Reema Asnani ریما اسنانی

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Reema Asnani ریما اسنانی

Reema Asnani ریما اسنانی

@RAsnani

Keep It Simple, Silly

Katılım Eylül 2011
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Reema Asnani ریما اسنانی
"Tell your struggle with triumphant humor. Lower the pitch of your suffering." ~ Rasheed Kameelah Janan.
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Iran News 24
Iran News 24@IRanMediaco·
BREAKING: Tehran claims it has received intelligence information indicating that the United States and Israel are preparing for a surprise attack on Iran.
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Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
In 1986, a five-year-old boy in India fell asleep on a bench at a train station while waiting for his older brother to come back. His brother never returned. The boy wandered onto an empty train carriage, thinking his brother might be inside. He fell asleep again. When he woke up, the doors were locked and the train was moving. It didn’t stop for nearly two days. When it finally did, he was in Kolkata, nearly 1,500 kilometres from home. He was too young to know his surname, couldn’t read, and had no idea what his hometown was called. He survived alone on the streets for weeks, sleeping under station benches and scavenging scraps of food, before eventually being taken to an orphanage and declared a lost child. No one could trace where he came from. He was adopted by a couple from Tasmania, Australia, who gave him a loving home and a new life. His name became Saroo Brierley. He grew up on the other side of the world. But he never forgot. He held onto fragments: the image of a bridge near a train station, a water tower, a neighbourhood layout, the faces of his family. In his mid-twenties, he discovered Google Earth. He calculated the rough distance the train could have covered based on how long he remembered being on it, drew a circle on a map around Kolkata, and began searching along every railway line within that radius. Some weeks he spent 30 hours scanning satellite images of towns across central India, looking for landmarks that matched his childhood memories. His family in Australia didn’t even know. They thought he was just browsing the internet. In 2011, after years of searching, he found it. A water tower. A bridge. A ravine past a station. It was a neighbourhood called Ganesh Talai in the city of Khandwa. He zoomed in and recognised the streets he had walked as a small boy. He flew to India and walked through the town until he found his family’s home. The door was chained shut and he feared the worst. Then people came out. One of them led him to a woman down the road. It was his mother. She had never stopped looking for him. After 25 years, they were standing in front of each other. What he didn’t know until that moment was that his brother Guddu, the one he’d been waiting for at the station that night, had been struck and killed by a train. His mother had spent 25 years searching for both sons. She learned what happened to one. She never stopped praying for the other. His story became the book “A Long Way Home” and was adapted into the film “Lion,” which received six Academy Award nominations.
Dr. Lemma tweet media
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Ian Weissman, DO
Ian Weissman, DO@DrIanWeissman·
Pancreatic cancer mRNA vaccine shows lasting results in an early trial. Scientists caution that more research is needed, but nearly all of the patients who responded to the personalized vaccine are still alive six years later. nbcnews.com/health/cancer/…
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churumuri
churumuri@churumuri·
Some newspapers are still calling the Constitution Amendment Bill as "women's bill". It can only mean one of two things. Either stenography is alive and thriving---and AI won't replace it. Or, headline options are being sent to 'panna pramukhs' by designated WhatsApp handlers.
churumuri tweet media
churumuri@churumuri

The biggest legislative defeat on the Narendra Modi-led government on the floor of the Lok Sabha since 2014. Yet, only the DMK mouthpiece 'Murasoli' has full-page treatment----and only Ananda Bazar Patrika (Bengali) and Sandesh (Gujarati) have 8-column banner headlines.

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churumuri
churumuri@churumuri·
"[India's] slide towards soft (and not-so-soft) authoritarianism, similar to Turkey is very concerning" Yann Martel, the Booker Prize-winning author of 'Life of Pi', on a country he has visited five times since the mid-1990s. @timesofindia @SharmilaGanesan
churumuri tweet media
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churumuri
churumuri@churumuri·
👉🏼 India "barbaric"; its cities "hideous"; its aesthetics "childishly vulgar" 👉🏼 Madrasis "degenerate---very dark, very naked with awful faces" 👉🏼 Taj Mahal wonderful but "not architecture" Edwin Lutyens in letters to his wife Emily, scooped by Shyam Bhatia. @NewIndianXpress
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Anku Chahar
Anku Chahar@anku_chahar·
On 19 May 2009, the body of 7-year-old Yogita Thakre was found inside a car parked at Nitin Gadkari’s residence ‘Bhakti’ in Nagpur. Yogita, daughter of a domestic help, had bruises on her body and bleeding from private parts. Initial post-mortem suggested smothering. Her family alleged rape and murder. Gadkari’s side claimed it was an accidental suffocation after she got locked in the car. Police/CID tried to close the case as accident multiple times, but courts rejected the reports twice (2011 & 2013), calling the probe inadequate. A plea for CBI investigation was dismissed by the Supreme Court in 2013. The case has seen no major progress or final verdict since then. An old, unresolved tragedy that still raises questions.
Anku Chahar tweet media
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The Times Of India
The Times Of India@timesofindia·
Pregnant women in #Delhi #slums are suffering from #dizziness, #sleeplessness, and #hypertension as temperatures soar. Living in cramped conditions exacerbates their #discomfort. Experts warn of serious risks to both #mother and newborn, including birth defects and premature delivery. #Preventive measures and community awareness are crucial to mitigate these dangers. More details 🔗 toi.in/tMVRka6
The Times Of India tweet media
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TheLiverDoc™
TheLiverDoc™@theliverdoc·
Today is World Liver Day 2026. Here are 8 things your liver actually wants you to know. 1 There is no such thing as a "liver detox." Your liver runs phase I and II detoxification 24/7 on its own. No juice cleanse, no milk thistle, no herbal detox speeds this up. In fact several have caused liver injury - the opposite of the claim. 2 Alcohol has no safe dose. Liver harm begins from the first drink. The old "moderate drinking is protective" myth came from flawed studies contaminated by abstainer bias - now debunked by Mendelian randomization. Zero ml is best. 3 "Natural" supplements are now a leading cause of acute liver failure. Ashwagandha. Green tea extract. Garcinia. Kratom. High-dose turmeric. Giloy/Tinospora. They dominate drug-induced liver injury registries across India, the US, and Europe. Natural ≠ safe. 4 Coffee is genuinely liver-protective. 2–3 cups/day (caffeinated or decaf) lowers the risk of fibrosis, cirrhosis, and liver cancer. One of the very few dietary interventions with real, replicated evidence. 5 Fatty liver (MASLD) now affects ~1 in 3 adults worldwide. A 7–10% body-weight loss: • clears Liver fat • reduces inflammation • can regress early fibrosis No approved drug currently beats this. Your plate and feet are the first-line therapy. 6 Sugar-sweetened drinks independently cause fatty liver. Fructose is metabolized almost entirely by the liver - straight into fat. One daily soda raises MASLD risk even after adjusting for total calories. Lesser is better. 7 Get vaccinated against hepatitis B. Get screened for HBV and HCV at least once in your lifetime. HBV vaccine prevents >95% of chronic infection, cirrhosis, and liver cancer. Hepatitis C is curable in 8-12 weeks with >95% success - but most carriers don't know they have it. 8 Exercise protects the liver independent of weight loss. 150 min/week moderate OR 75 min vigorous activity reduces liver fat and stiffness - even when the scale doesn't move. Movement is "medicine". 🫂 PS: we also need a liver emoji
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Piyush Rai
Piyush Rai@Benarasiyaa·
Cow jumps median → Brezza brakes → Verna driver’s view blocked → Verna loses control and jumps the median → Verna guy lucky to have survived Multiple highways, especially of Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan with stray cattle menace, are death traps for commuters.
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aree_shuklajii
aree_shuklajii@th_anonymouse·
LETS MAKE THESE WOMEN FAMOUS . Women supporting women is my favourite genre 💚 From the villages of Uttar Pradesh, a quiet revolution rose, women in green sarees, known as the Green Army 💚 • They step in to support women facing domestic violence, harassment, and injustice, making sure no one fights alone • They stand against social issues like alcohol abuse, dowry, gambling, and harmful traditions • They train women in self-defense and educate them about their rights, building confidence and fearlessness • They help women become financially independent through small businesses and skill building • They promote education, awareness, and stronger, safer communities Their unity and courage, walking together, confronting wrongs, and lifting each other up, captured the internet’s attention and turned them into a powerful symbol of grassroots change This is more than a group. It’s a movement of women empowering women 🌿✊
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Mohammad Hesham || محمد هشام
A settler sexually harassing a female activist in my community Masafer Yatta while she was documenting the attack on Palestinians were working on their land.
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Asim Ali
Asim Ali@AsimAli6·
The mark of a civilized society lies in how one treats the stranger (another human being unrelated by blood or any narrow relationship of exchange). Won’t find such behaviour in (uncivilized) “societies" aka apartment blocks in NCR
Ambedkarite@_ambedkaritee

Gareeb ka dil raheeson se bohot bada hota hai.

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Nitin Sethi
Nitin Sethi@nit_set·
People of Manipur, How does blood flow out from your bodies on to the streets so often? Something so porous about you, something so red. A blood disorder, is it? Oh wait. It was a blunt object? No? A tear gas shell? A bullet? Someone pierced you with a plan? Sitting in Delhi I have never been able to figure, why you bleed so often. I will come to walk in that leikai again. Hopefully you will tell me more then. Keep yourself safe from plans. Photo: Robinson Wahengbam. April 16, 2026. With his permission.
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