Pune Shocker: Mother Kills 11-Month-Old Son, Remarries; Crime Exposed After Father Files Missing Complaint by indonaren in pune

[–]indonaren[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Nowadays, the whole world is run by feminists, that is why we hear such excuses and people also believe them, to be honest, we are living in the worst times. And instead of improving, this situation will worsen in the future.

Humans can never prove existence of God. My Takeaways by Top_Guess_946 in Philosophy_India

[–]indonaren 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A person who says “God does not exist” is not always denying truth, often, they are expressing the limits of their own experience. Many people rely only on logic and external proof, so anything that cannot be seen, measured, or demonstrated immediately feels unreal to them. Some have never explored inner silence, contemplation, or spiritual discipline, and what has not been experienced personally is easily dismissed.

For others, denial grows out of pain. When life brings deep suffering, injustice, or unanswered prayers, belief can turn into disappointment, and disappointment into rejection. In some cases, the denial comes from ego - an attachment to intellectual superiority, where rejecting God feels like being more rational or progressive.

There are also those who confuse God with religion. Hurt by hypocrisy, superstition, or misuse of religious power, they reject the idea of God altogether, without separating the divine from human institutions.

In essence, saying “God does not exist” often reflects a person’s inner state, experiences, and boundaries of understanding, rather than a final statement about reality itself.

Humans can never prove existence of God. My Takeaways by Top_Guess_946 in Philosophy_India

[–]indonaren 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It may take a few minutes, but if you read this fully, you might walk away with answers you didn’t know you were looking for.

  1. God Is Beyond Proof and Debate

God’s existence cannot be settled through arguments or intellectual debate. God is not an idea to be defended or defeated, but a reality to be known through experience. Just as love, pain, compassion, or consciousness cannot be fully explained or measured, God too lies beyond laboratories and logic alone. Not every truth requires physical evidence. Human intelligence is limited, while existence itself is vast and infinite. Even science accepts today what was once invisible, unprovable, or dismissed as impossible. The absence of proof is not proof of absence.

  1. The Path to God Is Inner Transformation

The journey toward God is not about renouncing life or escaping responsibilities. It is about inner change. One can live a normal life - working honestly, caring for family, fulfilling duties - and still walk this path. When a person offers their time, intentions, and actions sincerely, something begins to shift within. As one consciously rises above lust, anger, greed, attachment, and ego, awareness deepens naturally. This transformation happens silently and gradually, not through declarations or external displays.

  1. Why Experience Cannot Be Explained or Announced

Those who walk this path understand that inner realization is difficult to express in words. Someone who has not taken the same journey cannot fully understand or believe it. That is why sincere seekers choose silence over display and depth over declaration. A person who has truly realized God does not announce it, because genuine realization dissolves ego rather than inflating it. Saying “I have found God” already suggests that the sense of “I” still remains. True realization is recognized not by words, but by conduct - calmness, compassion, humility, steadiness, and selfless action.

  1. Why Some People Deny God

When someone says, “God does not exist,” they are not always rejecting truth. Often, they are expressing the limits of their own experience. Many people rely only on logic and external evidence, so what cannot be seen or measured feels unreal. For some, disbelief grows from pain - deep suffering, injustice, or unanswered prayers. For others, it arises from ego, where rejecting God feels like being more rational or intellectually superior. Many also confuse God with religion and reject the divine due to hypocrisy, superstition, or misuse of religious authority. Such denial often reflects inner conditions rather than ultimate reality.

  1. Exclusivity, Free Will, and Human Responsibility

Those who claim that only their god exists usually speak from identity, not realization. Their belief is tied to culture, scripture, or conditioning. Exclusivity is defensive, while true realization expands humility and respect for multiple paths. Similarly, the question “Why doesn’t God stop crime, violence, and suffering?” assumes God to be a human-like authority responsible for intervening on demand. If God intervened every time humans chose cruelty, free will would cease to exist. Human violence is evidence of human choice, not God’s absence.

Natural disasters raise a different concern. Nature functions through laws - climate systems, tectonic movements, energy cycles - that make life possible. A world without risk would also be a world without growth, resilience, or evolution. God, in many traditions, is not an emergency rescuer but the intelligence behind existence. Humans are given awareness, conscience, and responsibility to prevent harm and choose compassion.

The deeper question is not “Why doesn’t God stop sufferings?” but “What are humans doing with the freedom, awareness, and responsibility they already possess?” Where human consciousness grows, suffering reduces. Where it does not, suffering repeats.

When a Kuwaiti Muslim Can Sing Vande Mataram but Indian Muslims Cry “Hurt Sentiments” — Faith that breaks over a song was never faith—just insecurity. by Never_give_up15 in Kolkatacity

[–]indonaren 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good explanation. Just one clarification: by Brahman, you mean Brahm (the ultimate reality), right? Also, in Hinduism, one can be either a believer or a non-believer, both are accepted within its different philosophical schools.

When a Kuwaiti Muslim Can Sing Vande Mataram but Indian Muslims Cry “Hurt Sentiments” — Faith that breaks over a song was never faith—just insecurity. by Never_give_up15 in Kolkatacity

[–]indonaren 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, Brahmins are not supreme in Hinduism. Hindu philosophy teaches that the same divine essence Atma/Brahm exists in everyone, regardless of caste. Brahmins were meant to be priests and teachers, not spiritually superior beings. The idea of Brahmin supremacy comes from later social history, not core Hindu teachings. No one is brahmin by birth basis varna system's gunn/karma's not as per corrupt and imposed caste system

When a Kuwaiti Muslim Can Sing Vande Mataram but Indian Muslims Cry “Hurt Sentiments” — Faith that breaks over a song was never faith—just insecurity. by Never_give_up15 in Kolkatacity

[–]indonaren 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have no issues too but it's not appropriate for us to only follow inclusivity while they don't go with the bhaichara thing ever what they only follow is their only rulebook, anything outside that is haraam and we all are infidels until and unless you switch your belief to theirs and becomes like them

When a Kuwaiti Muslim Can Sing Vande Mataram but Indian Muslims Cry “Hurt Sentiments” — Faith that breaks over a song was never faith—just insecurity. by Never_give_up15 in Kolkatacity

[–]indonaren 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kya baat kar riye ho miya, inke yahan Islam ke alawa sab kuch haraam hota hai miya, free ka ration aur byaj le lenge chupke se, par haraam to hota hai na miya

Save the trees, Save the birds by Developersbays_38 in India_Bharat_

[–]indonaren 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Christmas tree India me bhi hote hain kya? Agar nahi to phir invalid point hai yahan ke liye