@arn__rajput@AdrienneTh54766@skilled_sheep@radier7@PicturesFoIder Participate in as in to watch the festival not to be sexually harrased and groped, there are people who watched the bull festival from the sidelines outside the wall and those who goes down on the street actively participating, there's a big difference.
@Ivan96502699@radier7@PicturesFoIder Womens in India are way less likely to make a report cause of mainly shame and pressure, the authorities most of the time don't do anything either, stats on sexual harrasment are highly inaccurate and unreliable, depends on the county and culture.
@radier7@PicturesFoIder This is not true, in India the guest is considered as God and they welcome the guest with great love, and I also believe that sometimes such acts do happen but strict action is taken against them.
@StoicOnWheels@radier7@PicturesFoIder The key word here is "report", western women is much more willing to make a report and authority actually does something about it, but in india, womens are too scared to report and authorities most of the time just brush it off cause of men superiority and how they view womens
In 1999, Australian truck driver Bill Morgan was involved in a serious accident that left him in a coma.
Even though doctors said he had no chance of living, he miraculously woke up after 12 days and was completely fine.
Feeling lucky to have survived, he bought a scratch lottery ticket. The result? He won a $17,000 car.
Normally, winning a car wouldn't have made it to the news, but because of Morgan's accident story, Channel 9 decided to do a feature on the man who was "clinically dead and came back to win the lottery."
While filming, they asked him to buy a lottery ticket so they could reenact the winning scratch.
He happily obliged and started scratching the ticket on camera. To everyone's dismay, he won a further $250,000.