Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
राजवृत्तिस्थिताश् चौराश् चौराचाराश् च पार्थिवाः एकपत्न्यो न शिष्यन्ति वर्धिष्यन्त्यभिसारिकाः
rājavṛttisthitāś caurāś caurācārāś ca pārthivāḥ ekapatnyo na śiṣyanti vardhiṣyantyabhisārikāḥ
โจรจะดำรงตนตามวิถีของกษัตริย์ และกษัตริย์เองจะประพฤติเยี่ยงโจร สตรีผู้ยึดมั่นต่อสามีเดียวจะไม่สำรวม และการคบชู้ลับ ๆ จะเพิ่มขึ้น
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It frames adharma—corrupt rulership and unchecked desire—as a form of pasha (bondage). Linga-worship is implied as a Shaiva remedy: purification of conduct (ācāra-śuddhi) and re-centering life on Pati (Shiva) to weaken bondage.
By contrast: when society mirrors theft and desire, Shiva-tattva stands as Pati—the stabilizing Lord beyond corruption—who restores order through dharma, inner restraint, and grace when the pashu turns toward Him.
Sense-restraint (indriya-nigraha) aligned with Pashupata discipline is the takeaway; practically, it supports vrata, japa of Shiva-mantras, and regular Linga-puja to curb desire and re-establish dharmic conduct.