Had just one brown sepoy turned around and shot Diyer, the Jalianwalabagh massacre would not have happened.
Had Nandlal Banerjee just overlooked, the dreaded patriot Prafulla Chaki would not have succumbed.
From Akbar's Man Singh to Nandlal to Jalinwalabaugh - the outsiders didn't come with their own army.
They used us to fight with one another.
And the same slavery is still continuing - it's now called corporate slavery.
Remember...
The fortress gate is always opened by an insider.
No empire survives on force alone.
It survives because people inside the system make it work.
- That was true when Akbar built alliances through men like Man Singh.
- It was true when the brown sepoys fired at the Jallianwala Bagh massacre under the command of Reginald Dyer.
- It was true when Prafulla Chaki was cornered after being identified by Nandalal Banerjee.
And it is still true today.
Only the empire has changed.
From Political Control to Economic Control
Yesterday’s empires needed land.
Today’s systems need productivity, compliance, and time.
The tools have evolved:
Then: armies and administrators
Now: salaries, performance metrics, stock options
Force has been replaced by incentives.
Chains have been replaced by contracts.
But the mechanism remains eerily similar:
The system works because insiders keep it running.
The Modern Gatekeepers
In the colonial era, power functioned through intermediaries—local rulers, soldiers, informants.
In the modern corporate world, the equivalents are:
Middle managers enforcing top-down decisions
Employees competing against each other for limited rewards
Professionals aligning with systems they privately question
No CEO needs to micromanage millions.
The system self-enforces.
Just as empires once relied on insiders to maintain control, corporations rely on:
Internal competition over collective bargaining
Career incentives over ethical resistance
Fear of exclusion over courage of dissent
Obedience Has Been Rebranded
At the Jallianwala Bagh massacre, obedience meant pulling a trigger when ordered.
Today, obedience is quieter:
Staying silent in unethical decisions
Overworking to meet unrealistic targets
Prioritizing profit over well-being—your own or others.’
No bullets. No visible violence.
But the question is the same:
Where does responsibility lie—at the top, or with those who execute?
Why We Still Open the Gate
Nothing has changed in human nature.
The reasons remain:
Security over uncertainty
Incentives over ideals
Survival over resistance
Just as Nandalal Banerjee operated within a system that rewarded compliance, modern professionals operate within structures that:
Reward loyalty
Penalize dissent
Normalize compromise
This is not about individual failure.
It is about system design.
The Most Dangerous Illusion
We like to believe:
“This is different. This is voluntary.”
And in many ways, it is.
But voluntary systems can still shape behavior so strongly that alternatives feel impossible.
When identity, income, and social status are tied to the system,
walking away feels like collapse.
That is how modern power sustains itself—not through force, but through dependence.
The Real Parallel
This is not colonialism.
This is not slavery.
But it is something worth examining:
A system where people participate in structures they do not fully control,
and sometimes do not fully agree with—
because the cost of resistance is too high.
That is the thread connecting past and present.
The Question That Remains
History is not asking you to judge Man Singh I or Nandalal Banerjee.
It is asking something far more uncomfortable:
If you were inside the system, would you recognize the moment when you were opening the gate?
Closing Thoughts...
The empire no longer arrives on horseback.
It arrives as an opportunity. As a career. As growth.
And most of the time, it does not need to break anything.
Because quietly, efficiently, almost invisibly—
The gate is opened from within.
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