🇮🇳मनु भारत🇮🇳

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🇮🇳मनु भारत🇮🇳

🇮🇳मनु भारत🇮🇳

@RevoManu

Bharat First! जय माँ भारती! 🇮🇳 उत्तिष्ठ: भारत: ! सत्यमेव जयते - Zero Tolerance to Injustice. Social welfare, sarcaustic, RP not endorsement

भारतवर्ष Katılım Eylül 2014
498 Takip Edilen429 Takipçiler
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Praveen
Praveen@Nation1199·
Interesting fact 😂 Around 8.6 lakhs followers of “Cockroach Janata Party” are from a place called Topeka, USA. while the actual population of the town is only around 1.26 lakh 😂. “Cockroach Janata Party” is nothing but deep-state propaganda, heavily driven by bots and fake IDs.
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KV Iyyer - BHARAT 🇮🇳🇮🇱
After Partition in 1947, there was a rampant killing of Hindus and rape of girls in Pakistan. Every train from Lahore carried corpses, with dogs and vultures hovering over them. Nehru appealed on the radio to Hindus living in refugee camps to maintain patience and peace. The next day, he accompanied Indira to the camps. There, an 80-year-old man, trying to convey his message to Nehru, touched Indira. Nehru immediately slapped him. The old man was a well-known businessman from Lahore who was facing the hardships of times. After receiving the slap, he laughed out loud and said, "Indira is like my granddaughter because you yourself are my son's age. You became enraged at the mere touch of my hand, and the Muslims abducted my three young grand-daughters in front of me, yet you say I should forget everything..." Hearing this, Nehru left the scene, taking Indira with him. Excerpt from Ashwa Ghosh's book "The Quran and the Infidel."
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Anand Ranganathan
Anand Ranganathan@ARanganathan72·
The govt has capitulated before the Supreme Court, despite it lifting the lifetime ban, and confirmed it will not involve Padma Shri Michel Danino in its academic exercises or textbook preparations in future. Judicial Corruption is a reality. Punish Milord, not Michel. My Views:
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JIX5A
JIX5A@JIX5A·
Exposing Mother Teresa ! A 1991 audit of Mother Teresa's UK operation revealed that only 7% of the total income of about $2.6 million went into charity work. The rest was remitted to the Vatican Bank. And this audit was just for ONE year in only ONE country, this organization is 60+ years old with 700+ houses in 100+ countries. Regarding the financial matters of the Missionaries of Charity, in an interview, when asked how much money they received in donations, the head nun of the organisation condescendingly replied: "countless, countless, only god knows"
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Tathvam-asi
Tathvam-asi@tathvamasi6·
Marco Rubio and US govt openly supports Mother Theresa. Listen to her, she openly admitted (1992 California) that she converted/baptised 29000 Hindus at one go. She admitted that Hindu temples were given to her to use for her “conversion work”.
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Ram
Ram@ramprasad_c·
Rubio is visiting the Missionaries of Charity in Kolkata. Sergio Gor was there just days ago, reflecting on Mother Teresa's "legacy of service." It is a good time to revisit what that her legacy actually was. Christopher Hitchens spent years investigating Mother Teresa. He wrote a book about it, "The Missionary Position," testified as devil's advocate in her beatification, and produced a documentary called "Hell's Angel." YouTube link in next post. His central conclusion: "Mother Teresa was not a friend of the poor. She was a friend of poverty." She glorified suffering rather than alleviating it. Her facilities in Kolkata were called houses of the dying, not houses of the curing. Patients with treatable conditions were not given proper medical care. Needles were reused without sterilization. Pain medication was withheld or barely administered. As Hitchens documented, she told a patient suffering unbearable pain from terminal cancer: "You are suffering like Christ on the cross. So Jesus must be kissing you." The money was never the issue. Hitchens pointed out that she had immense quantities of money and material at her disposal. Millions flowed in from donors across the world. Where did it go? Not into medical equipment. Not into painkillers. Not into training. The conditions in her facilities remained deliberately austere while the donations piled up. And the donors themselves tell a story. Hitchens documented that she accepted over a million dollars from Charles Keating, the savings and loan fraudster who was later convicted for swindling elderly investors out of their life savings. When Keating went to trial, she wrote to the judge asking for clemency. The prosecutor wrote back, politely explaining that the money Keating gave her was stolen, and asked her to return it. She never replied. She never returned the money. She praised Haiti's Duvalier dictatorship, a regime responsible for the torture and murder of thousands, and accepted their Legion d'Honneur. She endorsed Albania's Enver Hoxha. As Hitchens put it, she was "a friend to the worst of the rich" Then there was the conversion apparatus. Former nuns from the Missionaries of Charity described being instructed to secretly baptize the dying, asking patients if they wanted a "ticket to heaven" and wiping their foreheads with a wet cloth that doubled as baptismal water, whispering the words of the sacrament. Hindus and Muslims were baptized without informed consent on their deathbeds. Hitchens summed it up: she spent her life "opposing the only known cure for poverty, which is the empowerment of women and the emancipation of them from a livestock version of compulsory reproduction." None of this is bigotry. This is not an attack on Christianity or on faith. Jesus, as the Gospels record him, drove money lenders out of the temple. He railed against the wealthy and the hypocritical. He healed the sick. He did not tell them their suffering was beautiful. He did not take money from fraudsters and appeal on their behalf. The criticism of Mother Teresa is not a criticism of Christ. If anything, it is a defense of what Christ actually taught. In today's world, she would have been exposed. The conditions in her facilities would have been filmed and uploaded as Insta reels. The financial secrecy would have triggered investigations. The secret baptisms would have been a scandal. She would have been compared to the evangelical faith healers and god men who promise miracles while collecting donations from the desperate. But she operated in an era before that kind of scrutiny existed, and the mythology is set in stone. Hitchens was one of the few who did. He paid for it with public outrage. But the record he assembled remains unanswered.
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News Algebra
News Algebra@NewsAlgebraIND·
🚨 SUPREME COURT : "If both parents are IAS officers, why seek reservation?" "The parents have studied, they are in good jobs, they are getting good income, and the children want reservation again" "We will never get out of it" "With educational and economic empowerment, there is social mobility" "See, they should get out of reservation"
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Anand Ranganathan
Anand Ranganathan@ARanganathan72·
One mother forbade medicines to the dying, converted them, then laughed at the death count; the other mother has provided free treatment to 5.9 million, built 13 million sqft, 95 OT, 101 speciality, 4050 bed hospitals employing 1540 doctors. The first mother got the Nobel Prize.
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Anand Ranganathan
Anand Ranganathan@ARanganathan72·
29,000 have died in our one house since we began in 1952. We give them a special ticket of St. Peter. It's so beautiful to see people die with so much joy. - Mother Teresa Mother Teresa is the single-most successful emotional con-job of the 20th century. - Christopher Hitchens
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News Algebra
News Algebra@NewsAlgebraIND·
HUGE 🚨 14 Years later, Tanya Bhardwaj is back 🔥🔥 "I was a student at Presidency University that time" "During a TV show hosted by Sagarika Ghose, I questioned Mamata Banerjee on law and order issues and conduct of some TMC leaders" "She got extremely angry, called me a Maoist, a CPM cadre" "That night, there were threats and pressure from party supporters and goons. I had to leave Kolkata immediately" 🤯 "Today, after so many years, I feel relieved" "The 'Hitler rule' is finally over" "I want to thank PM Modi, the BJP, and the people of Bengal for this change. We can now speak freely without fear" "Students and youth deserve a better environment"
News Algebra tweet media
News Algebra@NewsAlgebraIND

When then CM Mamata Banerjee walked out of an interview in 2012 : JOURNALIST : Ma’am, the conduct of several TMC leaders.. MAMATA : You are an SFI cadre. I won’t answer you 😐

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The Analyzer (News Updates🗞️)
The Analyzer (News Updates🗞️)@Indian_Analyzer·
🚨 HUGE! Supreme Court raises a big question on reservation: — "Why are children of IAS officers and economically advanced families still seeking QUOTA benefits?"🤯 The Court observed that once parents attain a certain Social & economic position by availing RESERVATION, their children should NO LONGER need it. It said social mobility achieved through quotas must eventually take families OUT of the reservation system. Strong push to revisit the Creamy Layer concept and prevent perpetual reservation.
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Erik Solheim
Erik Solheim@ErikSolheim·
Why is the West not curious on the great Indian 🇮🇳 civilization? This week Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Norway. The government rolled out the red carpet. King Harald invited for lunch. All bigwigs of Norwegian business turned up. This is of course as it should be at such a historic visit. Rather different was media. No curiosity, no real attempt to understand India. When the third most powerful man in the world visits Norway, you may expect some real interest? An attempt to understand the world’s third largest economy, a global green leader, one of the world’s brightest civilizations?? It’s not that Norway is overrun with visit at this level. Last Indian top visit was Indira Gandhi in 1983. Last Chinese president visit was 1996, last American president was 2009. Here are some taste bits from Norwegian media: * Aftenposten the largest newspaper printed a caricature of Modi as a snake charmer, many found it racist and derogatory. The accompanying article (written by an otherwise brilliant journalist) described Modi as a “slightly annoying man” and simply showcased that India is not high on the papers reading lists. * Norsk rikskringkasting (NRK), the state broadcaster, explained “why prime minister Støre is clearing his desk to receive Modi”. From everyone outside Norway I got exactly the opposite question: Why did Modi use his valuable time in such a small and insignificant place? * Dagsavisen, a left of center daily, sent a young journalist to throw questions after Modi - claiming that India is 157 on a global democracy ranking. When a ranking is so contrary to common sense - why doesnt she ask those who created the ranking why they spread such nonsense? I am not aware of one Norwegian journalist closely following India. NOT ONE! How can the public learn more? Unless you believe democracy only fits a handful of small, homogenous, ultra rich western nations, India is the miracle of democracy. The large, complex, lingustically and religiously diverse nation with many poor people - which has etablished a vibrant democracy and is much less violent than Europe or America. India can in fact make a claim to be the worlds most homegrown and impressive democracy. We are entering the Asian century. Unless we Europeans become more curious - to civiliazation, history, politics and economy in the Global South - we will become the big losers of history.
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Sridhar Vembu
Sridhar Vembu@svembu·
When Udayanidhi Stalin repeatedly attacks "sanathanam" in Tamil, why is there not more outrage among the highly religious Tamil Hindu population? I believe it comes down to language. In Tamil language, the word "sanathanam" (eternal in English) is not in regular use. Most Tamil people do not know this word and I did not know it myself as a child. On the other hand the word "dharma" (spelled as "dharmam" or "dharumam") is common in Tamil and there is a district named Dharmapuri in Tamil Nadu. There is also the word "aram" used in Tamil with the same meaning as dharma. Interestingly, in Hindi, the word "dharam" means "religion" in general and Hinduism is "hindu dharm" or "sanatan dharam" and Christianity is "isai dharam" in Hindi. But in Tamil usage, the word "dharmam" would effectively mean "Hindu dharam" in Hindi. Now if Udayanidhi had attacked "dharmam" in Tamil (which effectively means Hinduism) he would be widely criticised for proclaiming adharmam. That is why he is picking the word "sanathanam" to attack because that word is not widely known in Tamil. With all his "sincere" effort, he is making the word known in Tamil too and he has made the already huge anti DMK vote in Tamil Nadu even bigger. The DMK has never won a majority on its own ever, because of that huge strong anti-DMK current. They established that current with their constant attacks on Hindu deities. The AIADMK never did that and they harvested the anti-DMK current well. Now, in spite of the TVK being the new anti-DMK party and in spite of the AIADMK splitting the anti-DMK vote (see how I worked it!) and in spite of the DMK spending extraordinary amounts of cash, in spite of the DMK having a strong alliance and the TVK having no alliance, the DMK lost the election. Udayanidhi wants to ensure the DMK would never come back. May the eternal sanatana dharma grant his wish 🙏😉
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Parimal
Parimal@Fintech03·
Once, during a lecture by Niels Bohr, Satyendra Nath Bose was presiding over the session. At 1 point, Bohr got stuck while explaining a concept on the blackboard. He paused, turned towards Bose & asked, “Can Professor Bose help me?” The audience smiled because Bose had been sitting quietly with his eyes closed the whole time. But within seconds, Bose opened his eyes, immediately resolved the problem troubling Bohr, sat back down... & closed his eyes again.
Massimo@Rainmaker1973

He was Satyendra Nath Bose, an Indian physicist whose quiet brilliance in the 1920s forever altered our understanding of the quantum world. In 1924, Bose, then a 30-year-old professor in British India, sent a groundbreaking manuscript directly to Albert Einstein. The paper offered a novel, more elegant derivation of Planck's law for blackbody radiation by treating light quanta (photons) as indistinguishable particles—a radical departure from classical statistical methods. Impressed by its insight, Einstein personally translated the work into German and facilitated its publication in the prestigious Zeitschrift für Physik. This exchange sparked a brief but profound collaboration. Einstein extended Bose's statistical approach to material atoms, predicting a bizarre new state of matter at ultra-low temperatures: what we now call a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC), where particles behave as a single quantum wave. Bose's original framework became known as Bose-Einstein statistics, and the class of particles that obey it—those with integer spin, including photons, gluons, W and Z bosons, and the Higgs boson—was later named bosons in his honor by Paul Dirac. Unlike fermions (matter particles like electrons), which obey the Pauli exclusion principle and cannot occupy the same quantum state, bosons can pile into identical states en masse. This "social" behavior underpins extraordinary macroscopic phenomena: the coherent light of lasers, the zero-resistance flow in superconductors, and the collective quantum coherence in BECs. Despite the monumental impact—his statistics describe half of all fundamental particles and enabled key advances in quantum field theory, condensed matter physics, and particle physics—Bose remained remarkably unassuming. He continued teaching at universities in Dhaka and Calcutta (now Kolkata), mentored students, pursued ideas in X-ray crystallography, unified field theory, and other areas, and never sought the spotlight. Nominated several times for the Nobel Prize (notably for Bose-Einstein statistics and his later work), he was never awarded it, and his name rarely appears in popular accounts of 20th-century physics. There's a poignant humility in his story: a man whose legacy literally names one of the two fundamental families of particles in the universe, yet whose personal fame never matched the scale of his contribution. Bose reminds us that true influence often arrives without fanfare. Some breakthroughs echo through textbooks and technologies, while their creators work in the background, content to let the universe carry their ideas forward—even if history's spotlight rarely finds them.

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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
He was Satyendra Nath Bose, an Indian physicist whose quiet brilliance in the 1920s forever altered our understanding of the quantum world. In 1924, Bose, then a 30-year-old professor in British India, sent a groundbreaking manuscript directly to Albert Einstein. The paper offered a novel, more elegant derivation of Planck's law for blackbody radiation by treating light quanta (photons) as indistinguishable particles—a radical departure from classical statistical methods. Impressed by its insight, Einstein personally translated the work into German and facilitated its publication in the prestigious Zeitschrift für Physik. This exchange sparked a brief but profound collaboration. Einstein extended Bose's statistical approach to material atoms, predicting a bizarre new state of matter at ultra-low temperatures: what we now call a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC), where particles behave as a single quantum wave. Bose's original framework became known as Bose-Einstein statistics, and the class of particles that obey it—those with integer spin, including photons, gluons, W and Z bosons, and the Higgs boson—was later named bosons in his honor by Paul Dirac. Unlike fermions (matter particles like electrons), which obey the Pauli exclusion principle and cannot occupy the same quantum state, bosons can pile into identical states en masse. This "social" behavior underpins extraordinary macroscopic phenomena: the coherent light of lasers, the zero-resistance flow in superconductors, and the collective quantum coherence in BECs. Despite the monumental impact—his statistics describe half of all fundamental particles and enabled key advances in quantum field theory, condensed matter physics, and particle physics—Bose remained remarkably unassuming. He continued teaching at universities in Dhaka and Calcutta (now Kolkata), mentored students, pursued ideas in X-ray crystallography, unified field theory, and other areas, and never sought the spotlight. Nominated several times for the Nobel Prize (notably for Bose-Einstein statistics and his later work), he was never awarded it, and his name rarely appears in popular accounts of 20th-century physics. There's a poignant humility in his story: a man whose legacy literally names one of the two fundamental families of particles in the universe, yet whose personal fame never matched the scale of his contribution. Bose reminds us that true influence often arrives without fanfare. Some breakthroughs echo through textbooks and technologies, while their creators work in the background, content to let the universe carry their ideas forward—even if history's spotlight rarely finds them.
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Narendra Modi
Narendra Modi@narendramodi·
A thousand years ago, the first of many attacks on Somnath took place. Those who kept engaging in such attacks believed they could shatter the ethos of our land. But, they were wrong. Thanks to fiercely courageous children of Bharat Mata, Somnath kept getting rebuilt. Seventy-five years ago on this day, the doors of the newly rebuilt Somnath Temple opened in the presence of the then President Dr. Rajendra Prasad, proclaiming to the world that while the attackers have faded into the dust of history, the soul of Bharat endures. Somnath stands tall and eternal. It showcases our civilisational courage and our unbroken devotion. May the blessings of Mahadev always remain upon us all.
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Rishi Bagree
Rishi Bagree@rishibagree·
Remember how foreign-funded 5-star activists like Medha Patkar tried their level best to deprive the Kutch region of Narmada water, until Modi called their bluff. Today, the same dam irrigates 3 states & provides drinking water to millions of Indians
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