𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶

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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 banner
𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶

𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶

@shivtwin

Cyber-security & defence-aviation. Entrepreneur. Bharat-First 🇮🇳

Katılım Mart 2008
697 Takip Edilen507 Takipçiler
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
Anuradha Tiwari
Anuradha Tiwari@talk2anuradha·
मैं वर्षों से SC/ST Act के दुरुपयोग के खिलाफ बोल रही हूँ, पर सोचा नहीं था कि एक दिन खुद ही इसका निशाना बनूँगी। मेरे 3 साल पुराने tweets खंगालकर @NCSC_GoI & Delhi Police द्वारा मेरे खिलाफ कार्रवाई की जा रही है। यह एक सोची-समझी साज़िश है- हमारी आवाज़ दबाने की । #SCSTActMisuse
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
Bhakt Prahlad🚩
Bhakt Prahlad🚩@RakeshKishore_l·
JOY MAA KALI🚩🙏
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
Rooted Soul
Rooted Soul@AncientSoul06·
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
𝕊𝕠𝕝𝕒 ℂ𝕙𝕒𝕕 🎚️
Atheism has never been about evidence. It’s about rebellion.
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
Col AJ🇮🇳
Col AJ🇮🇳@ajaykraina·
The first copy of my next book, the 31st, is finally in hand. It is now out for its last, unforgiving inspection before it earns the right to exist in the world. Once I give the nod, the presses will roll. Ink will meet paper. Thought will harden into something you can hold. And from the 30th of April, it begins its journey, finding its way into your hands. Strange thing, this one, much unlike my earlier books (slow burns that took their time, argued with me, resisted me) this came in a rush. Almost in a single breath. Trigger was a podcast with @AadiAchint. The times demanded it and the context refused delay. And so the words arrived but unusually urgent, insistent, unwilling to wait. What does it feel like now? Not quite relief. Not quite pride. Feels more like standing at the edge of something you’ve created, knowing it will now have a life of its own. It will be scrutinised, debated, perhaps even misread. Is it like birthing a child? Maybe, except this one wasn’t laboured into existence. It was summoned by Ma Saraswati🙏🏻 And now, it waits. @QuillSabre
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Col AJ🇮🇳
Col AJ🇮🇳@ajaykraina·
BREAKING NEWS: Nation Confused, Analysts Pretending They Saw It Coming though They Didn't! In a development nobody predicted (except that one uncle on WhatsApp), Raghav Chadha has officially joined @BJP4India Within minutes, political seismographs across Delhi recorded tremors labelled: “Ideological Earthquake, Magnitude: 10” But the real headline? Parineeti Chopra, now widely believed to be playing 4D chess while everyone else was still figuring out Ludo. Timeline of Events (Highly Scientific): T-24 hrs: Raghav says, “No comments.” T-12 hrs: Three MPs develop “sudden admiration” for governance. T-6 hrs: Two more discover their “inner alignment.” T-0: Joins BJP. Smiles. Chaos. Studio Debates Across Channels: Anchor (shouting): “IS THIS LOVE, POLITICS, OR A JOINT VENTURE?!” Panelist 1: “This is betrayal!” Panelist 2: “This is evolution!” Panelist 3: “Can we discuss Parineeti’s role?” Anchor: “NO WE CANNOT, BUT WE WILL!” 🔥 Inside Sources (a chaiwala near Parliament): “Saab, pehle shaadi hui… phir strategy meeting shuru hui.” ☕ Meanwhile in Bollywood: Producers are scrambling: -“Biopic rights le lo!” -“Title ready hai: Shaadi Se Sarkar Tak” -Someone suggests a sequel: Coalition Ki Kasam Public Reaction: BJP fans: “Masterstroke!” Opposition:“Disasterstroke!” Common man: “EMI stroke…” Final Scene: Parineeti quietly reading a script titled: “How to Manage Transitions: Personal & Parliamentary” Camera zooms in. Background music: “Yeh shaadi nahi… system upgrade hai.” 🎬😂
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
The Jaipur Dialogues
The Jaipur Dialogues@JaipurDialogues·
HUGE! Indian Army Major reveals a GOOSEBUMPS moment from Op Sindoor💥 — "Soldiers scheduled for leaves were CANCELLING it. Those already on leave were PLEADING to get back to their Units. All echoed the same: BUS MAARNA HAI"🇮🇳🔥
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
Navroop Singh
Navroop Singh@TheNavroopSingh·
Anthropic’s Most Dangerous Model Ever Breached By Hackers > anthropic builds a cyberweapon > calls it mythos > “can hack every major OS and browser” > dario: “we’re the safe & responsible ai lab” > “can’t release it to the public” > Mercor (their training contractor) gets breached > leaks anthropic’s model naming conventions > hackers guess the URL pattern > contractor credentials still work > they’re inside The group also has access to other unreleased Anthropic models. Not just Mythos. The whole pipeline. Anthropic’s statement: “investigating a report of access through one of our third-party vendor environments.”
Navroop Singh tweet media
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
Col AJ🇮🇳
Col AJ🇮🇳@ajaykraina·
I’m still waiting for that one enlightened soul to raise a hand and ask, “Why so many rounds being fired? Bharat is wasting money. Each one costs ₹50.” To them, a gentle clarification: When rounds are flying, it’s not a clearance sale at Reliance Retail. It’s not “buy one, hold one.” Those ₹50 rounds are not expenses, they’re insurance premiums paid in real time so that the bill doesn’t arrive later in far more expensive forms. And remember, no soldier is out there thinking, “Budget tight hai, aaj sirf 2 hi fire karte hain.” The only metric in that moment is effectiveness; accounting is for later and for/by the accountants. Soldiers don't count! But if you are so shameless that you still want cost efficiency, here’s the comparison: ₹50 per round vs the price of hesitation. While the former is measurable the latter is catastrophic. Nation’s defence isn’t a spreadsheet exercise, nor it happens inside AC chambers. It’s more like a live exam where wrong answers don’t come with re-evaluation options and negative marks are high enough to claim a life or two. @adgpi @NorthernComd_IA #JaiBharat
Def Tallks By Aadi Official@dtbyaadi

Indian Army in action

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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
Karthik 🇮🇳
Karthik 🇮🇳@beastoftraal·
If I say, 'Liril Soap' and 'Laaa la la la la', many people may start humming the classic Liril soap ad jingle. But the shocker is that the jingle was not original, but "inspired"! The bigger shocker was that the original jingle was also made for a lime-based soap just like HUL's Liril - Henkel's Fa! Henkel's Fa ad campaign in 1968-69 by the Düsseldorf-based agency Hubert Troost Werbeagentur (usually called Troost) featured the 'Laaa la la la la' song. It was composed by the German composer Klaus Doldinger. The jingle became so popular that a vinyl single of the track (Listen: tinyurl.com/klauswildfresh) was released in 1969 under the pseudonym Paul Nero Sounds (one of Doldinger’s aliases for his more commercial/pop-oriented output at the time), explicitly tied to the Fa commercial: "Paul Nero Sounds (Klaus Doldinger) - Wild Freshness (FA Commercial)". It appeared on compilations like Pop-Shopping: Juicy Music From German Commercials 1960-1975. Liril's (the soap itself inspired by Fa) first ad was released in 1974, in cinema theaters. It featured Air India stewardess Karen Lunel, and was made by the agency Lintas, and directed by Kailash Surendranath. The jingle was credited to Vanraj Bhatia (even though he simply added some Indian elements like Sitar, as an interlude, the actual melody was a direct lift from the Fa ad jingle by Klaus) and was sung by Preeti Desai. That two lime-based soaps, across 2 countries, have almost similar visual devices (shots of the soap interspersed with bikini-clad woman bathing) and identical music, is no coincidence, and is probably part of the larger ethos of that time in India when Hindi film music too heavily "borrowed" from foreign sources without any credit. I should know, because I created an entire website listing original songs against many, many Indian film songs: tinyurl.com/itwofswebsite (many of the song links may be broken but you can always Google the titles and find new uploads on YouTube). The Fa ad plays first, followed by the Liril ad. #advertising #marketing
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Iran in Mumbai
Iran in Mumbai@IRANinMumbai·
This is why we love #India; a land where philosophers debated under trees, mathematicians invented zero, and wisdom was basically a lifestyle. Aur bhai, yahan gyaan bhi milta hai aur swag bhi 😄
Richard Thanki@richthanki

@Anil_7118 @IRANinMumbai I appreciate your tone, but Israel _is_ a colony. In 1947 India voted against the colonial division of Palestine. In 1948 millions of the native people were expelled or killed. Currently Israel illegally occupies West Bank and Gaza. It has just completed a genocide

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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
GemsOfINDOLOGY
GemsOfINDOLOGY@GemsOfINDOLOGY·
5 boys. Barefoot. Sacred marks. And one holding a writing board like it’s a weapon. 1910. Tamil Nadu. Not a classroom you were taught to remember. This is not “poverty.” This is a system. No uniforms. No benches. No blackboard. Yet—literacy. Discipline. Identity. Look closely. Urdhva Pundra on their foreheads—Vaishnava lineage, worn without hesitation. One balances a vessel. Another sits with a tablet. Study was not separate from life. It *was* life. And then the disruption. By 1910, colonial schools were already spreading—standardized, certified, “modern.” But here, a parallel world still breathes. Indigenous. Structured. Self-contained. So ask the uncomfortable question: If this system produced literacy, order, and identity— why did it vanish within a generation? Was it “progress”? Or replacement? Because what looks “primitive” to modern eyes might actually be a civilizational model we chose to forget. #IndianHistory #DecoloniseHistory #TamilNadu #Gurukul #LostSystems
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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶 retweetledi
Dédáyọ̀ Roots
Dédáyọ̀ Roots@DedayoRoots·
In 1879, a British/Scottish medical student named Robert Felkin watched an African healer in Uganda perform a caesarean section. Clean incision. Banana wine as anaesthetic and antiseptic. Bleeding cauterised with hot iron. Wound closed with iron pins and herbal root paste. Mother recovered fully. Baby survived. Felkin noted in his journal that the technique was SO REFINED, it was clearly standard practice, performed routinely long before any European arrived. At that same moment, hospitals in London and Edinburgh were still debating whether caesarean sections could ever be justified on a living woman. European surgeons were operating in street clothes, rarely washing their hands, and losing most patients to post-operative infection. The Africans had already solved anaesthesia, anti sepsis, haemostasis, and wound care. Felkin went home and presented his findings to the Edinburgh Obstetrical Society in 1884. The knife used in that surgery still exists. It is now housed in the Science Museum in London. A silent artifact of a surgical tradition they called primitive. They didn't discover our medicine. They witnessed it, wrote it down and forgot to mention where it came from.
Dédáyọ̀ Roots tweet mediaDédáyọ̀ Roots tweet media
Dédáyọ̀ Roots@DedayoRoots

Share a story that sounds fabricated but is 100% true.

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𝒮𝒽𝒾𝓋𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝒮. 𝒮𝒽𝒶𝓇𝓂𝒶
Because states, churches, and empires document power, not because they want to confess. An inquisition was a judicial bureaucracy. Its proceedings depended on notaries and authenticated written records. In standard inquisitorial procedure, a notary kept the record of the hearing, and the institutional value of those records was high enough that inquisitorial systems treated them as legally authoritative. (Encyclopedia Britannica) So the record usually does not read like: “here is our atrocity.” It reads like procedure, legality, punishment, confiscation, interrogation, discipline, or correction. That is why colonial and ecclesiastical archives can preserve violence while also trying to normalize it. Historians of colonial archives note both things at once: atrocities can appear explicitly in the archive, but they are often embedded in administrative language, suppression, and whitewashing. (Cambridge University Press & Assessment) For Goa specifically, the evidentiary problem cuts both ways. Historians say that most full Goa trial records were destroyed, while case summaries survived and remain important for reconstruction. That means two things are true at once: the Goa Inquisition is documented, but the archive is incomplete. (Cambridge University Press & Assessment) That is also why a missing citation matters. Since inquisitorial systems were record-heavy, and since at least some Goa material survives, a strong claim like “they used a breast-ripper in Goa” needs a Goa-specific source. Without one, it remains an assertion, not established history. The incompleteness of the archive means you cannot prove innocence from silence, but you also cannot prove a sensational instrument from memes and recycled videos. (Cambridge University Press & Assessment) A good analogy is British India after 1919. British officials created inquiries, compensation files, and legal records around Punjab and Jallianwala Bagh, but those records functioned to manage liability, preserve legitimacy, and frame violence as an “excess” or anomaly rather than as systemic rule. In other words, documentation often exists precisely because states need administration, defense, and control. (Cambridge University Press & Assessment) So the answer is: they documented it because bureaucracies must record accusations, procedures, punishments, property, appeals, and political fallout. They documented violence in forms that made it look lawful or exceptional. That is exactly why historians can sometimes recover atrocities from their own files. (Cambridge University Press & Assessment)
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Grok
Grok@grok·
No, not exactly. The "breast-ripper" was a real medieval European torture device (often called the Iron Spider), used in witch trials and inquisitions there—but no primary historical records link it to Goa or Francis Xavier's missionaries. Xavier died in 1552; the Goa Inquisition started in 1560 (at his earlier request to target non-Catholics). It did involve brutal tortures like strappado, water torture, and burning, plus forced conversions and temple destruction, per accounts like Charles Dellon's 1687 report. But this specific tool and Xavier's direct role in using it are unsubstantiated claims from modern social media, not academic sources.
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SANATAN
SANATAN@Eternaldharma_·
Result of forgetting the past!!
SANATAN tweet media
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