CJP Faked Everything — I Have Proof

I've been looking into this Gen-Z political movement called CJP — Cockroach Janta Party — and honestly, the more I dug, the more suspicious things got. Before you call me a BJP supporter or an andhbhakt, just hear me out and check everything yourself.

The Website That Was Blocked by the Government

The founder claimed the government blocked their website. That sounds serious — but here's the thing, I actually checked.When a government blocks a website, they do it through your internet provider. That means it only gets blocked inside India. You can simply use a VPN — a tool that makes it look like you're browsing from another country — and the website works fine. I went even further. I tried multiple VPNs and even the Tor network, which is the same technology people use to access the dark web.

Nothing worked. The site was dead everywhere, not just in India.So I checked the DNS. Think of DNS like a home address for a website — it tells your browser where to go to find the site's files. The DNS was completely empty. That means whoever runs the website removed the files themselves. The government didn't block it. Someone took it down from the inside and then blamed the government for it.

The Account That Was Hacked

About 12 hours after the website drama, the founder said their Instagram account got hacked.But think about it — what does a real hacker actually do when they get into an account? They delete posts, upload their own content, try to scam followers, or permanently lock out the owner. Here, none of that happened. Not a single post was deleted. Nothing changed. The account was just quietly "recovered" after 12 hours.That's not how hacking works. That's how a sympathy story works.

The Video That Suddenly Cuts at the Wrong Moment

This one is what really got me suspicious.The founder made a video showing their Instagram dashboard to prove that most of their followers are from India. It was a normal screen recording — until they reached the part showing the country-by-country breakdown of their audience.Right at that exact moment, the screen recording cuts. And what appears instead is a completely different clip with two images of Modi on the screen.If you're screen recording your own dashboard to show proof, why would you cut the recording at the one moment that actually matters? There's no innocent explanation for that. It looks like what was about to appear on screen didn't match the story being told.

The Content Pattern

Here's another thing I noticed. Look at the kind of videos CJP puts out:A couple of videos about real public issuesSeveral videos that are purely anti-BJPAnd then a large chunk of videos about — my account got hacked, someone messaged me, I'm being threatened, the government is after me

That last category does one thing really well. It keeps people emotionally invested and outraged. But it doesn't actually inform anyone about anything.

My Point

I'm not defending any political party. I'm saying that someone who claims to fight misinformation should not be spreading it themselves.Catching these things doesn't make you a BJP fan. It makes you someone who thinks for themselves — which is what CJP claims to want from you anyway.Check everything I said here yourself. The DNS, the VPN test, the video edit. Don't take my word for it either.


Nibil Krishna

Nibil Krishna

Founder of Ovita Space Research and Development Corporation