Acharya Prashant explains that acts of violence and rioting are not isolated incidents caused by a few individuals, but are products of a larger social ecosystem that breeds and tolerates such behavior. He argues that if society were truly different and did not socially accept or passively support such perverse attitudes in the name of religion, these incidents would not occur. He highlights that even the families of those who engage in rioting or corruption are often complicit, as they knowingly partake in the proceeds of loot or bribes. The active rioters are merely the visible tip of an iceberg, supported by a vast mass of passive toxicity within the general population. He further points out that this passive toxicity is fueled by content from television and social media, which the public fails to resist. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that humans possess an inherent animal disposition rooted in self-centered ignorance, which leads to both overt violence, like stabbing, and subtle violence, like environmental pollution. He asserts that the principle behind both is the same: the beastly instinct to prioritize one's own physicality and resources. To transcend these biological instincts and move beyond our historical identity as jungle beasts, he stresses the absolute necessity of wisdom literature and spirituality, specifically citing the Bhagavad Gita and the Upanishads as essential tools for human transformation.