Rethinking Democracy, Economy, and Global Power: A Civilizational Shift Towards Bharat's Dharmic Roots

The current Western, Abrahamic thought process, which has defined global institutions like the UN since World War II, is now being questioned. Dr Ankit Shah highlights that the United Nations Human Rights Declaration assumes democracy to be a universal ideal—but asks: Who decided that democracy is the best system?

They argue that ancient Bharat’s autonomous Janapada model was more advanced than today’s flawed democratic system, which relies on the assumption that all voters act rationally—an assumption many believe is false. Therefore, modern democracy is seen as inherently unstable.

The forecast includes future clashes in Europe, especially in the UK, between native populations and radicalized migrants from the Middle East, suggesting that Europe may rethink democracy and secularism. Dr Shah predicts a “one family, one vote” system might replace “one person, one vote”, marking a fundamental political shift.

The collapse of the fiat currency model is seen as the beginning of the return to indigenous, self-sustaining, dharmic economic systems. Nations, especially in Asia and the Gulf, are expected to reject Western materialistic indexes like per capita income, which don't fit models like joint family economics where resources are shared efficiently.

There’s a growing realization in Gulf countries that decades of radicalization were partly driven by attempts to prop up the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency. Now, even West Asian nations are looking back towards India for inspiration.

The world is expected to shift away from employer–employee relationships towards self-employment, local manufacturing, and rural economies, valuing social capital over material wealth.

Dr Shah also predicts massive geopolitical restructuring, where India, Russia, and China will carve out spheres of influence. The Indian Ocean will remain a crucial hub, with 90% of global resources flowing through it.

Furthermore, US deep-state tech—from companies like General Electric, Boeing, and Airbus—will gradually shift operations to India. By 2030, India is expected to become a hub of hard power, not just soft power, with major technological and manufacturing capacities.

The long-term vision includes the emergence of Akhand Bharat, culturally and economically spanning from Saudi Arabia to Laos and Cambodia. Even China, facing a demographic slowdown, may adjust to this shift and acknowledge India’s civilizational resurgence.

In essence, Dr Shah envisions a return of Bharat to global leadership, reclaiming its 1700-year legacy, which was only interrupted by the last 300 years of colonialism.

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