Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque
543 posts

Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi

@ajay43 I thought that it was Kunal Vijaykar's parody, at first
English
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi

Isko dekh ke lagta hai, shayad pehle UPSC paper bhi leak hote the !!
ANI@ANI
#WATCH | Oslo, Norway | MEA Secretary (West) Sibi George says, "...We are one sixth of the total population of the world, but not one sixth of the problems of the world. We have a constitution which guarantees the fundamental rights of the people. We have equal rights for the women of our country, which is very important...We believe in equality, we believe in human rights...If anyone whose rights are violated, they have the right to go to court...We are proud to be a democracy..."
हिन्दी
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi

Some in the Congress, and others, are gloating about TMC’s loss.
They need to understand this clearly - the theft of Assam and Bengal’s mandate is a big step forward by the BJP in its mission to destroy Indian democracy.
Put petty politics aside. This is not about one party or another. This is about 🇮🇳.
English
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi

BJP didn’t conquer India. Regional parties handed it to them.
TMC said “Congress is irrelevant” in 2021, BJP is now winning Bengal.
SP said “Congress is a burden” in UP, BJP has won UP 2 times in a row.
AAP said “we are the alternative”, they couldn’t hold Delhi, couldn’t hold Punjab’s narrative, and got decimated the moment BJP got serious.
Left said “Congress is finished”, Kerala just buried the Left and handed it to Congress on a platter.
DMK ran Tamil Nadu like a family business, and a new party ate their youth vote overnight.
See the pattern?
Every regional party that spent more energy keeping Congress out of the alliance than keeping BJP out of power is now either begging for relevance or watching BJP redraw their electoral map with SIR and Delimitation.
The Third Front fantasy has one consistent track record: it has NEVER defeated BJP. Not once. Not anywhere.
But Congress?
Congress held Karnataka. Congress flipped Telangana. Congress swept Himachal. Congress just demolished the Left in Kerala; UDF’s biggest win in decades.
Congress is the reason BJP doesn’t have a 2/3rd majority in Parliament today.
And they did all of this while every regional satrap was busy holding press conferences about how “Congress is a sinking ship.”
The ship didn’t sink. It’s the only one still sailing against BJP.
Regional parties don’t have a BJP problem. They have an ego problem.
And that ego problem has a name: Third Front Politics.
You either unite under the only national party that can take BJP head-on, or you find your party’s Wikipedia page updated to past tense.
Congress isn’t asking for charity. History is. 🇮🇳

English
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi

An old friend messaged me the other day. After the usual catching up, he asked a question many people wonder but don’t always say out loud:
“Why do you still support Congress?”
I paused before replying. Not because I didn’t have an answer, but because I wanted to give him an honest one.
I told him… it’s not about “still.”
It’s about why I do.
I support @INCIndia because I believe in the idea it stands for an India that belongs to everyone, not just a few. An India where differences are respected, not weaponised.
Yes, the party has had its ups and downs. What institution hasn’t? But I don’t judge it only by its moments of weakness, I look at the foundation it helped build. The Constitution, the democratic framework, the space for every voice to exist… these didn’t happen by accident.
And then there’s @RahulGandhi.
I told him, what stands out to me is not perfection, but intent. In a political climate full of loud claims, here is someone willing to listen, to walk among people, to ask questions, even if they’re uncomfortable. That, to me, is strength, not weakness.
I said, I don’t support politics that divides people into “us” and “them.” I support politics that reminds us we are one.
He asked me, “But do you really think it can make a difference today?”
I replied, change has never been instant. But it always begins with people who refuse to give up on the idea of a better, fairer country.
For me, supporting Congress is not blind loyalty. It’s a conscious choice to stand for unity over division, dialogue over noise, and hope over cynicism.
I ended the message by telling him:
“I don’t support Congress because it’s perfect.
I support it because I still believe in the India it stands for.”

English
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi
Dr Parvez David Haque retweetledi

















