Congress Wakes Up and Picks a Fight (Finally)
Congress Wakes Up and Picks a Fight
(Finally)
Stop the presses—Congress just did something. No, really.
After years of taking body blows from BJP propaganda, troll armies, and
prime-time loudspeakers masquerading as journalists, the Congress party has
finally decided it's tired of being everyone’s favorite punching bag. The
result? FIRs against Arnab Goswami and Amit Malviya, BJP’s chief meme distorter
and digital hitman.
Apparently, one too many photoshops of Rahul Gandhi finally
crossed the line. Who knew?
Rahul, long known for floating above the mud-slinging like
some Gandhi-inspired monk, has realized—belatedly—that in Indian politics,
silence isn’t golden. It’s political suicide. Letting your enemies define you
is not a high-road strategy. It’s a roadmap to irrelevance. You can’t fight a
firehose of lies with a glass of moral superiority.
Meanwhile, BJP has turned narrative warfare into a science.
They don’t just attack—they mass-produce character assassinations with factory
efficiency. And for years, the opposition just… watched. Occasionally tweeted.
Held a press conference. Maybe wrote a strongly worded letter. Revolutionary
stuff.
So now that Congress has finally filed some legal heat, we’re
supposed to be impressed. Sure, it’s late. Sure, it reeks of desperation. But
it’s still the most aggressive thing they’ve done since Rahul’s last
cross-country walkabout.
And where’s AAP in all this? Getting raided by every agency
with a three-letter acronym and still playing nice. The liquor scam narrative
has been dragged through every channel like it’s gospel, and Kejriwal still
hasn’t gone scorched-earth in court. Why not demand evidence? Why not sue for
slander? Why not flip the script?
Because let’s get one thing straight: the BJP wins because it
fights dirty and doesn't apologize. The opposition loses because it keeps
hoping fair play matters.
Here’s what needs to happen: drag the CBI, ED, and every
enforcement bulldog into court. Demand documents. Ask who gave the orders.
Demand transparency—not on Twitter, but under oath. Turn the tables. Make them
answer for the selective raids, the mysterious timing, the jail-before-trial
circus.
And while we're dreaming: file a public case against the BJP
for false election promises. Get signatures. Take it to court. Prove the people
were sold snake oil and call it electoral fraud. Will it succeed? Probably not.
Will it make headlines, shake cages, and force a reaction? Absolutely.
Congress says it wants answers on 75 lakh votes. Where’s the
follow-up? Where’s the task force? Where’s the outrage? If this matters, act
like it.
Bottom line: people don’t vote for victims. They vote for
fighters. BJP wins because it’s always on the offensive. If Congress and AAP
want to survive, they need to stop waiting for justice and start demanding
it—with teeth, with lawsuits, with unapologetic rage.
If Congress has finally grown a spine, good. Now show it in
every state, every channel, every courtroom. No more Gandhi-mode. No more
“dignified silence.” This is a street fight now. Fight like you mean it.
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