One thing I genuinely feel is that the moment you start getting too political, you start becoming joyless in life. This is applicable to both, right and left. Your political opinion should be a part of your identity, not your whole personality itself. That honestly makes you joyless and insufferable to be around. The only people who are/should be completely political and see everything from the lens of their political opinion are people who have something to gain from it, otherwise by doing this you're just being stupid and a genuine pain for people around you.
Watch/play sports, enjoy movies, crack jokes, have a life.
@kunalstwt I've watched movies in multiple locations across India and never experienced anything you've said. It might be true for some actors who have crazy fans who can't resist shouting. But, most of the people watch movie quietly and didn't disturbed anyone.
The disturbing and heartbreaking video which surfaced from Pakistan: a Hindu bride, moments away from beginning her new life, is dragged from her wedding and forced into the back of an SUV by a local Army commander and militia leader.
The brutality is not new, nor is the pattern. What remains remarkable—though no longer surprising—is the silence that follows from the very voices such as @amnesty@unhrcpr@FreedomofPress@hrw etc that claim a monopoly on moral clarity.
The modern Left builds its authority on the idea that morality is universal, linear, and evenly distributed—an ethical baseline on which all societies supposedly stand. They place themselves as the custodians of that baseline. When confronted with asymmetrical realities—where state structures, cultural frameworks, and historical trajectories differ sharply—their worldview buckles. Silence becomes easier than admitting that their model cannot account for complexity.
This silence is often reinforced by a kind of historical illiteracy, or worse, rationalisation. The familiar refrain—“this doesn’t reflect everyone I know”—misses the point entirely. It is an attempt to flatten civilisational contexts into a single plane, to insist on uniformity where none exists. Not all societies operate according to the same moral architecture, and not all state systems treat their minorities with equal dignity or protection.
In the Indian context, the misunderstanding runs deeper. Many Indians simply cannot fathom how Pakistan continues to function despite economic collapse, internal fissures, and decades of disastrous policy.
The answer lies not in resilience, but in insulation: Pakistan’s elites possess vast reserves overseas—London, Switzerland, and other havens—an informal lifeline that exists entirely outside the state’s official economy. Add to this a long-standing pattern of borrowing without intent to repay, shielded by strategic blackmail (“our nuclear assets may fall into the wrong hands”), and the state remains artificially afloat.
In such an ecosystem, the plight of minorities is not merely ignored—it is structurally obscured. Their suffering exposes too many contradictions. It disrupts ideological certainties. It interrupts the comfortable moral geography that the Left relies upon. And so it must be pushed into silence.
As we are repeatedly told silence is not neutrality. It is the quiet machinery that enables injustice to endure.
#PakistanMinorities #SelectiveOutrage #LeftSilence
#MoralGrandstanding #IdeologicalBlindness
RADICAL FEMINISM HAS CORRUPTED THIS SOCIETY AND OUR LEGAL SYSTEMS BEYOND REPAIR EVERYWHERE AROUND THE WORLD
MILLIONS OF FATHERS WANTING TO JUST SEE THEIR KIDS
MILLIONS OF MEN VICTIMS OF LIES OF WOMEN
ENDLESS MEN KILLING THEMSELVES
YET - ONLY WOMEN'S RIGHTS MATTER
This letter by Atul Subhash to his son teared me up. This is a letter by a very intelligent, very rooted, very smart man, who is pouring out his anguish to a son who will never have the privilege of knowing his father, thanks to his greedy mother and a corrupt judge!
People often ask me why I don't raise voice for crime against women.
When you start to take men's problems as a problem equally to women's, I'll start raising my voice for women as well.
@JonnyBones From tweets like these, it looks like you are hurt from people's comments about you ducking other fighters and thus writing this out as a coping mechanism. You don't really need to convince anyone. You have done enough for the sport and will be remembered as a ultimate UFC goat.
@WBPolice@MamataOfficial@KolkataPolice
We want justice for our sister who was brutally r*ped. Please make sure all the motherf*ckers involved in given the get the most brutal treatment. The things which are done to her are inhumane and unimaginable😣.
#JusticeForMoumita
The targeted violence against Hindus in Bangladesh is wrong, it's concerning, and it's a cautionary tale for victimhood-laced quota systems. Here's what happened: Bangladesh fought a bloody war for its independence in 1971. Hundreds of thousands of Bangladeshi civilians were raped and murdered. It was a tragedy, and it was rightly mourned. But in its aftermath, Bangladesh implemented a quota system for jobs in their civil service: 80% of the jobs were allocated to specific social groups (war veterans, rape victims, underrepresented residents, etc.), and only 20% were allocated based on merit.
The quota system proved to be a disaster. In 2018, protests led Bangladesh to scrap most of the quotas, but the victim-patrons fought back…and the quota system was reinstated this year. That triggered more protests which toppled the government, and the prime minister fled. Once chaos begins, it can't easily be reined in. Radicals are now targeting Hindu minorities. A quota conflict created to rectify the wrongs of rape and violence in 1971 is now leading to more rape and violence in 2024. Bloodshed is the endpoint of grievance and victimhood. It's hard not to look at Bangladesh and wonder what lessons we would do well to learn right here at home.
-If you can't appreciate #ArshadNadeem just because he is a Pakistani.
-If you are disappointed with king #NeerajChopra because he lost to a Pakistani sportsman who was better on that particular day.
-Then believe me that you are not worthy of watching sports and calling yourself a sports lover.
Jingoism has no place in sports!