“CJI BR Gavai’s vishnu Mockery: When the Judiciary Crosses the Line From Justice to Jokebook”




🔥 Intro:

Never before has India’s highest constitutional authority mocked Hindu faith so casually. When Chief Justice of india BR Gavai told a devotee to “go pray to Lord Vishnu” instead of addressing the petition seriously, it wasn’t just a remark — it was a slap on the face of millions who revere Sanatan Dharma.


This isn’t wit. This is mockery from the Bench. And under the self-proclaimed “Ambedkar Republic of India” narrative, it reveals a dangerous bias that Hindus will neither forget nor forgive.




1️⃣ From Bench to Blasphemy

A judge is supposed to uphold faith and law, not ridicule it. Gavai’s remark wasn’t judicial — it was juvenile.



2️⃣ Would He Dare Say the Same to Other Religions?

Would CJI ever mock Prophet Muhammad or Jesus Christ from the Bench? The answer is obvious. The selective courage is telling.



3️⃣ Ambedkar Republic = Licence to Mock?

By hiding behind the “Ambedkar Republic” narrative, Gavai thinks he is untouchable. But this isn’t reform — it’s an insult disguised as progress.



4️⃣ Faith on Trial

Every Hindu who bows before vishnu now wonders: if even the CJI thinks our gods are punchlines, what’s left of “secular respect”?



5️⃣ Power Without Responsibility = Arrogance

The gavel doesn’t give the right to gloat. The judiciary should deliver justice, not cheap one-liners.



6️⃣ Silence Would Have Been Golden

Gavai could have simply dismissed the petition. Instead, he crossed into mockery. That’s not authority — that’s abuse of it.



7️⃣ Call for Accountability

When the line between irrelevance and insult blurs, impeachment isn’t radical — it’s constitutional correction.



💥 Closing:

The judiciary isn’t a comedy club, and gods aren’t punchlines. Chief Justice BR Gavai’s words will be remembered not as wit but as wounds inflicted on Sanatan Dharma from the very chair that should have protected dignity. If faith can’t find respect in the supreme Court, where can it?

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