ਔਰੰਗਜ਼ੇਬ ਸਹੀ ਸੀ - Villains are the true Heroes - Everything Is Propaganda?
02 June 2026

ਔਰੰਗਜ਼ੇਬ ਸਹੀ ਸੀ - Villains are the true Heroes - Everything Is Propaganda?

Kaka Balli Punjabi Podcast

About

What if the villains of history, mythology, religion, and politics were never the real villains?

In this thought-provoking episode of Kaka Balli Punjabi Podcast, we challenge some of the most powerful narratives ever told and ask a controversial question: Who decides who is a hero and who is a villain?

From Mahabharata and Ramayana to world history, religion, politics, psychology, and modern pop culture, we explore how society creates heroes, villains, and enemies. Is history really written by the winners? Are we taught facts, or are we taught narratives?

We discuss Duryodhan, Karna, Krishna, Ravana, Aurangzeb, Churchill, Hitler, Thanos, and many other figures who continue to divide opinion. Some are remembered as heroes, some as monsters, but what happens when we examine their stories from a different perspective?

In the Mahabharata, was Duryodhan simply a power-hungry villain, or was he a loyal friend who stood by Karna when society rejected him because of caste? If Krishna is considered divine, why did he allow or encourage tactics that broke the rules of war? Can the end ever justify the means?

In the Ramayana, Ravana is remembered as one of the greatest villains in Indian mythology. But what happens when we look at the story through the lens of family honor, power, pride, and perspective? Does every story have two sides?

We also discuss the idea that many of history's most hated figures genuinely believed they were doing the right thing. From Aurangzeb to modern political leaders, how often do people commit questionable actions while believing they are serving a greater cause?

The conversation then moves beyond mythology into modern history and geopolitics.

• Is America really the world's police?
• How do governments use propaganda?
• How are wars justified?
• Why are some leaders celebrated while others are condemned?
• Does power influence morality?

We explore the idea that public perception is often shaped by media, politics, religion, education systems, and cultural narratives. The same person can be viewed as a hero by one group and a villain by another.

The podcast also examines religion, faith, heaven, hell, divine punishment, and the human tendency to believe that the religion we are born into is the ultimate truth. Are beliefs chosen, or are they inherited?

Beyond history and religion, we look at fictional villains such as Thanos and characters from The Boys. Why do modern audiences increasingly relate to villains? Why do so many fictional villains have understandable motivations? Why are morally grey characters becoming more popular than traditional heroes?

We also discuss an uncomfortable truth: villains may play an essential role in human progress.

Throughout history, crisis has often created innovation.

World wars accelerated medicine, engineering, aviation, and technology.

The Cold War accelerated space exploration, computing, and the digital revolution.

Periods of famine and hardship led to agricultural breakthroughs and large-scale reforms.

In nature, predators force prey to evolve. Pressure creates adaptation. Competition creates growth. Could the same principle apply to human civilization?

Perhaps villains, rivals, enemies, and crises act as society's ultimate stress tests.

This episode is not about glorifying violence, hatred, dictators, or harmful actions. It is about questioning assumptions, challenging narratives, exploring different perspectives, and encouraging critical thinking.

Topics Covered:

• Heroes vs Villains
• Duryodhan and Karna
• Krishna and Mahabharata
• Ravana and Ramayana
• Bhagavad Gita
• Aurangzeb
• Churchill vs Hitler
• America and Global Politics
• Propaganda and Media Narratives
• Religion and Faith
• Heaven and Hell
• Philosophy and Critical Thinking
• Thanos and The Boys
• Psychology of Villains
• History Written by Winners
• Power, Morality and Perspective
• Why Society Needs Villains
• Human Nature
• Politics and Ideology
• Indian History and Mythology