DebaratiG
21K posts


this is my weekend read. I really hope I can finish this asap

Goodreads@goodreads
It's Friday! What are you reading this weekend?
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@VaisakhNandan1 The couple that steals together stays together?
Anyway, the couple looks like they can afford two earthen matkas.Also they are shamelessly modeling theft to their child, teaching them that stealing is okay and a family event.Such children grow up to be assholes who steal ♾️
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5 things I need in my life
-sunny mornings
-never-ending supply of books
-a partner who understands and not reacts
-not being broke
-healthy loved ones
Priyanka dhakad🌻🍀@dhakadgirl8
5 things i need in my life - a never ending watchlist - friends who won’t judge my fictional crushes - a partner who loves watching sunsets after movie dates - cute outfits for theatre dates - enough money to never skip a theatre release again
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@DebaratiJee @realmfberlin An-uh-stay-juh: poor
An-uh-stass-ee-uh: rich
Nederlands

@Avoid_potato What kind of non-apologetic apology was that? Sesdha seedha publicly apologise karne mein maut ati hain kya logo ko? You have done well, such pathetic people should be dealt with strictly. I am so so so proud of you baccha
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UPDATE:
The apology posted does not address the false allegations, exposure of my identity, sharing of my personal information, or the targeted harassment that followed.
The damage caused to my reputation, privacy, and mental peace cannot simply be dismissed as “a fight between two girls.” False narratives were spread publicly without evidence, leading to online abuse, defamation, and unnecessary interference in my personal life.
I neither forgive nor forget what has been done, but I do not wish to escalate this matter further unnecessarily. However, I expect a clear public clarification regarding the false and baseless statements made about me in tweets and Twitter spaces.
I have already sought legal assistance regarding this matter. Any individual or account continuing to use my name, images, personal details, or related content to harass, demean, defame, or target me will be dealt with legally.
I request everyone to stop spreading misinformation and respect my privacy.

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DebaratiG retweetledi

@indiaa1947 When you take a deity who is actively worshipped in Hinduism & turn them into a sexualized fantasy figure, it is not creative freedom, it is blatant disrespect. There's a line between fiction & nonsensical shit- this has definitely crossed it. What are you doing @AmazonKindle?
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DebaratiG retweetledi

Can people stop writing about things they don’t know and stop using other people's religion, culture, race, and history to turn in a profit? Shame on this Portuguese writer who has diminished the most central figure of our religion 'the Devadidev' to a 'blue-skinned monster with two dicks'. Seriously, is this how you describe Shiva? Marcada por Shiva is outright blasphemous and outrageous and hurtful to all Hindus all around the globe. Who published this, and why is this book still available?Wtf
The funniest part is that Lord Shiva meditated for thousands of years waiting for his wife 'Sati'. Yet this 'brilliant' author didn’t have the brains to do a quick Google search on His backstory before reducing Him to a monster. Even worse,the author somehow linked the whole story to the Taj Mahal. How do you connect a Hindu deity to a mausoleum built by a very Muslim Mughal ruler for his Muslim queen? A simple Google search before writing this heap of garbage would have saved everyone’s sanity
This cannot go unnoticed. Amazon Kindle needs to be held accountable for hosting this trash. Are their content moderators really that clueless about a deity worshipped by over a billion people? Calling herself an author is an absolute disgrace. Shame on her. Please share this widely—she shouldn't get a free pass, and Amazon must ban books that actively insult and degrade religious sentiments. Like once again, the audacity! Wtf!!!! Our religion is not for you to write and publish your SMUT on, sincerely
#amazon #amazonkindle #carolinaSilva

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@VaisakhNandan1 You should keep taking small packets of locomotive snacks in between to keep your blood flowing 🙃
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DebaratiG retweetledi

DebaratiG retweetledi

Reality Check 🤐
• Urea in Milk
• Palm oil in Panner
• Sugar in Honey
• Iron Dust in Tea
• Brick powder in Chilli
• Colours in Haldi
• Plastic Rice
• Banned Pesticides in Fruits
• Contaminated Tap Water
• Fake medicine & Cough Syrup
• Package Foods in India having :
- More Sugar
- More Oil
- More Fat
- More Salt
• Mislead Claims by Big Companies :
- Maggi~ Goodness of Fibre of 3 Rotis
- Horlicks~ Taller, Stronger, Sharper
We are slowly poisoning ourselves & calling it as Normal Food !
India to become 3rd Largest Economy 🤡

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DebaratiG retweetledi
DebaratiG retweetledi

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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