Acharya Prashant addresses the issue of people not following social distancing guidelines despite clear instructions from governments and experts. He identifies this behavior as foolishness, irreligiousness, and a form of violence. He explains that science is clear: a vaccine will take time, and the current strategy is to buy time to prevent the healthcare system from collapsing. The goal is to 'flatten the curve' of infections. If too many people get sick at once, the system—doctors, hospitals, beds, and medicines—will be overwhelmed. This would lead to deaths not just from the virus but from other ailments as well, as resources would be unavailable. The deaths would be caused by the simultaneous infection of many, not just the infection itself. He uses an analogy: if you have six plates and sixty guests, you can feed everyone if they come in batches, but if thirty arrive at once, the system collapses. Acharya Prashant strongly criticizes those who spread misinformation, such as claims that a particular saint or guru has the cure. He labels such people as criminals against humanity because their actions lead to more infections and deaths. He clarifies that the role of spirituality is not to treat viruses; that is the domain of science. He laments the lack of both scientific and spiritual education in India, which makes people susceptible to being fooled by both pseudo-science and pseudo-spirituality. He notes how people are easily impressed by scientific-sounding jargon, especially when spoken by a religious figure, without any real understanding. He gives the example of people believing that clapping or banging plates would kill the virus through vibrations, calling it foolishness. He further explains that spirituality is the investigation of the ego, the 'I', and its various states like happiness, sadness, hope, and despair. It is about understanding the mind. One must know whom to approach for what: a doctor for a toothache, not a guru. He then addresses the concept of God being 'all-knowing' (Sarvagya). He clarifies that this does not mean God has a database of all worldly knowledge like virology or cosmology. In the spiritual context, 'all-knowing' means going beyond knowledge to a state of pure consciousness (Bodha), which is freedom from knowledge, not its accumulation. He also touches upon the superstition surrounding cow urine and Ganges water as cures, pointing out the hypocrisy of those who worship cows but are part of a system that leads to their slaughter. He concludes that the real disease is internal—ignorance and superstition—and the cure is proper education in both science and spirituality.