Human
4.6K posts


Has Dhurandhar really liberated India from “Urdu-wood”?
On @kunalkamra88’s show, I argued that it’s actually the opposite. If you take out Urdu and “Muslim” parts from Dhurandhar, there’s nothing left.
You become the thing you hate the most.
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@RagaRaga99 @HalalNation_ Sea has waves but at times it becomes tsunami. Waves are tsunami.
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@PerfectGiving95 @HalalNation_ Not exactly, only extrimists think so. Most moslem in many countries are having religious tolerance, they mind their own business. Propagandas to spread hatred about them do not work much now as people are smarter today than 20 years ago.
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“We killed God.”
My guy, if your God can be killed then by definition he isn't a God.
There is no one equal to or greater than God, no power or might stronger than Him.
𝕊𝕠𝕝𝕒 ℂ𝕙𝕒𝕕 🎚️@sola_chad
Atheists: “If God is real why doesn’t He come down here and prove it?” He did, and we killed Him.
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Hilarious. She’s allowed to go after a Jewish politician via his family but if he goes after her suddenly she’s a Jewish journalist needing protection.
The reason they hate @ZackPolanski is that they can’t Corbynize him because he is a Jewish politician who criticizes Israel.
Nicole Lampert@nicolelampert
When the leader of racist party calls a Jewish journalist - me - ‘parasitic’ simply for reporting that his Jewish family are scared by the direction his ‘Zionism is racism’ party is going in. This is the true face of the nasty Greens.
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Democratic senators Cory Booker, Ruben Gallego and Elissa Slotkin all told Politico they wouldn’t go on Hasan Piker’s show.
But they have all been on Bill Maher’s show, who says Islam is like “the mafia”, the Muslim world has “too much in common” with ISIS, Muslims bring “desert stuff” to the west, and has also used the N word on his show.
Why the double standard? Slotkin was on Maher’s show *yesterday*
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There was once a Hindu king in southern India, in Kerala. His name was Cheraman Perumal, and he ruled over the Chera dynasty. He was known among his people as a just and thoughtful leader.
One night, while standing on the balcony of his palace, he witnessed something extraordinary — the moon splitting in two. He saw it clearly, a majestic sign in the sky.
Disturbed and confused, he turned to his priests and advisors, but none of them had an answer.
In the following days, he spoke to Arab merchants who had come to trade along the Malabar Coast. When he described what he had seen, they told him that far away in Arabia, a man named Muhammad had declared himself a Prophet of God, and that this splitting of the moon was among his signs. It matched exactly what the king had witnessed.
Cheraman did not delay. He recognized the truth when it touched his heart. He left his kingdom and traveled with the merchants.
The journey was long, but he eventually reached Madinah.
There, he met the Messenger of Allah. He sat with him, asked questions, and listened. Then he accepted Islam. He took the name Tajuddin (RA) and became a Sahabi — a companion of the Prophet — the first Muslim from the land of India.
Before returning, he gifted something from his homeland: a jar of Kerala ginger pickle, which was accepted.
He intended to return and spread the truth, but on the journey back, he fell ill and passed away. His son-in-law, who was with him, returned to the kingdom. Cheraman was buried in Salalah, Oman — a place that, to this day, resembles the green lands of Kerala more than the deserts of Arabia. The people of Salalah still know his grave.
Islam did not enter India through war.
Not through political conquest.
But through one king’s sincere search for truth — through a miracle witnessed, a journey undertaken, and a heart that submitted.
Kerala became a gateway for Islam in India, a land touched early by divine guidance.
Tajuddin (RA) was not a scholar. Not a preacher.
Just a man who saw a sign… and followed it.
His story is a reminder: Islam begins in the heart.

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There is no evidence to support the claim that stones were pelted by Muslims at the Hindu religious procession in Murshidabad. On the contrary, multiple videos suggest that the violence was provoked by right wing goons themselves. It was members of these groups who removed an Islamic flag first, escalating tensions and triggering the unrest.
Despite such visual evidence being available, you continue to justify these incidents without question. This isn’t new to people like you @UnSubtleDesi and your propaganda outlet @OpIndia_com. You guys took a similar stance during the Kathua rape case, where instead of standing with the victim, you blamed the victim’s family even after the court convicted the rapists. Predictably, you’ll attempt to deflect this situation as well. After all, acknowledging the truth might go against the narrative you've been consistently pushing for years. If you don't, you very well know that your hate shop will soon be closed. Lage raho.

Nupur J Sharma@UnSubtleDesi
This was retaliation after your terrorist, Jihadi brothers stone pelted a Hindu religious procession. Well done, Hindus, I would say. It’s time Hindus refuse to accept murderous violence silently.
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"There's a history of Israel bombing every time we're close to a deal [with Iran]."
Thank you to @KonstantinKisin & @francisjfoster for having me on to inform their audience on the actual history of US/Iran negotiations.
I brought receipts!
Full show: youtube.com/watch?v=QrmKRV…

YouTube
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