If you see someone throwing trash on the road, dont confront him. If you do, then you may be assaulted or end up dead.
Similarly, don't try to correct the political/ religious opinion of your cab driver or the salon executive. Because in both cases, you are in a vulnerable position.
Only do the right thing when there is no danger to your physical safety and well-being. Teach your children to read the situation first.
You don't be the saviour and let the police or whoever's duty is to fix the thing do it for you.
Unsolicited bravery in India can lead to your untimely death. No one will remember what you did, but your family will suffer forever.
Don't listen to social media BS about doing the 'right thing' always.
She should lose her job. She shouldn’t be an Anganwadi worker with that attitude. And if there had been any child protective services in the country, she should have been flagged and they should have taken her own children from her care. People like this have no business being around any child.
Hello @jaipur_police, why did you pour hot water on this girl just to clear the way for a mere public servant, Bhajan Lal?
She suffered burns on her chest, hands, and legs.
You didn’t even stop to help her.
Who are you going to blame now?
Around 5,700 dowry deaths were registered in India last year.
1.33Lakhs additional cases for domestic cruelty......
Let's say even 33000 of them are genuine........( Because I know some scums will say that all cases are fake)
Reports also suggest roughly 150–160 cases a year of wives killing husbands (based on limited available data, since there is no official national figure).
Yet, social media is increasingly filled with men saying, "I'm scared. I don't want to get married."
If isolated crimes are the yardstick for deciding whether an entire gender is too dangerous to marry, then by that logic, women had far greater reason to stop marrying men a long time ago.
@hippogriff777@venom1s She clearly kicked the child. Why do you have to deny that ( even for sarcasm)?. Crime is gender neutral. Hope this lady gets identified and be put in jail.
Sia is guilty. She should face the harshest punishment .
But let’s stop pretending society suddenly cares about victims.
Women are tortured, murdered, burned, and buried every single day. Most of their names never trend. Most never get prime-time debates. Most are forgotten before the investigation even begins.
Take Madhu’s case.
📍 Manesar, Gurugram | 27 May 2026
Just three months after her wedding, 24-year-old Madhu allegedly begged her uncle, “Take me away from here. They’ll kill me.”
Days later, her in-laws claimed she had run away with jewellery.
Police eventually broke open a secretly rented room allegedly used by her husband and found her decomposed body hidden in the bathroom of his girlfriend.
The Sia , Atul Subhash and Sonam Raghuvanshi’s case dominated headlines for days , months and years .
Madhu’s case happened just last month.
If your outrage only exists when a woman is the accused, it’s not about justice. It’s about selective outrage.
Pune murder case is NOT a case of Pseudo Feminism. Remember there is a guy Chetan involved as much as Siya.
It is a case of -
1. Criminality(Crime is Gender neutral)
2. Toxic and controlled upbringing
3. Patriarchal and societal pressures
4. Compulsive Marriage Institution
Indian men are unsafe.
Please stay indoors. If you have to step outside, only go with your mother or sister, never alone. There's absolutely no need to be out after dark. And if you must go, cover your face with a scarf.
Why?
Because Indian men are unsafe.
Twitter is full of men vs. women wars. Every timeline is overflowing with hate and toxicity.
Meanwhile, I just received my seventh wedding invitation for July.
Seven.
Sometimes it's a good reminder that Twitter isn't real life. The world is still beautiful....
A maid from my colony, whom I've known for almost 15 years, was abandoned by her husband after they had three children. She was still very young. He just ran away and didn't know where.
She started working in people's homes: sweeping, mopping, washing dishes, cooking just to keep her children alive.
Years later, her son remarried after his first wife passed away. His new wife started mistreating his daughter and then with no other option,that elderly woman brought her granddaughter to her rental room.
That Amma ended up raising her granddaughter too. She brought her up and even got her married.
Just imagine that. She raised her own children, then raised her granddaughter all by herself, surviving on the bare minimum she earned doing domestic work. And in a rental home.
Women have been carrying families on their shoulders like this for generations, often without recognition.