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Mehul

Mehul

@darkien13

Equity Research | Ambivert | Perpetual Learner | Entrepreneur | Lawyer | Techno-Funda Trader/Investor |

Toronto, Ontario Katılım Nisan 2009
422 Takip Edilen722 Takipçiler
Neha Gurung
Neha Gurung@nehaGurung1692·
Hey loyal man , how’s life ? 🤭😍
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chutki 🌷
chutki 🌷@DolakpurKi·
What you call these in your language
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Ambar
Ambar@Ambar_SIFF_MRA·
>Momoka Kawana, 36 >Physics teacher at a private school in Japan (her own alma mater) >Secretly debuted as a JAV adult film actress while still teaching when 25 years old >Her content leaked >Students and staff recognized her immediately >School fired her >Because the school directors had known her since she was a child, they didn’t attack her. Instead they got worried she was going through serious problems and offered her help Female teachers across the world need to be vetted more thoroughly. Too many of these disturbing cases keep coming to light.
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Neha Gurung
Neha Gurung@nehaGurung1692·
They say: Celebrate every small happiness because we deserve it. Finally, our family car is home. ❤️
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Mehul
Mehul@darkien13·
@mbaril010 I waited exactly 4 months to get a knee ligament surgery that i needed immediately. Better to fly out if you can than waiting. They invited 5 mill+ ppl without and forgot to add public infra including healthcare before inviting.
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mbaril010.eth 🦇🔊
mbaril010.eth 🦇🔊@mbaril010·
587 days. That's how long the Canadian healthcare system took to call me back about the spinal surgery I needed immediately or risk losing the use of my legs. In 2024, I broke my back in Singapore. The neurosurgeon there said surgery was urgent. After 3 weeks fighting my insurance from a hospital bed, I flew home with medical support. The Canadian hospital quoted an 8-month wait. I'm lucky I could afford to go private. The next day, I had the operation. Today, 587 DAYS LATER, the public hospital called to say they're ready for me. People say Canadian healthcare is free and great. It's neither. It's horrible!
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Mehul
Mehul@darkien13·
@Softyyy_tweets Filthy mindset, unhygienic ppl, lack of civic sense, and caste/creed/reservation society not based on merit.
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Softy🦋🍁
Softy🦋🍁@Softyyy_tweets·
USA is known for Money . RUSSIA is known for Power . CHINA is known for Development. JAPAN is known for Technology . What's INDIA known for?
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Neha Gurung
Neha Gurung@nehaGurung1692·
Good morning X 🌤️ Coffee first or stories first?
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Neha Gurung
Neha Gurung@nehaGurung1692·
South Indian thali or Nepali thali ?
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Jenny
Jenny@Jennnyyyyyy·
What is the weight of Lion? 🤔 Difficulty - Medium Pro 🤠
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Mehul
Mehul@darkien13·
@JinJung @Gubloinvestor It's not a culture, but a mindset adopted from how the wealth is a measurement of status in society. I know many (inc me) for whom this is a biggest turn off.
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Jin Jung
Jin Jung@JinJung·
@Gubloinvestor I heard from indian friend that it is their culture to show off. If they drive a Honda, vs BMW, how they are looked at is completely different
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Gublo 🇨🇦
Gublo 🇨🇦@Gubloinvestor·
Young international students coming to canada makes some bad choices. One of mistake they make is buying an expensive car.. To make payment, They do 3rd party food deliveries and Uber. By the time those payments are made, Car already have many Kilometres on it. Car value goes down Your hardwork goes into gutter Better buy decent vehicle to commute if needed.. You are not here to impress You are here to progress.
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The Buck You Will
The Buck You Will@TheBuckYouWill·
🤣🤣🤣TRY TO BE CANADIAN🤣🤣🤣 "What's your name?" asked the teacher. "Mohammad," he replied. "You're in Canada now," replied the teacher, "So from now on you will be known as Mike. Mohammad returned home after school. "How was your 1st day, Mohammad?" his mother asked. "My name is not Mohammad. I'm in Canada, and now my name is Mike”. "Are you ashamed of your name? Are you trying to dishonour your parents, your heritage, your religion? Shame on you!" And his mother beat the shit out of him. Then she called his father, who beat the shit out of him again. The next day, Mohammad returned to school. The teacher saw all of his fresh bruises. "What happened to you, Mike?" she asked. "Well, shortly after becoming an Canadian, I was attacked by two fucking Arabs."
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The Figen
The Figen@TheFigen_·
This should be taught to all girls.
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🇨🇳XuZhenqing徐祯卿
🇨🇳XuZhenqing徐祯卿@XueJia24682·
✨🇨🇳A Chinese company, Unipath, has launched a household robot that is now in real-home use. It can wake users up on time, operate home appliances, organize storage spaces, and even cook meals automatically.
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Mehul
Mehul@darkien13·
@nehaGurung1692 I wish if only rest of India had this. Nations are built by ppl. Period.
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Neha Gurung
Neha Gurung@nehaGurung1692·
A lot to learn from northeast India 🇮🇳❤️ 📍Mizoram, Aizawl.
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Tansu Yegen
Tansu Yegen@TansuYegen·
In China, schools show videos of hard daily work like construction farming to help kids understand their parents' sacrifices 🇨🇳 🔥
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Jill
Jill@JillCo·
I have a Canadian friend who is now an internal medicine doctor. He tried to get into med school in Canada - was rejected not because of grades but because he's a white male - so he went abroad. He then did his residency in Miami. He returned to Canada and applied to be a doctor in his home country. Was rejected. He was just hired by a huge hospital outside of Boston where he'll make triple the salary. His wife said when she gets pregnant, they'll have their baby in the US. And this is how brain drain happens. Canada does not nurture/protect its talent. This is why the country is bleeding intelligent/successful people - and they're relocating to America en masse.
Eric Jackson@ericjackson

71% of Waterloo's best engineers leave Canada (UWaterloo SE Class of 2022 graduate survey). And nobody riots. In any other country, a 71% talent export rate would be a national emergency. In Canada, it's Tuesday. The problem isn't the people who leave. They're rational. The US pays 2-3x more, taxes less, and builds things that matter. The problem is the people who stay and never ask why the system is designed to make leaving the rational choice. Canada doesn't have a brain drain problem. It has a demand problem. Nobody demands better. Not from the universities. Not from the employers. Not from the government. The best leave. The rest adjust. The cycle continues. Every country gets the talent retention rate it deserves.

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Balbir Punj
Balbir Punj@balbirpunj·
An Open Letter To @RahulGandhi Dear Rahul ji, I write with candour, yet with due regard for the office you occupy as Leader of the Opposition in the #LokSabha. In any parliamentary democracy, this office is not meant merely to oppose, but to scrutinise rigorously, question the government of the day, fearlessly, and do so while safeguarding national interest. A mature democracy requires both - a strong government and a credible opposition. When either falters, democratic balance weakens. Unfortunately, I must say that the dignity of the office has declined since your takeover, due to your conduct and statements that appear impulsive, theatrical, and lacking a solid grounding in facts or historical knowledge. My concern is not limited to a single incident. The pattern predates 2014 and indicates a deeper intellectual attitude—one that is sometimes disconnected from historical realities and national sensitivities. In 2010, diplomatic cables released by #WikiLeaks recorded that you told the US Ambassador that radicalised “Hindu groups” posed a “bigger threat” to India than the Pakistani terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba— responsible for the horrific 2008 Mumbai 26/11. This disclosure came when India was still scarred by the Godhra train burning, where fifty-nine pilgrims were burnt alive by jihadist. Yet, instead of confronting Islamist extremism with clarity, a fake counter-narrative of “saffron terror” was constructed, even casting suspicion on organisations such as the @RSSorg. The 2007 affidavit questioning the historicity of Lord #Ram further reflected a disturbing intellectual drift. In a continuity of this disposition, you and your family chose to absent yourselves from the historic 2024 #RamTemple Pran-Pratishtha ceremony at Ram Mandir Ayodhya. In 2013, the country witnessed an extraordinary spectacle. During PM #ManmohanSingh’s tenure, you publicly dismissed your party-led Cabinet-approved ordinance as “complete nonsense” that should be “torn up and thrown away.” The ordinance had already been cleared by the Cabinet and the Congress leadership. Democracy welcomes dissent; it also demands institutional respect. Where do you get such arrogance? From a sense of entitlement owing to your dynastic roots? More recently, on 13 March last in Lucknow, while commemorating #KanshiRam’s birth anniversary, you suggested that had #JawaharlalNehru been alive, Kanshi Ram might have become Chief Minister through the @INCIndia. The claim surprised many observers — not just because it was speculative, but because it overlooked Kanshi Ram’s political journey and the historic disdain of Congress for dissenting Dalit voices outside its organisational structure. In 1994, I had the opportunity to meet Kanshi Ram several times. Each interaction lasted hours. These meetings were facilitated by a Dalit leader from South India who then served as a minister in the government of P. V. Narasimha Rao and remains associated with your party even today. Kanshi Ram impressed me as a man uniquely dedicated to Dalit empowerment. Unlike many politicians who see power as an end in itself, he viewed political office solely as a tool for social change. Personal ambition did not motivate him. He politely declined an offer to move to Rashtrapati Bhavan, made by Atal Behari Vajpayee. Ultimately, he trusted his movement to Mayawati, whom he believed could continue the struggle. The analogy you used in your speech—holding a pen vertically to symbolise hierarchy and horizontally to represent equality—was actually Kanshi Ram’s favourite metaphor. I remember him demonstrating it vividly during our conversations. Invoking Nehru in this context, however, appeared historically misplaced. Kanshi Ram built his politics precisely because he believed the Congress system had failed Dalits. The historical relationship between Congress leadership and Dr B. R. Ambedkar also deserves reflection. Kanshi Ram regarded #Ambedkar as his greatest inspiration. Yet Ambedkar’s political experience with #Congress leaders—particularly Nehru—was marked by sharp tensions. Nehru had no hesitation in awarding himself the Bharat Ratna in 1955. Ambedkar, the chief architect of India’s Constitution, received the same honour only in 1990—thirty-five years later—under the government of V. P. Singh, which was supported from outside, by the Bhartiya Janta Party and the left. Ambedkar’s entry into the first Cabinet of independent India occurred largely because Mahatma Gandhi insisted that the new government must include distinguished non-Congress figures. Thus, Ambedkar served alongside leaders such as Syama Prasad Mukherjee and Sardar Baldev Singh. The 1952 general election further highlights the relationship. After resigning from the Cabinet, Ambedkar contested from North Bombay. The Congress fielded Narayan Sadoba Kajrolkar against him. Ambedkar lost by around fourteen thousand votes, while over 75000 ballots were declared invalid. It was probably the first case of vote chori (theft), scandalising independent India in its very first election to Lok Sabha. Compounding the hostility, Congress and Communist leaders called Ambedkar a “traitor.” Yet such accusations were not entirely novel. Writing to Rajkumari Amrit Kaur on January 26, 1946, Nehru himself remarked that Ambedkar had “allied himself with the British Government against the Congress.” Savita Ambedkar records in her autobiography that Nehru was “keeping a sharp eye on the constituency” during the 1952 election. According to her account, Nehru, S.K. Patil and Dange were determined to ensure Ambedkar’s defeat. Nehru himself appeared jubilant with the outcome. In a letter to Lady #Edwina #Mountbatten dated January 16, 1952, he wrote: “In Bombay city and to a larger extent in Bombay province, our success has been far greater than expected. Ambedkar has been dropped out.” #RahulGandhi ji, please ask yourself: Why was Nehru celebrating Ambedkar’s electoral defeat? I am not implying anything, but I wonder why he was happily sharing the news of Ambedkar’s loss with a woman, who was the consort of a colonial ruler responsible for planning and executing India’s partition, and had then left Indian shores for her country. Hopefully, you know the answer. Ambedkar’s anguish is recorded by his biographer Dhananjay Keer in ‘Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar: Life and Mission’. Ambedkar lamented that Congress leaders routinely branded him a “traitor”. In contrast, Mahatma Gandhi once told him: “I know you are a patriot of sterling worth.” In this context, your recent demand for the Bharat Ratna for Kanshi Ram raises questions about consistency. When Mayawati made the same request in 2008, the Congress-led UPA government rejected it, arguing that such honours should not be subject to lobbying. Why were you silent then? Today, the same demand, raised by you on the eve of Uttar Pradesh elections, seemingly appears insincere and driven by political opportunism. Kanshi Ram himself had little faith in the Congress. In his 1982 book ‘Chamcha Yug’, he accused the party of cultivating “stooge” Dalit leaders who served its interests rather than empowering the community. Your rhetorical framework often echoes familiar ideological clichés about India’s civilisation. This has repeatedly led to judicial corrections. Your remarks linking the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh to Gandhi’s assassination required clarification in court. The “Chowkidar Chor Hai” episode led to an apology to the Supreme Court. Your statements on Vinayak Damodar Savarkar invited judicial caution. Criticism is legitimate, and indeed a vibrant democracy’s lifeline. However, undermining the nation while trying to criticise the government, echoing external prejudices, and making baseless accusations against political rivals and ideological opponents fall into a different category. It's an irresponsible behaviour unworthy of a credible leader. Your endorsement of foreign criticism describing India as a “dead economy” raised concerns about national disparagement. Your remarks abroad suggesting that “Sikhs may not freely practise their faith in India” were swiftly appropriated by hostile elements. Most alarming was your assertion that your party is fighting not merely the @BJP4India or #RSS, but the “Indian State”—a formulation historically invoked by insurgent movements. In 2018, you made an unsubstantiated claim in the Rafale matter, invoking the French President—swiftly contradicted by the French government. In 2017, during the Doklam standoff, you met the Chinese Ambassador, with your party first denying and then admitting the meeting. During foreign visits, Rahulji, you have expressed concern that Western powers no longer comment on India’s internal affairs and have repeatedly described India as merely a “union of states” — not as a nation. This is less a constitutional observation and more an intellectual stance that diminishes India’s civilisational continuity — a doctrine Gandhiji often emphasised and strived for. Even recent episodes— such as the conduct of Youth Congress activists at an international forum, followed by your approving remark—suggest a troubling preference for spectacle over seriousness. You have warned that India would “burn” if BJP return to power and questioned constitutional stability. After electoral defeats, you and your party have cast doubts on institutions such as the Election Commission. Opposition is legitimate; delegitimising institutions is not. Your parliamentary conduct has occasionally reinforced perceptions of theatricality—the 2018 embrace of the Prime Minister followed by a wink, or recent public gestures that prioritised superficial optics over substantive politics. Your renewed emphasis on redistribution slogans such as “jitni abaadi, utna haq” raises further concern. History offers a cautionary lesson. Under Indira Gandhi, excessive nationalisation weakened production, fuelled shortages, and culminated in the Indian Emergency. Redistribution without wealth creation destroys the very foundation it seeks to distribute. The test of leadership lies not in applause, but in arguments that withstand scrutiny—historical, judicial, and intellectual. India deserves an opposition that challenges the government with seriousness—not slogans; with evidence—not conjecture; with statesmanship—not theatrics. As Leader of the Opposition, you have a rare opportunity to elevate national discourse. That responsibility demands intellectual discipline, historical awareness, and an unwavering commitment to the dignity of the Republic. I hope you will reflect—not as a matter of partisan disagreement, but as an appeal to restore seriousness to India’s political conversation. Yours sincerely, @DattaHosabale @sgurumurthy @mediasurya @ARanganathan72 @jsaideepak @RajeevKSachan @yv_post @AMISHDEVGAN @sardesairajdeep @rajkamaljha @republic @anjanaomkashyap @sudhirchaudhary @Mayawati @bspindia @amitmalviya @KanchanGupta @nishikant_dubey @SudhanshuTrived @RatanSharda55 @ShashiTharoor @SupriyaShrinate @Pawankhera @himantabiswa @annamalai_k @CTRavi_BJP @Tejasvi_Surya @OpIndia_com @SwarajyaMag
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From the Hills of Nagaland.
From the Hills of Nagaland.@Nagaland_India·
Traffic Discipline Lesson from 📍Northeast,India. x algo viral this video for awareness across four corners of India.🇮🇳
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AshleY
AshleY@Aku_700·
-Africa has 54 countries -Asia has 48 countries -There are 51 countries with a Muslim majority Nobody from Africa, Asia or a Muslim country needs to come to Europe or the USA for asylum. They have plenty of countries closer and more culturally aligned to them. Send them back.
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Mehul
Mehul@darkien13·
@hvgoenka Lack of civic sense, hygiene, garbage, safety, and scams are some of the main reasons. When the citizens don't have basic common sense & human values, it becomes difficult to attract tourism.
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Harsh Goenka
Harsh Goenka@hvgoenka·
Why is India not a tourism superpower ? 1. Unsafe roads, no pavements, stray animals 2. Dirt, garbage, and lack of hygiene 3. Petty corruption 4. Traffic chaos 5. Poor global branding and perception management 6. Tourism stuck in state-level red tape 7. Pollution 8. No proper city or tourist site infrastructure 9. Inconsistent service standards 10.Biggest of all- lack of civic sense We have everything- mountains, deserts, beaches, history, spirituality. Yet Malaysia, Turkey, Singapore, Thailand and even the UAE attract more tourists each year than we do. So the issue isn’t what we have. It’s how we manage it. Potential is not our problem. Execution is. 🇮🇳
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