Acharya Prashant addresses the issue of the danger faced by Hindu girls in India, questioning whether people truly grasp the depth of this threat or merely react to a few sensationalized cases. He points out that while the murder of one girl becomes sensational news, the murder of a hundred girls would be a story used for decades to instill a mindset of foolishness, delusion, and hatred. He then reveals a startling figure: over one crore (ten million) Hindu girls have been lost in the last twenty years, a fact that receives no attention from the media or on social platforms like WhatsApp. He describes this as a silent conspiracy where people are distracted by other issues concerning girls' safety, which he claims constitute only 0.1% of the problem, while the real issue of one crore deaths, representing 99.9%, is ignored. The speaker asserts that by focusing on trivial matters, society becomes complicit in the ongoing tragedy. He directly states, "We are also partners in the murder of these girls... we ourselves have committed these murders." He explains that this complicity is evident in the desire for such killings to continue, which is why they are not discussed. He presents data indicating that these killings, primarily female foeticide, are not committed by the lower class, the uneducated, or those in rural areas. Instead, they are perpetrated by the educated, urban, upper and middle classes, and those of the 'upper' caste, predominantly in North and West India. He also cites a report that 96% of sexual abusers of minors are relatives or friends of the family. Acharya Prashant highlights that the number of these 'missing' girls is increasing at an accelerating rate. He contrasts the media's silence on this issue with the extensive coverage given to one or two cases of injustice against girls, especially if they have a sexual angle. He argues that if people were genuinely concerned, they would focus on the one crore girls who have been killed, a figure he compares to the Holocaust in scale. He laments that the media does not show these statistics and that the real danger to Hindu girls comes from their own homes and the Hindu society itself. He concludes by criticizing media channels that ignore the world's biggest issues, such as climate change, biodiversity extinction, and female foeticide, in favor of trivial, sensational news, deeming them deceitful and not worth watching.