"Who said that...", US Secretary of State Rubio in response to my question on racism agaisnt Indians in US.
US President Donald Trump had endorsed a post terming India "Hellhole"
500+ days in jail.
Bail denied. Again.
Chinmoy Krishna Das Prabhu, a spiritual leader and an ISKCON monk, continues to languish behind bars in Bangladesh while the world watches.
When even his lawyers are intimidated, threatened and silenced in court corridors, what justice are we even talking about?
Is advocating for the rights of the Minority Hindu community a crime? When a saffron-clad soul is treated like a criminal for raising his voice, the world CANNOT remain silent.
I appeal to the Government of Bangladesh to give medical aid and, more importantly, access to fair justice to Chinmoy Krishna Das Prabhu immediately. May he be granted bail at the earliest.
And to all the pseudo-secularists and Selective Human rights Activists around the World who flood timelines overnight, wave watermelons and trend hashtags on cue, your silence can be still heard. Apparently, your humanity has a filter.
@bdhc_delhi@UNHumanRights@UN_HRC@UN
#FreeChinmoyKrishnaDas
🚨 Tamil Nadu TVK manifesto promises:
1. Unemployed graduates will get ₹4,000 per month.
2. Women family heads below 60 years will get ₹2,500/month.
3. Every family will receive 6 free LPG cylinders/year.
4. Every bride will get one sovereign of gold and a silk saree.
5. Free residential schools will be set up to provide quality education.
6. Students can get education loans up to ₹20 lakh without collateral.
7. Plans to make Tamil Nadu drug-free
8. Each family will get health insurance coverage up to ₹25 lakh.
9. Unemployed diploma holders will get ₹2,500 per month.
10. 50 lakh job opportunities will be created for youth.
11. Small farmers (less than 5 acres) will get full crop loan waiver.
12. Sugarcane farmers will get a minimum support price of ₹4,500 per tonne.
It’s amazing that not a single leader in the great western civilisation, who are part of the U.S. alliance system, has the courage to stand up and tell this man that it’s madness!
American protective umbrella was the bedrock of not just the Persian Gulf/West Asia security system; but also for the post-war western alliance systems. One of the greatest impacts of the current war is that Iran, a country that has been under sanctions for 47 years, has drilled holes into this umbrella in the Persian Gulf using drones, rockets and missiles. I was talking to a contact in Abu Dhabi this morning. He said the U.S. has put the Arabs in a difficult position. Till now the basic understanding here was that the U.S. presence would offer protection to the monarchies. "Forget about the U.S. protecting them; now the Arabs are burning through cash and arsenals to protect American assets in their countries', he said. If this is what Iran can do, think about what Russia could do to frontline states in Eastern Europe in the event of a war with Nato, or what China could do to the Philippines and Japan in the event of a war in East Asia? So, not just the Arabs, all the frontline states would be taking note of the unfolding situation in the Persian Gulf.
Deeply saddened by the tragic loss of Tarun Kumar in Uttam Nagar. It’s heartbreaking that something as small as a child throwing a water balloon during Holi could escalate into such violence. Humanity should never fall to this level. Prayers for his family and hope the culprits face the strictest punishment.
In this country tens of thousands can attend funerals of terrorists, congregate to call for the breakup of India, block an arterial road for six months, lay siege to a highway for a year, but if @ajeetbharti wants to protest, legally and peacefully, he is put under house arrest.
This is not Iran, this is India. These are not Iranians, these are Indians. They never marched for Kashmiri Hindus, their own brothers, but here they are, marching at the death of a man who sponsored terror, killed thousands of his own people, and called India an oppressor.
As Israel, UAE, Kuwait, and Bahrain count the losses caused by Iranian missiles and drones, India thanks Dr Ramarao for building the indigenous Akash that tracked 616 Pak missiles and drones (64 simultaneously) before launching interceptors, logging a neutralisation rate of 99.4%
Farooq Ahmed Dar, alias Bitta Karate.
Despite openly admitting on camera to killing around 20 Kashmiri Pandits, he has never been convicted.
Between 1990 to 2006 he was in preventive detention multiple times and was released on bail in 2006, ironically by a Kashmiri Pandit judge. Since then, he has remained on bail, with the case against him never meaningfully progressing.
During this period, he joined JKLF under Yasin Malik, and emerged as a prominent separatist leader. He was even part of the Hurriyat Conference delegation that used to negotiate with India. He has been in jail since 2019, but in connection with a different terror-financing case.
Think about it: an individual who confessed to killing 20 people has not even been convicted. By any reasonable standard, such crimes warranted swift capital punishment. Another example how extraordinarily soft, and self-defeating, we have been as a country.
Many years ago, an incident went viral through slop facebook pages. An elderly homeless man was seen selling pens to commuters. When someone tried to give him money, he refused and said he would not beg, only sell pens.
The story spread widely. People began visiting the spot regularly and buying his pens in large numbers. The incident, and the old man, were genuine. But others were watching as well. Begging syndicates, which closely observe what works in public spaces, were likely taking notes.
They understood something crucial about human psychology: people dislike outright begging, but they feel morally rewarded when they believe they are supporting “honest hard work.” Selling something, even something trivial, reframes begging as dignity and effort, and that attracts far more money.
That is why, over time, beggars have increasingly started selling small, unbranded daily-use items at traffic signals and public places. These items are extremely cheap in bulk. A pen that costs a syndicate 50 paise is sold to you for ₹5 or ₹10. The product is just a prop. The remaining ₹4.50 or ₹9.50 is effectively begging money, paid with a cleaner conscience.
Begging today functions as an organised, profit-driven system. And like any such system, if it remains profitable, it will naturally expand, by pulling in more people, often children, who are the most vulnerable and the easiest to exploit. What looks like compassion at an individual level can unintentionally strengthen a structure that thrives on long-term dependence rather than genuine upliftment.
If the intention is to truly help, the focus should be on support that does not fuel this cycle. Avoid giving cash or buying symbolic items meant only to evoke sympathy. Instead, offer food, water, or basic necessities. Support local shelters, NGOs, or community kitchens that work on rehabilitation and skill-building. Even small acts, like directing someone to a nearby support service or contributing to verified charities, can help without turning begging into a profitable enterprise.
These Bureaucrats are worse than the Britishers.
@PMOIndia, bring in a report card system to check their work.
Most importantly, ban them from making reels.
Read this absolute horror story:
In June 2017, a minor girl accused Unnao BJP MLA Kuldeep Singh Sengar of rape, but the police refused to register an FIR. After months of inaction, in April 2018, the girl attempted suicide by self-immolation outside the CM’s residence, which finally forced the authorities to file the FIR.
Meanwhile, her father was arrested on false charges and reportedly assaulted in police custody; he later died in hospital due to his injuries. Public outrage followed. Even before any proper investigation had begun, a key witness in this mysterious custodial death was also found dead.
The case was eventually transferred to the CBI. The CBI concluded that the girl’s father died due to injuries inflicted in custody and that the assault was connected to an attempt to pressure and intimidate the victim’s family.
In July 2019, while the victim was travelling to court with her two aunts and lawyer, their car was hit by a truck, killing both her aunts and leaving the victim and the lawyer critically injured, an incident later treated as a deliberate attempt to silence witnesses.
In December 2019, Sengar was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment, but by then the victim’s family had already paid an irreparable price. The Unnao rape case had all the elements of an 80s–90s Bollywood villain plot: systemic intimidation, blatant abuse of power, and a trail of destruction that went far beyond the crime itself. But worse was still to come.
Yesterday, the Delhi High Court suspended the jail term and granted bail to Sengar. This is nothing but salt rubbed into the wounds of whatever little the victim’s family has left. An absolute disgrace. After everything they endured, this feels like the system mocking them. Shameful beyond words, and everyone should raise their voice against this.
Sohan, a Class 12 student, was travelling by bus to visit relatives when it was abruptly stopped near Malhargarh (MP). A few men, later identified as cops, boarded the bus and dragged him off in full public view.
There was no explanation, no warrant, and no prior FIR. He was picked up merely on suspicion of carrying drugs, despite being arrested completely empty-handed.
When the police realised no drugs had been recovered, they chose not to let their “seamless operation” go to waste. They planted 2.7 kg of opium, said to be seized in another case, on Sohan, registered an FIR showing recovery from him, and told the media they had busted a major narcotics syndicate. He was then produced in court and sent to jail.
What they failed to anticipate was that the bus had CCTV, which clearly showed Sohan being taken away empty-handed, pointing to planted evidence. When the video went viral, the police initially denied that the men were cops, only worsening their position.
The case reached the High Court, which summoned the SP. The SP admitted that Malhargarh police acted illegally and outside the law, apologised, and ordered a departmental inquiry against the officers involved. Sohan was released after two months of illegal detention.
Ironically, Malhargarh police station had been awarded as one of the best in the country by the Home Minister. If this is how the “best” station works, one can only imagine the rest. It is frightening how easily the police can ruin a life in this country. Without CCTV, Sohan’s life would have been destroyed forever.
> Studied hard
> Cleared IIT
> Cleared IIM
> Got a dream job at Amazon
> Hit a pothole and lost his life
Pay taxes your entire life only to be killed by corruption.
No Arrests. No Justice. No Accountability.