There are hardly Brahmins in India, they are a minority, I am not even a Brahmin, the reviews here are so funny, completely untouched from reality.
I can make my own book and start selling it by attacking Dalit forces, who have done nothing for the Dalit community, except beg for more reservations.
My sympathy with the writer tho, either he really suffered or he just used this propaganda book to earn some money which most do in today's time.
I always look for different perspectives and after years of experience I can tell which is a propaganda book and which isn't, and this book just makes you feel like an idiot, "I am a victim too, a victim of reservation".
My book name would be, "Why I hate Victim Card holders".
After decades of reservation, if a community still cannot help themselves, that community seriously has some issues, the victimhood mentality in many communities of India is very real, and even after so much "free funds" given to them, they still consider themselves victims of everything.
As an Indian youngster, who is pretty educated with foreign literal and political books, Indians just make me laugh, this is so funny that the guy who made this book is 40x older than me, I guess this is because India is a third-world country, the nation created on the basis of divisions will never survive, and if keeps on surviving with the same system it was created upon, then that's not surviving, that's enduring the sufferings within.
The people attacking Hinduism should know, you can openly attack Brahmins or Hindus, but if a Hindu does the same to you, you all get pissed.
Now that's India and India's reality, nothing other than that, if someone considers BJP as a Hindu party, they are living in a delusional world and are uneducated with the terms of right and left.
India doesn't have any right-wing party, except AIMIM.
Blaming a majority, who doesn't even know who is a Dalit and a Brahmin, tells a lot about you.
Most reviewers here are just political bots, don't understand one word of philosophy and political terms, and how deep-rooted issues are solved