In
the
aftermath
of
Sushant
Singh
Rajput's
death
by
suicide,
questions
regarding
nepotism
in
Bollywood
are
being
discussed
with
much
vigor.
However,
this
has
taken
an
unproductive
turn
by
netizens
turning
against
celebrities
such
as
Karan
Johar,
Alia
Bhatt,
Sonam
Kapoor
and
others,
and
outright
blaming
them
for
Sushant's
death.
Earlier,
Swara
Bhaskar
had
said
that
blaming
Karan
and
Alia
for
Sushant's
death
is
the
height
of
'hypocrisy
and
idiocy'.
Now,
Harshvardhan
Kapoor
has
raised
an
important
question
by
asking
what
if
the
people
being
targets
of
hate
today,
choose
to
depart
tomorrow.
Harshvardhan
shared
a
post
by
an
Instagram
user
which
suggested
that
there
may
be
new
victims
of
the
blame
game
and
hate
over
Sushant's
death,
which
is
being
spread
on
the
internet.
It
read,
"It's
easy
to
create
a
soft
spot
for
the
departed
and
loathe
the
living.
What
if
the
person
alive,
who
is
the
target
of
our
hate
today,
was
to
depart
tomorrow?
Why
create
that
soft
spot
tomorrow?"
To
this,
Harsh
added,
"People
out
here
hating
on
and
wishing
death
upon
other
people
that
have
absolutely
no
connection
to
what's
happened
...
this
is
your
way
of
making
this
world
a
better
place
?
Sad
sad
regressive
society
is
all
I
can
say
...everyones
upset
...
but
being
reactionary
and
hateful
isn't
the
answer...
that's
just
dumb."
Harshvardhan
had
written
a
heartbreaking
note
on
Sushant's
passing.
"Woke
up
today
to
the
saddest
most
unthinkable
news
...
I
really
loved
my
interactions
with
sushant
,
whenever
I
would
see
him
out
I
would
Always
corner
him
and
keep
asking
him
things
about
performance,
life
and
science
,
he
was
so
bright
,
lived
life
to
the
absolute
fullest
and
generous
,
so
kind
...
it's
a
huge
huge
loss
for
everyone
that
he
ever
came
in
contact
with
and
it
fills
me
with
deep
sadness
to
know
I
will
never
see
or
be
able
to
talk
to
him
again
...
this
is
so
so
awful
and
I'm
genuinely
disturbed
by
this
,
I
very
rarely
do
this
but
after
meeting
him
out
I
remember
I
sent
him
some
books
and
films
and
he
would
watch
and
read
and
we
would
talk
more
,
I
have
no
words
only
sadness
..
RIP
sushant
we
all
will
always
love
you," he
wrote.
Worried
about
your
mental
well-being
or
of
someone
you
know?
Help
is
just
a
call
away.
Reach
out
to
the
nearest
mental
health
specialist
at
COOJ
Mental
Health
Foundation
(COOJ)-
0832-2252525,
Parivarthan-
+91
7676
602
602,
Connecting
Trust-
+91
992
200
1122/+91-992
200
4305
or
Sahai-
080-25497777/
SAHAIHELPLINE@GMAIL.COM