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23 Jan --
A shocking video from Greater Noida has sparked outrage online after a child was seen lying on the roof of a speeding luxury sports car inside a housing society. What looked like a “fun stunt” quickly turned into a serious safety concern, with police arresting the driver and seizing the car. Authorities later revealed the act was allegedly done to gain social media views—at the cost of a child’s life.
Such reckless stunts can cause severe head injury, spinal damage, internal bleeding, or even death if the child slips or the car brakes suddenly. Children’s bones and brains are still developing, making them far more vulnerable to high-impact trauma. No online fame is worth risking a young life.
Netizens summed it up best: “Baccha hai, khilona nahi.”
This incident is a reminder that child safety, responsible parenting, and road discipline must come before social media validation.
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-- 23 JAN - Kerala case / Justice for Deepak
A false allegation led to public shaming, and a man lost his life. This is the real harm of socialmedia trials.
Men are suffering like hell because society judges instantly. No facts, no enquiry, no due process straight away character assassination.
In real harassment cases, most people react immediately shout, ask for help, complain to conductor or police within hours.
Here, instead of that, the video went viral first.
I did a morphological image analysis of the screenshot.
She looks very normal and calm direct camera look, relaxed face, no visible panic. This analysis is only about appearance, not emotions or proof.
Psychologically, this whole pattern looks like malingering, creating or exaggerating a victim story for attention (virality ) often seen with histrionic personality traits (traits only, not a diagnosis).
After everything went wrong and a man died, now the victim card is being played.
That’s a known defense mechanism to escape guilt, responsibility, and social backlash.
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