Nepal Just Slashed Petrol ₹2 & Diesel ₹12 While India Jacked LPG by ₹993: The Brutal Wake-Up Call No Politician Wants
Brother, look at this madness.
In Nepal, petrol just dropped by ₹2 and diesel by ₹12. Simple. Quick relief at the pump.
Meanwhile, in India? One LPG cylinder just shot up by a jaw-dropping ₹993.
Not two rupees. Not even twenty. Nine hundred and ninety-three rupees. On the gas you use to cook your dal-chawal every single day.
That’s not inflation. That’s daylight robbery dressed up as policy.
And yet the same tired line keeps playing: “Leaders are doing their best.” Bullshit. Politicians aren’t gods. They’re employees. Expensive, arrogant, out-of-touch employees who keep raising the bill while the common man tightens his belt.
This is exactly why governments must be questioned, challenged, and replaced when they start costing more than they deliver. When the price of survival keeps climbing, and the people paying the bill get poorer, you don’t pray harder. You change the damn management.
Nepal just showed it’s possible. A small cut, a small relief. No drama, no excuses. India? Another thousand-rupee slap on the same kitchen that’s already struggling.
The message is crystal clear: when your leaders become too expensive, fire them. Don’t worship them. Don’t defend them. Don’t wait for the next election cycle to “hope” things improve.
Change them like you change a leaky gas stove that’s burning your money faster than it cooks your food.
Because at the end of the day, the only thing more expensive than bad governance… is pretending it’s acceptable.