The author demands that the rich and the government perform their “duty,” but he is dangerously silent on the borrower’s debt to society. He is proposing a system with zero stakes for the people receiving the capital—no rules, no skin in the game, and no accountability for how funds are utilized.
What we are looking at isn’t a revolution; it’s a lopsided fantasy. Mandating “Dharma” for the giver while making it optional for the taker isn’t righteousness—it is outright Adharma. A real system of duty would mandate that any borrower who achieves success must be legally and morally bound to pull their community up with them, with actual consequences for failing that promise.
Instead, the author has taken a top-down bureaucratic model, wrapped it in ancient aesthetics, and sold it as a breakthrough. He is preaching Dharma from the heights of a committee while sowing Adharma at the roots. This is nothing more than expensive theater designed to let wealthy investors sleep like heroes while the power structure on the ground remains untouched. Without a reciprocal obligation from the borrower, this exchange is just a performance of virtue that leaves the common person without real power or protection
The author demands that the rich and the government perform their “duty,” but he is dangerously silent on the borrower’s debt to society. He is proposing a system with zero stakes for the people receiving the capital—no rules, no skin in the game, and no accountability for how funds are utilized.
What we are looking at isn’t a revolution; it’s a lopsided fantasy. Mandating “Dharma” for the giver while making it optional for the taker isn’t righteousness—it is outright Adharma. A real system of duty would mandate that any borrower who achieves success must be legally and morally bound to pull their community up with them, with actual consequences for failing that promise.
Instead, the author has taken a top-down bureaucratic model, wrapped it in ancient aesthetics, and sold it as a breakthrough. He is preaching Dharma from the heights of a committee while sowing Adharma at the roots. This is nothing more than expensive theater designed to let wealthy investors sleep like heroes while the power structure on the ground remains untouched. Without a reciprocal obligation from the borrower, this exchange is just a performance of virtue that leaves the common person without real power or protection
Dharmo Rakshati Rakshitaha