Arush Tandon

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Arush Tandon

Arush Tandon

@ArushTandon

Hi. और सब ठीक? Working at @swarajyamag. Views personal. Lucknow-Bangalore.

Katılım Mayıs 2009
718 Takip Edilen3.8K Takipçiler
Dr. Van Nostrand
Dr. Van Nostrand@RSD270·
Next lok sabha election should be before Holi in Feb, April-May mein nahi hona chahiye
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Arush Tandon
Arush Tandon@ArushTandon·
@Shreyas_Mysuru In the event he's not faking it the difference might boil down to the specific questions PG's surveyors are asking versus what others are.
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Arush Tandon
Arush Tandon@ArushTandon·
Pradeep Gupta saying last time 20-30% of people surveyed in Bengal did NOT reveal their voting preference. This time that figure is in excess of 60%.
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Arush Tandon
Arush Tandon@ArushTandon·
That reminds me. We don't celebrate K.J. Rao enough. Not a fan of glorifying bureaucrats for doing their job but what Rao ji did was historic.
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Arush Tandon
Arush Tandon@ArushTandon·
Around the 31st minute, Devendra Parashar shares that he spoke to a senior BJP leader who believed that winning Bengal 2026 is important in civilisational terms. youtu.be/zxOoZ_sLG3o?si…
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Arush Tandon
Arush Tandon@ArushTandon·
The Sarsanghachalak can say this because the Sangh actually imagined, planned and executed the movement on the ground. What needs to be agitated against fiercely is good-for-nothing caste kangers ranting about 'Sangh and BJP having no role in RJB mandir construction'.
Organiser Weekly@eOrganiser

Ram Mandir was built due to the commitment and support of the entire country: RSS Sarsanghchalak Dr Mohan Bhagwat via @eOrganiser @RSSorg @DrMohanBhagwat organiser.org/2026/04/28/350…

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Karthik Tadepalli
Karthik Tadepalli@karthiktadepall·
if only most econ papers had this good of a first paragraph
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M@BjornQuixote·
Meet my ancestors Krittibash Mukhopadhyay. More popularly known as Krittibash Ojha. Ojha was a title. His father was Bonomali Mukhopadhyay & brother Aniruddha Mukhopadhyay. He wrote Krittivasi Ramayan. So when someone tells "Jai Shree Ram" is a north Indian slogan, show them this
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Amar Govindarajan
Amar Govindarajan@amargov·
Sentences lifted from a @SwarajyaMag piece. Overall argument/piece - nearly the same. Ofcourse we also derive ideas from X/news articles etc.. We like to spread thoughts/ideas - no harm - it’s why we exist but some credit may not have hurt is all.
Dhiraj@IndustrlPolicy

A well-researched article on the notoriety of Korean chaebols and their termite like extractive behaviour in Indian domestic market. They quietly quietly repatriated under the guise of royalties etc offshore to fund heavy capital investments abroad. newindianexpress.com/opinion/column…

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Anmol Jain
Anmol Jain@teanmol·
We agree, it is "a well-researched article". Just that it is @SwarajyaMag's research. @PrabhuChawla Ji's column in @NewIndianXpress (Korea earns. India pays. Who dictates?) appears to be remarkably inspired by Swarajya's piece (The Imbalance With Korea That Delhi Is Trying To Address) published on 22 April, four days before his column ran. The flow and story arc appear to be same. The opening peg, the three-company analytical frame, the figures used and the comparisons drawn from them, and the closing argument all follow our piece. Obviously, the underlying data is public. The MEA briefing was open to all, the IPO filings are available to anyone, the trade numbers come from DPIIT data, and all of us draw from the same well. What does not come out of public data is: - the choice Samsung, Hyundai and LG as the frame for reading the imbalance, - treating each as a distinct repatriation playbook, -deciding which figures from each tell the story, and -building the case that CEPA has produced outcomes its designers didn't intend. And there is more. The closing argument, as it happens, is more than 'inspired': @SwarajyaMag: "The $50 billion bilateral trade target Modi and Lee announced for 2030 is not new. Moon Jae-in and Modi set the same goal in 2019. What is new is Delhi's public acknowledgement that hitting that number without fixing the ratio would simply enlarge the gap." Chawla Ji: "The roughly $50-billion bilateral target Modi and Lee announced is not new. Moon Jae-in and Modi set the same goal in 2019. What is new is Delhi's public acknowledgement that hitting that number without fixing the ratio would simply enlarge the chasm." So while we're glad the "well-researched article" is finding readers, the research comes from Swarajya — "Swarajya researches. NIE rewrites. Who dictates?" Just to be clear, we're not asking for any royalties. A footnote, maybe. A line of credit would have been nice, Chawla Ji. :) For the readers, the original story and our X threads on it, are below. Original Story: swarajyamag.com/economy/the-im… Threads: 1. x.com/SwarajyaMag/st… 2. x.com/SwarajyaMag/st…
Dhiraj@IndustrlPolicy

A well-researched article on the notoriety of Korean chaebols and their termite like extractive behaviour in Indian domestic market. They quietly quietly repatriated under the guise of royalties etc offshore to fund heavy capital investments abroad. newindianexpress.com/opinion/column…

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The Emissary
The Emissary@TheEmissaryCo·
Spoke to some non-religious uncles. They think religion is a scam (though they participate in rituals cuz their wives make them lol). They railed that Hindus are the most ungrateful people in the world after Modi gave them Ram Mandir. They couldn’t believe how the community responded to the most seminal religious event in centuries. Ofc the reality is more complex, but amongst regular people, this is what 2024 will represent. Brutal.
Dehati Armageddon Neutraliser@ImperiumHindu

4 June 2024 still hurts

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Ujjawal Mishra
Ujjawal Mishra@Ujjawal1Mishra·
Rudyard Kipling: "The heat was like a grey-hot blanket. It was a stifling, breathless heat that made the brain boil in the skull... men drank more than was good for them, and said things they regretted when the monsoon finally broke." Point being, Indian summers have always been unbearable. Attaching infra push with the sweltering heat is some next level chicanery.
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Dr. Van Nostrand
Dr. Van Nostrand@RSD270·
Ayodhya is beautiful, the temple and the area surrounding it is soothing and divine, anyone trying to tell otherwise has ulterior motives.
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Arush Tandon
Arush Tandon@ArushTandon·
You'd think the reporter here is describing a state which has the most benign and gentle political culture and not one where 2.4 lakh security personnel have to be deployed only so that people can go out to vote.
Preeti Choudhry@PreetiChoudhry

My exit poll! As I leave #Bengal, it would be a disservice not to say this: I have come to deeply admire the way women inhabit space here. There is a quiet, almost subconscious elevation of women as independent beings . something that stands in stark contrast to the entrenched misogyny that still finds resonance across much of northern India. Perhaps it stems from a cultural understanding of shakti. A form of empowerment that manifests here in ways both subtle and profound, unlike anywhere else in the country, even in the south. Any woman journalist who has covered political rallies across India will recognize the difference immediately. Other states, a crowd is not just a logistical challenge, it carries risk. the inevitability of wandering hands, the violation masked by chaos. Here, the crowds are no less dense, the air no less heavy with sweat and alcohol—but the hands, for the most part, do not grope. Men step aside to make way. When contact happens, as it inevitably does in chaos, there is visible embarrassment rather than entitlement. What you encounter is not chivalry, but something far rarer: equality. And equality feels far more meaningful. Was never a fan of chivalry in any case :)  There is more. Women politicians across party lines campaign with a striking freedom, aggressive, sharp, unapologetically irreverent, often using what would elsewhere be labelled as ‘masculine’ rhetoric. In most states, such behaviour would invite judgment, even censure. Here, it is met with acceptance,  applause. What feels liberating to an outsider is, in Bengal, simply normal. What we frame as empowerment  here is a cultural undercurrent. I have covered four elections in this state, and each time I have returned with the same sense of awe. Bengal, meanwhile, ambles on with a certain bemusement, as if unaware of what sets it apart. But it is a big deal. And perhaps the most remarkable part is that Bengal does not think so. Governments will come and go. One can only hope that this constant endures, not just how Bengal sees its women, but how, in many ways, it doesn’t. ♥️♥️♥️

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Arush Tandon
Arush Tandon@ArushTandon·
Someone made this point a few days ago and I agree. Would rather do other things than post on X but under no circumstances can Indian discourse be allowed to be dominated by illiterate, narrow-minded takes whose vision does not extend beyond one's nose.
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Arush Tandon
Arush Tandon@ArushTandon·
Reminder: Black-pilling is ignoble, un-Aryan.
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