In December 2012, a young woman was raped for hours in a moving bus in Delhi. She later died from her injuries. That moment shook India. Streets filled. Voices rose. The nation claimed its conscience had awakened.
At that very same time, somewhere in this country, a 15-year-old girl was growing up unaware that 13 years later she would face the same horror in NCR but this time in silence.
On 28 December 2025, a 28-year-old woman was gang-raped for over two hours in a moving van and thrown onto the road, broken and bleeding.
The crime was similar.
The brutality was the same.
But the society was different.
In 2012, we were outraged.
In 2025, we are numb.
More than 100 women are raped every single day in India. Not as headlines. Not as emergencies. Just as statistics we scroll past. This is not ignorance. This is moral exhaustion. A dead conscience.
A society that can no longer be shocked by violence against women has already failed them. And make no mistake: if this doesn’t disturb you, if it doesn’t anger you, if it doesn’t move you to demand change, then the crime isn’t happening somewhere else. It is happening within us, and in your mind.
The conscience must rise again.
Because every woman deserves a safer country. And every society that looks away deserves to be called out.
INSANE: Kyren Lacy was cleared of causing a fatal crash, but police had coached a witness to implicate him, despite the witness insisting the woman was at fault. Officers turned off their body cams before an unnamed statement was drafted.
Kyren Lacy took his own life because of lies that were spread about him. That kind of harm is real and his family deserves justice and accountability for what they’ve been put through.
The best decision I ever made was marrying you, @MichelleObama. For 33 years, I’ve admired your strength, grace, and determination — and the fact that you look so good doing it all. Happy anniversary!