Reclaiming the Cockroach: Why the Insect Is the Insignia
A one-minute read on why a political party named after a pest, drawn in vintage pamphlet style, is the most honest response to India in 2026.

Every movement worth remembering has an animal. Republicans have an elephant. Democrats, a donkey. Congress, a hand. BJP, a lotus. Most were chosen by committee. Ours was chosen by the people calling us names — and we accepted in writing.
Why a Cockroach
When governments compare a population to insects, it is rarely neutral. Rwanda 1994 was preceded by radio broadcasts calling Tutsis inyenzi — cockroaches. The Nazi apparatus used similar language in the 1930s. The rhetoric travels.
So when Indian political figures applied the word to young, online, jobless Indians, the choice was: ignore it, or take the symbol away. The moment the targeted group claims the slur, it stops loading.

The Practical Layer
- Survived three mass extinctions. Likely to survive a fourth.
- Can go a month without food. Holds its breath for forty minutes.
- Withstands radiation that kills humans in days.
For a movement made of unemployed graduates, chronically online critics, and people the formal economy discarded — you could not, frankly, design a better mascot.
The cockroach is the patient insect. It has been around for three hundred million years. It has, at minimum, two hundred left.
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