Supreme Court Steps In: A Nation’s Shame Reaches the Courts “OTT Vulgarity The Planned Destruction of Bharat’s Culture

Poonam Sharma

In the name of entertainment, Bharat today faces a silent yet deadly assault — an assault on its values, its morality, its very soul. OTT platforms like ULLU, ALTBalaji, and even MX Player and many endlessly  are leading this charge, pushing an endless supply of vulgar, obscene, and sexually explicit content straight into our homes. Shows like Gandii Baat, Charmsukh, Mastram, and XXX: Uncensored are not merely entertainment; they are weapons of cultural destruction, designed to weaken the moral foundations of our society.

Who are these producers and creators? Do they not have families, daughters, and sisters? Or have they sold their conscience at the altar of profit and perversion?

Every scene of naked flesh, every glorification of lust, and every normalization of adultery is an attack on Bharat’s ancient tradition of Maryada (restraint) and Sanskar (values). These creators must not merely be criticized — they must be punished. They are planting seeds of perversion in young minds, dismantling centuries of cultural wisdom brick by brick.

The situation has deteriorated so much that even the Supreme Court of India has been forced to take serious note of the vulgarity festering on OTT platforms.
The Court recently urged the central government to bring in strict legislative measures to curb obscenity and pornographic content being streamed online.
The highest court of the land expressed grave concern over how easily youth can access immoral content and observed that unchecked vulgarity will have devastating social consequences.

When the Supreme Court, traditionally cautious in matters of censorship, issues a public warning, it is no longer just a cultural debate — it becomes a national emergency. It is a damning indictment of OTT platforms that the judiciary had to intervene where the creators and the so-called “liberal” entertainment industry failed so miserably.There is no mistake here. This is not accidental.There is a deliberate, organized attempt to normalize obscenity — to break the Indian family system, to shatter the dignity of women, and to encourage moral anarchy.

  • Gandii Baat glorifies rural erotic fantasies, reducing the purity of Bharat’s villages to a cheap, dirty spectacle. 
  • Mastram portrays the writer of erotic fiction as some kind of hero, celebrating perversion instead of condemning it. 
  • Charmsukh and Wanna Have a Good Time go even further, crossing all lines of decency, promoting incestuous and illicit relationships.
    Is this freedom of expression? Or is it freedom to destroy? When the young boys and girls of Bharat consume this toxic content, their minds are poisoned. Respect for women decreases. Relationships are seen through the lens of lust instead of love. Obscenity becomes “normal,” and crime inevitably follows.

Already, reports have shown a dangerous link between pornography consumption and crimes against women.
If young minds are constantly bombarded with images of exploitation and objectification, can we be surprised when they replicate this behavior in real life?These vulgar series are doing more harm to Bharat than any external enemy.A society that worships its women as goddesses cannot coexist with a culture that objectifies them for cheap thrills.

These are Cultural Criminals brand them as traitors of civilization.

When a petty thief steals a wallet, he is jailed.When someone vandalizes a temple, he is punished.Then why are these creators, these cultural vandals, celebrated, awarded, and made millionaires?OTT platforms operate without any real censorship. Under the false banner of “creative freedom,” they unleash the worst forms of filth into the public sphere. They are more dangerous than drug peddlers.They are drugging Bharat’s youth with mental poison.Now, with the Supreme Court’s direct intervention, there is hope that these cultural criminals will no longer go unpunished.
Legislation must come — and it must come hard and fast. Make no mistake This is part of a globalized attack on Bharat’s traditional civilization. A civilization that taught the world about Dharma, Family, Sacrifice, and Restraint is being systematically weakened by exporting the culture of vulgarity and selfish pleasure.

  • Movies normalize infidelity.Web series normalize one-night stands Songs and reels celebrate objectification and nudity.

A Bharat disconnected from its roots, ashamed of its purity, eager to imitate the worst excesses of the West.

Bharat cannot afford to stay silent any longer. Action must be taken before it is too late:

  • Strict Regulation: Immediate censorship of explicit content on OTT platforms.
  • Severe Punishment: Heavy fines and jail terms for producers who promote obscenity.
  • Cultural Reawakening: Promotion of series and films based on Indian values, history, and family systems.
  • Public Awareness: A nationwide campaign to educate youth about the dangers of consuming vulgar content.
    And above all, the government must act on the Supreme Court’s warning without delay.

Bharat is not just a piece of land.It is a more than a  150000 -year-old civilization built on sacrifice, honor, and righteousness.
The vulgarity being spread today through OTT platforms is a betrayal of every saint, warrior, and sage who built this sacred land.

If we do not act now, the future generations will inherit a Bharat stripped of its soul.
The choice is ours: protect our culture — or watch it burn in the fire of obscenity.

The time for polite discussions is over. It’s time to fight back — with law, with awareness, and with unbreakable resolve.

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