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๐๐๐ง๐๐จ๐ฆ ๐๐ก๐จ๐ฎ๐ ๐ก๐ญ๐ฌ: ๐๐๐ง๐ฃ๐๐ ๐๐๐๐ฅ๐ฌ ๐ญ๐ข๐ซ๐๐.
Not weak - just exhausted.
Panjab is not collapsing by accident. It is being slowly dismantled - layer by layer - by corruption dressed as governance.
A land that once fed a nation now struggles to save its own children. Fields still turn green every season, but homes quietly turn empty. Some leave for foreign lands chasing dignity, others disappear into powders and needles chasing escape.
Drugs didnโt arrive overnight. They walked in slowly - protected by silence, nourished by greed, and guarded by power. Everyone whispers about it, yet nobody seems surprised anymore. The tragedy isnโt addiction alone. The tragedy is normalization.
The real question is no longer โWho brought drugs?โ The question is โWho benefits from keeping Panjab numb?โ
An addicted population does not protest. A struggling youth does not organize. A distracted society does not question power.
Police institutions, meant to enforce law, often appear trapped between duty and orders. Honest officers exist, but systems punish integrity faster than corruption. Transfers become threats. Promotions become rewards for loyalty - not justice. When law enforcement becomes politically managed, crime stops fearing consequences.
Meanwhile, politicians perform outrage like theatre. Every election promises a โwar against drugs,โ yet the war never ends - because ending it would expose too many alliances.
Governments change; networks remain untouched. Criminal gangs flourish where governance retreats. They recruit from unemployment, frustration, and broken aspirations.
When legitimate opportunity disappears, illegitimate power becomes attractive. Guns become symbols of status because society has failed to provide dignity. Where governance weakens, fear organizes itself.
Young men searching for identity find belonging in violence. Guns replace guidance. Loyalty replaces law. And somewhere in between all this - mothers pray longer, fathers worry silently, and an entire generation learns resilience the hard way.
Panjab once stood as the backbone of India - agriculturally, culturally, spiritually. Today, it risks becoming an example of how systemic corruption can hollow out even the strongest societies.
The tragedy is not that people donโt know the truth. The tragedy is that truth has become routine.
But the hardest battles are always internal. The fight today is not against an enemy across borders - it is against decay within systems, minds, and morals.
But history shows one thing clearly: Panjab never stays silent forever.
When institutions fail repeatedly, societies eventually demand accountability - not speeches, not slogans, but consequences.
The real war Panjab needs is not just against drugs. It is against political complicity, institutional decay, and the normalization of corruption.
Until then, every promise of reform will sound like another campaign speech echoing over empty fields.
It lives in farmers waking before sunrise. In students who still choose books over shortcuts. In voices that refuse silence. Maybe Punjab isnโt broken.
Maybe it is waiting - for honesty to become louder than fear.
Just my random thoughts on a weekend.
Happy International Womenโs Day. The Khalsa Panth embodies equality for Sikh women. Motherโs of the Khalsa have always shown great leadership and valour, with their roles and sacrifices everlasting in Sikh History as an example for us all. May we all be inspired by our Kaurs ๐๐ฝ
Mass funerals for 168 girls & teachers murdered in the Minab girls school ๐ฎ๐ท bombing
The UN calls it:
โA grave violation of humanitarian lawโ
No coverage on โMainstream Mediaโ
No call for Trump ๐บ๐ธ & Netanyahu ๐ฎ๐ฑ to answer in The Hague
Shameful.
This is the crowd gathered for the funeral of 168 school girls who were killed by Trump and Netanyahu.
They did not do anything to America
They did not do anything to Israel
They just went to school one day and returned in coffins in pieces. ๐