Acharya Prashant begins by stating that in India, a vast number of daughters, particularly very young girls, have genuinely disappeared over the last 20 years, in numbers far greater than one can imagine. He specifies that this issue particularly affects Indian girls, and even more so, Hindu girls. This is a phenomenon that began many decades ago and is not only continuing but accelerating, yet it is not being discussed. He points out that this is a horrific massacre, or more accurately, a femicide, rooted in the country's culture. To substantiate his claims, the speaker refers to the Global Gender Gap Index, a survey of 146 countries. In the 'Health and Survival' parameter for women, India ranks 146th out of 146. He dismisses the notion that such surveys are conspiracies to defame India, urging the audience to face the truth. He also mentions India's poor rankings in other parameters: 107th in 'Educational Attainment' and 143rd in 'Economic Participation and Opportunity'. Further data from a Thomson Reuters Foundation poll is cited, which ranked India as the third most dangerous country for women in 2011. By 2018, India had progressed to become the number one most unsafe country for women out of 193 nations, surpassing even Afghanistan and Syria. The speaker sarcastically congratulates the nation on this 'achievement'. The speaker asserts that the greatest danger to a girl is not on the streets but in her own home, in the cradle, and even in the womb, from her own family. He attributes this crisis to a profound lack of spirituality, stating that where spirituality is absent, violence will prevail. He distinguishes spirituality from superstition and culture, which he identifies as the root of the problem. He argues that modernization and education alone are not the solution, as technology like ultrasound is being used to facilitate sex-selective abortions, thereby increasing female foeticide. The cultural belief that the family's honor rests on the daughter's sexuality makes her a liability. The speaker concludes that the only solution to this problem is spirituality, as superstition and traditionalism will only perpetuate the killing of girls.