Why Indians Don’t Feel Responsible for Cleanliness | Vijender Masijeevi

Feb 9, 2026Channel
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Video Overview

Video Details

Published5 months ago
Duration1:15
Video ID2b4nIx0MUhw
Languageen
CategoryPeople & Blogs
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeYouTube Short

Performance Metrics

Views84.3K
Likes6.8K
Comments129
Engagement Rate8.24%
Likes per 100 views8.09
Comments per 1K views1.53

Description

Why do so many Indians feel no discomfort throwing garbage in public spaces? Why does breaking queues feel normal, even justified? And why does civic discipline suddenly improve when we travel abroad? This video explains a hard truth we rarely talk about — how caste-based division of labour historically removed the idea of shared civic responsibility from large sections of society. When cleanliness was assigned to a specific group, everyone else was slowly trained to believe it was not their job. This is not just about sanitation. It is about mindset, entitlement, and prioritising immediate convenience over long-term collective dignity. From airports to railway stations, from queues to public spaces — this video connects everyday behaviour to deeper social conditioning, and asks an uncomfortable question: Can a society improve without taking personal responsibility? Watch till the end to understand why civic sense is not about laws or fines — it is about how societies train people to see responsibility. #civicsense #cleanliness #socialconditioning #casteandsociety #publicbehaviour #indiansociety #responsibility #civicdiscipline #socialmindset #indianrealities #publicspaces #queueculture #everydayindia

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