No Job? Daughter Unmarried? Son Turned Rogue? Just Chant "Jai Shri Ram" - Problem Solved Says BJP MP in Parliament
What do you say to millions of unemployed youth, collapsing families, failing farmers, and broken households? According to a bjp mp speaking inside parliament, the answer is simple: chant “Shri Ram, Jay Ram, Jay Jay Ram” and everything will magically fall into place. Jobs, marriages, milk, morality, marriages again—problem solved.
The tragedy isn’t just the statement. It’s that the treasury benches laughed. Laughed—inside a parliament that costs taxpayers crores of rupees every single day to function. This wasn’t comedy. This was contempt.
💣 THE BRUTAL REALITY
1. parliament Is Not a Temple, It’s a Workplace
Faith is personal. Governance is professional. When lawmakers replace policy with prayers, they’re not expressing belief—they’re abdicating responsibility. Citizens didn’t elect MPs to chant solutions; they elected them to create them.
2. Crores Burned Daily for Slogans and Giggles
Every hour parliament runs, public money is spent—security, staff, logistics, infrastructure. And what do citizens get in return? Laughter at superstition masquerading as advice. This isn’t harmless nonsense. It’s a financial insult.
3. Unemployment Isn’t a Spiritual Problem—It’s a Policy Failure
Jobs don’t appear because of chants. They appear because of investment, planning, education, and accountability. Reducing structural economic failure to a religious slogan is not ignorance—it’s evasion.
4. Social Problems Aren’t Solved by Mantras
Marriages failing? youth going astray? Families under stress? These are outcomes of inflation, job insecurity, mental health neglect, and social pressure. Offering chants instead of solutions is the political equivalent of washing hands and walking away.
5. When MPs Laugh, It Signals Normalisation of Incompetence
The laughter in parliament matters. It tells citizens this mindset is not fringe—it’s mainstream. That ignorance is not embarrassing—it’s acceptable. That seriousness is optional.
6. Slogans Are the Last Refuge of Failed Governance
When governments have answers, they present data. When they have plans, they debate policy. When they have nothing, they sell emotion. Chants fill the vacuum where governance should be.
7. This Is How Democracies Decay—Not With Tanks, But With Trivialisation
No dramatic collapse. No sudden coup. Just a slow transformation where institutions turn unserious, accountability becomes optional, and elected representatives behave like influencers chasing applause.
8. Faith Is Being Weaponised to Cover Administrative Bankruptcy
This isn’t about devotion. It’s about deflection. religion becomes a shield behind which failure hides comfortably, knowing questioning it will be labelled “anti-faith.”
⚠️ FINAL HAMMER BLOW
A parliament that laughs at superstition while the country struggles is not governing—it’s mocking its own people. Citizens deserve answers, not chants. Policies, not punchlines. Competence, not comedy. When slogans replace solutions, democracy doesn’t die loudly—it rots publicly. And the bill, as always, is paid by the people.