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Kumar S. Ratan

Welcome to the platform of Kumar S Ratan, an activist working to promote men's and children's rights within family law. Our mission is to ensuring that every family member's rights are acknowledged and protected.

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Bollywood’s Moral Decline: Entertainment Turns into Corruption of Values

Bollywood has moved far away from being the mirror of society — it has instead become the tool that distorts it. Opposite to Bollywood, South Indian Movie makers who promote family bonding, respect, social responsibility, culture, religion. But Bollywood glorifies casual relationships, mocks traditional values, and encourages a lifestyle that weakens the moral foundation of our youth.

A recent conversation between Bollywood personalities, in "Two Much with Kajol & Twinkle" show, Karan Johar, Kajol, and Twinkle Khanna, along with Janhvi Kapoor, reveals the disturbing mindset dominating the industry. In the video, these celebrities casually joke about one-night relationships, even laughing about how “raat gayi, baat gayi” (what happens at night doesn’t matter in the morning). When Janhvi Kapoor hesitated and disagreed, she was ridiculed for being “too innocent” and told she would “join their league one day.”

Is this the kind of influence Bollywood wishes to spread among the next generation? These are the same faces that millions of young Indians follow on social media. When such public figures normalize immoral or careless relationships, they directly shape young minds to believe that commitment, family, and respect no longer matter.

Bollywood’s problem is not limited to this one discussion. It has systematically used its vast wealth and reach to promote a biased, agenda-driven narrative. For years, films have been made under the banner of “women empowerment,” but in reality, they mostly portray men as criminals and women as perpetual victims. Instead of promoting equality, these stories deepen gender divides and spread hatred.

At the same time, Bollywood glorifies fake love, betrayal, and rebellion against family — creating an illusion that emotional chaos equals freedom. As a result, many youngsters have started prioritizing relationships over education and career, even going against their parents for superficial ideas of “love.” This mental corruption is not entertainment — it is social destruction.

In sharp contrast, South Indian cinema continues to celebrate family values, integrity, and balanced character portrayals. Their films often depict mutual respect between genders, cultural pride, and emotional strength — and that’s exactly why audiences across India are now turning towards them.

Bollywood needs to reflect on its direction. The industry that once inspired generations is now polluting young minds under the name of modernity. It’s time society questions this hypocrisy and demands responsibility from those who claim to represent Indian culture.

Entertainment should uplift society, not destroy its moral roots.

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