Skip to main content

Posts

Why Leaked Videos Go Viral in India: Internet Morality, Hypocrisy, and Blame Culture

Why Leaked Videos Go Viral in India: Internet Morality, Hypocrisy, and Blame Culture The recent controversy involving Sofik SK and Dustu Sonali shows something uncomfortable about today’s internet: people get angry even when the ones being targeted are not at fault. Their private moments were leaked without consent, yet the outrage was directed at them instead of the person who committed the real crime. This reaction exposes a deeper problem in our digital culture. India is growing fast in technology, but our behaviour online still lacks maturity. People react instantly, judge blindly, and treat real lives like entertainment. Outrage has become a habit. Many users don’t care about the truth; they respond to whatever goes viral because anger feels powerful and easy. Instead of asking who leaked the video, many began blaming the victims. This is the same old pattern of victim-blaming that still exists in society. It’s easier for people to say “they shouldn’t have made the video” than to ...

If ₹12 lakh crore vanishes every year and no one notices, are we even a democracy?

If ₹12 lakh crore vanishes every year and no one notices, are we even a democracy? India is not poor. India is not helpless. India is being robbed— systematically, silently, and shamelessly . Every single year, this country loses over ₹10–12 lakh crore (USD 120–150 billion) to corruption. That’s not an exaggeration. That’s not some hidden foreign conspiracy. That’s money stolen by our own people, from our own people , under our own noses. Yet we don’t scream. We don’t protest. We normalize it. Let’s be clear: this isn’t "chai-paani" level bribery. This is economic warfare against the nation’s soul . And it’s time we stop pretending this is normal. The Annual Loot: Real Numbers, Real Theft Here is how India bleeds over ₹10–12 lakh crore every single year: 1. Government Procurement and Infrastructure: ₹3–4 lakh crore According to data from the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) and studies by the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP) , up to 25% ...