
A so-called “Hindu baba” sits scrolling reels on his phone while his disciple—lost in blind faith—washes his feet and drinks the murky water like nectar. If this isn’t the height of stupidity, what is? This isn’t spirituality. This isn’t devotion. This is exploitation at its dirtiest form, where religion is used as a tool to turn thinking humans into brain-dead devotees. Fake godmen thrive in india because we allow them to, because people refuse to question, and because blind belief often outweighs basic logic.
1. The Reel baba Culture
Not meditating, not guiding, not preaching wisdom—just scrolling reels like any bored teenager. Is this the “guru” meant to lead people toward enlightenment?
2. From Feet to Faithlessness
Making a disciple wash your feet in water is disgusting enough. But making him drink that dirty water? That’s not spirituality, that’s humiliation disguised as holiness.
3. Blind Faith = Open Wallets
These fake babas thrive because their disciples don’t just offer dirty water respect—they offer cash, gold, land, and unquestioned loyalty.
4. When religion Becomes Business
Spirituality in india has become a billion-dollar scam industry where self-proclaimed gurus market themselves like influencers while their devotees surrender brain cells.
5. The Psychology of Devotees
Why do educated people still fall for this nonsense? Because fear, guilt, and blind conditioning from childhood make them vulnerable to exploitation.
6. Selective Outrage
If such stunts happened in the name of any other religion, outrage would explode. But in india, Hinduism’s fake babas keep milking followers because questioning them is “blasphemy.”
7. Wake Up, Don’t Wash Feet
The only way to kill the baba circus is to question, to doubt, to use logic. Respecting faith doesn’t mean surrendering your dignity.
👉 At the end of the day, a guru scrolling reels while his devotee drinks dirty foot water isn’t religion—it’s a circus. And the only clowns are the ones who still believe.