डॉ यशोधन जोशी - मी सावरकर 🇮🇳

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डॉ यशोधन जोशी - मी सावरकर 🇮🇳

डॉ यशोधन जोशी - मी सावरकर 🇮🇳

@yashj

Startup Mentor, Open Source & Mobility Solutions for Start ups and businesses. Photography enthusiast. मोदी भक्त.

Pune Katılım Şubat 2009
488 Takip Edilen151 Takipçiler
A K (Vedic Astrologer) ಎ ಕೆ 🇮🇳
Yesterday was Shani Jayanti and today Saturn moves into Revati, the final Nakshatra of Pisces. Revati is the end of the zodiac..time for final chapters, closures basically, a period of subtraction in your life. As Saturn retrogrades over the next two years, it will hit you between now and early 2028. If you are an Aquarius, Pisces, Aries (Sade Sati), Leo (Ashtama Shani), Sagittarius (Kantaka Shani) or running under Shani dasha You will feel emotionally exhausted kind of heavy & unexplainable emotional hangover urge to just isolate yourself.. from now until October 2026, you will see drop in your tolerance for superficial friendships & draining obligations If connections are quietly fading out of your life right now, let them go.   As many person asked me about its impact this energy will not disturb everyone with those Moon signs. For some, this exact Saturn transit will be the period where they become rich, get married etc. this will be entirely based on your birth chart. for example, if you have 28+ points in Pisces with 4+ in Saturn Bhinnashtakavarga, it will not harm you. if you are a Taurus or Libra lagna, Saturn is a Yogakaraka and this auspicious status will protect & bring positive results If you want to know how this Saturn transit & the coming transit of Jupiter in Cancer on June 2 is going to impact you, type . I will look into the birth charts of 10 people
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D-ASTRO
D-ASTRO@pmastrology_com·
Today, I am available for quick consultations regarding career challenges. Share your career concerns below, and I will send a DM or call you based on your post.
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Palash
Palash@ABiggerSpalash·
Surprised that no business publication thought of this, amidst the INR crisis. @pHequals7 hits the nail on the head.
pH@pHequals7

x.com/i/article/2053…

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Office Of Vijay Patel
Office Of Vijay Patel@VijayGajeraO·
Exposing the hidden hand behind the protest against the Great Nicobar Project. You won’t find these EXCLUSIVE details anywhere. So let’s start the THREAD. 1. Meet Ashish Kothari. He filed a petition before the NGT against this project. But why? And who is he?
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Neil Borate
Neil Borate@ActusDei·
The full piece — including what your neighbour's portfolio probably looks like, and why the envy pitch is more honest than most financial advice — is in this week's newsletter. linkedin.com/pulse/do-you-w…
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Neil Borate
Neil Borate@ActusDei·
Last week I was on a panel at IIM Mumbai. My fellow panellist, Nitin Rao, CEO of Incred Wealth, was asked why wealth managers are even needed in the age of AI.His answer was one line. It annoyed me. Then it didn't. 🧵
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डॉ यशोधन जोशी - मी सावरकर 🇮🇳 retweetledi
Harinder S Sikka
Harinder S Sikka@sikka_harinder·
@san_x_m Your half-truths are more dangerous than outright lies & I will not let them stand unchallenged. I served under Vishnu Bhagwat when he was Chief of Staff in Mumbai. Am aware how he connived with Admiral Ramdas to file a fabricated legal case against Admiral S. Jain, a decorated officer, simply to engineer his own promotion to Vice Admiral. This was not ambition. This was betrayal of the uniform. And Admiral Ramdas? A warship sank under his command in peaceful times. Fourteen officers & countless sailors perished. In any navy that holds itself to account, that ends a career. Instead, Ramdas was handed the top job, Navy Chief. Why? Because when Rajiv Gandhi, then PM, routinely commandeered warships, submarines, aircraft carriers, fighter jets & helicopters for private family holidays to Bangaram Island with his Italian in-laws, Ramdas bent over backwards to oblige. He made himself useful. He made himself untouchable. Ramdas then returned the favour. Vishnu Bhagwat was elevated to Chief of Naval Staff. What followed was a masterclass in institutional sabotage. Open defiance of government orders, deliberate insubordination, & a naked contempt for civilian authority that left the Navy’s chain of command in tatters. Bhagwat’s sacking was not a tragedy. It was overdue. If that were not enough, Bhagwat then published a vindictive book attacking the Navy, timed, with breathtaking arrogance, to coincide with the International Fleet Review presided over by the President of India. Let history record this plainly: Ramdas & Vishnu Bhagwat did not serve the Indian Navy. They used it, damaged it & when it no longer served their ambitions, they turned on it. The institution deserved far better than both of them.
Sann@san_x_m

His name is Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat. He was commissioned into the Indian Navy in 1960. He won the Sword of Honour as the best all round midshipman of the fleet. He served in the Goa Liberation Operations of 1961 and the Indo Pakistan War of 1971. He spent 38 years rising through every rank the Navy had. On September 30, 1996, he was appointed Chief of Naval Staff. The highest position in the Indian Navy. On December 30, 1998, he was dismissed while still serving. He became the first and only Chief of Naval Staff in Indian history to be sacked mid tenure. The dispute was over a senior appointment. The government nominated Vice Admiral Harinder Singh as Deputy Chief of Naval Staff. Bhagwat refused to accept it. He said the process bypassed established norms and amounted to interference in internal naval postings. He went public. Press conferences. Open letters. He made his case loudly. The government invoked Article 310 of the Constitution and terminated his services immediately. His rank of Admiral was stripped as a punitive measure. He challenged it in the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court upheld the government’s decision. 38 years of service. Two wars. The highest office the Navy could offer. Dismissed in two minutes under a single constitutional clause. Whether the government was right or Bhagwat was right is a question India never formally answered. Follow for real stories India never makes headlines about.

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sushant sareen
sushant sareen@sushantsareen·
@sanjayuvacha Are you a complete idiot or just a self loathing Indian to not know this is fake? Shame on you!
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Jeet Mashru
Jeet Mashru@mashrujeet·
Important : The Census 2027 exercise has begun from today, May 1, in Maharashtra. The first phase involves self-enumeration by citizens. Between May 1 and May 15, citizens are required to complete their details online by registering at se.census.gov.in and answering a set of 33 questions. Authorities say the process takes around 10 minutes. This will be followed by a verification phase from May 16 onward, during which enumerators will visit households to validate the information submitted online. The final phase will begin in 2027, involving full door-to-door enumeration. The BMC said it has deployed around 25,000 personnel for the exercise, and citizens are expected to participate and provide accurate information when approached.
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Yash Rawat
Yash Rawat@india_expert·
Dhruv you are missing the point. This is not about blocking ships in a narrow choke point. It is about building a modern transshipment hub like Singapore, Hong Kong, or Dubai. Ships unload big containers here and smaller ones take goods further. This cuts logistics costs and brings more trade to India. Great Nicobar sits at the western entrance of the busy Malacca Strait, where 60% of global sea trade and 80% of China’s oil pass every year. One good port can change India’s economy. India has depended on foreign ports for transshipment for too long. This hub will save money, create jobs, attract investment, and make our exports stronger. The idea is old even Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi saw its value for national security and trade. Now that work has finally started, some people want to stop it. Try to be smarter and don't be that person.
Dhruv Rathee@dhruv_rathee

Anyone who calls Great Nicobar as India's Strait of Hormuz is the biggest clown 🤡

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Parimal
Parimal@Fintech03·
Next in who after the Bibha Series? He was a Himalayan monk who solved the mysteries of the atomic nucleus. Swami Jnanananda born as Bhupathiraju Lakshminarasimha Raju (1896-1969) was the Ghost in saffron who worked in the world's most elite nuclear labs. He did not see a conflict b/w the Vedas & Beta-Rays; to him, the electron was just another dance of the divine. He built the machines that allowed us to see the energy holding the universe together, then went back to his Saadhna. He is the titan who bridged the gap b/w the ancient sage & the modern scientist... a man who proved that the deepest silence & the fastest particles both lead to the same truth. Born in 1896 in Andhra Pradesh, he began his life as a seeker. He took Sanyas early in life, spending yrs in deep meditation in the Himalayas. He was a master of the Vedas. He realized that to understand Creation, he needed to understand the Atom. He traveled to the West in his saffron robes, stunning profs at Dresden (Germany), Liverpool, & Ann Arbor (USA). He earned his DSc. & Ph.D. while maintaining his monastic vows. He was a man who could discuss the Upanishads in the morning & Beta-Ray Spectroscopy in the afternoon. He was a pioneer in Nuclear Spectroscopy. He designed & built advanced Magnetic Lens Beta-Ray Spectrometers. He was obsessed with how electrons (beta particles) are emitted from the nucleus. His work provided the precise measurements needed to understand the Binding Energy of the atom, the force that holds reality together. He was 1 of the founding pillars of the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in Delhi & later established the Nuclear Physics department at Andhra University. He was a Ghost because he defied classification. In the lab, he was the rigorous Dr. Jnanananda; in the temple, he was the revered Swami. He proved that the Silo of Science & the Silo of Spirituality are actually the same room. Because he was a Monk, many Modern scientists were uncomfortable with him. Because he was a Nuclear Physicist, many traditionalists did not understand him. He lived in the Neutral Zone. He was invited by the Soviet Union & the US to speak at the highest levels of Nuclear Science, yet in India, his name is almost never mentioned alongside Bhabha/Sarabhai. He worked with Nobel laureates like James Chadwick (the discoverer of the neutron), who respected him as a peer. He wrote High Vacua, a foundational text for experimental physics. He treated the Vacuum not as nothingness, but as the source of everything. There are no national science awards named after him. He is a Ghost whose work is buried in the foundations of India’s nuclear program, but whose face is missing from the history books.
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Sann
Sann@san_x_m·
His name was Peshwa Bajirao I. He was born on August 18, 1700, in Sinnar, Nashik. His father was the Peshwa of the Maratha Empire. When his father died in 1720, the royal court was sceptical. Bajirao was only 20 years old. Chhatrapati Shahu ignored the sceptics and appointed him anyway. He fought 41 battles in 20 years. He never lost a single one. He told his brother Chimaji Appa the night was not created for sleeping. It was created to raid the territory held by your enemy. In 1728, he crushed the Nizam of Hyderabad at the Battle of Palkhed without a single major engagement. He simply cut every supply line until the Nizam had no choice but to surrender. In 1737, he marched his cavalry to the gates of Delhi and humiliated the Mughal Emperor in his own capital. In 1739, he forced the Nizam’s son to surrender at Aurangabad and extracted reparations of five million rupees. He expanded Maratha authority from the Deccan to Rajputana to Bundelkhand to Gujarat to the outskirts of Delhi. British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery later studied his Palkhed campaign and described his tactics as a masterclass in manoeuvre warfare. He moved the Maratha capital to Pune in 1728 and began building Shaniwar Wada in 1730. He turned a village into a city. On April 23, 1740, he developed a sudden fever at his camp in Raverkhedi on the banks of the Narmada. He was leading one lakh troops toward Delhi. He never made it. On April 28, 1740, exactly 285 years ago today, he died at the age of 39. He was cremated the same day on the banks of the Narmada. He spent 20 years on the battlefield. He never came home defeated. India has forgotten more heroes than it remembers. Follow for more such stories.
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Khalid Baig
Khalid Baig@KhalidBaig85·
@sabeer Arvind has shown courage to be flexible, in the interest of India. He stood against leaders who he called corrupt and then stood with the same leaders, when it came to saving India. He is courage personified.
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Sabeer Bhatia
Sabeer Bhatia@sabeer·
Arvind Kejriwal showed courage in standing up for his beliefs. Raghav Chadha showed he has no kahunas.
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Navroop Singh
Navroop Singh@TheNavroopSingh·
The New Russian-Indian Military Logistics Pact Sends Five Messages To The World Russia isn’t at risk of becoming a Chinese vassal nor is India at risk of becoming an American one. 1. Russia & India Remain Each Other’s Special & Privileged Strategic Partner 2. Russia Is Preemptively Averting Disproportionate Dependence On China 3. Massive Japanese, South Korean, & Taiwanese Investments Might Follow 4. Russia Won’t Let China Dominate The Arctic Like Some Claimed It Would 5. India Has Now Become Russia’s Privileged Energy Partner In The Arctic Very interesting perspective by Andrew do give it a read ! RELOS heralds a new era of Indo-Russian ties and its message is essentially a Multi-Polar world order navigating Bi-Polarity of America & China
Andrew Korybko, PhD@AKorybko

x.com/i/article/2048…

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Sridhar Vembu
Sridhar Vembu@svembu·
Open letter to Indians in America. -- Dear brothers and sisters from Bharat: Like I did 37 years ago, you arrived in America with no money but with a good education and cultural heritage from Bharat. You achieved outstanding success. America was good to us. For that we must remain grateful - gratitude is our Bharatiya way. Yet today, a significant number of Americans, may be not the majority but not too far from it either, believe that Indians "take away" American jobs and our success in America was unfairly earned. You may think the next election will fix this, but your choice would be between people who hate our Bharatiya civilisation and people who hate civilisation itself. That is the "hard right" vs "woke left" battle. You are mere bystanders to that conflict. Meanwhile there is one thing that is true now and will be true in the future: the respect Indians command world-wide will substantially depend on the fortunes of India herself. If India remains poor, the woke left will give us moral lectures with pity and the hard right, different moral lectures with scorn ("hellhole") and we must not confuse either with respect. Respect in today's world, along with prosperity and security, comes from one source: a nation's technological prowess. India produces sufficient brain power to achieve that prowess but alas we exported so much of that talent, particularly to America. As we develop that prowess in India, our civilisational strength will assert itself. As difficult as it is for many of you to contemplate this, please come back home. Bharat Mata needs your talent. Our vast youthful population needs the technology leadership you gained over the years to guide them towards prosperity. Let's do it with a missionary zeal. Respectfully Sridhar Vembu
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Arun Krishnan 🇮🇳
Arun Krishnan 🇮🇳@ArunKrishnan_·
On our way on a Trans-Siberian trip! Talk to you folks on the other side!
Arun Krishnan 🇮🇳 tweet media
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