A line stretches out from Assam and wraps itself around India, like a new Tropic of Cancer or an invisible Radcliffe Line, but changing meaning along its path. To understand it, one must go back to its place of origin. On December 11, 2019, as the Rajya Sabha passed the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, Assam was being convulsed by a monumental surge of anger. In its history, marked by 600 years of uninterrupted Ahom reign, Badan Barphukan is one of the most reviled men, his name associated with what바카라s considered the highest treason바카라in 1817, he invited the Burmese army to help him capture the throne. This led to the fall of the Ahom empire and capture of Assam by the British. Since then, the word 바카라Badan바카라 has become synonymous with 바카라traitor바카라 in Assamese. Cut back to December 2019. Protests had erupted across the state바카라huge masses of people on streets, smoke billowing out of burning tyres, curfew, the army on standby, and a Kashmir-like internet lockdown, albeit temporary. Among the crowd, denouncing the contentious bill, using the innocuous-sounding shorthand CAB, many are identifying present-day 바카라Badans바카라바카라politicians seen as having sacrificed the state바카라s interests at the altar of Hindutva politics. Heading the list are leaders who once led the six-year-long movement against what later gained currency as 바카라illegal migration바카라 (or 바카라illegal infiltration바카라), especially from Bangladesh.