Nikhil Seri నిఖిల్ శేరి

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Nikhil Seri నిఖిల్ శేరి

Nikhil Seri నిఖిల్ శేరి

@indoiseri

🕉

Katılım Mart 2010
300 Takip Edilen22 Takipçiler
Rishi Sunak
Rishi Sunak@RishiSunak·
Huge congratulations to Bodhana Sivanandan on becoming England’s top female chess player at just 11 years old. We once played each other in the Downing Street garden. Let’s just say her success has not come as a shock!
Rishi Sunak tweet media
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Mistress Dividend
Mistress Dividend@mistressdivy·
Guys: if a woman challenges you intellectually, is that attractive to you?
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Frontalforce 🇮🇳
Frontalforce 🇮🇳@FrontalForce·
Pakistani caller on live TV debate "Our condition is so bad, hum salwar silwate hain to kameez fat jati hai kameez silwate hain to salwar fat jati hai, dono silwate hain to pata nahi kya kya fat jata hai" Asim Munir what u have done to Pakistan 😭😭
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Dear Son.
Dear Son.@DearS_o_n·
CORRECT ME IF I'M WRONG BUT, after 37 years of age, I’ve finally come to realize that, as a man, no one cares about you. Not your wife. Not your family. Not your friends. Not your workmates. Nobody. People act like they care, but deep down, they don't. You are on your own. Always on your own.
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Arda
Arda@Arda124578·
@RishiSunak Mate, shes indian, you can just say that. Its literally the only reason your posting this. Its okay to call an indian, indian. Please.
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gene 🇵🇸
gene 🇵🇸@jonghopilled·
they can’t read uncle
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Chudmendid
Chudmendid@gocastefo·
@indoiseri @IraninSA Much much better than succumbing to Christianist regimes. Europe should go back to their pagan roots and abandon the foolish way of paul
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Iran Embassy SA
Iran Embassy SA@IraninSA·
Stone Age? At a time when you were still in caves searching for fire, we were inscribing human rights on the Cyrus Cylinder. We endured the storm of Alexander and the Mongol invasions and remained; because Iran is not just a country, it is a civilization.
Pete Hegseth@PeteHegseth

Back to the Stone Age.

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Aquib Mir
Aquib Mir@aquibmir71·
I lost my brother Khursheed Mir in 2003 . He got martyred when he was fighting Pakistani terrorists in district ramban of Jammu and Kashmir . 23 years without him 😭
Aquib Mir tweet media
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Nikhil Seri నిఖిల్ శేరి
@drsunita02 Not questioning your intentions here but, well educated? This is an Indian disease where how much you own rather than how much resources you consume became the criteria for how many children you have. At the current rate, I think 3 children is a good way to go. More the merrier.
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Sunita Sayammagaru 🇮🇳🇬🇧
Why do a few well educated Indians abroad have 3 kids?? 3 kids one after the other, and not just an older child and younger twins. I already know 4 families with 3 kids each..... And none of them are filthy rich, they just went abroad via the usual channels and earning just like loads others. And it's nothing to do with wanting a male child. Infact all 4 families have sons as their first child. The couples are currently in their 40s and kids are into their teenage years. What is the secret that these people are privy to and that we don't know in India, that makes them want to have 3 kids? Here, in India, even well educated, well earning people don't want to have kids at all or don't want to have a second kid. All I can think is that they wanted a home filled with kids.... Loads of well educated Caucasians voluntarily have more than 2 kids abroad. #Children
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Ram
Ram@ramprasad_c·
India is officially Naxal-free. If you grew up in the 70s and 80s in Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, or large parts of central India, you know what this means. This isn't some abstract news headline. This is the end of a terror that shaped our childhoods. As a kid, I witnessed an assassination for the first time when Naxals murdered a small-time farmers' leader who didn't give in to their demands. They killed a friend who was in college. They put my uncle on their hit list. Their threat was at the doorsteps of many ordinary people. They killed Andhra's Home Minister Madhava Reddy. MLA after MLA. Police officers. Student leaders in hostel rooms. They nearly assassinated Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu in Tirupati in 2003. No one was safe. Not politicians, not police officers, not college kids, not farmers. The numbers: Naxalism killed more Indians than Islamist terrorism and Khalistani terrorism combined. Let that sink in. Naxalism (1980–2025): ~20,000+ killed. 12,000+ civilians. 3,000+ security forces. Over 30,000 violent incidents since 2000 alone. J&K Islamist insurgency (1990–2020): ~14,000 civilians + ~5,300 security forces killed. Devastating, but concentrated in one region, and episodic in rest of India. Khalistan insurgency (1980s–90s): ~21,500 killed including ~12,000 civilians. Intense but contained to roughly a decade. Naxalism wasn't episodic. It was chronic. It hit daily, across 180 districts, for nearly six decades. Yet Naxals got the most extraordinary cultural cover. Telugu cinema built an entire genre around romanticising them. They were portrayed as Robin Hoods fighting injustice. The revolutionary fighting the system. Nobody wanted to criticise them. Not filmmakers. Not intellectuals. Not the media. They destroyed schools, roads, mobile towers. They killed the very tribals they claimed to protect. They didn't fight the system. They were the system in those forests. A brutal, unaccountable one. From 180 affected districts to zero. From 2,258 violent incidents in 2009 to near zero. An 85% drop in civilian and security force deaths. This is the biggest internal security achievement in independent India's history. And it deserves to be talked about as exactly that. The Red Corridor is gone. Let's never romanticise what it was.
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