I see a lot of parallels between the Indian gang rape case, and the latest mass shooting in the US, not to mention that sexual assault, rape is definitely not an Indian issue but global.

But the main problem is that in both cases people want a quick fix, to punish or remove the last part of the chain, the guns in the mass shooting case or the raping men in the case in India.

Of course people do not want to tackle the much more complex and difficult issue, the responsibility of the whole society.

There is no question about the need of reducing the access to guns in the US, or about the appropriate punishment for the criminals committing rape or any other violent attacks against women, or children. But even if a death penalty is given to those committing these crimes would not change the fundamental problems initiating such crimes.

It is naturally a multi factorial question so let us just concentrate on the "freedom of women" we celebrate so much in western societies. Unfortunately I do not see any freedom.

Society forced women to try to become men in terms of professions, work, positions in order to sustain themselves and their children, many times they are raising alone. The consumer brainwashing completely distorted the classical woman image, with the present external look and lifestyle they have become the caricature of themselves. Especially young women today have such look, and lifestyle that even 5-10 years ago would have identified them 100% as prostitutes.

Even 13-14 year old teenagers have no other theme to talk or fantasize about but sex, getting high, getting laid, their lives are flowing in between weekend parties.

Every form of media is pouring either violence or sex or both.

And this "free, western" influence is washing over the whole globe, undermining thousand year old classical cultures, removing the family model, any moral or ethical framework.

The only full solution is a totally new education program, to re-educate ourselves about the role of the family, the different but equal roles of men and women in families and in the society, and how we could build modern societies where such roles can be fulfilled comfortably, without any pressures or prejudice.