Indian social media users never miss a chance to moral police others. Even harmless moments get twisted into drama. A recent example involved a group of schoolgirls who shared farewell photos wearing white shirts filled with doodles and goodbye messages from friends.
Among the flowers, hearts and jokes, one doodle on a girl’s shirt looked like a penis. A social media user immediately questioned the “values” of the girls and asked whether schools teach such behaviour now. The intent behind the drawing was clearly teenage mischief, nothing more.
In most Indian schools and colleges, farewell shirts turn into fun memory boards. Students write inside jokes, silly drawings and personal messages. Yet adults online labelled this simple moment as disgusting because it did not match their idea of acceptable fun.
These same people show no outrage when real problems in education appear. Social media is full of videos showing government schools without teachers, blackboards, drinking water or toilets. These serious issues get ignored while harmless doodles from three private-school girls become national debates.
This selective outrage reveals deep hypocrisy. People demand that children, especially girls, behave in a way that fits their narrow idea of culture. Many millennials, however, supported the girls and said students should be allowed to be silly on their last day of school.
The real obscenity lies in how poorly our education system functions. Instead of attacking children for harmless jokes, adults should focus on saving the schools and institutions that urgently need attention.
Disgusting!! this is what kids are learning in school these days https://t.co/No8Biw443T pic.twitter.com/9Dxz0bHpf1
— Tweet Chor (@Pagal_aurat) November 20, 2025
Farewell day, the saddest day in a student’s life. pic.twitter.com/ivnGo1Lcgm
— xuraj (@xurajbxnl) November 20, 2025




