The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) chief, Mohan Bhagwat, recently asked his volunteers at Bardhaman, West Bengal, to 바카라˜바카라˜make efforts to unite Hindu society바카라, since according to him it is the 바카라œHindus who carry the responsibilities of Bharat바카라. The statement, prima facie, is a generous nudge to the Hindu community to be extra nationalistic바카라”a pretty innocuous statement바카라”but discursively, with a slight deeper probe, the call smacks of what may be called the 바카라˜metastasis of binary바카라™. It immediately throws up several binaries. One: us/them or self/other, wherein the Hindus are 바카라˜us바카라™ or 바카라˜self바카라™ and the rest of the religious groups are 바카라˜them바카라™ or 바카라˜other바카라™. Two: majority/minority where, in terms of numbers, the Hindus are imagined as the majority and the other religious groups as minorities. Three: among the real/pseudo nationals, it is the Hindus who are the 바카라˜real nationals바카라™ carrying the obligation, both political and religious, to shape up India and for the rest, to escape the pseudo-national tag, they must prove their nationalism and nation-building disposition time and again. And also, the unity/diversity binary, which stresses especially on Hindu unity, symbolising the Hindu nation. Against this Hindu unity lies the flourishing of this vast diversity only due to the tolerance of the majority. Such binaries spread from one part of the body politic to another, causing deep polarisation and lends to the crisis of common good.