u/Potential_Lime_9237

Typical chadd! playbook

Craft a narrative

Execute it through loyalists and sellouts across respective fields

Amplify it disproportionately through media channels

Deploy IT cells to flood platforms with copy-pasted messaging until it spreads widely across the country

Capitalize on the momentum like win elections, deepen divisions, and push through questionable policies during the chaos "until the court steps in and frees the accuseds"

Ensure that any bail, acquittal, or corrective outcome is downplayed or buried, so it rarely reaches neutral audiences unless their social media algorithm allows it, which contributes to a very low number

reddit.com
u/Potential_Lime_9237 — 3 days ago

If you don't read the newspaper you're uninformed. If you read it, you're misinformed- Mark Twain

If you’ve been following the news lately, you’ve probably come across this wave of highly controversial news; almost like a form of corporate-level radicalism. What’s striking is how closely some of these stories resemble the themes from previously ridiculed propaganda styled movie on Kerala. It almost feels like reality is being shaped to retroactively justify those narratives.

So why am I not buying into it, despite it being all over the news?

Because there’s a pattern. One that keeps repeating.

First, there’s a trigger story. Often, it oddly aligns with themes from earlier movies or narratives that were once mocked or dismissed.

Then comes the social media wave:

* Posts flood timelines saying, *“Dekha, humne pehle hi kaha tha”*

* The narrative gets amplified across platforms

* Even relatively neutral people, without strong biases, start engaging and push the conversation further out of sensitivity.

* By this stage, the topic becomes so sensitive that anyone who notices the pattern or questions it is quickly shamed or dismissed.

At this point, it stops looking like coordinated propaganda and starts feeling like “public sentiment"

Then comes what’s missing:

* You rarely see the other side of the story

* No proper defense, no statements from families, no detailed follow-ups

* The accused are suddenly reported as arrested, eliminated, or “dealt with”, with little to no verifiable information.

And just like that, the story disappears. No closure, no accountability, no clarity on what actually happened or to whom. It strategically doesn't matter because the damage has been done.

Honestly, claims like forced practices in corporate environments? That’s where it starts sounding completely unrealistic. Yes, I’ve personally come across a few radical individuals, and unpleasant experiences do exist. But the idea that such things could systematically happen in a corporate setup like forcing beef and namaz lol come on. On top of that, it is casually brushed off by HR is just ridiculous. How can so many people at once not worry about feeding their family and paying bills? Haha please.

Even if such fetish exist, it can not be executed in India, let alone inside a multinational company. You'll see biases or discrimination at the most.

At this rate, it wouldn’t be surprising if the next “story” mirrors yet another dramatic plot. Something like a burkha-clad woman planting a bomb in a public place and then, almost predictably, similar news start surfacing in the news. It shall, therefore, follow the same pattern

And the cycle continues:

Narrative → Amplification → Public reaction → Sudden resolution → Silence.

No details. No scrutiny. No real answers.

Finally, to conclude, this doesn't happen in Kerela, Kashmir, or Meerut. It happens in Nasik. A popular RSS hub. I'll leave up to you to figure out what's easier to manage here. Forcing something down your throat or a good peak detailing script.

reddit.com
u/Potential_Lime_9237 — 5 days ago