Exposed: Anjana Om Kashyap's Savage Hypocrisy—From Bashing Manmohan to Modi Muzzle!

SIBY JEYYA
Man, if you're fed up with media bias, this one's gonna hit like a truck—Anjana Om Kashyap, that fiery anchor who's never short on opinions, is getting roasted online for her blatant hypocrisy on fuel prices. Back in the day, she tore into the old government over a measly hike, but now? Radio silence on a much bigger sting under the current regime. It's the kind of two-data-faced drama that exposes how some journos pick their battles based on who's in power. Let's rip this apart, point by brutal point, and see why it's got everyone talking.



  1. Flashback to 2012: 

    Dr. manmohan singh is PM, and the UPA crew bumps petrol prices by just 78 paise a liter. Anjana goes full throttle on her show, hammering them for 30 straight minutes as anti-middle-class villains. petrol was chilling at ₹65, LPG at ₹400—hardly apocalypse territory, but she made it sound like the end of days. Fast-forward to now, and it's a whole different story.



  2. Cut to 2026: 

    The government's just jacked up LPG prices by a whopping ₹60, hitting families right where it hurts. But Anjana? Not a peep. No fiery segments, no calling out the powers that be. Folks are asking, where's that same outrage? It's like she's got a selective mute button when it comes to critiquing Modi—can't even muster one question without risking her spot.




  3. The hypocrisy stings extra hard because it's so obvious. In the old clip, she's all passion and fury, defending the little guy against "greedy" policies. Today, with costs soaring and people struggling, her silence screams louder than any rant. Is it fear, favoritism, or just plain old bias? Whatever it is, it's eroding trust in media faster than you can say "double standards."




  4. Bottom line, this isn't just about one anchor—it's a mirror to how indian journalism sometimes plays favorites. If you're slamming one side for pennies, you better bring the heat for rupees too. Wake up, media: Consistency isn't optional. Otherwise, you're just part of the problem, not the watchdog we need.

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