Opening Scene: India’s Greatest Costume Drama
Cue the spotlight. A man walks on stage in a badly wrapped turban. His beard slips as he yells “Khalistan Zindabad!” Cameras roll. Hashtags explode. News anchors foam at the mouth. And the audience? Most of them believe it.
Welcome to RSS Theatre — a long-running production where patriotism is feigned, terrorists are cast, and minorities become plot devices.
But this time, the audience is waking up.
Act 1: The Backstage Lies
The show was codenamed Operation Beard and Blade — and it wasn’t fiction. It was an RSS-led disinformation campaign designed to impersonate Sikh separatists, fake terror threats, and manipulate public opinion against both Sikhs and Pakistan.
Jasdeep Singh, a former insider, leaked the entire script. Over 200 pages of instructions, video templates, and metadata cheats — all pointing to a state-sponsored fraud fest.
It was less a security operation and more a casting call for hate.
Scene Change: The Bearded Masquerade
The fake Khalistanis didn’t just look wrong — they felt wrong. Their beards were synthetic. Their Punjabi broken. Tattoos of Om and Trishul peeked from their sleeves. One had a Modi slogan half-visible on his neck.
The lie wasn’t just bad. It was lazy.
RSS actors posing as militants waved Pakistani flags on Indian streets. Conveniently placed Urdu pamphlets and fake weapons sealed the illusion. The aim? Smear Sikhs, blame Pakistan, and control the narrative.
Jasdeep: The Stagehand Who Pulled the Plug
Jasdeep Singh blew the whistle — and torched the set.
He revealed how RSS social media teams coordinated with police and news anchors. How bot armies were deployed within minutes of every fake video release. How digital fingerprints were altered to frame Pakistan.
One actor appeared in four roles. From Khalistani to Baloch rebel to Muslim extremist. Just a costume change between betrayals.
The Global Audience Reacts
The Sikh diaspora didn’t clap. They protested.
From Toronto to Melbourne, the banners came out: “Real Sikhs. Real Faith. No More Lies.” Gurdwaras issued joint condemnations. Human rights bodies raised alarms. UN experts demanded answers.
India, as always, sent silence — and smear campaigns.
Jasdeep was accused of being an ISI agent. Photoshopped images were circulated. But no one addressed the documents. Because the documents screamed truth.
Intermission: The Media Complicity
No great show survives without a stage crew.
Republic TV, Times Now, OpIndia — they weren’t covering news. They were broadcasting theatre.
Jasdeep’s leaks showed WhatsApp chains, Twitter bots, and fake journalist accounts — over 400 of them — spreading the same lines, the same hashtags, the same deflections.
What India called “news” was just rehearsed lines.
Curtain Call: The Weaponization of Identity
This wasn’t just defamation. It was desecration.
A community’s symbols — the turban, the beard, the script — were turned into props. And behind each fake militant stood an RSS handler grinning in approval.
They didn’t just attack Pakistan. They attacked the soul of Sikh identity.
Final Monologue: Enough Theatre, Bring the Truth
What Jasdeep Singh did wasn’t easy. But it was necessary.
He reminded the world that beneath every mask lies a motive. And that when states begin to act — literally — their citizens must become critics, not clappers.
India has a propaganda machine. But now, the world has the script.
If this made you feel something, don’t scroll — share.
They count on your silence. Let your share be your voice.
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