If a factory accident = FIR on the promoter, then..
Train accident → FIR on the Railway Minister?
Air crash → FIR on aviation authorities?
Pothole death → FIR on the Municipal Commissioner?
Accountability must be consistent , not selective.
🚨 Big Breaking : Just Now Majority Of Oil Tankers Taking U Turn From Strait Of Hormuz . Raising Confusion. @grok Please Verify .
Monday Another Blast Coming In Market ?
I recently completed a Registration for a Land in Punjab.
The amount of bribe we had to pay to the Teshsildar and + 28 other people was insane. The lawyer said everyone has their rate fixed. Even one miss step? Your file will be stuck. The Land I bought was WHITE. For something so transparent, I had to pay bribes to the crooked Punjab Administration. It’s criminal to invest in Punjab.
SHAMEFUL.
@officeofssbadal@HarsimratBadal_@AamAadmiParty@BhagwantMann@ShivrattanDhil1@capt_amarinder
@ActusDei But income tax require lot of paperwork and tax official enquire repeatedly for using LRS route so people are hesitant to use such platform. kindly throw some light on this important issue
Motilal Nasdaq ETF trades at ₹286. Its NAV is ₹238. That's a 20% premium — just to buy Nasdaq exposure. Absurd!
Open a US brokerage account. Buy QQQ & other ETFs directly. No premium, no nonsense. We'll show you how at thefynprint
Comment, global & get started!
In most banks you can easily open FDR online.
But the same FDR you cannot break (pre-close) online.
You have to visit the branch.
Very inconvenient! Banks should allow both opening and breaking online.
What do you think?
@NalinisKitchen from low IQ people like baba bageshwar to sourav joshi one thing is common how to connect with masses and mint money if you are able to connect with masses money will flow
This is called a successful life. At a very young age, Sourav Joshi got married and has cars, house, money, fame, financial freedom, a luxurious lifestyle, brand deals, and a stable career. He doesn’t need to buy anything on EMI, and he has everything that a common man wants in life.
Even after getting so many things, he is still humble and a down-to-earth person.
Yesterday night, a 58-year-old man was admitted to the ICU.
He’d been suffering from a severe headache for four days. His family ignored it. By the time they brought him to us last night, he was already drifting into unconsciousness. The CT scan confirmed the nightmare: a massive Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. A catastrophic bleed.
I sat the family down and explained the prognosis. It was grim....mostly because they had waited so long. I advised the necessary investigations, but they were reluctant. Their first question wasn't "How do we save him?" but "If he has no chance, can we just take him home?"
I told them we wouldn’t give up. We activated Ayushman Bharat services so their treatment would be completely free. I told them Neurosurgery docs would come the next morning to evaluate him for a life-saving intervention.
This morning, the attendant..a young man in his late 20s approached me again. "Can we just take him home? we don't have the money."
I felt my temper rising. "I already told you, everything is covered. It’s free. How can you even think of taking your father home in this state?"
He looked at me and said, "He’s not my father. He’s my uncle."
I paused. "Where are his children? His wife?"
"He never married," the boy replied.
The anger in me died instantly, replaced by a cold, sudden realization. For a second, I found myself thinking that if this man had his own children standing there, the conversation might be different. Maybe they would be fighting for every extra second of his life instead of looking for the exit.
It made me think about the importance of building your own family...having people who are truly yours when the lights start to dim. Of course, I know we shouldn’t generalize. I have seen biological children treat their parents far worse than strangers.
But watching that man lie there, essentially alone in his most critical hour, hit me hard. I eventually convinced them to stay and continue treatment, but the silence of his so called family spoke louder than any monitor in that room.
Don't take your health for granted, and don't take the people who care for you for granted. In the end, they are the only ones who will be standing by your bed.
This country is amazing.
Recently, there was a case where a really young guy Ayush sold his kidney for ₹10 lacs. He got paid 9.5 lacs and the racket wasn’t paying ₹50k.
So this guy went to police, what happened next is nothing short of a netflix series.
-Ayush’s kidney went to Parul who paid ₹60 lacs for it. Ayush got just ₹10 lacs & even then they were not paying 50k.
-Police caught several doctors in this syndicate. Several hospitals of Kanpur were involved.
-The syndicate was operating in whole country. Several hospitals of different cities.
-there were de@ths due to botched operations.
-a fake 12th pass “doctor” Rohit has operated 30 surgeries to remove kidneys.
-another fake Dr Mudassar Ali is at large, has conducted 100 surgeries. Police looking for him.
-some have paid ₹90 lacs for kidneys based on urgency!
-there were telegram groups which lured needful men to sell kidneys, even motivated them that people live happily on one kidney their whole lifetime.
-A doctor couple was caught. Foreigner patients were also buying kidneys.
-Hospitals were switching off CCTVs & lights for this. 3 different hospitals were used to extract, implant, and recovery of patient.
Imagine this kidney racket worth crores involving several fake doctors, real doctors, ambulance guys, hospitals, and others got busted because they were reluctant to pay ₹50k to a man in desperate need of money.
Greed! Probably in Indian DNA like no others. They were so confident that no one goes to police and nothing happens to them.
India is amongst the top 10 countries with highest wealth inequality.
"I earn ₹11,500 per month and I'm not able to afford a simple bicycle in 6 months. While my bosses are buying new BMWs and other imported cars worth crores regularly"
Congratulations to Manu for rebuilding his life with alcohol.
Women do not have the ability to think beyond a certain threshold...
Here she destroyed both hers and Manu life...
At least when he fired a warning shot, she could have swallowed her pride, offered the drink, she goes home alive, file a police complaint...Alcohol makes you do stupid things, most crimes happen when drunk and it's not advisable to deal with drunks..
Her name was Jessica Lal.
She was 34 years old. A model in Delhi working as a celebrity barmaid at a party in Mehrauli on the night of April 29 1999.
There were over 300 people at that party. Politicians. Businessmen. Fashion designers. Bollywood faces.
At midnight the bar ran out of liquor.
Manu Sharma walked in. Son of a Congress MP. He demanded a drink. She said no. He offered her Rs 1,000. She said no again.
He pulled out a pistol. Fired one shot at the ceiling as a warning.
She still said no.
He shot her in the head.
Then he walked out.
Among the group that left with him that night was Vikas Yadav. Son of MP D.P. Yadav. The same Vikas Yadav who three years later kidnapped and murdered Nitish Katara.
Out of 300 people at that party only 10 came forward to testify.
Then one by one they changed their statements.
32 witnesses turned hostile.
In February 2006 the trial court acquitted all nine accused.
The nation erupted.
Media ran a sting operation. Witnesses were caught on camera admitting they had been paid to change their testimony. Manu Sharma’s father was linked to the bribes.
The public campaign forced a High Court appeal. Daily hearings for 25 days.
In December 2006 Manu Sharma was convicted. Life imprisonment.
Vikas Yadav got four years.
He was out on bail when he committed the Nitish Katara murder.
Today Manu Sharma is free.
Released in 2020 on good behaviour after 17 years. He changed his name. He now runs a whisky brand called Indri.
Jessica never got to say no again.
Her sister Sabrina fought alone for 7 years. She lost her mother in 2000. Her father died in 2006. She kept fighting.
If Sabrina had stopped this case would have died the way Jessica did.
In silence.
Follow for real stories about the people who refused to let India forget.
𝐘𝐨𝐮 𝐚𝐭𝐭𝐞𝐧𝐝𝐞𝐝 𝐑𝐒𝐒-𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐤𝐞𝐝 𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐬 𝟒 𝐭𝐢𝐦𝐞𝐬: 𝐀𝐫𝐯𝐢𝐧𝐝 𝐊𝐞𝐣𝐫𝐢𝐰𝐚𝐥 𝐫𝐢𝐩𝐬 𝐢𝐧𝐭𝐨 𝐣𝐮𝐝𝐠𝐞 𝐢𝐧 𝐜𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐭
Former #Delhi Chief Minister #ArvindKejriwal alleged that Delhi High Court Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma had attended events organised by the Adhivakta Parishad, a lawyers' body affiliated with the #RSS, on four occasions. He further said he strongly opposed the BJP-RSS ideology.
Read more: intdy.in/iudpfv
✍️ @SrishtiOjha11
@NalinisKitchen Ias who keep on wagging their tails for political masters are rewarded. those who work for public are punished. such system we have built
This is Neha Byadwal.
- Born in Jaipur, raised across different cities due to her father’s government job.
- She gave up using mobile phone for 3 years and studied 17-18 hours a day.
1st attempt - Failed prelims
2nd attempt - Failed prelims
3rd attempt - Couldn’t clear mains
4th attempt - She cleared UPSC at just age 24 and became an IAS officer.
She can choose an easy and comfortable life. But some people walk away from it to serve others and make the country better.
@DrDhruvchauhan Government and medical College doctor should be prevented from doing private practice at any cost. first patient care and second is the education of the young doctors it at stake. it should be country wide
Discriminatory and Worrisome order for People of Bihar .
The govt has banned only “Allopathic practitioners” under this scheme and have not taken any action on any other branch of practitioners / Quacks or self claimed doctor Baba’s who play with millions of lives in bihar under the pretext of providing treatment !
This order was not any issue if it involved all pathy , be it allopathy , Ayush or others without any discrimination to one but a single side attack to modern medicine will only promote further quackery in the state !