If no issue was too small for Nehru, as the above examples show, no issue was also too big for him, whether of a philosophical or technical nature. In his speech in the Lok Sabha on August 19, 1959, justifying President’s rule in Kerala, he deviated from the legal issues and dilated on the philosophy of satyagraha. “...Surely, this House will remember that in the old days, when satyagraha and all these direct action movements were pretty common, how Gandhiji stopped the whole movement, because he thought it was going wrong; he stopped it. He even said that he was the one and only man in India who could perform satyagraha, nobody else.... If what I have said is satyagraha, then there was no satyagraha in Kerala, none at all, because I have seldom seen any place so thick with hatred and incipient violence, it was a case of thick walls of hatred and incipient violence, group hatred.... If there is so much hatred and so much bitterness about it, then it is dangerous to conduct any satyagraha, you may call it by any other name; it is not satyagraha.” In many ways it seems he was speaking to us today when he said that if we want to invoke Gandhi then “incipient violence and group hatred” as a subtext are impermissible. Gandhiji, he believed, would have stopped it. And we know what that “it” is. Gandhiji cannot be invoked lightly. Nehru thought deeply about foundational issues. Professor Bhagwan Josh has detailed how he deliberately chose the dharmachakra of Ashoka as our most valued national symbol to signal our commitment to peace and non-violence.