Chickenlover

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Chickenlover

Chickenlover

@Metchul_head

Nihilist; Awaiting alien invasion or end of the world - whichever is earlier. Getting back to the Hindu fold. Metal Head ! Certified Yapologist !

Pune, India Katılım Mayıs 2010
293 Takip Edilen163 Takipçiler
Chickenlover
Chickenlover@Metchul_head·
Chalo time to hibernate again
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maithun
maithun@Being_Humor·
🤣🤣🤣🤣
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Amit Schandillia
Amit Schandillia@Schandillia·
A Josh Xiao can plant Chinese propaganda in Bloomberg. A Saeed Shah can plant Pakistani propaganda in Reuters. And the best we as Indians can do is call it propaganda and move on? What is our case outside our borders? Why is propaganda such a taboo word in our polity? Narrative matters and in a million ways. The Nazis had a literal Ministry of Propaganda as did the Poles. Fascist Italy had one and so did a very democratic Britain. Were they stupid? Why can’t we have our side of the story out to the world in a way that matters? Especially when it’s true? Narratives affect perception. And perception is not for just social media ego boosts, they have a direct impact on how we’re treated in the streets outside our borders. On our trades. On our geopolitics. Because ultimately, democracies are far more numerous than non-democracies today and in a democracy, every move a government makes sooner or later succumbs to public pulse. That’s why demagoguery remains in fashion. Then why shy from propaganda? What’s this goody-two-shoes attitude? Besides, it’s not that we’re too noble for propaganda. We’ve done it to our own people ever since independence. Which we shouldn’t. For a change why can’t we do it to others? Falsehood is bad. But unpublicized truth is worse. Lie travels, truth doesn’t. Truth has to be propelled.
Amit Schandillia tweet mediaAmit Schandillia tweet media
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Chickenlover
Chickenlover@Metchul_head·
Fati nahi hoti to itna likhna hi nahi padta lol
Dr. Ahmad Shahidov@shahidovcom

🇦🇿❤️🇵🇰 Those trying to intimidate us with threats and boycotts are making a huge mistake! Delhi must understand that #Azerbaijan has never abandoned the path of justice and brotherhood. The embargoes and travel bans called by Indian companies cannot shake our firm stance. We stand by Pakistan — because this bond is part of our history, our dignity. Baku has already sent a clear and firm message to Delhi: “If someone is unhappy, they better take a closer look!”Diplomacy may be a tool of politics, but friendship is the honor of humanity. We don’t choose friends based on threats or embargoes. We stand by justice and what’s right. Maybe there’ll be economic losses, but honor is not measured in money! We are neither friends for sale nor a nation to bow to pressure! Azerbaijan stands with #Pakistan — today, tomorrow, always! 🇦🇿🤝🇵🇰

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Chickenlover
Chickenlover@Metchul_head·
Khud convert hone ke baad ye sab gyaan kaise pel sakte hai log?
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sushant sareen
sushant sareen@sushantsareen·
The Modi Doctrine has been enunciated
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Abhishek Bhardwaj
Abhishek Bhardwaj@CharteredGunner·
BREAKING: All Pakistani drones flying over Yamuna Expressway have been captured by Nitin Gadkari and now he is asking them for tolls
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Sidhant Sibal
Sidhant Sibal@sidhant·
Video of the crater:
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Manish Shrivastava
Manish Shrivastava@Shrimaan·
How Mumbai Airport Quietly Kept India’s Skies Moving While the nation’s attention was locked onto missile launches, diplomatic briefings, and high-stakes military coordination, an invisible operation was unfolding at ground level—one that didn’t involve uniforms or war rooms, but was no less vital. Mumbai Airport and its Air Traffic Control team emerged as one of the quietest pillars of India’s resilience during the India–Pakistan escalation. Nobody's talking about it. But they should be. When Pakistan closed its airspace and multiple airports across northern India went offline or faced partial disruption, Mumbai became the fallback air corridor—not by plan, but by necessity. The numbers tell the story. Mumbai’s airspace typically manages around 750 international overflights every day, balanced delicately over a criss-cross runway that’s already one of the busiest in Asia. Add the usual 900+ domestic takeoffs and landings, and you have a sky operating near maximum load—on a normal day. But this wasn’t normal. Overnight, Mumbai’s airspace load surged by over 60%. At its peak, more than 1,200 international rerouted overflights were redirected through Mumbai FIR (Flight Information Region), taking the daily traffic in its skies well beyond 2,000 aircraft movements. Major carriers like British Airways, Lufthansa, Emirates, Thai Airways, and many others—unable to traverse northern corridors—rerouted through the western window. This was not just about holding altitudes and assigning vectors. It was about preventing chaos when the margin for error was zero. Imagine ten aircraft approaching simultaneously. Imagine the stakes if even one sequencing call was delayed, miscommunicated, or misread. One misstep, and you risk an international aviation incident. But none of that happened. Mumbai’s ATC worked like clockwork. Quiet. Disciplined. Flawless. No headlines. No interviews. Just relentless professionalism. Keeping those skies open was not only essential for continuity of global and domestic commerce—it was a symbol of stability. Amid geopolitical tremors, Mumbai became the calm in the storm, ensuring business travelers, cargo routes, medical flights, and humanitarian corridors stayed operational. And above all, it gave India something invaluable: a psychological anchor of normalcy. So while the nation salutes our soldiers, we must also acknowledge the men and women behind radar screens, headsets, and tower consoles—the silent sentinels who kept India connected when the sky could have collapsed into confusion. They didn’t wear uniforms, but they served. #AviationHeroes #MumbaiATC #NationalResilience #SilentStrength #JaiHind
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Slarti
Slarti@slarti_·
“Our job is to hit the target, not to count body bags” Please make a banger edit on this
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Chickenlover
Chickenlover@Metchul_head·
Looks like we did lose planes.
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The Kaipullai
The Kaipullai@thekaipullai·
For everyone who is disappointed that we didn’t finish Pakistan. I have only one question. What exactly do you mean by “Finish Pakistan”? What do you expect to do? Do you want to do a WW2 style Operation Sickle Cut, launch armored pincer movements, encircle Pakistani armies and annex Pakistan? Why on earth would you want to do that? Do you want to add 300 million hostile people, some of whom already think blowing themselves up is their greatest purpose in life? How will you manage them? Is that how you will finish Pakistan? Or do you want to nuke them out of existence? Because let me give you a reality check here. We won’t do that. We can’t do that. Indian citizens cannot morally contemplate, let alone sanction, nuking 300 million people. So that option is out. Then Someone said, “Let’s split Pakistan into 5 countries”. Now, Pakistan isn’t some Ikea Furniture that you can assemble or disassemble at your will. As hopeless they may be, they still have a functioning military and a working bureaucracy. They will do anything they can to keep the country together. With all our might, with all our focus, we can exploit that Faultline, but it will take a lot of money and energy and 10-15 years. Are you ready to wait that long? Some people said we should do a large-scale attack on all their air bases, military bases, Ports, Military HQ everything. Obliterate them out of existence. Sounds nice if you are movie general. In reality if we do that, Pakistan will launch nukes on Mumbai and Delhi. Simple. Because it will be their last resort and they will exercise it. Obviously, we will retaliate and wipe them out of existence, but are ready to lose our 2 big cities and the lives of 20 million Indians as a price for taking out their military? I don’t think so. Finally, what is War? War is nothing but politics by other means. And War without objective is pointless. Any battle launched should be with a purpose. Our purpose in this strike was two-fold 1. Send a message to Pakistan that for every Indian your terrorist kills, we will kill 100 of your terrorists. We will take you out even if you are ensconced in the heart of your country. We will come after your terrorists like a wrath of God. 2. If Pakistan retaliates, not only can we handle them, but we will also hit and twist the knife if it comes to that. We have achieved it. In fact, we have more than achieved it. We have put the fear of God in the terrorists. Obviously, they will try again, but this time they know we will hit back. And we have clearly shown Pakistan that we can penetrate wherever we want into Pakistan, while the maximum they can do is look up and shake their fists. Some people also speak about India being diplomatically isolated. In this entire exercise, if anyone has been isolated, it is Pakistan. In the olden days, as soon as something bad from Pakistan happened, most countries used to descend on us, asking us to be restrained, calm, resilient etc. This time not only did nobody speak, but they also allowed us three days of complete freedom of action where we stuck fear in the hearts of the Pakistani military. So much so, they had to beg to us to stop. In international diplomacy, no country will come out and say “Please attack someone else. We are with you” . They will support you only when you are being attacked. The fact that nobody said anything when we attacked, is a diplomatic success in itself. Just that we don’t see it. To summarize, as far as Operation Sindoor is concerned 1. We sent 200 jihadis to where they belong. 2. Took out 9 terrorist locations deep inside Pakistan 3. Attacked all major Pakistani Air bases, made a complete mockery of their air defence system. 4. Made them beg for us to stop. I mean if it is a wrestling match, the person who taps out first is the one who loses. Pakistan tapped out. Ergo, they lost. 5. Ensured Indus Water Treaty is now firmly in the dustbin. 6. Have given ourselves the freedom to attack Pakistan as soon as a Terrorist incident takes place. If this is not a win for us, then I don’t know what is. P:S: India wants to be an advanced country and has to provide for 80 crore people who are below the age of 30. We have to focus on industrialization, technological self-sufficiency and agricultural modernization. We have higher priorities than fighting pointless wars against a country who has nothing and can give nothing.
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sushant sareen
sushant sareen@sushantsareen·
O ye of little faith. Remember this: there will be no American mediation. They will be asked to FO if they try; there will be no roll back of any measure taken - Indus waters, trade etc; there will be no concessions given to the pakis; India has established a new baseline of punitive action; the objective at this point wasn’t to occupy PoK or declare war but only to punish Pakistan and to go up the escalation ladder if required and that objective was achieved; 11 Paki airbases have been hit and damaged and they have done jackshit to us; remember pakis still claim they didn’t lose 1971 or Kargil so you think they will admit defeat now;
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Amit Schandillia
Amit Schandillia@Schandillia·
Cockroaches in my Insta. This after swatting another half a dozen.
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Chickenlover
Chickenlover@Metchul_head·
Damn ! it is going on on the entire western front
Aditya Raj Kaul@AdityaRajKaul

#BREAKING: 12 Pakistani drones have been neutralised in Gujarat so far in Kandla, Bhuj, Lakhinala areas. Govt of Gujarat are monitoring situation closely.

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