From Fake Bombs to Stolen Clinics: BJP’s Two-Step Plan to Fool a Nation

From Fake Bombs to Stolen Clinics: BJP’s Two-Step Plan to Fool a Nation

Let’s not kid ourselves—India under the BJP isn't being governed, it’s being gaslit. At this point, the party isn’t even pretending to lead. They’ve outsourced “development” to branding agencies, outsourced governance to billionaires, and outsourced responsibility to ghosts—because no one in this regime ever seems accountable for anything.

Take Delhi’s Mohalla Clinics, the pride of the Aam Aadmi Party—free, accessible healthcare for millions, praised internationally. So naturally, BJP’s response isn’t to build more—it’s to rename, repaint, and relabel them as their own. Because why bother creating anything when you can just steal the credit and hope nobody notices?

And who’s going to call them out anyway? The media? Please. Most of them now moonlight as BJP’s marketing interns, obediently reporting on Modi’s latest outfit while skipping over little things like, say, the collapse of the education system.

Let’s talk about that too—the BJP's flagship employment scheme: the Paper Leak Industry™. Competitive exams in India are no longer about merit; they’re about who gets the leaked paper first. Under Modi’s rule, paper leaks have become such a well-oiled machine, it’s almost impressive. UPSC, SSC, teacher eligibility, you name it—they’ve all been hit. And the results? Millions of dreams trashed, careers stalled, youth pushed into despair. But hey, as long as Ambani’s stock is up, everything’s “vikasit,” right?

Here’s the bitter truth: an educated India is dangerous to BJP’s survival. That’s why the system is rigged to fail the student and reward the scammer. Because the last thing a prime minister who couldn’t pass beyond 4th grade wants is a population smart enough to ask questions—especially when he himself has managed to dodge a single open press conference for 11 years straight. Think about that. Eleven years in power, and not one press conference. Even dictators in banana republics pretend better.

And then there’s Punjab, where the circus really kicked into gear. Congress leader Pratap Bajwa decided to moonlight as a thriller novelist, inventing stories about 18 bombs going off and 32 more waiting. No evidence, no sources—just pure, industrial-grade fearmongering. And who benefits most from Punjab being painted as unstable and unsafe? You guessed it—Modi & Co.

Which brings us to the question that no one's allowed to ask on national TV:
Did the BJP pay Bajwa to say it?
Because let’s be honest, it wouldn’t be the first time BJP found a puppet in another party to do their dirty work. After all, when AAP starts getting popular for actual governance—like shutting down toll booths and saving citizens ₹60 lakh a day—the BJP’s PR machinery suddenly shifts into overdrive.

But CM Bhagwant Mann wasn’t having it. He dared to demand evidence. He called out the lie. He told Bajwa: name your sources or lawyer up. Now that’s a leader. Not someone who needs ten cameras, a teleprompter, and an echo chamber to say two words.

And where’s Rahul Gandhi in all this? If Bajwa’s statements were false, Rahul should’ve suspended him yesterday. But in typical Congress fashion, they’ll issue a statement no one reads and wait for the next disaster to react to.

And the public? Sadly, still silent. Because in India, scams have become white noise, and outrage is reserved for Bollywood gossip and IPL scores. While the BJP renames clinics, manufactures terror plots, and floods WhatsApp with lies, the nation scrolls, shrugs, and sleeps.

So here we are.
Clinics stolen. Bombs faked. Papers leaked. Dreams crushed.
And yet, the "most powerful leader" in the world refuses to face a free press. Maybe because even he knows: a single real question would be enough to tear down the cardboard cutout of a man that’s been sold to the country as a messiah.

From fake bombs to stolen clinics, this isn’t a government—it’s a con job. And the only thing more dangerous than those running the scam are the millions still applauding it.





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