Kollectively Vigilant: Law and Crime
Caution: Don't use headphones for this episode. Sorry for the bad audio. In this episode, Dr. D and Sam examine the Hardik Singh and Harshita/Himshika Singh case from Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh. Hardik Singh, a 26-year-old man, allegedly killed his twin sister and attacked his mother after months of visible frustration over work, money, unemployment, online identity, and a failed emotional attachment. Rather than reducing the case to an online infatuation or a religious angle, this episode looks at the deeper layers: the pressure facing young Indians in corporate jobs, the collapse of work-life balance, the emotional burden of failure, the performance of victimhood online, and the psychological process through which grievance can become identity. The discussion uses psychological and criminological frameworks including cognitive dissonance, hostile attribution bias, external locus of control, strain theory, general strain theory, and grievance-fueled violence. This is a case about family, pressure, self-image, and the terrifying moment when the people who supported someone most became, in his mind, the people standing in his way.
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