
When ordinary citizens are struggling to manage rising costs, the sons of India’s political elite seem to be busy building empires shielded by unchecked privilege. The latest storm revolves around Nitin Gadkari’s son and a company accused of looting people under the fashionable label of “green fuel.”
Here’s why the issue has the nation fuming:
1. The Audacity of Power
In any democracy, public representatives are expected to set examples of integrity. Instead, political heirs use surnames like bank accounts, drawing limitless credibility while the common man bleeds dry.
2. SEBI’s Convenient Silence
The stock market regulator — SEBI — appears to be in a self-induced coma. No questions, no inquiries, no transparency. When powerful surnames are involved, accountability conveniently disappears.
3. Green Fuel or Green Scam?
What is marketed as “sustainable innovation” looks more like a cash grab with zero checks. Investors and ordinary citizens are sold dreams of clean energy, while insiders laugh their way to the bank.
4. The Inequality Slap
While the middle class counts every rupee of tax and faces penalties for the smallest defaults, politically connected families enjoy a license to loot, immune to scrutiny.
5. The shield of Privilege
Had it been any private entrepreneur without political bloodlines, watchdogs and media panels would be all over them. But here, privilege acts as the ultimate shield.
6. Citizens Are Not Blind
Anger is spilling on social media. people are openly calling this out for what it is: daylight robbery dressed up as innovation. The gap between rulers and ruled has never felt wider.
7. India’s Great Betrayal
This isn’t just about one family or one company. It’s about the systemic rot that lets power protect plunder, while ordinary indians are told to “tighten their belts” and “trust the system.”
⚡ Final Word: india doesn’t need more slogans about green growth or sustainable futures. It needs transparency, accountability, and an end to dynastic privilege masquerading as business innovation. Otherwise, every such venture will look less like entrepreneurship and more like robbery in broad daylight.