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@ds_chatter

Consumer Tech, Start-ups, Math, History, Spirituality, Meditation, Cricket, Tennis 🇮🇳 🇺🇸

India 参加日 Aralık 2010
1.4K フォロー中68 フォロワー
DS
DS@ds_chatter·
@monidipadey @Reuters The aricles are so outrageous that it feels like Jameel Jamali's handiwork. Keep 'em coming.
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Monidipa Bose - Dey (মণিদীপা)
Ancient Mughal???? Your idiotic writer doesn’t even know the time period for the term ‘ancient.’ Timurids came to India in mid 16th century, which is early modern period!! Much much later than the ‘ancient period’ which ends at late 5th century CE. Islam was not even born in the ancient era. At least study history before doing your Islamic propaganda!
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DS@ds_chatter·
@QiaochuYuan karma is dharma (action & consequence aren't separate from natural law), and dharma is sukshma (that law operates at subtle levels). There is no dichotomy between "observable psychology" and "cosmic order" - the behavioral mechanics (karma) ARE how dharma manifests in the world.
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QC
QC@QiaochuYuan·
the exoteric understanding of karma is that god punishes evil people directly with lightning bolts from the sky. this is obvious nonsense as any cursory inspection if the world reveals. the esoteric understanding of karma is that it is literally ordinary non-supernatural causality, not in the physics sense but in the sense of how the world natively responds to goodness and evil. evil is inherently destructive of goodness, it means eating the seedcorn so you starve next winter, it means taxing the peasants into oblivion so they don’t have anything you can tax anymore. evil can gain in the short term by vampirically leeching off of goodness but this structurally never works in the long term and makes you enemies in the medium term. goodness and only goodness is what produces real flourishing. that’s karma
︎ ︎venom@venom1s

If karma is real, then why are so many evil people living their best life?

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DS@ds_chatter·
@johnecto @BholanathDutta Yes, we have to assume isoceles, else we will end up 3 variables and 2 equations.
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john basile
john basile@johnecto·
@BholanathDutta Not enough information but if you assume triangle to be isosceles then X equals 25
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DS@ds_chatter·
@GabbbarSingh Chakkawala kursi effect eh?
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Gabbar
Gabbar@GabbbarSingh·
Life has changed since I replaced my main office chair with a recliner. I type less, and review decks & presentations more. My job is usually speaking & giving directions. So now I have a wireless keyboard & a mouse. With a 17 inch screen. And a recliner to lie in. Productivity has increased. Feels like sitting near a psychiatrist 😊
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DS@ds_chatter·
@Bhayankur Soul searching for what? We shouls focus on our economy, and de-risk from international shocks. All this mediation business is distracting for us. Pak needs it to survive. We need to aim higher and keep pushing on fundamental investments to sustainbly thrive!
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Ankur Bhardwaj
Ankur Bhardwaj@Bhayankur·
Instead of acting all petty and salty, we should acknowledge that Pakistan enabled this ceasefire and do some genuine soul-searching. Where has Indian diplomacy gone wrong and why?
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Aabhas Maldahiyar 🇮🇳
Few scams of Indian history that immediately come to my mind: A) Jaichand, Jagat Seths & Mir Jafar were traitors. B) Rana Sangram Singh invited Babur to Hindustan. C) Ashoka became Buddhist after Kalinga War. D) British took Delhi from Timurids (Mughals) (it was actually taken from Marathas). E) Jalaluddin was given title of “Akbar” by a Rajput (actually he gave it to himself). F) Pushyamitra destroyed 84k Buddhist stupas. G) Tipu was the first freedom fighter. H) Tipu gave us rockets. I) India was richest during Timurid (Mughal) rule. J) De di humein aazadi bina khadag bina dhal. K) Netaji was a communist. L) Ghazni destroyed Somnath thinking it was the idol of Al-Mannat and he had nothing against Hindus. M) Sufis are peaceful and they didn’t force conversions. N) Maharaja Prithviraj was taken to Ghazna as a prisoner, and blinded he killed Muhammad of Ghor. O) Cheraman mosque is the first mosque of India. P) Khilafat movement didn’t lead to massacre of Hindus; rather it was an anti-British movement. Q) Ram Mandir at Ayodhya was destroyed by Babur (in reality it was destroyed by Aurangzeb). R) Tagore wrote “Jana Gana Mana” for the British crown. S) Timurids never converted their Hindu wives. T) Taj Mahal was built from scratch by Shah Jahan. U) Savarkar is the father of “two-nation theory”. V) Nalanda University was destroyed by Brahmins and not by Khalji. W) Hindu society practiced evil traditions like sati big time, and British saved hindu women by bringing laws against it. X) Caste System is unique to Hindu society and is root of all oppression in world. Y) Marx was against British rule in India. Z) RSS & Hindu Mahasabha along with Muslim league were main reasons behind partition of India. Madani opposed partition as he believed in Hindu-Muslim unity.
Lost Temples™@LostTemple7

Tell me the biggest scam in Indian history ?

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DS@ds_chatter·
@jopriyu Extending this thought to all situations / context leads to idea of "chitta shuddhi" - a critical unlearning / cleansing necessisity for spiritual growth, right?
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Saucy bandit (Priyanka Joshi)🇮🇳
It’s strange how easily we learn to change our outer layers, our language, our lifestyle, our preferences, but the core remains stubbornly intact. I had a small but telling moment recently. I don’t consider myself a particularly demanding parent, but I do find myself telling my son, quite often, to work hard and to have some sense of direction. It’s not philosophy, it is simply the most honest advice my journey from a chawl to a relatively comfortable corporate life allows me to give. It is lived experience, distilled...... Then I heard another mother tell her child something entirely different, don’t worry about anything, just have fun, childhood is only for that. And for a brief, very unfiltered moment, my chawl core was scandalized. Of course, I knew immediately that she wasn’t wrong. Her advice too came from a place of care, perhaps from a life where pressure arrived too early..... She was protecting something she believed was fragile and fleeting. And that’s when it clicked. What we call advice is often nothing more than memory, carefully repackaged. We don’t just teach our children what is right, we teach them what once kept us safe, what helped us survive, what we wish we had more or less of. We may upgrade our surroundings, refine our tastes, and learn new ways of being, but somewhere beneath it all, the original blueprint quietly continues to guide us. And perhaps the real work is not to erase that core, but to understand it well enough that we do not pass it on unquestioned.
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Abhishek
Abhishek@AbhishBanerj·
Everyone thrilled to see the end of "Naxalism" in India So am I! Humble request ... don't call it "Naxalism" Naxalbari is just a place in Bengal What does "Naxalism" mean? Call it Communist terror ... take the real name of the monster so that everyone knows Down with Communism. Long live India.
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DS@ds_chatter·
@TovarischManu @AbhishBanerj Soviet economy's most important input was oil. The 1986 global oil shock killed it. They didnt have any money to pay for their subsidies. Perstroika was an half hearted attempt to open markets. They were not wrong-tried an approach but failed. We must learn lessons, not dogmas.
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Comrade Manu Kant
Comrade Manu Kant@TovarischManu·
You’re mixing up two different things. “Equal poverty” is just a slogan. The Soviet people were amply provided for. They had different conception of wealth. If they were poor, then they wouldn't have defeated Hitler but like Sikhs & others who served in the British army for meagre dal & roti would have shifted loyalties towards Germany. The real question is: who controlled production. In the Soviet Union, there was no capitalist class living off profits. That already changes everything. Yes, some officials had privileges. But that’s not the same as a class owning factories and extracting profit. Don’t equate perks with exploitation. Even the working class had privileges & perks. Your own point defeats you. Inequality shot up after the collapse. Why? Because state property was broken up and handed over. A new rich class emerged overnight. That’s not continuity—that’s a complete shift. And saying socialism didn’t create wealth is simply wrong. A backward country became an industrial power. Built massive infrastructure like the Moscow Metro, developed regions like the Seven Sisters skyline, and even led humanity into space with Sputnik launch and Vostok 1 mission. That doesn’t happen without creating real material wealth. The difference is simple: under socialism, wealth was used for public development. After collapse, it was captured by a few. So no—your argument doesn’t hold. First read unbiased sources & then argue with me.
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DS@ds_chatter·
@TovarischManu @AbhishBanerj Being equally poor is not a virtue. In Soviet Union, the elite extracted value through non-monetary privileges. Gini index all Soviet countries shot up to > 50% in 2 years after collapse highlighting the above. Communism neither created wealth nor did it create equality
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Comrade Manu Kant
Comrade Manu Kant@TovarischManu·
You do business apparently & yet you don't know rudimentary economics or politics. What is America's foreign policy? To exploit the world economically. America is rich because it exploits the entire world. Some crumbs are given to the Americans. Bulk is kept by the capitalist class. Earlier, the British industralised itself through exploiting the entire world. The British looted 45 trillion dollars from India. That was its foreign policy. aljazeera.com/opinions/2018/… Now stfu.
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DS@ds_chatter·
@TovarischManu @AbhishBanerj Thanks for pointing out where I live! Per capita income of Soviet Union in 1991 was $9000 vs US at $24000. Data > ancedotes Btw, you asked me to Google (American company), you are debating in X (again... you know the drill)! Dogma is good but eating your dog food is better!
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Comrade Manu Kant
Comrade Manu Kant@TovarischManu·
I guess you live under the rock. You know nothing about either the reality of America nor about the Soviet Union. Before the October revolution Russia was a very poor agrarian nation. In less than 30 years it was in space ahead of the US. Before that, it defeated mighty beast Hitler's Germany. In Olympics & the world games it was far ahead of the US. Read Oxfam reports. The American ruling class created wealth for itself. The blacks & hispanics feed themselves in jail by committing crimes. The "whites" are not better off. Google on the Internet to see how many Americans are in jail. Every month there is a shootout.
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DS@ds_chatter·
@TovarischManu @AbhishBanerj The question you should ask is what did capitalist America do for its people. Not what its foreign policy. Primary role of a government is wealth creation for its people. Communism abjectly failed at that!
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Comrade Manu Kant
Comrade Manu Kant@TovarischManu·
@AbhishBanerj Maoism is a travesty of Marxism. Real Marxism is not about terrorism. Capitalism is terrorism. See what capitalist America is doing now What capitalist England did to us.
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Rohan Pandey
Rohan Pandey@khoomeik·
Sanskrit has >2000 verb roots (dhātus). But do you really need to learn them all? I had Claude analyze 270 Sanskrit texts, and it found that with just the 192 most common dhātus, you can understand ~90% of verbs in literature. Below are those 192 dhātus, ordered by frequency:
Rohan Pandey tweet media
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SEN Cricket
SEN Cricket@SEN_Cricket·
Is Jasprit Bumrah the Bradman of Bowling? Gerard Whateley & Robert Craddock dissect the T20 World Cup final. @remitly | #Cricket
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Pratim D Gupta
Pratim D Gupta@peedeegee·
A couple of days back at a cake shop in Calcutta, I had stepped in for a quick snack. The man in front of me had the look of someone who had been very careful, for a very long time, not to inconvenience anyone. White shirt, collar gone a bit yellow. He was buying a pineapple cake. The kind with the aggressively yellow icing. The girl at the counter asked whether any name needed to be written on the cake. The man shook his head. But she wasn’t done. “Kaar jonmodin (Whose birthday), Jethu?” she prodded. He pushed his glasses up. “Aamar (Mine),” he said. Quietly, trying to make it sound very matter-of-factly. She went still for a second. Exchanged glances with me and another customer. Then she turned toward the back where two boys were loading something in the fridge. “Shibu! Mondal!” What followed was not polished but more touching than any great musical performance. They all sang Happy Birthday to this man, and meant it, the way you can only mean something that wasn’t planned. The man turned red. He looked at his shoes. He looked at the cake. He looked at the girl. And I thought I saw a tiny smile. He didn’t say anything. Took his change, took the box. His shoulders sat differently as he stepped out onto the pavement and got swallowed up in the street crowd. I kept thinking about him for the rest of the day — this man who had turned up alone to buy himself a cake, and left a little less alone.
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Mathonymics
Mathonymics@Mathonymics·
The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people with limited knowledge or competence in a specific area greatly overestimate their own abilities. Conversely, highly skilled individuals often underestimate their relative competence, assuming tasks that are easy for them are similarly easy for others.
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Vijay Shekhar Sharma
Vijay Shekhar Sharma@vijayshekhar·
Absolutely no AI was used in creating this. You will enjoy this reaction from Bollywood 🤣
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DS@ds_chatter·
@Schandillia Thank you, all of should tirelessly keep calling these truly cruel people out who use the suffering of others to advance their personal wealth and their vaccous self-worth!
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Amit Schandillia
Amit Schandillia@Schandillia·
The article she shares says: “On the morning of the visit, Netanyahu’s office issued a statement that effectively presented Modi not as an official guest of the State of Israel but rather as a private guest of the Netanyahu family.” Modi addresses the country’s legislature. Modi signs security agreements with the country. Modi will address the country’s media. But it’s a private visit just because the two leaders are friends? Does Netanyahu own the Knesset? Is Magan Or a family heirloom? Is Israeli State media Netanyahu family’s personal TikTok? Of course @thewire_in HAD to platform this incoherent drivel. After all, they just won a jackpot of yellow journalism as the article is by an Israeli Jew himself! What they won’t tell you, however, is that the author is himself less of a journalist and more of a “human rights activist” whose own heart beats for the terror state of Balestine. He himself writes about Israel’s “apartheid” and Netanyahu’s “fascism.” He literally abuses his own country of “provoking Ramadan escalation” in Gaza. In sum, Israel’s Rana Ayyub. Would you expect anything but salty drivel from a character like that when, in his books, two “fascist” leaders meet? And when India is being shat upon by a foreign dredge, how do you expect The Wire to not lap it up more eagerly than a dog laps up dog food? Of course Modi humiliated India. It’s Netanyahu, after all. Had he visited Qatar instead and pledged support to whatever Hamas cockroach is still breathing there, on all fours, he would’ve made India proud. Go look up Eitay Mack and his “journalism.”
Seema Chishti@seemay

PM Modi Humiliated India During His Visit to Israel. "Whatever the reason for the visit, Prime Minister Modi humiliated both himself and India. He acted and spoke like the leader of a minor state visiting a global power, desperate to curry favour" writes Eitay Mack [LINK in next]

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