What's in a name?

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What's in a name?

What's in a name?

@SlyandSulk

Pro logic. Pro principles. Pro reasoning. Pro argument. Pro India.

અમદાવાદ ⇄ ನಮ್ಮ ಬೆಂಗಳೂರು Katılım Mayıs 2016
616 Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
What's in a name?
What's in a name?@SlyandSulk·
No we just don't want to buy your snake oil anymore. Do whatever sneaky shit you want, those days are not coming back. As for what we do in our country, none of your business. We gave you sub-humans your land. You've shown incapacity of running or live in it. Now, live with it.
MD Umair Khan@MDUmairKh

Indians are being carried away by their newly found H!ndu nationalism and jingoism, just like Umahjeet generals were in Pakistan back in the 80s and 90s. A few decades from now, Indians will look back and greatly regret what they did to their country.

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What's in a name?
What's in a name?@SlyandSulk·
Didi, wo zamana gaya when you could gatekeep conversations, engage in intellectual feel-good masturbation over South Delhi soirée. I know it pains but you and people like Nirupama cannot tell citizens how to think, what to think, what to consume, what opinion to have.
Smita Sharma@Smita_Sharma

It is a strange platform where even the most random people with nothing to do in foreign policy would like to troll and preach to one of our finest diplomats who made India proud as Foreign Secretary. Sadly such is the discourse in this country where abuse and vile have more premium attached than serious deliberations and dialogue. @NMenonRao

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What's in a name? retweetledi
Gabbar
Gabbar@GabbbarSingh·
Their Ex-Diplomat: We should nuke India. Our Ex-Diplomat: We are not doing enough Pappi jhappi. 😢
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What's in a name?
What's in a name?@SlyandSulk·
Best diplomats - no evidence for that Rich experience and wisdom - no evidence of that supposed quality bringing benefit to India. Highly successful domain expert - really? More like elite making her career on the back of our dead bodies.
Yashovardhan Jha Azad@yashoazad

Nirupama is one of our best Diplomats. What she says we should appreciate as it comes from rich experience and wisdom of one of the highly successful domain experts. A flourishing democracy encourages public discourse with differing views not slander or personal remarks. But care a damn Nirupama! Ignore and keep writing.

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What's in a name?
What's in a name?@SlyandSulk·
@angshuman_ch @USAmbKeshap lol so rhetoric & virtue signalling is your only answer? time is gone when garbage would float cz it came wrapped in feel-good words. She's trying to be relevant on back of our people's dead bodies. Will be countered. Tumare bap ka nai he foreign policy. Aur na ye ganga dhaba hai
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Angshuman Choudhury
Angshuman Choudhury@angshuman_ch·
There are many reasons to support this perfectly rational post. But one of the more prominent ones for me is to counter the barrage of condescending, sexist and hawkish responses from two-bit youtubers, trolls & OSINT dudebros who larp as “defence experts” & “geopolitical analysts” on this app for blue tick payouts but have never opened a single book on geopolitics or questioned the foreign policy failures of this government. Also hoping to see folks from Delhi’s think tank circle to publicly support her.
Nirupama Menon Rao 🇮🇳@NMenonRao

The women of India and Pakistan need to deploy our ingrained common sense and suggest ways forward in our relationship. We need a women’s caucus. Not to throw accusations against each other but to think calmly and sensibly about the future ahead. For the sake of our children. We need to bring in the counterpoint: without naming it, without sounding defensive, but making it impossible to dismiss. For decades, India–Pakistan engagement has been trapped in a single script: territory, terror, recrimination. We repeat it with ritual precision, but it yields diminishing returns. What if we widened the frame? In West Asia, especially the Gulf, our interests often run in parallel: energy security, diaspora welfare, maritime stability, crisis response. These are not abstractions since they affect millions of lives and the resilience of both economies. Engaging here need not dilute our positions, create false parity, or reopen familiar disputes. It can remain tightly bounded, issue-specific, and without prejudice to core differences. Skeptics will argue that Pakistan cannot compartmentalise, that any engagement risks being instrumentalised, and that peripheral cooperation has never altered core hostility. But the purpose here is not transformation, it is insulation. Not to resolve the conflict by other means, but to prevent it from defining all means. Some may also say Pakistan has found a “role” in the Iran crisis and India should not be seen as seeking one. But this is not about visibility or mediation. Our interests are structural not transitory. If anything, the moment underscores a larger truth: even adversarial states operate beyond their disputes when interests demand it. When the central track is blocked, responsible statecraft does not stand still. It explores parallel ones, carefully, deliberately, and on its own terms. Sometimes, widening the field is not weakness. It is strategy. The women must speak.

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What's in a name?
What's in a name?@SlyandSulk·
energy security - Pakistan has nothing to offer & has no credibility diaspora welfare - makes no sense. Benefits pakistan maritime stability - they are the threat lol. Remember 26/11 boat hijacking? crisis response - pakistan has nothing to offer & benefits from any engagement
Nirupama Menon Rao 🇮🇳@NMenonRao

The women of India and Pakistan need to deploy our ingrained common sense and suggest ways forward in our relationship. We need a women’s caucus. Not to throw accusations against each other but to think calmly and sensibly about the future ahead. For the sake of our children. We need to bring in the counterpoint: without naming it, without sounding defensive, but making it impossible to dismiss. For decades, India–Pakistan engagement has been trapped in a single script: territory, terror, recrimination. We repeat it with ritual precision, but it yields diminishing returns. What if we widened the frame? In West Asia, especially the Gulf, our interests often run in parallel: energy security, diaspora welfare, maritime stability, crisis response. These are not abstractions since they affect millions of lives and the resilience of both economies. Engaging here need not dilute our positions, create false parity, or reopen familiar disputes. It can remain tightly bounded, issue-specific, and without prejudice to core differences. Skeptics will argue that Pakistan cannot compartmentalise, that any engagement risks being instrumentalised, and that peripheral cooperation has never altered core hostility. But the purpose here is not transformation, it is insulation. Not to resolve the conflict by other means, but to prevent it from defining all means. Some may also say Pakistan has found a “role” in the Iran crisis and India should not be seen as seeking one. But this is not about visibility or mediation. Our interests are structural not transitory. If anything, the moment underscores a larger truth: even adversarial states operate beyond their disputes when interests demand it. When the central track is blocked, responsible statecraft does not stand still. It explores parallel ones, carefully, deliberately, and on its own terms. Sometimes, widening the field is not weakness. It is strategy. The women must speak.

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What's in a name?
What's in a name?@SlyandSulk·
I'm game if women of Pakistan are willing to stand in front of paki bullets to promote this initiative.
Nirupama Menon Rao 🇮🇳@NMenonRao

The women of India and Pakistan need to deploy our ingrained common sense and suggest ways forward in our relationship. We need a women’s caucus. Not to throw accusations against each other but to think calmly and sensibly about the future ahead. For the sake of our children. We need to bring in the counterpoint: without naming it, without sounding defensive, but making it impossible to dismiss. For decades, India–Pakistan engagement has been trapped in a single script: territory, terror, recrimination. We repeat it with ritual precision, but it yields diminishing returns. What if we widened the frame? In West Asia, especially the Gulf, our interests often run in parallel: energy security, diaspora welfare, maritime stability, crisis response. These are not abstractions since they affect millions of lives and the resilience of both economies. Engaging here need not dilute our positions, create false parity, or reopen familiar disputes. It can remain tightly bounded, issue-specific, and without prejudice to core differences. Skeptics will argue that Pakistan cannot compartmentalise, that any engagement risks being instrumentalised, and that peripheral cooperation has never altered core hostility. But the purpose here is not transformation, it is insulation. Not to resolve the conflict by other means, but to prevent it from defining all means. Some may also say Pakistan has found a “role” in the Iran crisis and India should not be seen as seeking one. But this is not about visibility or mediation. Our interests are structural not transitory. If anything, the moment underscores a larger truth: even adversarial states operate beyond their disputes when interests demand it. When the central track is blocked, responsible statecraft does not stand still. It explores parallel ones, carefully, deliberately, and on its own terms. Sometimes, widening the field is not weakness. It is strategy. The women must speak.

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What's in a name?
What's in a name?@SlyandSulk·
Peddler ka naam bata do madam. Some really good stuff you're smoking up. Imagine people like these were occupying power positions in MEA!!!
Nirupama Menon Rao 🇮🇳@NMenonRao

The women of India and Pakistan need to deploy our ingrained common sense and suggest ways forward in our relationship. We need a women’s caucus. Not to throw accusations against each other but to think calmly and sensibly about the future ahead. For the sake of our children. We need to bring in the counterpoint: without naming it, without sounding defensive, but making it impossible to dismiss. For decades, India–Pakistan engagement has been trapped in a single script: territory, terror, recrimination. We repeat it with ritual precision, but it yields diminishing returns. What if we widened the frame? In West Asia, especially the Gulf, our interests often run in parallel: energy security, diaspora welfare, maritime stability, crisis response. These are not abstractions since they affect millions of lives and the resilience of both economies. Engaging here need not dilute our positions, create false parity, or reopen familiar disputes. It can remain tightly bounded, issue-specific, and without prejudice to core differences. Skeptics will argue that Pakistan cannot compartmentalise, that any engagement risks being instrumentalised, and that peripheral cooperation has never altered core hostility. But the purpose here is not transformation, it is insulation. Not to resolve the conflict by other means, but to prevent it from defining all means. Some may also say Pakistan has found a “role” in the Iran crisis and India should not be seen as seeking one. But this is not about visibility or mediation. Our interests are structural not transitory. If anything, the moment underscores a larger truth: even adversarial states operate beyond their disputes when interests demand it. When the central track is blocked, responsible statecraft does not stand still. It explores parallel ones, carefully, deliberately, and on its own terms. Sometimes, widening the field is not weakness. It is strategy. The women must speak.

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What's in a name? retweetledi
The Times Of India
The Times Of India@timesofindia·
India may need Chinese expertise for projects in Arunachal: Jairam Ramesh http://toi.in/dj0Xj8
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What's in a name? retweetledi
Supriya Shrinate
Supriya Shrinate@SupriyaShrinate·
Lowest GDP growth in 5 decade? Q2 GDP gr at 5.3%. Has growth bottomed out. Top India Inc voices @ETNOWlive
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What's in a name? retweetledi
Sensei Kraken Zero
Sensei Kraken Zero@YearOfTheKraken·
I am sorry but wtf was going on in this country before 2014
Sensei Kraken Zero tweet media
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