Krishnendu Bachhar

217 posts

Krishnendu Bachhar

Krishnendu Bachhar

@Krishnendu600

Katılım Mart 2026
54 Takip Edilen2 Takipçiler
Krishnendu Bachhar
Krishnendu Bachhar@Krishnendu600·
@KanojiaPJ So Madafaka, which scholar told you that a PhD holder can't be a Terrorist? There were many IITIAN terrorist abbus of yours.
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Prashant Kanojia
Prashant Kanojia@KanojiaPJ·
Umar Khalid is not a Terrorist! He is Phd Scholar, who has been languishing in jail without trail!
Prashant Kanojia tweet media
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WarMonitor
WarMonitor@WarMonitorINTL·
"Freebies are hopefully increasing productivity of the India.”, says Dr Shamika Ravi, PM Economic Advisor
WarMonitor tweet media
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Krishnendu Bachhar
Krishnendu Bachhar@Krishnendu600·
@KanojiaPJ Killer and Terrorist are of different poles... Understand Intellectual Terrorist !!
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Krishnendu Bachhar
Krishnendu Bachhar@Krishnendu600·
This is how Colonizer Racist perverts will be taken care of
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ʙʜᴀᴛᴜʀᴀ
ʙʜᴀᴛᴜʀᴀ@_Bhatura·
What stops Indian men from dressing up like this?
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Aravind
Aravind@aravind·
Hippocracy. Ultimately, students and India's future pay the price of such hypocrisy. From Vyapam and other examination scams then to shady companies allowed to do shoddy jobs with our students' future now.
Aravind tweet media
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ʙʜᴀᴛᴜʀᴀ
ʙʜᴀᴛᴜʀᴀ@_Bhatura·
Name something india has done better than other countries.
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WarMonitor
WarMonitor@WarMonitorINTL·
Big Breaking: USA wants to end licence allowing countries like India from buying Russian oil as soon as possible, says US Secretary of State Marco Rubio
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Aadesh jain
Aadesh jain@adeshjainj·
Kab theek hoga apna market? Kabhi war, kabhi tarrif, kabhi crude, kabhi hormuz. Only india goes down, all others go up. Why? Not able to understand. Were we so high valued that we ate future returns and in a big consolidation phase? Or what it is? What are your views?
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Krishnendu Bachhar
Krishnendu Bachhar@Krishnendu600·
@beingwingman Abe Chewtiye.... They get Top position because of their Merits. Don't say that Chapri people with 40% score should get reservations for Top positions against 90% scoring UR class. ( Myself is a reserved category- But not brainless Chewtiya)
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wingman
wingman@beingwingman·
Brahmins who represent tiny minority of Indian population are given top most position in Armed forces. Most of the community is settled abroad and have no skin in the game for modern India. Majority of the population is kept away from power structures due to historical injustice
wingman tweet mediawingman tweet media
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Ram Subramanian
Ram Subramanian@iramsubramanian·
How much money is Narendra Modi going to spend on making plastic currency? Do Indians need this at at time of economic crisis? Can someone please answer?
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Prashant Kanojia
Prashant Kanojia@KanojiaPJ·
At this juncture, crude oil exports should be curtailed so Indian consumers can benefit from lower fuel prices. Instead, the Modi government has cut export duties while keeping petrol and diesel prices high for ordinary Indians. Why are consumers paying more while exporters benefit? The perception is clear: fuel pricing policy seems designed to protect corporate interests rather than provide relief to the public.
Prashant Kanojia tweet media
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Malay Krishna
Malay Krishna@Malay4Product·
This is a sensible move and 60+ countries have already done it. The Adani conspiracy angle is silly. Let me explain the real pros and cons. First, why RBI is even considering this. India spent ₹6,372 crore printing notes in FY25, up from ₹5,101 crore the year before. 23.8 billion soiled notes were pulled out of circulation in FY25, up 12% from the previous year. Despite UPI, cash demand hit a record ₹42.86 lakh crore. Low-value notes (₹10, ₹20) change hands constantly in buses, markets, and tea stalls, so they wear out fast and need constant reprinting. Polymer is being looked at to break this cycle. First the pros; Durability. Polymer notes last 2.5 to 4 times longer than paper. A note that survives 1 year as paper survives 3-4 years as polymer. So fewer reprints, lower long-term cost. Lower replacement cost over time. Higher upfront printing cost, but far fewer replacements. Net saving over the note’s life. Counterfeit resistance. Transparent windows, micro-optic holograms, and specialised inks are much harder to fake than paper security features. Countries that switched reported lower fake-note circulation. Hygiene. Polymer resists moisture, dirt, and grime. Cleaner notes in a country where cash passes through countless hands. Climate resilience in wet conditions. Survives monsoon, humidity, accidental washing. A paper note through a wash is destroyed. Polymer survives. But there are a few cons too; Heat performance. This is the big one for India. Polymer notes can shrink, curl, or stick together in extreme heat. India regularly hits 45-48 degrees in summer. Australia and Canada don’t have this problem at scale. India does. This was the main reason the 2014-15 pilot stalled. Higher upfront cost. Polymer substrate costs more per note to produce. The savings only materialise over years through fewer reprints. Short-term budget hit. Folding and creasing. Polymer doesn’t crease like paper but can develop permanent fold marks and tends to spring back, which annoys people used to folding cash into wallets. Counting friction. Polymer notes are slippery. Manual counting by hand, the way most Indian shopkeepers and bank tellers count, becomes harder. They stick together or slide apart. Recycling and disposal. End-of-life polymer notes need specialised recycling. Paper notes are easier to dispose of. Environmental questions were raised in past evaluations too. Machine recalibration. ATMs, vending machines, counting machines, and note sorters across the country need recalibration or replacement to handle the different thickness and feel. This will be a significant transition cost. Public adaptation. 145 crore people who’ve handled paper their whole lives need to adjust. Older and rural populations may initially distrust or struggle with the new feel. Australia is the global pioneer and they went fully polymer starting 1988. Canada, UK, Singapore, New Zealand, Vietnam, Romania, Mauritius followed. Most started with a pilot on one or two denominations before scaling. But none of them have India’s combination of extreme heat + cash volume + manual counting culture, which is why India needs its own pilot rather than copying anyone. RBI is doing the right thing by starting with a pilot on ₹10 and ₹20 notes. These are the highest-circulation, fastest-wearing, lowest-risk denominations. They should test heat performance across Rajasthan, Vidarbha, and the South in peak summer. Test counting in real markets. Test ATM and machine compatibility. Then decide on scaling. Polymer is a good idea with one real India-specific risk, heat. So we need to get the substrate right for 48-degree summers and it’s a clear win on durability, cost, hygiene, and counterfeit resistance. This is just a routine currency modernisation that 60+ countries have already done. Yes, we should be asking questions if the polymer can handle Indian summers. Everything else is solved engineering.
Indian Tech & Infra@IndianTechGuide

🚨 The RBI is considering replacing India’s paper currency with plastic (polymer) banknotes. (Mint)

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Open Letter
Open Letter@openletteryt·
SSC NEET CBSE CUET as a country can we conduct one exam with zero issues? students are future of our country, them losing faith in system will make our future hopeless.
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Krishnendu Bachhar
Krishnendu Bachhar@Krishnendu600·
@TARUNspeakss Isme Kiska Baap ka kya?? Jo print kare ...kare... This was needed at least 25 years ago.
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Krishnendu Bachhar
Krishnendu Bachhar@Krishnendu600·
@TheSincereDude Dhyaat bak14 . After a long time they are introducing truly durable and high quality notes. You Fkers have problems in everything.
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Sincere Dibya
Sincere Dibya@TheSincereDude·
Interesting timing. RBI is suddenly considering polymer notes. But let’s look at who benefits. ▪️ Adani Enterprises set up Mundra Petrochem Ltd in 2021; a greenfield PVC & polymer plant at Mundra, Gujarat. ▪️ Polymer banknotes are made from BOPP (Bi-axially Oriented Polypropylene) films; exactly the polymer category Adani’s ₹34,900 Cr petchem cluster is built around. ▪️ India’s domestic polymer production capacity is woefully short (~1.59 MT vs 4 MT demand). Guess who just received environment clearances to fill that gap? ▪️ The same Modi govt that gave Adani airports, ports, roads, coal, solar & defence contracts; is now handing RBI a “cost-efficiency” pitch that happens to need BOPP polymer at industrial scale. Demonetisation destroyed cash. Now they want to control how cash is made. No open tender announced. No Parliamentary debate. Just two RBI board meetings, and a ready supply chain conveniently owned by a friend. Ask yourself: why does every reform in India eventually route money to the same address? This isn’t progress. It’s procurement.
Indian Tech & Infra@IndianTechGuide

🚨 The RBI is considering replacing India’s paper currency with plastic (polymer) banknotes. (Mint)

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Lt Colonel Vikas Gurjar 🇮🇳
Lt Colonel Vikas Gurjar 🇮🇳@Ltcolonelvikas·
🔥 Do You Support the Agneepath ( Agniveer) Scheme of the Indian Armed Forces? © YES © NO Write your response in Comments
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