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View Full Version : General talk Netflix: Delhi Crime S3 is legit



sus619
10-12-2025, 11:55 AM
I recently watched the latest season of Delhi Crime on Netflix. The storyline focuses on young women from Northeast India being trafficked abroad.
It struck me because I’ve noticed that many indian ML I’ve met in massage parlours also seem to come from regions like Assam and other parts of the Northeast.

This made me reflect on the issue more deeply, and I sometimes feel conflicted or guilty about being connected to all this.
I'm trying to understand how one can process these feelings and rationalize them without carrying guilt.

Roydemeo
10-12-2025, 01:22 PM
Tips on where some hot Indians are, trafficked or not are welcome.

Cm888
10-12-2025, 07:51 PM
Yea, spill the beans!

iamthewalrus
12-12-2025, 09:49 AM
The topic is Delhi Crime. an excellent 'Off Bolywood ' series based on real crimes.

Highly recommend.

Double_Adapter
12-12-2025, 11:18 AM
Yea, spill the beans!

In the context of this thread I guess the OP should spill the ramja masala....just saying

Wayne
12-12-2025, 12:32 PM
I recently watched the latest season of Delhi Crime on Netflix. The storyline focuses on young women from Northeast India being trafficked abroad.
It struck me because I’ve noticed that many indian ML I’ve met in massage parlours also seem to come from regions like Assam and other parts of the Northeast.

This made me reflect on the issue more deeply, and I sometimes feel conflicted or guilty about being connected to all this.
I'm trying to understand how one can process these feelings and rationalize them without carrying guilt.

I reckon it is easy to tell the difference between trafficked girls and those that choose this line of work. There used to be a lot of trafficked Thai and Lao girls in Sydney on fake Singaporean passports. They stood out a mile. I think the federal police eventually acted and quietly moved in on the offenders. There probably still are trafficked girls in sydney though I suspect, because of the ubiquity of legal prostitution now, the return for criminals is not worth the risk of prosecution.

Your point is well made. And really, if you ever you come across a suspected trafficked woman it is your responsibility to report it.

Also, Delhi Crime is excellent. I’d recommend it too.

Nelly69
12-12-2025, 02:43 PM
I started watching Delhi Crime due to this thread, there was a dialogue in E3/4 between two police which I thought was very impactful.

Driver: Sir, have you ever seen anything like this before?
Sudhir Kumar: Seen too many like this.
Driver: No…I mean, yeah, there are many violent crimes, but not like this. How can someone do this to another person?
Sudhir Kumar: It’s simple, it’s economics. The bigger the gap between the rich and poor, the more the crimes. You see, the rich have brought more money into society but it’s not reaching the poor, so they try and take it. The result is more strife in society. It’s normal, it’s happening all over the world. Add to that the explosion of uneducated youth here, they have no sex education but get free porn online…which affects their adolescent brains. They don’t know how to interpret it. They objectify women and wish they could have that in their lives. If they don’t get it, they take it, with no regard for the consequences. After all, they have nothing to lose.

Wayne
12-12-2025, 02:51 PM
I sat up at that dialogue too, Nelly69. Basically summarised all the social issues brought by the mad rush to riches from the digital revolution. Crime has, and always will be, based on financial inequality. Think Marx said something about this with his theory of alienation.