
“Tax Default = Jail, Pothole Death = No One Jailed: India’s Law is a Circus of Hypocrisy” ⚖️🚨
india doesn’t run on justice—it runs on double standards. A woman in delhi skips filing tax returns. Six months' jail. A woman in mangalore dies because of a pothole? Nobody behind bars. That’s not just injustice—it’s systemic cruelty dressed as governance. Here’s the slap-in-the-face reality of how indian law protects the powerful and punishes the powerless:
1. When Citizens Err, They’re Criminals
Forget intent or circumstance—if you miss filing tax returns or default on paperwork, the law comes crashing down like a hammer.
2. When the System Errs, Nobody’s Guilty
Crumbling infrastructure, potholes, negligence by officials—these are “accidents,” never crimes. Deaths get reduced to statistics.
3. Jail for Small people, Excuses for Big People
The law is designed to hunt the easy targets—the common taxpayer, the salaried class, and the shopkeeper. But when politicians, contractors, or civic bodies fail, loopholes magically appear.
4. Negligence Kills, But Accountability is Dead
Every pothole, collapsed bridge, or delayed ambulance is a direct result of negligence. But responsibility is so fragmented that no one ever faces jail.
5. The Hypocrisy of indian Justice
One woman gets caged for missing taxes. Another loses her life to potholes. The common factor? Both are victims. Only one is punished.
6. The Law Shields Its Own
The system is rigged so that if the rulers or their machinery fail, punishment is near impossible. If a citizen fails, punishment is instant.
7. Justice in india = Power Play
Law here isn’t blind—it sees money, power, and position. It crushes the weak and bows before the strong.
🔥 Final Punchline: In india, potholes kill—but it’s the taxpayers who go to jail. Justice isn’t blind; it’s corrupt, biased, and weaponized against the very people it should protect.