A Note on Satire.
What is real, what is rhetorical, and why the difference matters less than you might think.
This is, in part, a work of satire
The Cockroach Janta Party is presented as a political party. It uses the visual language, the manifesto format, the slogan structure, and the ceremonial seriousness of a political party because that is the most precise vehicle available for the kind of commentary we want to make. The aesthetic is sincere. The format is sincere. The hyperbole, when it appears, is hyperbole.
If you arrived here believing this is a registered electoral organisation with a building, a treasurer, and a number on the ballot, you may be slightly disappointed. If you arrived here looking for political writing that takes its subject seriously, you are in the right place.
What is genuinely sincere
- The five demands.Every one of them — judicial reform, electoral integrity, fifty per cent women's reservation, media monopoly, anti-defection — represents an actual policy position the party would advocate. The figures, the mechanisms, and the targets are real.
- The analysis. The essays in /articles are written with the intent to inform, not to mislead. Where they cite specific incidents (such as the post-retirement nomination of a former Chief Justice to the Rajya Sabha), those incidents occurred and are matters of public record.
- The tone. The party voice is sharp, opinionated, and confrontational. That is the register; we mean it.
What is satirical
- The party's organisational claims.When the site says it has no PA, that is both true and a joke. When it says it is headquartered “wherever the wifi works,” that is both true and a joke. The TCJP currently has no salaried staff, no office, and no fundraising arm.
- Membership categories.“Overqualified, politically frustrated, civic anger, financially confused” is a real description of the constituency. It is also visibly self-mocking. We are not running aptitude tests.
- Specific rhetorical flourishes.Phrases like the “Approved” stamp, “Edition No. 001,” and “Live since yesterday” are part of the visual gag. They do not refer to actual licences or print editions.
On naming public figures
Several essays and demands name specific living individuals — current and former judicial appointees, heads of conglomerates that own broadcast licences, prime-time anchors who have functioned as government spokespersons. These references are commentary on public figures performing public functions, in the context of editorial criticism. They are factually grounded and protected as fair comment under Indian and international media-law norms.
If you are one of the figures referenced and you believe a specific factual claim is inaccurate, write to info@thecockroachjantaparty.org.in with the correction. We will review and, if the correction is substantiated, update the relevant passage and credit the source.
On the cockroach metaphor
We use the cockroach as a positive symbol of resilience. We are aware of the historical use of the term in genocidal propaganda — Rwanda in 1994, pre-war Europe before that. We reclaim the symbol specifically because it has been used against the demographic this party speaks for. Nothing in our use of the metaphor endorses or normalises its previous deployments. The full argument is in our essay on reclaimed symbols.
Bottom line
Read the site as you would read Private Eye, The Onion, or any other publication where serious political analysis arrives wrapped in the format that makes the analysis tolerable. The seriousness is the point. The wrapper is the gift.
Questions
contact@thecockroachjantaparty.org.in — subject line “Disclaimer query” gets routed to whoever is awake at the time.