Reservation or Extortion? Richest SC/ST Guy Pays ZERO while Poor General Category Student Pays ₹95,000
7 Reasons India’s education “Justice” System Is a Cruel Joke
In the name of social justice, India’s education system has turned into an institutionalized extortion racket. A poor General Category student pays ₹95,000, while even the richest SC/ST student walks away paying ₹0. This isn’t justice—it’s robbery disguised as equality. Here’s why the system is broken beyond repair.
1. Merit Is Penalized, Not Rewarded
A brilliant General Category student, even from a struggling background, is punished with sky-high fees. Meanwhile, caste-based privilege ensures that someone with fewer marks but the “right” certificate pays nothing.
2. Rich Dalit vs Poor General – Who’s Really Needy?
A millionaire SC/ST student enjoys full subsidies, while a rickshaw-puller’s General Category child drowns in debt. Where is the logic? Where is the justice?
3. Vote-Bank politics Over True Equality
Politicians cling to this system because it guarantees votes. Instead of empowering the poor across all communities, they weaponize caste and divide society further.
4. Institutionalized Robbery
Forcing one group to subsidize another isn’t social justice—it’s economic exploitation. students from General Category families are literally being robbed in the name of “upliftment.”
5. Quality Suffers, Resentment Rises
When admissions and fees are dictated by caste, not competence, educational institutions become weaker. Resentment brews, not harmony.
6. Zero Incentive to Reform
As long as this rotten system continues, there’s no incentive to bring in income-based reservations or real need-based support that could actually uplift the poor.
7. Equality Cannot Be Built on Injustice
A policy that crushes merit, divides students, and rewards privilege under the garb of caste can never build equality. It will only deepen fault lines until the system collapses under its own hypocrisy.
🔥 The Harsh Truth
What india calls social justice is nothing but state-sponsored extortion. A poor student pays ₹95,000, while a rich student pays ₹0—this is not equality, this is a sick joke. Unless we demand reforms, the dream of a fair india will remain a lie.