Maharani Mandodari
6K posts

Maharani Mandodari
@Mahalankeshwar2
Ex-SriLankan, Ex-Muslim, Bhakt of Shiva, 2nd account after Twitter suspended my first over spreading truth about Islam. I support Hinduism as an Organisation.
Katılım Mayıs 2023
258 Takip Edilen169 Takipçiler

Laxmi Agarwal is a woman who survived an acid attack. In 2005, when she was only 15 years old, a 32-year-old man named Nadeem threw acid on her after she refused his marriage proposal.
This happened when the Congress party was in power in India. At that time, Laxmi did not feel ashamed of being Indian. But today, she says she feels ashamed because she believes girls and daughters are no longer safe in the country.
Recently, she said that Prime Minister Modi tells ordinary people not to buy petrol and gold to save money, but he himself travels in expensive aircraft worth thousands of crores.
She also claimed that rape cases against girls have increased in India. Today, Laxmi makes videos with her friend Sajid Malik Siddiqui.

English

@Shirink_13 so, we have all seen dog shows. Do they allow rabid dogs in the show? No. Right. That's the reason.

English

@MasterMaliq when 9 out of 10 dogs are rabid, it no longer matters that 1 dog is uninfected. Every dog should be made to sleep.

English
Maharani Mandodari retweetledi
Maharani Mandodari retweetledi

Indian Hindu woman Himanshi Khurana was in a relationship with Abdul Ghafoori in Canada.
Her abdul was no different.
Himanshi Khurana(30) brutally murdered in Toronto Canada by her partner Abdul Ghafoori(32) in Dec 2025.
The relationship cost her life.
#lovejihad
English

@SheetalPronamo Once you free the temples, the priest themselves will steal everything.
English

@Sagar_02X @AmitShah can we implement termination from the post for being involved in such activities?
English

Just fix the indicator, Ma’am… We Have a Patient Inside!
What happened on a road in Bihar is now leaving people angry and heartbroken!
An ambulance was rushing a patient to the hospital. Every second mattered!
But suddenly, the driver got stuck behind a Bihar Police officer’s vehicle. According to eyewitnesses, the officer was driving with both indicators blinking, making it impossible to understand which way the vehicle would turn!
The ambulance driver politely requested:
“Ma’am, your double indicators are on. We can’t understand where you’re going. Please fix it, we need to reach the hospital quickly.”
Instead of the matter ending there… things allegedly took a shocking turn !
The officer reportedly became furious, stepped out of her car, and allegedly snatched the ambulance keys!
Even after that, the driver didn’t argue. He kept folding his hands and repeating:
“Please let us go… there’s a patient inside.”
But the tension only escalated further. Reports claim the situation turned physical as well!
And then came the most heartbreaking moment!
Helpless, humiliated, and frustrated, the ambulance driver allegedly started taking the patient out onto the road, saying:
“How could you hit me? I only asked you to fix the indicator…”
Imagine the condition of the patient and the family watching all this happen in the middle of an emergency!
An ambulance is not just a vehicle.
For someone inside, it is the thin line between life and death!
If these allegations are true, this incident is not just about road rage anymore — it’s about humanity, responsibility, and misuse of power!
What’s your opinion on this incident?



English
Maharani Mandodari retweetledi

Just wanted people to know, Jio as a company doesn't respond to any social media posts. They don't respond to any complaints you raise with them, be it for any platform. Also raising complaints is a strenuous task when using their services. Just use it as long as it's cheap.
Gaurav Srivastava@GauravAajneeti
Dear @JioCare @reliancejio Please cancel this order and refund the amount ASAP. After waiting for more than a week, I have decided to go with @airtelindia
English

From sharing an image of a condom on a Shiva linga, to this. Amazing what one election result can do .
Jai Bholenath.
Saayoni Ghosh@sayani06
Faith…. Unseen but felt! 💫
English

@CinemaMadness24 Dump at some common area, and don't pay these scoundrels. After COVID and NaMo' taliyan for these scoundrels, these fuckers are unstoppable.
English

Are we really supposed to pay the municipality workers who come to collect trash from apartment complexes?
They’re charging ₹100 per flat. On top of that, they only take regular daily garbage. Any extra waste like plastic, wood, etc., is left unattended unless we pay extra.
Is this the same across Hyderabad? Who should be tagged regarding this?

English
Maharani Mandodari retweetledi

-12-year-old Muslim girl went missing from her home in Budgam, Jammu and Kashmir,
-Body was found next morning, just 200 metres from her house, rape and murder case was registered
-Pakistani proxy accounts, Indian liberals and Bollywood celebs amplified this news attacking Narendra Modi and RamRajya
They deleted their tweet when turned out that accused was her neighbour identified as Mudasir arrested by JK police
Another propaganda busted 💯




English

@gharkekalesh Reliance as a group is based on fraudulent activities. Ever had an issue with JioMart? How well do they resolve? Had an issue with JioFiber? Pathetic customer service.
English

@MohiniWealth Ambanis are into sodium ion cells, which is hailed as the next big tech in battery industry and once it takes off, lithium ion would be a talk of the past.
English

🚨 SHOCKING TRUTH: Anant Ambani's ₹750 Ice Cream is PROOF India is DOOMED to Stay Poor Forever? The Dark Secret No One Dares Say!
Hey friends, stop everything. While you're struggling with ₹50 ice cream cones in this crazy heat, Anant Ambani – son of Asia's richest man – just launched Vantara Creamery selling scoops for a jaw-dropping ₹750 each. Yes, you read that right. Seven hundred and fifty rupees for one scoop of fancy ice cream.
The internet is exploding with memes, anger, and questions. But here's the real bombshell: This isn't just about rich people flaunting luxury. It's the deadly symptom of why India keeps failing to build real tech giants like China. We're trapped in a dangerous illusion.
The Ice Cream Empire While the Nation Starves for Innovation
Think about it. The Ambani family has unlimited money, power, and brains. They could pour resources into AI that changes the world, semiconductors that make India independent, or batteries to crush Tesla. Instead? Premium ice cream targeted at the super-rich.
Why? Because in today's India, selling fancy scoops, protein powders, or hair oil makes way more money with zero risk than betting on hard tech. One viral Instagram post, beautiful packaging, and boom – cash flows in weeks. Deep tech? It takes 7-10 years, massive risk, and government red tape that kills dreams.
This is controversial, but someone has to say it: Our entire startup culture is a massive scam. We brag about having over 2 lakh startups. Sounds impressive, right? Wrong. Less than 1% work on real future tech like AI, chips, or biotech. The rest? Shampoos, popcorn brands, and food delivery apps. Shark Tank India is basically a D2C fashion and food show at this point.
The Heartbreaking Reality of India's "Tech" Unicorns
India has 117 unicorns worth billions. Their total patents? Just around 2,129. Shockingly, over 110 of them have ZERO patents. Zero! Compare that to real tech companies abroad that file hundreds every year.
Our biggest "tech" firms are actually delivery apps and e-commerce. Engineers from IITs – the best brains in the country – are delivering Swiggy and Zomato orders because the pay is better and faster than risky startups. This is heartbreaking. We're wasting our demographic dividend on gig work.
China? They're building BYD electric cars, TikTok-level apps, and dominating semiconductors. India? We're busy copying foreign tech and paying them $14.3 billion every year in royalties just to use their inventions. That's money leaving our country while we sell ice cream.
Zoho tried to build semiconductors – a massive ₹3,500 crore project. They had to shelve it because finding real tech partners in India is nearly impossible. Even big corporates run away from deep tech.
Why This System is Broken (And How It's Keeping India Down)
India's economy has three layers:
- Top 15 crore rich people who buy ₹750 ice cream
- Middle 30 crore aspirational folks loving convenience apps
- Bottom 100+ crore fighting daily survival
The system rewards quick consumer wins over long-term nation-building. Foreign companies laugh all the way to the bank as we import their tech and export our talent.
This isn't hating on Ambani – they are brilliant businessmen playing the game perfectly. The real villain is our broken incentive structure that makes ice cream the smartest bet.
We say we want an Indian Elon Musk. But our ecosystem rewards the guy selling overpriced dessert instead.
The Wake-Up Call We Desperately Need
India has the talent. We have the population. We have ambition. But we're stuck in "trader mode" instead of "builder mode."
Real change needs:
- Massive rewards and protection for deep tech risk-takers
- Education that teaches invention, not just dropshipping tricks
- Government buying Indian tech first
- Culture that celebrates patents more than valuations
Until then, expect more ₹750 ice creams while China builds the future.
What do you think? Is Anant Ambani's ice cream a smart business move or a national embarrassment? Drop your hot takes below – let's debate this like our future depends on it (because it does).
Like, share, and subscribe if you want more truth bombs on India's real challenges. Turn on notifications – the next one might hit even harder.

English

@jain_harshit Hahaha...I once covered approximately 9kms in 2.5hrs in Bangalore traffic. That was just a few months before COVID.
English

@DriveSmart_IN First generation gareeb automobile owners.
English

@TrishaElite One of the reasons, I have actually stopped purchasing anything from roadside vendors. They quote prices based on what ride you came on and how you look. Give absurd explanations and are extremely rude. Govt. needs to stop freebies and free ration to the poor.
English

Today I bought a coconut water for ₹85.
But the moment I opened it, I felt there was barely any water inside.
I took just 2–3 sips… and it was finished.
So I asked the seller, “Bro, why is there so little water in this?”
He replied, “Madam, it’s extremely hot these days, that’s why coconuts have less water.”
I said, “But the online ones cost ₹83 and usually contain 250–275 ml of water.”
And without missing a beat, he said, “Madam, those online ones are bad… ours are original.”
Come on, man…
If you’re going to fool customers, at least make the explanation sound believable.
Simply calling everything “Original” doesn’t mean customers will believe anything anymore.
Now tell me — has something like this ever happened to you too?


English

@Sagar_02X @AshwiniVaishnaw maybe you gotta look at this employee and the RPF who didn't take action against this errant employee
English

A railway staff member allegedly tried to sit on another passenger’s reserved seat inside a train from Mumbai to Amritsar.
When the actual seat owner refused to give up the seat, the staff member reportedly said,
“This is my train… I work for the Railways. How can you stop me from sitting here?”
After the argument escalated, he allegedly pulled the emergency chain and declared,
“The train will not move until you allow me to sit.”
Soon, the RPF arrived at the spot.
But instead of taking action against the chain pulling, the situation reportedly took a different turn. The staff member introduced himself, the chain was fixed, the train was allowed to move again… and he eventually sat on the same seat.
What shocked many people even more was what happened next.
The staff member allegedly looked at the passenger and said,
“Now say something.”
The passenger stayed silent… probably because even the authorities present did not object.
According to railway rules, unnecessary chain pulling can lead to penalties and strict action. That’s why many people online are now questioning whether power and position should be used like this against ordinary passengers.
What do you think? Was this behavior justified or was it misuse of authority? Share your opinion.



English












