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| The Divine Origin of the Monarchy Constitution of Nation |
Indian Constitution Origin According to Sanatan Dharma
Chapter 1: Origin of the Constitution
Parmeshwar First
Ganapati created a monarchical constitution for nation-building.
Incarnations of
Bhagwan Shankar, Dattatreya, Parashurama, Ram, Krishna, Buddha, and Kalki
established Sanatan Dharma and the constitution.
Concept of dual
celestial Earth: whenever Bhagwan establishes Sanatan Dharma and monarchy,
Satan establishes a fake religion and democracy.
Chapter 2: Types of
Constitutions
2.1 Monarchy vs
Democracy
|
Feature |
Monarchy |
Democracy |
|
Power Distribution |
100% ruling ministers |
75% ruling, 25% opposition |
|
Opposition Rights |
None |
Can interfere in legislature
and executive |
|
National Planning |
Smooth, uninterrupted |
Disrupted by opposition,
risk of treason |
|
Citizen Unity |
Promotes patriotism |
Can foster inequality,
casteism |
|
Ministerial Accountability |
Immediate punishment for
treason/corruption |
Often unpunished |
|
National Objective |
Nation-first |
Personal or party gain,
corruption |
Chapter 3: Pillars
of the Monarchy Constitution
Three Pillars:
Economics, Parliament, Judiciary
Three Homes:
Legislature (Parliament), Executive (government firms), Judiciary (courts)
24 Sections: 8 each in
Economics, Parliament, and Judiciary
Ministerial Ratios:
Economic 1:1, Parliamentary 1:2 (minister & deputy), Judiciary 1:3 (hear,
examine, judge)
Separation of Roles:
Ministers/magistrates work only in legislature; executive officers in executive
home; executive magistrates in judiciary
3.1 Economics Sections
Manufacturing,
Agriculture-Husbandry, Entertainment-Tourism, Marketing-Broking, Retail
Services, Government Firms, Banking-Finance, Import-Export
Ministers: 8, plus
Chief Minister of Economy per state, Prime Minister of Economy for nation
3.2 Parliament
Sections
Education,
Development, Property, Defence, Foreign, Health, Revenue, Culture
Ministers: 8, Deputy
Ministers: 8, Chief Minister of Parliament per state, Prime Minister of
Parliament for nation
3.3 Judiciary Sections
Domestic, Social,
Cultural, Government, Industrial, Prestige, Executional, International
Magistrates: 8 for
hearing, 8 for examining, 8 for judgment
Chief Justice per
state, Prime Justice for nation
Chapter 4: Fundamentals of Monarchy Constitution
Single king, religious
& educated, elected based on intelligence and contributions
King serves for life;
ministers may change but king remains
Citizens: Original
citizenship vs Refugee citizenship
Equal rights for
original citizens; refugee citizens’ rights graded
One identity card for
all communities; no caste-based privileges
States may have
different languages/cultures, but national culture must follow Sanatan Dharma
Chapter 5: Partition of the Nation
Area and population
determine division
Hierarchy: Village → Taluka → City → Metropolis → District → State → Nation → United Nation → Union Nation → World Nation
24 units combine to
form higher levels (24 villages = 1 taluka, etc.)
Chapter 6: Parliament of the Nation
Four levels: Nation
Parliament, United Nation Parliament, Union Nation Parliament, World Nation
Parliament
State Parliament: 8
economic ministers, 16 parliament ministers, 24 magistrates; Speaker = Chief
Ministers of Economy, Parliament, Judiciary (3)
National Parliament: 3
chief ministers per state; Speaker = Prime Ministers of Economy, Parliament,
Judiciary + Prime Advisor + King (5 prime humans)
Chapter 7: Currency of the Nation
Four types: Nation,
United Nation, Union Nation, World Nation
Currency must be
eternal → Image of
Parmeshwar Ganapati
One currency, one bank
per nation; no private banks
Currency changed every
18 years
International trade
rules for united, union, and world nations
Chapter 8: Framework of the Constitution
Eight fundamental
elements:
Citizenship and Rights
Facilities and
Reservations
Currency and Property
Religion and Culture
Education System
Justice System
Electoral Process
Economic Policy
Articles failing these
elements must be amended or constitution recreated
8.1 Citizenship and Rights
Two types: Original
& Refugee
Original citizens:
Full rights in parliament, judiciary, executive
Refugee citizens:
Rights based on purpose; may gain full citizenship upon fulfilling duties
8.2 Facilities and
Reservations
Emergency aid based on
need, not caste/religion
Economic, intellectual,
and physical reservations given individually, not caste-based
8.3 Currency and
Property
One currency, one
property department
Currency ≤18 years
Land/natural resources
are national assets, no private ownership
8.4 Religion and Culture
Nation identity tied
to Sanatan Dharma
Citizens may follow
different cultures, government adheres to one religion and culture
8.5 Education System
Include indigenous
scientists & scholars
Three pillars:
Cultural schools, Economic institutions, Research universities
Free education,
economic support, and invention encouragement
8.6 Justice System
Eight courts:
Domestic, Social, Cultural, Government, Industrial, Prestige, Executional,
International
Court decisions final
within court; National laws decided in Parliament House
8.7 Electoral Process
Jobs in parliament,
executive, judiciary based on competence
Selection based on
intellect, physical strength (if needed), and mental stability
Exception: Voluntary
service without salary allowed
8.8 Economic Policy
Balanced production
& pricing of goods/services
Categories of National
Industries and Public-Private Sectors
Tariff control &
commodity markets
International trade based on fair currency or barter in case of overvaluation
Conclusion: This Gudi Padwa 2026, I am embarking on the creation of India’s new Constitution. Writing this Constitution may take me around 5 years, and bringing it to life across India could take 10–20 years. I do not have the patience to tolerate injustice—but I possess extraordinary patience and determination to fight for justice and a better nation.
I had my first job in 2005, and at that time, I wished to work in 10 different fields. By 2025, I had been worked in more than 20 different fields. In 2009, I developed a desire to become a massage therapist, and by 2023, I have provided body massage services to a thousand clients. In 2016, I wished to write a book on Sanatan Dharma; my first scripture was published in 2025, another is in the process of being published, and two more, Kedi Purana and Kedi Kand, are currently being written. Now, in 2026, I have the desire to write a common constitution for all countries of the world. I have already drafted a list and written a short chapter. Perhaps in 10–15 years, the entire constitution will be completed.
I have madness, but I am not mad. I do not act impulsively or according to rigid plans; I act according to time, place, and circumstances. I do not fear failure, because I do not work to achieve success just to sit quietly. Even if I fail in writing the constitution, I will not be saddened, because I have 3–4 other missions, and between every mission, I have so much fun that the mission itself becomes my enjoyment. Even if I succeed in writing the constitution, I will not find peace, because I seek the joy of victory. After every victory, I desire a new conquest. In the end, despite thousands of failures, I want to emerge victorious.
Note: This content represents a summary of Chapter 31 from "The Spine of Sanatan Dharma", a 33-chapter work authored by Kedi Ganapati.
"Free to learn. Free to share. If you feel it — feed the mission 🙏"

