I suppose any historical fact can be used or abused by people to serve their own agenda and it is difficult for me escape the risk of that, except to point out two things. One, where I talk about contrast and what was being destroyed, the economy and the industry and so on of India of the 18th century which was not exactly ancient India, but it was actually Muslim-ruled India for the most parts. Bengal was ruled by Siraj-ud-Daulah and a Mughal was sitting in Delhi. Of course, a large part of the country was controlled by the Marathas and the Mughal emperors became hostage of the Marathas. But it was not, to put it bluntly, the Hindutva notion of India, it was a composite India after many centuries of Muslim influence and involvement. Second, where I venture into counter-factuals, I don’t hark back to some idealized view of ancient India. On the contrary, I talk about extrapolating from the realities of that time. So, if the British had never come, what was more likely would have been the consolidation of the Maratha confederacy over larger areas of India, under the titular rule of a Mughal emperor. We would have had that evolving into some sort of constitutional monarchy. Something like this happened in Malaysia where the different sultans agreed to accept an elected monarch amongst them as the king. Many countries have managed to evolve politically in modern ways under ancient kingship, the Japanese being the best known example.