MR SIINGH

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MR SIINGH

MR SIINGH

@THANOSASLIWALE

Katılım Temmuz 2022
1.2K Takip Edilen91 Takipçiler
MR SIINGH retweetledi
Anand Ranganathan
Anand Ranganathan@ARanganathan72·
Stop throwing a fit. Delhi Gymkhana is a private club. No one’s taking away your membership of it. Just that, leave aside valid security concerns, taxpayers are no longer willing to subsidise to the tune of thousands of crores, your stale cutlets and evening swims. My views:
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@AmitShah @BJP4JnK Applaud yes! But what about the maintenance? Safety checks precautions are joke in India. No wonder foreigners stay away from Kashmir .
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Amit Shah
Amit Shah@AmitShah·
Applause to India’s disaster response forces for safely rescuing 300 tourists stranded mid-air in cable cars in Gulmarg, Kashmir. The disaster response teams comprising the SDRF, NDRF, Army personnel, local police, and the administration swung into action and rescued all the passengers stranded in 65 cable cars through a six-hour-long operation. The nation salutes the forces for their valour and skill.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@SyedJunaidHsmi No accountability, just squeeze the money out of public until there is incident , then the whole system will wake up & fake promises with reforms and bla bla .
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Syed Junaid Hashmi
Syed Junaid Hashmi@SyedJunaidHsmi·
Gulmarg Gondola incident which left more than 300 tourists hanging in the air reflects systemic governance failure rooted in financial opacity. Recently tabled CAG report reveals that Jammu and Kashmir Cable Car Corporation has 10 pending accounts since 2014-15. This nine-year audit vacuum means no independent verification exists for maintenance budgets or safety compliance. Without transparent financial oversight, cost-cutting measures escape scrutiny, critical repairs are indefinitely deferred and safety becomes negotiable. The government’s deliberate tolerance of such accountability gaps demonstrates that public protection is not a priority. Financial negligence directly enables operational failures. A government serious about safety would never permit critical tourist infrastructure to operate under such opacity. Gulmarg Gandola Incident exposes what happens when administrative convenience supersedes responsibility. Until pending audits are completed and independent safety audits occur in parallel, such incidents will remain inevitable consequences of negligent governance.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Divcomjammu @Rameshkumarias Why is he not doing any hearing for last 3 months? Why common people are being subjected to delay ? Can someone provide any answer?
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Divisional Commissioner Jammu
Divisional Commissioner Jammu @Rameshkumarias, completed the self-enumeration process in his office today in presence District Census Officer, Jammu. The Div Com was apprised that more than 10500 citizens in Jammu district have already completed their self-enumeration process by visiting on se.census.gov.in , using their mobile number and OTP. He appealed to the citizens to actively participate in the digital self-enumeration process of the census 2027 and completing the process by 31 May, 2026.
Divisional Commissioner Jammu tweet mediaDivisional Commissioner Jammu tweet media
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Divcomjammu is there any timeline for your esteemed officers to hear the plea. Every month we get dates and on that day ( aaj sahib nahi baitenge). How is this even acceptable? Is there any accountability. No wonder judiciary pace is the slowest in Jammu. @OfficeOfLGJandK
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MR SIINGH
MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@voice_jammu So many beautiful places in bhaderwah and the government has completely turn blind eye to it. So much potential for tourism and yet everything is focused on Kashmir only.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Devansh_IAS @jmcjammu Do you need any documents to challenge the stay? The land is not in his name presently. Jammu tehsildar had cancelled intakal for that land two years ago.
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MR SIINGH
MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
Right in the middle of residential area, this slums has been a total nightmare. Nallah used as toilet, road as playground. No action by @jmcjammu even after complaint @Devansh_IAS pls look into this matter. JMC are not interested because slums belong to tehsildar friend.
MR SIINGH tweet mediaMR SIINGH tweet media
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Devansh_IAS @jmcjammu Is there a timeline? Can I pls get an answer when it will be done? It’s been almost 3 months now since I put up application.
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Oxygen
Oxygen@Oxygen18_·
He was 48 off 30 when Hardik Pandya came and I was noticing him he stopped trying to hit. It's not like that he would have won the match but he literally stopped trying. Scored 12 runs in the last 12 balls when the required run rate was 12. And he was celebrating his fifty as he won the World Cup final. - Choked in 2021 T20 World Cup. - Choker in 2022 Asia Cup. - Choked in 2022 T20 World Cup. - Choked in 2023 World Cup. - Choked in 2024 T20 World Cup. - Choked in 2025 Asia Cup. - Choked in 2026 T20 World Cup. - But never choked against Hongkong, Netherlands, USA, Zimbabwe, China Antarctica and in useless matches.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Oxygen18_ Players to be removed from Mumbai- rohit, sky, tilak, shardul .
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Oxygen
Oxygen@Oxygen18_·
If you fail 50% games, means 7 games in each season for 19 years in IPL, you’ll have 133 failures. Rohit Sharma has 160 scores from 0 to 25 in IPL. Mumbai Indians Please release this third class mediocre player and get that 16.3 crore back in the purse.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Oxygen18_ Should have retired when was removed s captain. What did he gain by delaying it?
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Oxygen
Oxygen@Oxygen18_·
🚨🚨LAST INNINGS OF ROHIT SHARMA’S IPL CAREER According to reliable sources and reports, Rohit Sharma has played the last IPL innings of his career today. Even when Rohit got out today, the crowd also stood up and clapped for him. End of an era. Now Rohit will be seen in the coaching setup like Kieron Pollard from next season. [Cricbuzz]
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Tajinder Bagga
Tajinder Bagga@TajinderBagga·
STORY OF DELHI GYMKHANA CLUB Total Land: 28 Acres - Prime Lutyens Delhi 🏛️ Membership fee: ₹30 LAKH ⏳ Waiting list after paying fees: 37 YEARS 🇮🇳 Yearly rent paid to Government: ₹1,000/year 💸 Tax dues: ₹2.93 CRORE You pay ₹30 lakh upfront. Then wait 37 years to get in. While they pay India just ₹1,000 a year. For 28 acres in the heart of Delhi. 113 years of colonial privilege. June 5, 2026, GOI takes it back.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Oxygen18_ They always perform in useless match, that’s how they fool everyone saying (they still got it). Aaj dono chalenge.
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Oxygen
Oxygen@Oxygen18_·
Rajasthan can still win this match easily. Anyone who thinks MI will win, clearly has no cricket knowledge. MI is basically playing with two batsmen short. Whether Rohit Sharma and Suryakumar Yadav play or not, it makes no difference. Together they can’t even contribute 20 runs. RR just need to score around 150 and the game is theirs. The only way MI can win is if they don’t send Rohit to bat at all and make someone else open instead.
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Aaraadhya Saxena 🇮🇳
Aaraadhya Saxena 🇮🇳@ihailmyindia·
Convincing Rome to align Trieste, Italy’s largest free port, with India to expand 🇮🇳 export access to 17+ EU countries after Italy quit China’s BRI in 2023, is one hell of a negotiation win 💀 Modi gave Meloni a ₹45 chocolate pack, posted reels & never mentioned Trieste or IMEC, everyone were into it. Such a theatrics at play.
Aaraadhya Saxena 🇮🇳 tweet media
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Malay Krishna
Malay Krishna@Malay4Product·
This isn't an India problem, every middle-income country has gone through this exact phase before us. Let me explain; Quick history. Here's what other countries looked like at our stage. > Japan in the 1970s. Tokyo had two-hour queues at parks on weekends. Bullet trains were so packed people had to be physically pushed in by station staff (the famous "oshiya"). Kyoto temples in cherry blossom season were unmanageable. Mount Fuji had garbage piling up because trails couldn't handle the foot traffic. > China in the early 2000s. The Great Wall had so many visitors that sections were closing for repair. Beijing parks were standing-room-only. Shanghai's Bund was a sea of humans every evening. The Forbidden City had hour-long entry lines. They started capping daily visitors only in 2014. > South Korea in the 1990s. Seoul's Han River parks were packed every weekend. Mountain trails to Bukhansan had traffic jams of hikers. Jeju Island hotels were impossible to book. They had the exact same complaints we have today. Even London in the 1960s and Paris in the 1970s went through this. Hyde Park used to be considered overcrowded with one tenth of today's London population. The Louvre had no crowd management. Eiffel Tower had no advance booking system. As, countries get richer, their middle class grows. More people can afford to travel and enjoy leisure. The country's infrastructure (built when only a small elite traveled) suddenly can't cope. There's a 15-20 year painful gap before infrastructure catches up. We're in year 12-13 of that gap. Now let's look at our growth; India added 25 crore people to the middle class in the last 15 years. Domestic tourism has tripled. Vehicle ownership doubled. But hotel inventory grew only 3-4% annually. Park space barely changed. Hill station capacity stayed roughly the same. India has roughly 2.5 lakh hotel rooms. The US has 50 lakh. China has 35 lakh. Even adjusting for tourism volumes, we're massively underbuilt. Mumbai has 1 sq metre of green space per person. London has 27. Singapore has 66. New York has 23. India has 22 popular hill stations that the entire middle class is squeezing into. We could easily have 50 if we developed Arunachal, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Mizoram, parts of Himachal that nobody knows about. To improve the situation, both the government and the citizens need to step up. Let's look at what our government and policy makers must do first; > One. Open up the North-East seriously. The seven sisters and Sikkim could easily absorb 30-40% of current Himalayan tourist flow. The reason they don't is poor roads, inner-line permit complications for some states, weak hotel infrastructure, limited flights. All fixable in 5 years if treated as a national priority. > Two. Build new hill stations from scratch. Vietnam built Sa Pa into a major destination in 15 years. Malaysia did the same with Cameron Highlands. India has dozens of underdeveloped hill towns (Munsiyari, Chopta, Tawang, Ziro, Mawlynnong) that could become next-generation Shimla and Manali if infrastructure gets built. > Three. Cap visitors at fragile destinations. Bhutan does this brilliantly with their high-value tourism policy. Tirupati already does some version of this with time-slot darshan. Ladakh announced visitor caps in 2024. Manali, Mussoorie, Shimla, Rishikesh need the same. > Four. Distribute the load across the year. Right now everyone goes to the hills in May-June and December-January. School vacation timings, public holiday clustering, weather perception all push everyone to the same dates. Some of this can be solved with better government coordination on holidays. > Five. Build urban green space aggressively. Singapore's Park Connector Network. Tokyo's pocket parks every 500 metres. London's protected greenbelt. These are policy choices and we need to make ours. Now, let's look at what we, as citizens of this great country can do; > One. Travel off-peak. Avoid Diwali week in Goa. Avoid May in Manali. Avoid December in Kashmir. Push your travel by 2-3 weeks. The same place is 60% emptier and 30% cheaper. Two. > Skip the famous destinations. There are 7 lakh villages in India. We collectively visit maybe 200 of them. Skip Manali this year, try Chopta. Skip Goa, try Gokarna or Diu. Skip Shimla, try Tirthan Valley or Chamba. Skip Munnar, try Vagamon. The country is mostly empty if you look outside the Instagram circuit. > Three. Don't add to crowd-pulling content. Every viral reel of a "hidden gem" guarantees that place is destroyed in 6 months. Spiti was peaceful in 2018. Then 50 lakh reels happened. Now Spiti is the next Manali. If you find a quiet place, don't post the exact location. Be selfish about it. > Four. Carry your trash back. The single biggest visible damage at hill stations is plastic waste left behind. Manali and Leh look the way they do not because of crowds alone but because of crowds plus garbage. Take a bag. Bring it back full. Train your kids to do the same. > Five. Stop expecting hill stations to feel like 1995. They won't. Make peace with that. The five lakh people you're sharing Manali with are not the problem. The system that didn't build new infrastructure for them is the problem. > Six. Plan smarter. Book hotels 60-90 days ahead, not 5. Pre-book temple darshan slots. Avoid long weekends. Travel midweek where possible. We have terrible last-minute travel habits compared to Europeans or Japanese who plan months ahead. > Seven. The deeper mindset shift. Crowds in India don't mean India is broken. They mean India is finally working for more people than it used to. The poor family that couldn't afford to see Taj Mahal in 2005 is now seeing it in 2026. That family is sitting next to you in the auto, queuing next to you at the temple, breathing the same hill station air. That is genuinely a good thing for the country. The discomfort of more people in shared spaces is the price of those people no longer being too poor to participate in middle-class life. The fix is simply building more places to travel to. More hotels. More parks. More hill stations. More circuits. More infrastructure. That's slow, unglamorous work of the next 20 years. In the meantime, your part as a traveler is to spread the load, respect the place, plan ahead, and stop expecting the Indian experience to feel like a private experience just because you can afford it now. The country isn't crowded because something went wrong. It's crowded because something went right. We just need to build fast enough to match. It the same story that Japan, Korea, China, Vietnam all wrote before us. And eventually came out of. We will too. :)
Pankaj Arora 🇮🇳@Panks_Arora

Every single place in India is just so overcrowded. - Want to go to a park? Hundreds are already there, not enough space. - Want to go to a temple? You won’t even get five minutes of peace. - Want to visit a hill station? Not a single hotel is available. - Same with Ladakh, Uttarakhand, and everywhere else. It feels like the calmest place is your own house.

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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Panks_Arora Yeah if you want to go to touristy places, but there are so many hidden gems.
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Pankaj Arora 🇮🇳
Pankaj Arora 🇮🇳@Panks_Arora·
Every single place in India is just so overcrowded. - Want to go to a park? Hundreds are already there, not enough space. - Want to go to a temple? You won’t even get five minutes of peace. - Want to visit a hill station? Not a single hotel is available. - Same with Ladakh, Uttarakhand, and everywhere else. It feels like the calmest place is your own house.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Ankittskedia The fact 97% Indians have not travelled abroad helps this politicians a lot. Poor countries than India have more civic sense and cleanliness standard.
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Ankit Kedia
Ankit Kedia@Ankittskedia·
Once you visit small countries like Sri Lanka, Thailand, or Vietnam, or cities like Dubai for the first time and then come back to Indian streets, you realize how much you’ve been scammed by your municipality, local MLA, MP, and the whole system.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@Kilaruness Pant is not made for T20 no matter which team he plays for.
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Meher Kilaru
Meher Kilaru@Kilaruness·
Teams that might be interested in #RishabhPant next year: #CSK: No. Already have Sanju and Urvil #SRH: No. Already have Ishan, Klaasen and Salil. #GT: Maybe, that too only as a player if they want to look beyond Butler as a keeper. #RCB: Maybe. Replacement for Jitesh. #KKR: Most likely. #PBKS: Highly likely, as a keeper. #MI: Likely, to replace QdK. #RR: No. Jurel and Donovan exist.
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MR SIINGH@THANOSASLIWALE·
@rajatahir27 It is very easy to criticise, imagine the hard work this lad has put in just to be there and waiting for the opportunity. As a parent it’s their duty to praise children when they doing something good. Sports is not easy mate. Sitting on couch & tweeting is.
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Tahir
Tahir@rajatahir27·
If you read this tweet without looking at the IPL table, you’d think LSG just qualified for the playoffs. And if you read it without looking at the scorecard, you’d think Arjun just bowled a double-maiden hat-trick to save the franchise. Reality: LSG finished dead last at the bottom of the table, and the boy bowled a 1/36 spell.😭💀
Sachin Tendulkar@sachin_rt

Well done, Arjun. ❤️ Proud of the way you’ve carried yourself through this season, always believing in your ability, staying patient, working hard quietly, and remaining positive despite having to wait for your opportunity till the very last match. Cricket tests patience as much as skill, and you handled both beautifully today. Keep your feet on the ground, and continue being in love with the game like you always have. Love you always.👏

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