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Rupesh S
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Rupesh S
@Rupesh_TG
Nationalist. 🙏. Philosopher. ॐ नमो नारायणाय. ॐ नमो भगवते वासुदेवाय.
India Katılım Aralık 2017
164 Takip Edilen110 Takipçiler
Rupesh S retweetledi

ATUL SUBHASH
He said his ashes must be put in the gutter if he isn't given Justice
1 Hour suicide video. 24 page suicide note. Letter to PM President HM all. Neatly kept in a google drive thinking he would get justice
His wife got out on bail in 20 days
His Mother-in-law - who laughed and said - oh you haven't killed yourself yet - also got bail within 20 days
His wife's uncle who demanded huge amounts to settle the case was never arrested
His son, who his wife had kept in boarding at such a young age became the reason for bail so soon, his parents haven't even seen a glimpse of him since then
Judge Rita Kaushik - first name in his suicide note never faced ANY ENQUIRY WHATSOEVER & later got promoted as well. Supreme Court never took cognizance even to investigate corruption despite a dying declaration
Nikita Singhania's right to livelihood was never taken away. Not for a day
First date given in trial of his case by the court was ONE YEAR AFTER THE FIRST HEARING
His wife has moved High Court to quash the case
I will not be surprised if it is even quashed because - There's no concept in India to criminalize mental cruelty by wife
Our system questions men who take their own life calling them weak, sensitive and overreacting
Compare it all to what we are seeing in media for last one week
I am sure Justice will be done to Twisha. I can not even hope if Justice would ever be done to Atul.
EQUALITY 🙏

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Rupesh S retweetledi

This is the Samadhi Sthal of King Hemchandra Vikramaditya- last major Hindu emperor to rule Delhi before the Mughals consolidated power.
He won 22 battles but lost the Second Battle of Panipat on 5 November 1556 to Akbar’s forces (led effectively by Bairam Khan).
Hemu was struck by an arrow in the eye, fell unconscious, was captured, and behe@ded
This property, more than 10 Acres in revenue records, which formed the Camp of Babur in 1526 during First Battle of Panipat and Camp of Akbar in 1556 during Second Battle of Panipat was with Haryana ASI till 1990.
This entire Hemu Samadhi Sthal of 10 acres was transferred by then CM Om Prakash Chautala in 1990 to ‘Wakf Board of Haryana’ whose Chairman, a Muslim MLA from Mewat area of Haryana allowed encroachments charging money from some people and allowed Pucca constructions.
This CM was the father of @AbhaySChautala . Gaali do MC ko

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Rupesh S retweetledi

This married Hindu woman, who has two children, tied up her husband along with her Muslim boyfriend & then set him on fire.
Listen to the husband Lalji Gautam, who is in critical condition: “My wife, Puja, and her boyfriend, Firoz, set me on fire…” Incident of Siddharth Nagar, Uttar Pradesh. All this Bollywood & OTT platforms are encouraging Hindu women's to get involved in illicit sex with Muslims. Beware before its too late

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@IronyMeter Indian tourism hotspots are already overcrowded with domestic tourists. The SE Asian countries hardly have any domestic tourists and hence less crowded, this also helps in keeping the place clean and rates affordable.
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I am currently in a country in South East Asia. The name and the exact location are not important.
I have spent two days on an island which is off the mainland of this country. And today I was on another island which is further dislocated from the main island.
The pricing for most goods, including restaurants, coffee, and other items are similar to what one would find on mainland.
In India, goods in such a place would be jacked up by at least 2x, even as they are more expensive from this country I am currently in.
Whenever anyone talks about India's travel potential, they should spend more time understanding the competitive scenario we are in. And the competitive countries and locations should not be the ones where Indians usually travel. For example, the popular destinations in Thailand.
But they should be locations where Westerners and people from other parts of the world travel.
Our offering is the weakest in terms of infrastructure, cleanliness, accessibility, and pricing.
And you can't push somebody to a temple or an old fort every single time they reach your country. Just beating your drum about India is the best is not enough.
If India is losing foreign travelers, and countries around South-East Asia are gaining them, both our government and our people need to understand what the problem is and work towards solving it.
I am not hopeful, but I dream.
PS: one thing which is surprising, even in Indian states where the local governments have proven over a long time to be very able, tourism is one thing they have still not been able to solve for completely.

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Rupesh S retweetledi
Rupesh S retweetledi

This beech, a mother of two children, along with her M boyfriend Firoz, tied her husband to a cot and b*rned him alive.
She abandoned her two children, gave up her own religion, destroyed a family, all this for her lust....now feminist girls will probably come to defend her by calling it 'her choice'

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Rupesh S retweetledi

Her name was Snehalatha Reddy.
She was born in 1932 in Andhra Pradesh into a family of second generation Indian Christian converts. Her father had served as a Major in the British Army.
She grew up deeply resenting colonial rule. When she went to college, she reverted to her Indian name, wore only Indian clothes and learned Bharatanatyam.
She became an actress in Kannada and Telugu cinema and theatre. She co founded the Madras Players theatre group.
In 1970, she starred in Samskara, a Kannada film directed by her husband Pattabhi Rama Reddy.
The film initially faced censorship issues before later winning the National Award.
Snehalatha and her husband were close to socialist politics and associated with leaders like George Fernandes and Ram Manohar Lohia.
On the night of June 25 1975, Indira Gandhi declared the Emergency and suspended fundamental rights across India.
On May 2 1976, police arrested Snehalatha Reddy under the Maintenance of Internal Security Act in connection with the Baroda Dynamite Case.
George Fernandes and several others were formally accused of plotting sabotage against the government during the Emergency.
But when the final chargesheet was filed, Snehalatha Reddy’s name was reportedly not included.
She remained imprisoned anyway.
She spent nearly eight months in Bengaluru Central Jail, much of it in solitary confinement.
She had suffered from chronic asthma since childhood. Despite her condition, she reportedly received irregular medical treatment in prison and went into asthmatic coma more than once.
During her imprisonment, she kept a diary.
In it she wrote, “What is the purpose of every human being born in this world? Is it not to lift mankind a little higher towards perfection?”
She was released on parole on January 15 1977.
Five days later, on January 20, she died after her health had severely deteriorated from chronic asthma and lung infection.
She was 44 years old.
Her prison diary was later published posthumously as A Prison Diary.
In 2019, a documentary on her life and imprisonment was also released.
She spent months in prison during the Emergency without being named in the final chargesheet of the case she had been arrested in.
Five days after her release, she was dead.
Follow for stories India deserves to remember.

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@realMichaelVB @DHSgov Why can't both of you travel to your country and get married. Why is it necessary to get married in US?
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An alien who is in the U.S. temporarily and wants a Green Card must return to their home country to apply.
This policy allows our immigration system to function as the law intended instead of incentivizing loopholes.
The era of abusing our nation’s immigration system is over.
Daily Caller@DailyCaller
EXCLUSIVE: Trump Admin Closes Loophole Letting Migrants Stay In US While Awaiting Green Cards: 'We're returning to the original intent of the law' dlvr.it/TSgK6R
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@Paritolkks Meri cabs used to be good before these aggregators turned up. Now there are no good options.
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Booked a Rapido. Driver called:
“Bhaiya, extra dena hoga.”
Booked an Uber:
“Bhaiya, fare bahut kam hai.”
Then why did you accept the ride?
Booked an Ola:
Driver confirmed, then cancelled after 5 minutes.
The entire taxi aggregator system in India is a mess. There is not a single app that feels customer-centric. Half the cars are poorly maintained, drivers keep negotiating outside the app, and cancellations are normalised.
Once someone travels to places like Dubai or parts of Southeast Asia, they realise how far behind our basic service standards are.
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Rupesh S retweetledi
Rupesh S retweetledi

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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Rupesh S retweetledi

Her name was Swati Reddy.
She was 27 years old. A nurse at a private hospital in Nagarkurnool, Telangana. She had been married to Sudhakar Reddy, a 32-year-old businessman, for three years. They had two children.
She was also in a relationship with Rajesh Ajjakolu, a physiotherapist at the same hospital. The affair had started before her marriage and continued after.
Together, they decided to kill Sudhakar and replace him with Rajesh.
The plan was inspired by a 2014 Telugu thriller called Yevadu in which a character undergoes plastic surgery and takes on another man's identity.
On the night of November 26 2017, Swati injected Sudhakar with anaesthesia while he slept. When he fell unconscious, she and Rajesh struck him on the head with an iron rod. They then burnt his body in a forest outside the town.
Two days later, Swati poured acid on Rajesh's face. She then took him to a hospital and told Sudhakar's family that her husband had been attacked by unknown assailants with acid. He needed plastic surgery. His face would look different afterward. Sudhakar's parents rushed to the hospital.
They believed it was their son.
They sat by his bedside for days. They paid Rs 5 lakh in hospital bills. They prayed for his recovery.
Then came the mutton soup.
As is standard practice for burn patients, the hospital served a bowl of mutton soup. Rajesh refused it. Sudhakar's family was confused. Sudhakar had loved mutton soup his entire life.
The family began testing him. They asked him to identify relatives by name. He could not. He stopped speaking and began writing responses on his palm.
Sudhakar's brother filed a police complaint. Police questioned Swati. She confessed.
Sudhakar's body was recovered from the forest where it had been burnt. His parents performed his last rites. Swati's parents performed her symbolic last rites too. They disowned her and said she was dead to them.
Swati and Rajesh were arrested. Rajesh told police the entire plan was Swati's idea.
She killed her husband, burned his body, poured acid on her lover's face, and had her in-laws pay for his hospital treatment while he pretended to be their son.
A bowl of mutton soup ended the plan.
Repost this. Some stories must not be allowed to disappear.

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@Masterji_UPWale Have it since 1999. My first email id and still active.
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Rupesh S retweetledi

A Historic Revival in Kerala! 🚩
History was made today as 150 individuals reclaimed their sacred roots and returned to Sanatan Dharma. This isn’t just a statistic ,it’s a powerful awakening of identity, faith, and cultural pride.
The fearless resolve of our tribal and grassroots communities proves that the spirit of Dharma is unshakable. When people stand united for their traditions, no external force can break their spirit.
Dharma always finds its way back home.
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