The tractor rally on Republic Day came at the end of a two-month-long farmers바카라 movement바카라a strikingly durable and cohesive affair, judging by the numerous and disparate actors who are part of it. An 바카라actor바카라 called Deep Sidhu does not describe them. But he took the lead role in producing a situation that became an inflection point for the movement바카라indeed, for India바카라s democracy itself. At the end of the day, the Nishan Sahib, the religious flag of Sikhs, was fluttering alongside the Tricolor at Red Fort. The streets of Delhi saw some violence as the police and protesters바카라children of the same social universe바카라encountered each other in a drama over the formal procedures of permission or its absence. Unprecedented scenes were witnessed as tractors바카라the very symbol of India바카라s green revolution바카라moved past barricades, attacking police personnel who came in their way, as they moved towards the symbolic heart of New Delhi. Under strict orders not to open fire, over 300 policemen sustained injuries. Many of them got multiple fractures, jumping into the moat from the Red Fort ramparts to escape violent agitators. They put themselves at risk to maintain law and order바카라vulnerable, and visible, in a way they were not when violence raged in the Capital a year ago. Or visible only in less than flattering ways. That was at the end of the anti-CAA agitation, a remarkably similar episode of India바카라s citizenry speaking to its government. Being Muslim-led, that was more vulnerable to popular characterisations of 바카라anti-nationalism바카라. An allegation slightly more difficult to sustain when protesters come from the heartland of western UP, Haryana and Punjab.