Ramifications

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Ramifications

Ramifications

@rammedury

Fund Manager focused on PMS & asymmetric opportunities. Helping investors build resilient portfolios | Sharing insights on markets, valuations & wealth strategy

India Katılım Ekim 2008
706 Takip Edilen805 Takipçiler
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Muji Singh Rangi
Muji Singh Rangi@mujifren·
Nehru's jail saga will always be funny What kind of inmate celebrates his Birthday in Jail with his friends and supporters, Have his own garden, a room with sofa and electric table fan that too in 1934 What kind of jailed person gets parole whenever he wanted, got his sentence terminated by British to travel to Europe The only time Nehru was in actual jail was in Nabha Princely State in 1922 that too for 12 days, after which his Daddy Motilal came running and both Dad-Son signed a bond that Jawaharlal will behave and never come back to Nabha
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Pawan Khera 🇮🇳 ಪವನ್ ಖೇರಾ@Pawankhera

Those whose ideological forefathers wrote 9 mercy petitions will not understand this!

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Aravind
Aravind@aravind·
Peaceful rural life in India. Tourists must visit such areas of India, like this in the foothill of Himalayas. Indian railways connect well, people are very kind, stays are so cheap and cultured, you can still get internet, even 5G, unlike the US or EU.
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Harpreet
Harpreet@CestMoiz·
Shiv Tandav Stotram by Arvind Trivedi Ji who played the role of Ravan in the Ramayan TV serial
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Veda Ghosham
Veda Ghosham@VedaGhosham·
Our students have started receiving the Sandhyavandanam books (Level 1+) rare new information over and above our regular Sandhyavandanam books, that's why level 1+ Sri Sankar is our Brahmavarchas class student. Soon our WhatsApp will be flooded with such proud display of our book 📚 because it's a blessed content. Sri Kanchi Bala Periava🚩 blessed our book today morning with his divine hands 🤲🏼 Do you want this blessed book click the link below 👇🏼 vedaghosham.com/book/ #Sandhyavandanam #VGBooks #WeAreVedaGhosham
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Ole Lehmann
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann·
if you're under 50 and you stay healthy, i think you will live to 150 years old minimum the medical singularity is happening. just in the past 2 months alone: > revmed's pancreatic cancer drug (daraxonrasib) doubled survival in the deadliest cancer there is, 13.2 months vs 6.7 on chemo. it got a standing ovation from 40k+ doctors at the world's biggest cancer conference > a one-time gene editing infusion (verve-102) permanently switched off the gene that drives bad cholesterol and cut it up to 62% from a single dose. one and done, no daily pill for life > a lung cancer pill (lorlatinib) kept 60% of patients with spread cancer progression-free at 5 years. the longest anyone has ever held back a metastatic solid tumor with a single drug > mayo built an ai that catches pancreatic cancer on routine ct scans up to 3 years before doctors can. it spotted 73% of the earliest cases vs 39% for human radiologists > lilly's new weight loss drug (retatrutide) hit up to 30% body weight loss in its big phase 3 trial, and along the way it cut knee arthritis pain by 76% and dropped bad cholesterol about 20% and we are still just at the beginning of the exponential call me crazy but i'm a believer when Demis hassabis says we will cure all disease in the next 10 years
Rod Wong, MD@docrodwong

a standing ovation for daraxonrasib at asco. over 40k oncologists, entrepreneurs, investors, and patient advocates together celebrating revmed's breakthru in the fight against pancreatic cancer. u never forget these moments. it's what innovation is all about.

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Kalinga Arya
Kalinga Arya@KalingaArya·
A curious rule in academia: when evidence is ambiguous, Egypt is explained through Egyptian tradition, Greece through Greek tradition, and Scandinavia through Norse tradition. India alone is often denied the benefit of civilizational continuity. Here, the first instinct is not continuity but an outside origin, migration, or import. The Pashupati seal controversy is just another reminder.
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Aravind
Aravind@aravind·
IMO, the Vedas are everything in one. Chanting them after necessary refinements to the mind, and with intent, one can get revelations about science, as much as about spirituality or surgery. In the age of AI, I will request you to think of the Vedas as quantized, compressed version of a lot of revealed knowledge distilled into the most efficient, lossless sounds called mantras. Most people may, at most, appreciate their rhythms while they see religious intent mostly with bits of philosophy and spiritual instructions here and there. It's like someone appreciating an AI model's training weights and the output they see using a low level computer without having the powerful hardware or knowhow to extract the best knowledge. A truly determined seeker will improve this hardware (or his brain and mind) to be able to extract much knowledge out of the quantized and distilled model (or the Vedas). To the credit of the Vedas, they even provide the necessary steps to build and improve the hardware (body and mind) to extract the knowledge. Many seekers from Patanjali to Sankara have developed complete systems on how to do this. But even if all these systems are lost, and only the sounds of Vedas remain in human consciousness, it will still enable more Patanjalis and Sankaras to emerge and develop systems to realize the Universe complete with all its knowledge. This is the beauty of the Vedas. This is why the Vedas were never just "religion". They are a complete epistemic system engineered for precision, revelation, and infinite expansion of knowledge in our simulation. They enable us to see the entire source code of the simulation (past, present, and future) or access just parts of it to in-vivo improve our experience (by creating science & tech with the revealed knowledge). @bubbleboi is in the process of realizing this, do read👇
bubble boi@bubbleboi

I’ve been reading the Vedas a lot recently, and what’s stood out is how it doubles as an encyclopedia as well as a religious text. Astronomy, medicine, mathematics, metallurgy, linguistics, are all woven through hymns and rituals as one body of knowledge. Simply calling it “religious” forces it into a Western category that didn’t have the apparatus to recognize what it actually was. It’s closer to a tradition of formalized epistemology in which metaphysics, observation, and language form one continuous inquiry, which as a result led Indian civilization to develop along a fundamentally different path because of it. You can see the effect most clearly in the sciences. Around 600 BCE, the Vedic record describes a surgical procedure that matches modern rhinoplasty and is still foundational to reconstructive surgery today. Centuries before Western Europe stopped treating eclipses as supernatural, Indian scholars had calculated the circumference of the earth within 0.2% and explained eclipses as shadows. Centuries before Plato and Aristotle rejected atomism, the Vedic tradition already held that matter is composed of indivisible particles combining into binary and triatomic compounds, transformable by heat. The first formal rules for zero and negative arithmetic appear in the Vedas, along with infinite-series derivations of π, sine, and cosine centuries before Newton and Leibniz. The interesting question is how did they get so much right, so early? My best guess is language. The Vedic tradition is unique compared to other oral traditions as it demanded letter-perfect oral transmission across generations. Around 500 BCE, scholars composed a generative grammar of Sanskrit called Panini so rigorous it anticipates Backus-Naur form, the notation that defines programming languages today, by 2,500 years. Sanskrit is recursive, rule-based, and built to minimize ambiguity. It reads more like mathematics than English. When you think in a language built like that, the precision of the language becomes the precision of your reasoning. The West didn’t formalize this until much later. Kant argued our categories of understanding shape what we can know, Wittgenstein wrote that the limits of language are the limits of one’s world, and Kripke showed that naming doesn’t just describe things, it constitutes what they mean and how we can reason about them. All three touch the same insight which is that thought is downstream of language. The Vedic tradition operated on that insight thousands of years earlier. To the point that they built a whole language first and used it to think clearly about everything else after. I find that all really fascinating.

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Ramifications@rammedury·
If you want to see real Bengali culture, visit Andaman. Most Bengalis migrated there between 1940s-1960s. That pre dates what transpired in Bengal with its last two regimes.
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Abhijit Majumder
Abhijit Majumder@abhijitmajumder·
Swachh Bharat must be revived on WAR FOOTING. This time with greater intensity, much wider participation, strict penalties. * School awareness drives. * Targets for municipalities. * Weekend citizen campaigns with incentives. * Clean marketplaces. * Flying squads. * Steep fines.
Abhishek Singhvi@DrAMSinghvi

India really needs a civic sense movement. The incident at Delhi Metro where an elderly man reportedly urinated inside a lift is severely unacceptable and deserving of penalty under public nuisance laws. Civilised societies should punish misconduct in real time!

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RAMAN
RAMAN@Dhuandhaar·
When I last visited Kolkata, I loved some part of the city so much. Unlike any other metropolitan city in India, Kolkata has a different charm; it looks similar to Southeast Asian countries due to its climate, diverse people, and a mix of colonial architecture. Additionally, the city's water bodies truly elevate its beauty. A plus point is it’s the only major city where a full river is fully functional all year round. Kolkata needs a few major steps to look truly unique and culturally rich, such as: 1. Blending modernity with heritage, like introducing modern trams while preserving their heritage value. 2 Rebuilding and restoring old buildings. 3 Getting rid of the tasteless, omnipresent blue-and-white TMC color scheme across the city. 4 Undertaking a major upgrade of the railway stations and the airport. 5. Fix the encroachment and illegal construction.
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Ramifications@rammedury·
AI is making smart people dumb. And the dumb dumber.
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Rajeev Mantri
Rajeev Mantri@RMantri·
West Bengal was the troglodyte of Indian states. It was turned into a North Korea like economy. The Trinamool Congress ruled by spreading fear and terror among voters. People outside the state really do not appreciate what the opening up of West Bengal to India is going to do. It’s like the fall of the Berlin Wall! I shall be sharing some tweets of all the hard-to-believe stories coming out from the state now. 🧵
Kushan Mitra@kushanmitra

Man, it is becoming clearer and clearer Maomata deliberately kept Bengal backward to preserve her political power.

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Padmaja Joshi
Padmaja Joshi@PadmajaJoshi·
Across India, there are countless structures like the Bhojshala, which some believe to be a mosque while others call a temple. Visited one such in Malda, called Adina Mosque. Locals call it an Adinath Temple. These contrasting claims have existed for centuries, leading to several agitations. After several such squabbles, all photography inside is prohibited by the ASI. (Pictures of the bell, lamp, lotus motifs on the walls are available online) The question though is, with hundreds of such examples, where does the demand of reclamation stop? outlookindia.com/national/a-jou…
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Ramifications
Ramifications@rammedury·
There comes a time when a Dicatator Dictator goes.
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