Sarvam retweeted
Sarvam
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Sarvam retweeted
Sarvam retweeted

Smriti Ji’s Bengali is better than @MamataOfficial ‘s Bengali!
Very clear and understandable.
@smritiirani ji 👏🏼👏🏼🫡
Sameer@BesuraTaansane
Abhi bolo “bohirogato” !!! Bolo bolo @MamataOfficial @derekobrienmp @MahuaMoitra ? Oh I realised all 3 have blocked me 😅 Smriti ji @smritiirani speaks Bengali better than many “Bengalis”
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Sarvam retweeted
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Sarvam retweeted

சட்னி காணாம போனா புதுசா அரைச்சிக்கலாம். கிட்னி காணாம போனா என்ன ஆகும்னு யோசிங்க.
கிட்னி திருடனுங்க நமக்கு வேண்டாம். #VoteForNDA
தமிழ்
Sarvam retweeted
Sarvam retweeted

Those who support stone pelters must stand in her shoes to understand what they r doing wrong ..
Salute to her. every soldiers must have latest gun to protect their life
Their life too matters @adgpi
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Sarvam retweeted
Sarvam retweeted

People of Bengal, before you vote, don’t forget those tears in the eyes of countless mothers and sisters.
#BengalElection
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Sarvam retweeted

The elderly man in the picture below, over sixty years old and destitute, crosses the Bhagirathi River every day by boat from Vaishnavnagar in Malda to Dhuliyan Ghat in Murshidabad. This is his profession; he is a boatman.
Last year at dawn, he reached Dhuliyan Ghat and saw crowds of panicked, terrified people waiting desperately for a boat ride. He thought to himself that today might bring an unexpectedly good earning. But most of the passengers were weeping women and children. In a moment, his illusion shattered as they were all fleeing Murshidabad out of fear of some marauding, violent Muslim goons. All of them were Hindus.
Amid the crowd, his own son-in-law stood helplessly, waiting for him. Everyone was desperate to get on the boat, pushing, shoving, chaos.
Rupchand made twenty trips across the river that day, ferrying everyone to safety in Malda. Seeing the plight of these helpless people, he didn’t take a single penny as fare. And only after helping everyone else, he finally took his son-in-law across.
Rupchand Mondal is not just a hero, he is now a deity.
A billion salutations.
So when some Congress activists like Anuradha Tiwari ask why the BJP is promising freebies to outdo TMC, then they must be reminded of how important it is for Hindus to win this election.
Courtesy: “Ei Samay” | 14.04.25

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Sarvam retweeted
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Every Bengali must read this before voting today & decide where he/she wants to take Bengal in Future.
THE DAY KOLKATA BROKE IT'S GOLDEN GOOSE🥲
Kolkata once pulsed as beating heart of Bharatiya industry—grand mills humming, fortunes rising, the Birlas at the center of it all.
Aditya Vikram Birla, the sharp-eyed scion fresh from MIT, had already worked miracles. In 1965 he returned and turned the family’s sinking Eastern Spinning Mills into a roaring success. The old Dalhousie offices at India Exchange Place still carried the scent of power, right opposite the Writers’ Building.
But by the late 1970s, the air had turned toxic.Militant Leftist Trade Unions ruled the streets. “Gherao” became a weapon — managers trapped for days, starved, humiliated. Strikes crippled factories. Politicians openly branded industrialists “class enemies” who deserved no mercy. Every flight out of the city felt like an escape; many carried emergency bags stuffed with jewels and documents, half-expecting they might never come back.The pressure on the Birlas had been building for years. Union trouble had even blocked them from fully occupying their own Birla Building until President’s Rule briefly intervened.
Then came the breaking point!
Around 1978, Aditya Vikram Birla looked at the writing scrawled in red across the city walls and made a cold, decisive call. The place that once nurtured his family’s empire now treated ambition like a crime. He shifted his base to Mumbai. It wasn’t loud. It didn’t need to be.The signal rippled like shockwaves. Other Birla branches followed. Soon the great exodus began in earnest — JK Group, Thapars, and scores of Marwari houses accelerated their departure. Multinationals like ICI, Bata, Philips, and Brooke Bond started shrinking or fleeing. Iconic chimneys fell silent. Hundreds of lockouts and strikes became routine. West Bengal’s share of Indian industry, once commanding, began its long, painful collapse. Aditya poured his fire into building something unstoppable from Mumbai — a global empire in textiles, cement, chemicals, and more that would one day span dozens of countries. He never made Kolkata his home again.
The real tragedy wasn’t just one man’s departure. It was an entire ecosystem of dreams, jobs, and daring strangled by ideology, gheraos, and endless hostility.
Today, when you walk past the quiet streets and watch talented youth board trains for work elsewhere, the echo still lingers—They didn’t just chase away capital. They killed the golden goose.
Bengal then threw out the Leftists & elected Mamata Didi with a hope. But did she deliver?
Yes! She delivered. She made it from worse to worst!
Bengal Today:
~Per Capita Income nearly 20% below the national average.
~Share in National GDP: Dropped sharply from 10.5% in 1960-61 to 5.6% in 2023-24.
~27.8 Lakh youths registered for the state's unemployment allowance scheme (Banglar Yuva Sathi),
~FDI inflows (2019–2025) total only ₹15,256 Crore.
~Capital Expenditure saw a 35.1% contraction in late 2025.
Bengal is having, maybe, it's last chance today & on 29th to reclaim lost glory again AND this time, Bharatiya Bengalis must decide what they really want. A steep downfall further with anarchy OR Development with National Security!
Your Vote, Your Choice! Use it Wisely🙏

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In a landmark articulation before the Supreme Court in the Sabarimala matter, celebrated constitutional lawyer J. Sai Deepak laid down a principle of extraordinary jurisprudential weight. He argued with surgical precision that where a religious tradition is governed by Shastrically determined rules rooted in centuries of theological authority, the constitutional courts must exercise restraint and refrain from substituting judicial reasoning for scriptural doctrine.
The legal and civilisational threshold Sai Deepak drew was as clear as it was consequential. The judiciary, however supreme in matters of civil law, does not occupy the throne of theological arbitership. Secular constitutional logic cannot and must not be weaponised to dismantle traditions whose very foundation rests on a divine and doctrinal order that precedes the Constitution itself.
This was not merely a courtroom argument. It was a definitive declaration of where the boundary between judicial authority and religious sovereignty must permanently stand. @jsaideepak ji reminded the highest court of the land that robes do not confer omniscience and that the humility to distinguish between legal jurisdiction and spiritual jurisdiction is itself the highest form of constitutional wisdom. 🔥👏
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