess commodities while losing meaning.

Poverty, Basic Needs, and the Illusion of Free Choice

Discussions of happiness often ignore that billions lack access to fundamental necessities.

According to global development studies, millions continue to experience:

food insecurity,

unemployment,

inadequate healthcare,

unsafe housing,

poor sanitation,

educational exclusion,

and debt dependency.

Under such conditions, speaking abstractly about “choosing happiness” becomes philosophically hollow.

A hungry child does not primarily seek enlightenment; they seek food.
An indebted worker seeks survival before self-actualization.
A displaced family seeks safety before spiritual fulfillment.

Historical materialism insists that consciousness cannot be detached from material existence. Human thought, emotion, aspiration, morality, and even imagination emerge within concrete social realities.

This does not mean human beings are mechanically determined by economics alone. Rather, it means that freedom itself becomes constrained when basic needs remain inaccessible.

True liberation therefore requires not only inner transformation but also rational social organization.

The Political Economy of Restlessness

Contemporary capitalism survives by preventing contentment.

Economic systems dependent upon continuous growth require continuous dissatisfaction. Markets expand only when people remain psychologically incomplete. Therefore modern culture systematically cultivates restlessness.

Beauty industries manufacture insecurity.
Luxury industries manufacture status competition.
Digital systems manufacture attention addiction.
Corporate culture manufactures overwork.
Entertainment industries manufacture escapism.

The result is a civilization psychologically incapable of stillness.

Even leisure becomes commodified.
Even sleep becomes monetized.
Even relationships become performative.

The human mind becomes permanently overstimulated yet emotionally exhausted.

This explains why many affluent societies simultaneously experience loneliness epidemics, burnout crises, declining mental health, and existential despair despite material abundance.

Happiness as Peace, Not Possession

After prolonged exhaustion from endless pursuit, many individuals eventually recognize the futility of limitless desire. The realization emerges slowly but profoundly: happiness cannot be permanently secured through accumulation because desire itself continuously expands.

True peace arises not from possessing everything, but from reducing unnecessary cravings.

This idea appears across philosophical traditions, yet historical materialism enriches it by emphasizing that simplicity itself requires just social conditions. A society built upon extreme inequality makes inner peace difficult because survival anxiety dominates consciousness.

Therefore the question of happiness is inseparable from justice.

A humane society would not merely increase consumption; it would rationally distribute resources, reduce exploitative labor, guarantee basic human dignity, and create conditions where individuals can genuinely flourish emotionally, intellectually, and socially.

In such a society, desires themselves might transform — away from compulsive consumption and toward creativity, solidarity, knowledge, love, and collective well-being.

Conclusion: Liberation Beyond the Market

Modern civilization has mistaken stimulation for happiness and consumption for fulfillment. It teaches humanity to endlessly pursue desires while concealing the structural inequalities that shape those desires. Yet scientific research, sociology, psychology, and historical materialism collectively reveal a deeper truth: happiness is neither purely individual nor infinitely consumable.

Human desires are historically produced, socially conditioned, and economically manipulated. Inequality intensifies suffering not only materially but psychologically, creating insecurity, alienation, comparison, and emotional fragmentation. A society organized around accumulation inevitably generates dissatisfaction because perpetual desire sustains perpetual consumption.

The tragedy of the modern world is not merely that people suffer from unfulfilled desires. It is that entire systems depend upon keeping those desires permanently unfulfilled.

True happiness therefore cannot emerge solely from private pursuit. It requires both inner clarity and social transformation. Peace of mind becomes possible when human beings free themselves from compulsive consumption, when societies rationally distribute resources, and when human dignity is valued above profit.

Liberation begins when humanity realizes that the endless expansion of desire does not produce freedom. It produces dependence.

And perhaps the highest form of happiness is not the possession of everything, but the freedom from needing endless things in order to feel complete.

References

1. Civilization and Its Discontents — Sigmund Freud, 1930.

2. The Spirit Level — Richard Wilkinson & Kate Pickett, 2009.

3. Having or Being? — Erich Fromm, 1976.

4. Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 — Karl Marx, 1844.

5. Capital: Critique of Political Economy — Karl Marx, 1867.

6. Man's Search for Meaning — Viktor Frankl, 1946.

7. Brickman, Philip & Campbell, Donald — “Hedonic Relativism and Planning the Good Society,” 1971.

8. World Health Organization — Global Mental Health Reports.

9. Oxfam — Global Inequality Reports.

10. Pierre Bourdieu — Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste, 1979.