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Snehal

@SnehalMRJ

Stop ethnic cleansing of Palestinian. #FreePalestine

Katılım Ocak 2024
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Darab Farooqui
Darab Farooqui@darab_farooqui·
R@@nd, L@wri, B****h. Nari shakti has come in full force to Bengal. BJP and it's supprters delivering Nari Shakti, one tweet at a time.
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LoksattaLive
LoksattaLive@LoksattaLive·
टिटवाळा बल्याणी, बनेलीतील बेकायदा चाळींमधून ७०० कोटीची उलाढाल; १२ कोटीचा मलिदा अधिकारी, कर्मचाऱ्यांच्या खिशात कल्याण - कल्याण डोंबिवली पालिका हद्दीतील अ प्रभाग क्षेत्रात टिटवाळा, बल्याणी, बनेली परिसरात गेल्या तीन ते चार वर्षात १ हजाराहून अधिक बेकायदा चाळी भूमाफियांनी स्थानिक राजकीय पुढाऱ्यांच्या आशीर्वादाने उभारल्या. या बेकायदा चाळींच्या माध्यमातून भूमाफियांनी गेल्या चार वर्षाच्या कालावधीत एकूण ७०० कोटीची उलाढाल केली असल्याची खात्रीलायक माहिती या क्षेत्रातील एका माहितगाराने दिली. या बेकायदा चाळींच्या माध्यमातून भूमाफियांकडून स्थानिक पालिका कर्मचारी, अधिकाऱ्यांच्या खिशात सुमारे १२ कोटीचा मलिदा पडला असल्याचे वास्तव या माहितगाराने सांगितले. ( Video - लोकसत्ता टीम ) loksatta.com/thane/titwala-…
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Shekhar
Shekhar@Shekharcoool5·
खरचं इतके असंवेदनशील असतात नेते?
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Antifa_Ultras
Antifa_Ultras@ultras_antifaa·
Happy birthday, Karl Marx.
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The Dalit Voice
The Dalit Voice@ambedkariteIND·
A case has been registered under the SC/ST Act against Brahmin Genes Anuradha Tiwari for insulting Babasaheb Ambedkar and Dalits. The action was taken by Delhi Police following directions from the National Commission for Scheduled Castes. 🔥🔥🔥
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Mission Ambedkar
Mission Ambedkar@MissionAmbedkar·
Horrifying caste terror. 💔 Thakur caste Hindus mercilessly assaulted a dalit woman and her family in Ashok Nagar, MP. They beat her with sticks and kicked her. she is undergoing treatment. Where are Women's Commission, media, govt, and judiciary now? No outcry, no outrage.
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Gana Kedlaya
Gana Kedlaya@Eletell·
'Naxal affected area to be transformed into a "green" steel hub'. The framing is simply unbelievable! And what on earth is green steel hub? Also, 1.23 lakh trees to be axed for this "green" project.
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Shraddha (슈라다)
Shraddha (슈라다)@HuhVsWorld·
Find the missing Home Minister and tell him...Maharashtra is no longer safe for women at all. A shocking incident has come to light within the jurisdiction of the Kasa Police Station in Palghar district, where a 55 year old self styled godman sexually assaulted a 13 year old minor girl under the pretext of performing black magic and superstitious rituals. We don't need slogans, we need safety.
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RAHUL
RAHUL@RahulSeeker·
The crocodile has finally climbed the TREE. It is useless to talk about how it climbed there. Just wait & see who will be its first prey. My view is the First Attack would be on Bengali Culture itself which is the antithesis of BJP & RSS Hindutva ideology. For example, in 2022 All India Hindu Mahasabha Durga Puja pandal portrayed Gandhi as Asur being killed by the Hindu Goddess Durga. From this, we can guess the future Puja themes in Bengal. Nevertheless, this festival from now will slowly lose its very inclusive character and increasingly start turn into a communal show of Hate like those cowbelt festivals. Not so believable? Today, Suvendu Adhikari said “After the second round, which was a Hindu area, I am leading… I want to thank every Hindu, Sanatani who has cast their vote in favour of me.” Did all Hindus vote for the BJP because of Muslim hate or communal reason? No. But they are moulding it in this way now. So, let this sink in - a very beautiful future ahead. Congratulations Bangla.
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Darab Farooqui
Darab Farooqui@darab_farooqui·
A Satire (of sorts) I want to be clear about what I am. I am a screenwriter. I make up fiction for a living but not as good as Hindol Sengupta. When the Iran-Hormuz war broke out I did what any professionally curious person does. I fell into a rabbit hole. Asymmetric warfare. Drone swarm doctrine. Hypersonic missiles. Precision strike theory. The kind of reading that starts at 11pm and ends with your wife screaming at you at 7 in the morning, asking "Milk finished last night, did you Zepto it?" I am not a strategist. I am not a geopolitician. I have no institutional affiliation, no think tank letterhead, no professorship. And yet. Hindol Sengupta is executive dean at O.P. Jindal Global University's school of international relations. He has the credentials, the platform, and the institutional weight. He published a piece in Sunday Guardian titled: India's Great Nicobar Project is the Dragon's Nightmare. I read it and regretted it instantly. Two to three IQ points, gone. Then the embarrassment set in. Not second-hand. First-hand. I am an Indian. Chinese scholars reading this are not cringing. They are laughing. A kind of self-assured laugh because this piece made them feel safer. Since Iran demonstrated what a determined state can do to a critical maritime chokepoint, a certain kind of Indian commentator has discovered a new hobby: imagining India doing the same to China at Malacca. Sengupta's piece is the most fluent example of this genre. It is confident. It is sweeping. It makes sounds like, and I say this with affection for the form, Dhan ta tan. The dragon is desperate. The vice is tightening. India closes the tap. Dhan ta tan. Two questions lodged in my head as I read it. Just two. I am a screenwriter, not a strategist, so I kept it simple. First: how do you defend a forward island base against a peer adversary with long-range precision strike capability? Second: Iran-Hormuz worked because Iran was operating from its own mainland, with compressed geography and an inexhaustible resupply chain. Does India have anything comparable for an island sitting 1,400 kilometres from the mainland? Sengupta never asks either. His piece moves in one direction only, from geography to complete dominance, the type of dominance kids discuss in class 3 as they buy new cricket bats, without a single sentence about vulnerability or what happens on Day 2. Because if he asked, the answers would destroy his conclusion. Let us start with the word Sengupta uses in his very first paragraph. He calls Nicobar not a strategic inconvenience for Beijing but an existential threat. Existential. The survival of the state. Imagine China in a post-apocalyptic scenario, red sun shining at the horizon, Chinese citizens shuffling around like zombies, their will to live broken by a single Hindol Sengupta op-ed. From an island that currently hosts nothing. Defended by nothing capable of intercepting modern Chinese missiles. Supplied through a single corridor 1,400 kilometres long. I write fiction for a living and even I would hesitate. The tap, the pipe, and the several other pipes Sengupta writes: "India's fortified presence at Great Nicobar would allow it to effectively close the tap on China's economic lifeblood." Malacca handles 82,000 ships a year. It is the busiest shipping lane on earth. Closing it would send global commodity markets into freefall within days. The US, EU, Japan, and ASEAN would be on the phone within a week. India's own economy, which depends on the same lanes, would be screaming within a month. Imagine an 80s policeman in khaki shorts, waving his baton while managing traffic at a red light. That is the visual I got. But leave that aside. Just ask the geographic question. Malacca is not the only door. The Lombok Strait, the Sunda Strait, the Ombai-Wetar passage, all navigable, all viable. These routes add roughly 1,000 to 1,500 kilometres per voyage. Costly. Inconvenient. Not impassable. Closing the tap assumes one pipe. There are several. Hormuz is landlocked on one side. It is literally one pipe. Geography works there. Hindol's common sense doesn't. Iran held Hormuz under maximum pressure sanctions with nothing left to lose. India is a $3.5 trillion economy with global trade ambitions and a non-alignment posture it has spent decades building. Even the fantasy works for weeks at best. Sengupta mentions none of this. The dragon is desperate. Dhan ta tan. Permanent. Like a target. He writes: "These things, once built, become permanent features of the strategic landscape." Yes. Permanent features with fixed coordinates, known infrastructure, and predictable supply corridors. In military terminology this is called a target list. See, I may have forgotten to buy milk, but I learned a few things. He also describes "a dual-use airfield capable of hosting nuclear-capable bombers." The airfield is under construction. It currently hosts nothing. What Sengupta celebrates as permanent is not yet built. And when it is, here is what permanence actually means in 2026, in the world of asymmetric warfare. China's DF-17 hypersonic glide vehicle travels at Mach 5 to Mach 10, maneuvers to evade interception, and has been confirmed accurate to within meters of a stationary target. It is simply hard to understand what Mach 10 is. Let me put it in simple terms. For the fastest things we use the metaphor of a bullet. It went like a bullet. The fastest commercially available bullet travels at around Mach 3.8. We are talking Mach 10 here. That is nearly thrice the speed of the fastest bullet. Your brain cannot fathom this speed at close range. At a comfortable distance, Hindol can write this piece and enjoy moderate intellectualism. No currently deployed Indian system credibly intercepts it. Not S-400, which was not designed for this threat. Not the DRDO ballistic missile defense program, which is designed for slower trajectories and years from deployment at a remote island anyway. You do not need a large warhead when your target has known coordinates and cannot move. Iranian missiles that threatened Hormuz were fast. China's are a different category entirely. A screenwriter who spent three weeks reading about this knows it. Apparently, a professor of international relations does not. The vice with one jaw Sengupta uses the metaphor of a vice, India tightening it around China's Malacca dependency. A vice requires both jaws to be secured. Hindol possibly has a missing jaw and is on a liquid diet, so he doesn't understand how grinding or locking works. India's other jaw: no hypersonic intercept capability, a submarine fleet that cannot credibly deny these waters to Chinese strike assets, a single resupply corridor 1,400 kilometers long that is itself a target. China doesn't need to contest the island. It severs the supply chain. Mines the corridor. Hits Port Blair's fuel infrastructure. Nicobar doesn't fall. It ends up in a wheelchair, writing sad poetry about being left alone. But the vice tightens. Because Hindol said so. Dhan ta tan. Desperate? Try the trade deficit. Sengupta writes China is "desperate to stop" the Nicobar project. Desperate. If China is truly desperate, it has an instrument it hasn't bothered to use yet. India imports over $100 billion annually from China. Pharmaceutical APIs. Electronics. Solar components. Industrial machinery. Inputs that Indian manufacturing cannot replace in any realistic timeframe from any alternative source. China does not need missiles to hurt India. It needs an export ban. You don't need a knife to scoop things; you need a spoon. Elementary, dear Sengupta. The supposedly desperate adversary holds India's supply chains in its hand and hasn't squeezed. That is not desperation. That is a country that knows it has options and is in no hurry to use them. What India actually has, and what is being destroyed to get it. What India has at Nicobar is a peacetime traffic signal. What Sengupta describes is a wartime weapon. He never explains how one becomes the other. That gap, between a flag planted on strategic geography and an operational military capability that can survive an adversary's first strike, is the entire argument he failed to make. I know this is a satire, but I am losing my sense of humor now. But seriously. A UNESCO-recognised biosphere is being destroyed. The last significant leatherback sea turtle nesting ground in the Indian Ocean is disappearing. The Shompen tribe, one of India's most isolated indigenous communities, is being displaced. Concerns raised formally by scientists, including the former ISRO chairman who chaired the original environmental committee, have been ignored just as formally by the government. Dead turtle babies are not funny. Destroyed ecosystems are not funny. Green vanishing from satellite images is never funny. So, no satire here. Sengupta mentions none of it. The dragon is desperate. We won, na na na na na. Who is this really for? Indian strategic commentary of this kind is essentially melodrama. Written to make a particular reader feel that the country's rise is inevitable, that adversaries are scared, that geography is destiny. The gap between the story and reality has a way of closing. Usually at the worst possible moment. Posturing is great if you are Dharmender. Not when you are Arun Govil. But Sengupta's piece is something more specific than cheerleading. This is a professor using institutional credibility to dress up ruling party talking points as strategic analysis. This is a clown dressed in a business suit with a detachable red nose. The Great Nicobar project is a government priority. The narrative that it terrifies China is government myth-making. Sengupta delivers both, fluently, without a single uncomfortable question. Sengupta is a Sarkari bard singing Sarkari narrative in op-ed form. This is how the ecosystem works. You don't need a cheque. You need a conclusion the regime finds useful. The professorship follows. If you are going to be a sycophant, at least construct an argument that survives basic scrutiny. As they say, even if you sing a bad song, at least make the words rhyme. At least ask how the base gets defended. At least reckon with the hypersonic threat. Build a case worth taking seriously before you expect to be taken seriously. I am a screenwriter. I fell into a rabbit hole after a war broke out. I spent a few weeks reading things I had no professional reason to read. And I came away with more questions about this project than a professor of international relations apparently thought to ask. That is funny, in a way. Because it is not even intelligence. It is common sense. It stops being funny when you remember that this writing shapes policy expectations, budget allocations, and diplomatic postures. That the gap between the story and the reality is not just an intellectual embarrassment. It is a strategic liability. That is not a professor's failure. That is a propagandist's occupation. None of you probably laughed reading this satire. I understand. But I can guarantee you one thing. Every Chinese analyst and scholar who read Hindol's op-ed was laughing. He set out to frighten them. He ended up entertaining them. Which makes him funnier than me, despite trying his very best to be the exact opposite.
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🚨Indian Gems
🚨Indian Gems@IndianGems_·
While India is busy with the election results, a ₹838 crore bridge in Bihar has collapsed because the Tropic of Cancer passes just south of it 🤡
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Saurav Das
Saurav Das@SauravDassss·
A warning bell, long whispered about, but now impossible to ignore: “we are on a wing and a prayer that the consolidation of this form of Hindutva does not result in deeper exclusion and violence, which is typically the denouement of such nationalisms.” What is even more concerning is this: “For now, India is in the grip of Hindutva supremacy; it has been sold as a utopian dream. There is no rival.” The lack of an alternate, outside the social media echo chamber, is going to cost us all heavily.
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Sony Thăng
Sony Thăng@nxt888·
The United States has the largest prison population on earth. Not per capita. Total. More people in cages than China. More than Russia. More than every "authoritarian" state it condemns in its annual human rights reports. 1.8 million people. Disproportionately Black. Disproportionately poor. Disproportionately from the zip codes with the worst schools, the fewest jobs, the most abandoned infrastructure. This is presented as a "criminal justice system." It functions as a labor system. Prison labor, paid between 13 cents and $1.15 an hour in most states, produces goods for McDonald's, Walmart, Victoria's Secret, Whole Foods, and the United States military. The 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery, contains an exception clause: "Except as punishment for crime." That exception has never been closed. It has been expanded. The plantation did not disappear. It received a different name and a legal foundation.
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Darab Farooqui
Darab Farooqui@darab_farooqui·
If you participate and the system is rigged enough, you lose and legitimize it. If you boycott, they walk over and also legitimize it. The problem was never the electoral strategy. The problem is that the institutions that should make either strategy meaningful, the courts, the press, the Election Commission, have already been captured. The opposition understands this at some level. Which is why they keep making noise. Press conferences. Walkouts from Parliament. Strongly worded statements. Noise is what you produce when you know action is pointless but silence feels like surrender. They are not capable of sustained, unified, self-sacrificing defiance. Not because they lack courage individually, but because every leader in that coalition has too much to lose and no shared vision of what they are actually fighting for beyond not being the BJP. So what breaks the trap? Not opposition strategy. The opposition has no strategy left that the system cannot absorb. What breaks it, if anything does, is something outside the electoral frame entirely. Something so large, so undeniable, that the system cannot bend around it. An economic crisis deep enough that all citizens feel the brunt. Internal fractures within the Sangh that no outside force engineered. A war that he starts and cannot win. These are not predictions. They are not solutions. They are simply the kind of shocks that have historically broken systems that refused to break any other way. There is one more way. It has no party, no leader, no election to win or lose. History has a name for it. Every Indian knows what that name means and what it demands. But it only works at scale. Mass, pan-India, sustained and long. Not a moment but a movement. Not one city for one week but every city, every town, every village, for as long as it takes. Anything smaller the system simply waits out. 'Satyagraha' is a tool of people who have decided they have nothing left to lose. The Indian opposition hasn't still reached that conclusion. They still believe the next election might go differently. That belief, however thin, however frequently betrayed, is precisely what makes them manageable. The Sangh and Modi understand this better than the opposition understands itself.
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Dr.Medusa
Dr.Medusa@ms_medusssa·
Ho gaya democracy ka naatak ya abhi bhi kuchh bachaa hai?
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Papaksh 🇵🇸
Papaksh 🇵🇸@NeilDube3·
If BJP wins in West Bengal today DO NOT FORGET 90,00,000 (90 Lakh) votes were removed ILLEGALLY from WB ballots to make BJP WIN This is an ILLEGAL win
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Indian Youth Congress
SAVE THE GREAT NICOBAR RAINFOREST ‼️
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