Era of Stupidity (2015–2025) This book is in prelaunch and January 2026 .
Sleeping Guardian -India Lost Justice : This Book is in launch by this Sunday
Why This Letter, and Why Now?
I did not write a book to sell it. I did not build an audience to be followed.I wrote Sleeping Guardian to ask a public, constitutional question — not in secret, not in sealed cover, and not as a whisper.
But as a citizen. With one vote. And one voice.
“Supreme Court of India — why have you been asleep?”
The Judiciary Is the First Pillar — Not the Last One to Be Questioned
India is built on four pillars — legislature, executive, judiciary, and media.
We question:
Parliament every hour.
Government every day.
Media every night.
But what about the guardian of the Constitution?
The one institution that exists to strike down injustice — not after it happens, but before it normalizes?
The Constitution gave the Supreme Court weapons — Articles 32, 142, 14, 21 — and it gave citizens a voice.
But for the last 10 years, that guardian has not used its tools.It has not used its voice.And until now, no citizen has asked publicly: Why?
I have.
What Is Sleeping Guardian?
Sleeping Guardian: A Decade of Constitutional Silence is the first citizen-authored, AI-powered forensic audit of the Indian judiciary between 2015 and 2025.
It uses:
Supreme Court filings
CAG audit reports
Disaster management data
Article-wise constitutional benchmarks
RTI replies and statutory timelines
No conjecture. No ideology. No vendetta. Only verified evidence — and one loud question:
Where were you, Guardian?
The Judiciary Was Born to Intervene — Not Observe
The judiciary was not created to wait.It was created to interrupt abuse, check power, and restore dignity when all else fails.
But when:
Children died in floods and disaster funds lay unused…
Citizens walked barefoot for 700 km during COVID lockdowns…
Journalists were spied on and judges said, “We see no evidence”…
Article 370 was revoked without full hearing for 4 years…
Electoral bonds corrupted elections in plain sight…
The Supreme Court did not roar.It did not even whisper.
It blinked.Then it waited.
This Is Not a Legal Case. It Is a Constitutional Wake-Up Call.
This is not a PIL.This is not a protest.This is a public question asked respectfully — and lawfully — under Article 19(1)(a) of the Indian Constitution:
“I have the right to free speech. I am exercising it. I am not asking the government. I am not asking the press. I am not asking political parties.”
I am asking the Supreme Court — the first pillar — because it is the one that was meant to protect us when the others fall.
Why Has No One Asked Until Now?
Let’s be honest.
The media has questioned the executive, but rarely the judiciary.
Politicians fear contempt.
Lawyers seek elevation.
Institutions avoid “disrespect.”
But constitutional criticism is not disrespect.
It is a civic right.It is a democratic responsibility.
And when judicial silence becomes systemic, it becomes a risk to the Republic.
Who Am I to Ask?
I am not a politician.I am not a public intellectual.I am not an activist.I do not lead any party. I do not take any donations. I am not selling outrage.
I am a certified national cyber-security scholar. A data scientist.A citizen of India with no affiliation — but complete evidence.
In 2013, I submitted formal disaster warnings to the state and central governments. They acknowledged. Then ignored.
So I started studying what failed — not just the systems, but the guardians of those systems.
Ten years later, this is the result: a book-length constitutional audit.
What Am I Asking the Judiciary?
Nothing personal. Nothing political.
Only this:
“Where were you when citizens were dying and Parliament remained silent?”
“Why did you delay hearings while policies permanently changed India’s democratic structure?”
“Why did you not intervene on Pulwama, COVID lockdowns, Morbi collapse, hate speech, electoral funding, or NDMA failure — even once, suo motu?”
I am asking this not out of anger, but because the silence has consequences.
Media Channels: You’ve Covered Everything Except This
You have covered:
Breaking news.
Riots.
Scams.
Ministers.
Campaigns.
But the Supreme Court’s silence has gone largely uninvestigated.
Not out of fear, perhaps. But out of habit.
This book — this question — breaks that habit.
It opens the door to a new chapter of Indian journalism:
Journalism that asks questions not just to those who rule — but to those who are meant to stop rulers from going too far.
This Is Not Defamation. This Is Democratic Memory.
The Constitution gives me the right to ask:“Why are you sleeping?”
I ask it with full evidence.With full respect.And with full clarity that the guardian must be accountable too.
You — the media — have 1,800 channels of reach.Use your platforms to open this question, not to defend me — but to wake up the fourth pillar.
Because when all pillars sleep, the roof collapses.Not in sound.But in silence.
Editors, Reporters, Journalists — What Can You Do Now?
Read the Book. It’s not emotional rhetoric. It’s a data-based record of silence.
Cover the Question. Not the person — the precedent. A citizen publicly questioned the judiciary — legally.
Open a Constitutional Dialogue. Start panels. Ask retired judges. Investigate delays. Audit outcomes.
Ask: Why Didn’t We Ask Sooner? Reflect. Then act.
The Time to Be Silent Has Ended
History will ask —
“When rights were crushed, and justice was delayed, did anyone ask the guardian why it slept?”
Let your answer be yes.
Because one citizen has already asked.
Now the country is watching.
Download the full book.Verify the evidence.Ask the question with me.This is not personal.This is constitutional.
Why This Letter, and Why Now?
I did not write a book to sell itI did not build an audience to be followed.I wrote Sleeping Guardian to ask a public, constitutional question — not in secret, not in sealed cover, and not as a whisper.
But as a citizen. With one vote. And one voice.
“Supreme Court of India — why have you been asleep
The Judiciary Is the First Pillar — Not the Last One to Be Questioned
India is built on four pillars — legislature, executive, judiciary, and media.
We question:
Parliament every hour.
Government every day.
Media every night.
But what about the guardian of the Constitution?
The one institution that exists to strike down injustice — not after it happens, but before it normalizes?
The Constitution gave the Supreme Court weapons — Articles 32, 142, 14, 21 — and it gave citizens a voice.
But for the last 10 years, that guardian has not used its tools.It has not used its voice.And until now, no citizen has asked publicly: Why?
I have.
What Is Sleeping Guardian?
Sleeping Guardian: A Decade of Constitutional Silence is the first citizen-authored, AI-powered forensic audit of the Indian judiciary between 2015 and 2025.
It uses:
Supreme Court filings
CAG audit reports
Disaster management data
Article-wise constitutional benchmarks
RTI replies and statutory timelines
No conjecture. No ideology. No vendetta. Only verified evidence — and one loud question:
Where were you, Guardian?
The Judiciary Was Born to Intervene — Not Observe
The judiciary was not created to wait.It was created to interrupt abuse, check power, and restore dignity when all else fails.
But when:
Children died in floods and disaster funds lay unused…
Citizens walked barefoot for 700 km during COVID lockdowns…
Journalists were spied on and judges said, “We see no evidence”…
Article 370 was revoked without full hearing for 4 years…
Electoral bonds corrupted elections in plain sight…
The Supreme Court did not roar.It did not even whisper.
It blinked.Then it waited.
This Is Not a Legal Case. It Is a Constitutional Wake-Up Call.
This is not a PIL.This is not a protest.This is a public question asked respectfully — and lawfully — under Article 19(1)(a) of the Indian Constitution:
“I have the right to free speech. I am exercising it. I am not asking the government. I am not asking the press. I am not asking political parties.”
I am asking the Supreme Court — the first pillar — because it is the one that was meant to protect us when the others fall.
Why Has No One Asked Until Now?
Let’s be honest.
The media has questioned the executive, but rarely the judiciary.
Politicians fear contempt.
Lawyers seek elevation.
Institutions avoid “disrespect.”
But constitutional criticism is not disrespect.
It is a civic right.It is a democratic responsibility.
And when judicial silence becomes systemic, it becomes a risk to the Republic.
Who Am I to Ask?
I am not a politician.I am not a public intellectual.I am not an activist.I do not lead any party. I do not take any donations. I am not selling outrage.
I am a certified national cyber-security scholar. A data scientist.A citizen of India with no affiliation — but complete evidence.
In 2013, I submitted formal disaster warnings to the state and central governments. They acknowledged. Then ignored.
So I started studying what failed — not just the systems, but the guardians of those systems. Ten years later, this is the result: a book-length constitutional audit.
What Am I Asking the Judiciary?
Nothing personal. Nothing political.
Only this:
“Where were you when citizens were dying and Parliament remained silent?”
“Why did you delay hearings while policies permanently changed India’s democratic structure?”
“Why did you not intervene on Pulwama, COVID lockdowns, Morbi collapse, hate speech, electoral funding, or NDMA failure — even once, suo motu?”
I am asking this not out of anger, but because the silence has consequences.
Media Channels: You’ve Covered Everything Except This
You have covered:
Breaking news.
Riots.
Scams.
Ministers.
Campaigns.
But the Supreme Court’s silence has gone largely uninvestigated.
Not out of fear, perhaps. But out of habit.
This book — this question — breaks that habit.
It opens the door to a new chapter of Indian journalism:
Journalism that asks questions not just to those who rule — but to those who are meant to stop rulers from going too far.
This Is Not Defamation. This Is Democratic Memory.
The Constitution gives me the right to ask:“Why are you sleeping?”
I ask it with full evidence.With full respect.And with full clarity that the guardian must be accountable too.
You — the media — have 1,800 channels of reach.Use your platforms to open this question, not to defend me — but to wake up the fourth pillar.
Because when all pillars sleep, the roof collapses.Not in sound.But in silence.
Editors, Reporters, Journalists — What Can You Do Now?
Read the Book. It’s not emotional rhetoric. It’s a data-based record of silence.
Cover the Question. Not the person — the precedent. A citizen publicly questioned the judiciary — legally.
Open a Constitutional Dialogue. Start panels. Ask retired judges. Investigate delays. Audit outcomes.
Ask: Why Didn’t We Ask Sooner? Reflect. Then act.
The Time to Be Silent Has Ended
History will ask —
“When rights were crushed, and justice was delayed, did anyone ask the guardian why it slept?”
Let your answer be yes.
Because one citizen has already asked.
Now the country is watching.
Download the full book.Verify the evidence.Ask the question with me.This is not personal.This is constitutional.
