Goa Burns, IndiGo Collapses, Air Turns Toxic — And Parliament Debates Vande Mataram for 10 Hours

SIBY JEYYA

india is hurting. Twenty-five people died in goa due to alleged negligence. Thousands cried in airports after IndiGo’s operational collapse. air pollution is suffocating millions. Yet today, parliament will spend ten uninterrupted hours debating Vande Mataram. Not safety, not regulation, not accountability — but a symbolic performance that critics say is designed to distract, deflect, and divide.




1. Goa’s fire Didn’t Kill 25 people — Negligence Did, Critics Say


A nightclub operating without a fire NOC, without emergency exits, without enforcement — that’s not an accident. That’s a system collapsing under corruption, incompetence, and greed. people didn’t die because of fate. They died because the State looked away.


2. IndiGo’s Mega-Meltdown Exposed India’s Fragile Skies


Thousands stranded. Desperate passengers sleeping on airport floors. airlines are allegedly bending FDTL rules and arm-twisting regulators. A Parliamentary panel warned about this months ago. Nothing changed. Why? Because governance has turned reactive instead of responsible.


3. Parliament’s Priority Today: A 10-Hour Debate on Vande Mataram


Not aviation safety.
Not regulatory reform.
Not disaster accountability.
Not toxic air choking Delhi.


But Vande Mataram — a debate critics argue is engineered to shift national conversation away from present-day failures to century-old symbolism.


4. The Oldest Trick in the Book: Blame Nehru, Avoid Responsibility


Whenever things break, distract the public. Rewrite history. Blame the past. Critics say today’s debate isn’t about patriotism — it’s about manufacturing outrage, creating division, and drowning out questions the government does not want to answer.


5. India’s Burning Issues Get zero Airtime


No discussion on:
• 25 deaths in Goa
• Aviation collapse
• ATC shortages
• Regulatory weakness
• air pollution
• Infrastructure failures
• Centralisation crisis


When parliament becomes a stage for political theatre instead of national problem-solving, people suffer — and problems escalate.


6. Centralisation Has Made India’s Pillars Weak, Brittle, and Ready to Break


When all decisions flow upward, accountability flows nowhere. Critics argue India’s systems — aviation, safety, law enforcement, environmental regulation — are cracking because power is concentrated, not distributed. When one pillar fails, everything shakes.


7. “Burning Issues” Are Being Ignored — Literally


Whether it’s the toxic air in delhi or the fire in goa, the message is clear: without strong systems, nothing works. And right now, nothing feels strong. people are scared to travel, scared to breathe, scared to trust institutions that once felt stable.


8. A Nation That Cannot Guarantee Safety Cannot Guarantee Anything


India’s biggest crisis today isn’t the fire, the flights, or the smog. It’s the erosion of trust. When citizens can’t rely on safety standards, on regulators, on enforcement, or on leadership that data-faces problems instead of avoiding them, the country stands on a fault line.


9. We Are Divided, We Are Distracted, and We Are Drifting


A fractured society cannot hold itself together. When everyday governance collapses, but public attention is hijacked into symbolic battles, the cracks deepen. And critics say india is now witnessing the consequences — in the skies, on the roads, in the air, and in the morgue.




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