'India's Daughter' BBC documentary creator Leslee Udwin has left India for fear of being arrested, as Indian parliament bans the film fearing global defamation conspiracy

I started responding because according to my interpretation the person I was replying to was drawing the lines in such a way that horrible people were not part of his tribe, nation and religion (but rather, had somehow fallen down from the sky). As far as I could tell, he was refusing to acknowledge their existance and proximity.

This seems to be a language barrier problem. For me, "to accept a fact" means only "to stop denying a fact". I do not have a word in my partial english vocab that means "to make peace with a fact and stop considering it a fixable problem". What you call "acknowledge" I seem to call "accept".

It seems my english is not very good and I'm not using the words properly.

Also what the fuck does "you are merely redrawing the lines of your caste system" mean in this context? Being condescending like that just blurs whatever message you're trying to say in the first place.

You are right. It was my bad. I have huge respect for India and I think much of the 21 century will be shaped by it and China, but I can't come to terms with its uncaring attitude towards fragmentation. Lets look at the US - they have a vast prison complex, quite a lot of people serving sentences, leaving jail, going back home and then having a permanent record - they can't get a good job even if they get the education, they can't leave the poor community they come from with it's high crime rate and few legal ways to make ends meet. The states are currently creating a poor, criminal caste of undesirables. The more one part of society distances itself from another, the more tribal borders take shape, and once we have tribes in close proximity, things start to go real violent real fast. The solution seems to be some sort of unity - certainly not treating criminals like victims, but accepting their basic flawed humanness and trying to fix it. Or removing them from society permanently (and I don't like how this sounds). But the first step, according to me, is accepting acknowledging that we are all basically featherless birds and like it or not, we are stuck together on this rock. And while some people just could never be able to fit in a civilised society, we can at least remove some of the artificial cultural separations that make vastly similar people hate each other over shit outside their control.

/r/worldnews Thread Link - theguardian.com