It's a rotting society

@franxav (14291)
India
October 23, 2025 10:25pm CST
Yesterday I had to go to the local rural hospital. One of my relatives developed pain in her heart region. We had to hire a tuktuk (electric rickshaw ) at ten to take her to the hospital. She was better in two hours . Thanks to the service we received there In the hospital I was saddened to see a case of sexual assault on a 10 or 11 year old child. She was bleeding. Thus is not an isolated case. Sexual assaults on children are committed almost every day in our country. Most often they are not reported. In spite of all the noisy religious show and self praise we can smell it, it's a rotting society.
6 people like this
6 responses
@Deepizzaguy (115388)
• Lake Charles, Louisiana
19h
I am in an agreement with you that society is getting worse and worse.
1 person likes this
@Nevena83 (65712)
• Serbia
10h
Oh, God. I'm shocked what's happening to children? Why aren't these cases reported?
@JudyEv (364732)
• Rockingham, Australia
19h
That is very, very sad. It would have been very distressing for you, I'm sure.
16h
the laws are in place like POCSO Act, but when victims are defenseless they hardly file FIR before police and case is dragged to courts
@arunima25 (92524)
• Bangalore, India
15h
My heart breaks each time when I hear such news. Such criminals should be eliminated without wasting time and money on trials. It really makes me livid. The culture that worships ladies has such horrible crimes happening round the clock. It's a big SHAME.
@Namaco21 (282)
11h
That must have been such a difficult and emotional experience — relief that your relative is okay, yet deep sadness and anger at what you witnessed in the hospital. Seeing a child in that kind of pain is heartbreaking, and it’s even more painful to know that these cases happen far too often and are often silenced. You’re right — no amount of outward religiosity or public virtue can hide the moral decay that allows such cruelty to persist. Speaking out, even in small ways like this, matters. It keeps awareness alive and reminds us that healing a society begins with honesty, empathy, and protecting the most vulnerable.