(From AstroTalk’s celestial sales pitch to the Great Egg Crusade: How high-tech tools and social media platforms are being used to sell low-IQ regression).
“Gathamatha thadisenu rakthamuna, kaakunte kannilatho” (The past is drenched in blood, if not in tears)”
The above Sri Sri’s haunting words, serve as a grim reminder that history is a catalogue of human struggle and sacrifice.
However, the tragedy of the modern era is our refusal to learn from these tear-stained pages. When we fail to consolidate the lessons of the past, lessons of science, equality, and rationalism, we don't just stand still; we slide backward.
This "devolution of wisdom" is exactly what fuels a blind march toward stupidity. By ignoring the blood and tears that paved the way for progressive thought, we allow regressive forces to masquerade as "cultural guardians," leading us into a future that looks suspiciously like a dark, forgotten past.
Sri Sri’s words are a testament to the heavy price paid for human progress. Yet, looking at today’s digital and social landscape, it seems we’ve decided that those lessons were optional. Instead of building a future on the solid ground of that struggle, we are witnessing the systematic dismantling of common sense.
This isn't just a lapse in judgment; it is the "Vivekapu Thirogamanam" (the retreat of wisdom) paving the way for "Moorkathvapu Purogamanam" (the advancement of idiocy).
While the rest of the world is busy debating AI ethics and Mars missions, a special breed of "intellectuals" is working overtime to ensure we don’t accidentally stumble into the 21st century. These regressive champions are successfully using the glossiest modern platforms to sell us the most rusted ideas.
Take the current IPL season, for example. Between high-octane sixes and tactical timeouts, we are treated to a barrage of "AstroTalk" ads, a ‘celestial sales pitch”.
It’s a hilarious paradox: you’re holding a smartphone powered by quantum physics and using high-speed internet beamed from satellites, only to ask a complete stranger if a planet floating millions of miles away is the reason your boss is a jerk or why your husband still can't remember your anniversary. It takes a lot of high-tech genius to support that much low-tech delusion.
Watching celebrities pitch "destiny-changing" apps to a generation that should be focused on skill-building is the ultimate comedic tragedy of our digital age.
It’s the ultimate irony: we’ve used the blood and sweat of scientists to build smartphones, only to use them to ask a stranger if Mercury is the reason our bank balance is low. This isn't just entertainment, but a high-tech effort to make sure the next generation swaps their logic for "luck" and their brain cells for "alignment."
Then we have the curious case of the "honored" preacher in the state of Andhra Pradesh, who seems more concerned with the menu of a government school than the malnutrition of the children eating it.
In a country where stunting and anaemia are real battles, attacking the inclusion of eggs in midday meals isn't just regressive, but a direct assault on a child’s right to health. It takes a special kind of "progress" to argue that ideology should trump protein.
The real danger isn't just these individuals; it’s the megaphone given to them by social media and mainstream broadcasts. By packaging superstition as "culture" and deprivation as "discipline," they are grooming a generation to embrace a "Progressive Ignorance." If we don't distance these regressive vibes from our public discourse, we might find ourselves "advancing" straight back into the dark ages, one app download and one food ban at a time.
We are moving forward, yes, but we are doing it facing backward, headed straight for the abyss we thought we had escaped.
If these efforts continue, our future won't be written in code or science, it’ll be stuck in a horoscope, waiting for a "guru" to tell us when it’s okay to eat an egg.