@sabeer We have to meter it and levy honking tax. Based on the religion and cast of the owner free honking minutes per month per vehicle should be fixed. After exhausting the free minutes heavy tax should be collected. Employment opportunity for horn meter readers.
@Monaangl_7m Some are shameless throughout their life. They want to exploit the surroundings to the core. May it be natural resources or people around us.
All superheroes don't wear capes, some wear uniforms.
Amid heavy rains in Bengaluru last night, a differently-abled youth was struggling to cross a road with gushing water. Police Constable Anil stepped in, stopped traffic and then carried him across to safety.
@thekaipullai You are assuming that the internet and electricity are available to the full extent. There is no sufficient internet bandwidth to transmit the thumb impression to the server while distributing PDS ration. Rural areas undergo 6 hours of power cut daily.
Petrol bunks in the future should have 2 underground storages. 100% petrol and 100% ethanol. The pump should be capable of mixing and delivering based on consumer choice. Billing should automatically happen based on the mixing ratio.
Consumers will soon have more choices at petrol pumps across India. New ethanol-blended petrol variants like E20, E22, E25, and E30 will become available. This move aims to reduce crude oil imports and enhance energy security. Vehicle owners can select fuel based on their car's compatibility.
A railway staff member allegedly tried to sit on another passenger’s reserved seat inside a train from Mumbai to Amritsar.
When the actual seat owner refused to give up the seat, the staff member reportedly said,
“This is my train… I work for the Railways. How can you stop me from sitting here?”
After the argument escalated, he allegedly pulled the emergency chain and declared,
“The train will not move until you allow me to sit.”
Soon, the RPF arrived at the spot.
But instead of taking action against the chain pulling, the situation reportedly took a different turn. The staff member introduced himself, the chain was fixed, the train was allowed to move again… and he eventually sat on the same seat.
What shocked many people even more was what happened next.
The staff member allegedly looked at the passenger and said,
“Now say something.”
The passenger stayed silent… probably because even the authorities present did not object.
According to railway rules, unnecessary chain pulling can lead to penalties and strict action. That’s why many people online are now questioning whether power and position should be used like this against ordinary passengers.
What do you think? Was this behavior justified or was it misuse of authority? Share your opinion.
My dryer broke, instead of going out and buying a new one, I bought a 16$ replacement part and fixed it myself. How many people out here today can say honestly they are fixing there things instead of tossing them and buy a new one.
Luckily in Namma Metro most of these are rare occurrences.
Watching reels or serials used to happen but nowadays I don't see much. People respect the norm that eating and drinking is strictly prohibited.
Last week I saw one person drinking water inside Namma Metro!
Every Delhi Metro ride has 5 types of people:
- One watching reels without earphones
- One blocking the gate like it’s personal
property
- One pretending to sleep to avoid giving
seat
- One standing exactly at the door even
when their station is 12 stops away
- One eating momos like it’s a food court
And somehow everyone is still silently judging everyone else in the coach.
With E20 petrol, as mileage per litre drops, people end up using the same quantity of petrol part of fuel, wasting money on the ethanol. With reduced fuel efficiency, we are contributing more to the pollution. Is it not?
@DealsDhamaka The convertible fridge I have been using for 2 years. No issues so far. We are using the freezer compartment as refrigerator which is saving a good amount of electricity.