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@jalebiloverr
#econtwitter If I dont respond, take it personally because I probably muted you for the ridiculous things you've said.


WARNING: 🇺🇸 DOJ admitted 47,635 Epstein files including Trump allegations, were deleted after the war with Iran started.


Separatists welcome PM Modi's surprise visit to Lahore goo.gl/8AfUyK


Government of India has called for an all-party meeting tomorrow, 25th March at 5 PM on West Asia crisis.


Any normal country would've removed him by now, and put him in prison






Archives | Bhagat Singh is one of the only national heroes, perhaps after Gandhi, who is venerated across India. This could be attributed to his appeal as a martyr, which cuts across political ideologies. If only the same was true for his intellectual legacy as well. Many simply lap him up as a martyr, but few celebrate his political and social vision. This is not to undermine the sacrifice of Singh—or, for that matter, any martyr—but it is important to add that there was more to him than just shaheedi (martyrdom). Singh left behind a corpus of political writings, underlining his vision for an independent India. He envisioned an India where the 98 percent would rule instead of elite 2 percent. His azaadi—freedom—was not limited to the expelling of the British; instead he desired azaadi from poverty, azaadi from untouchability, azaadi from communal strife, and azaadi from every form of discrimination and exploitation. Just twenty days before his hanging on 23 March 1931 Singh sent out an explicit message to the youth, saying: “…the struggle in India would continue so long as a handful of exploiters go on exploiting the labour of the common people for their own ends. It matters little whether these exploiters are purely British capitalists, or British and Indians in alliance, or even purely Indians.” Read the entire essay by S Irfan Habib: caravanmagazine.in/vantage/bhagat…


















