यूँ ही कांग्रेस ने दिग्गज नेता कमलनाथ को इग्नोर करके 👇इनको चुना है!
इनका नाम है मिनाक्षी नटराजन, कांग्रेस ने राज्यसभा भेजने के लिये मध्यप्रदेश से इन्हे ही चुना है, यह तो सबको पता होगा,
लेकिन जो आपको नहीं पता है वो मै आपको बताता हूँ, यह इतनी पक्की ईमानदार और गांधीवादी नेता हैं, 2024 लोकसभा में कांग्रेस ने इन्हे लगभग 5 करोड़ रुपए चुनाव लड़ने के लिये दिये थे
( जो लोग कांग्रेस को जानते हैं उन्हें पता है कांग्रेस में हैसियत के हिसाब से चुनाव के लिये पैसे दिये जाते हैं ) तो चुनाव के बाद इन्होने 4 करोड़ से ज़्यादा रूपये वापस पार्टी फण्ड में जमा करवा दिये थे, ऐसे ही विधानसभा चुनाव में भी इन्होने चुनाव के बाद लगभग 75% वापस पार्टी फण्ड में जमा करवा दिये थे।
रहन सहन से लेकर खाना पीना एकदम गाँधीवादी हैं।
आप कह सकते हो सच्ची कांग्रेस की सिपाही हैं।
राहुल गाँधी जी को मुबारकबाद देनी चाहिये उनके इस फैसले के लिये। RT
A 96-year-old woman wrote this letter to her bank, and it became so funny that the bank manager decided to share it in the New York Times.
To whom it may concern,
I’m writing to thank you for bouncing my check when I tried to pay my plumber last month. By my calculations, only a few nanoseconds passed between when he deposited the check and when the funds finally arrived in my account. I’m referring, of course, to the automatic monthly transfer from my savings account, which has been set up for the past 31 years.
I want to give you credit for catching that short gap of time and also for charging me a $30 penalty for the trouble you caused.
I’m actually thankful because this incident made me rethink my financial habits. I realized that while I always answer your phone calls and letters, when I try to contact you, I’m stuck with your impersonal, overcharging, pre-recorded messages that don’t help at all. So from now on, I’ll deal only with a real person.
From now on, my mortgage and loan payments will no longer be automatic. Instead, I will send a check to an employee at your bank who you will have to choose. No one else is allowed to open that envelope—it’s against the Postal Act.
I’m attaching an Application Contact Status form that your chosen employee will need to fill out. It’s a long one, but it’s necessary because I want to know as much about them as your bank knows about me. They’ll also need to provide proof of their financial situation and medical history, signed by a Notary Public.
Once this is all set up, I’ll give your employee a special PIN number for dealing with me. It will be 28 digits long—just like the number of button presses I have to do to check my account balance using your phone service. I’m just copying you, and they say imitation is the highest form of flattery.
I’ll also be updating my voicemail. Here’s the menu you’ll need to follow if you call me:
Press 1: To make an appointment with me. Press 2: To ask about a missing payment. Press 3: To reach me in my living room if I’m there. Press 4: To reach me in my bedroom if I’m sleeping. Press 5: To reach me in the bathroom if I’m in there. Press 6: To reach my mobile if I’m not home. Press 7: To leave a message on my computer (password needed). Press 8: To go back to the main menu.
If you need to make a complaint, I’ll put you on hold, but don’t worry—some pleasant music will play while you wait.
Oh, and just like you do, I’m adding a $50 setup fee for all of this. Please credit my account after each payment.
Sincerely,
Your Humble Client
(Just remember, this was written by a 96-year-old woman!)
En España, la hija de 13 años de una madre fue secuestrada y violada por un vecino. El agresor fue condenado a nueve años de prisión.
Aproximadamente seis años después de cumplir su condena, el agresor fue puesto en libertad condicional y regresó a la ciudad. Se encontró con la madre en un bar cerca de una parada de autobús.
El agresor le preguntó burlonamente: "¿Cómo está tu hija?". Enfurecida, ella compró gasolina, regresó al bar, roció al hombre con ella y le prendió fuego.
El hombre sufrió quemaduras graves y murió pocos días después.
Aunque estaba presa del pánico, no huyó, sino que confesó lo sucedido a quienes la rodeaban y esperó a que llegara la policía.
Fue condenada a cinco años y seis meses de prisión, pero gracias a una campaña de indulto y por motivos de salud, fue puesta en libertad tras cumplir parte de su condena.
FURIOUS ABHIJEET ASKS THE REAL QUESTION 🔥
REPORTER: If the Education Minister does not resign, what next?
ABHIJEET DIPKE 🎯: We will start the movement again. We will sit in protest again.
REPORTER: But how will Pradhan’s resignation fix the system?
ABHIJEET 🔥: The first step to fixing the system is accountability. In any private job, someone like this would have been fired by now. Only resignation. Nothing else.
21 ppl d!ed due to systemic corruption & Delhi Police thinks arresting a 65yo cook, Keshav Negi, solves the case? Since whn is a chef responsible fr Fire NOCs, illegal encroachments & building maps? Govt is busy saving its own corrupt officers by framing an innocent Pahadi man.
हैलो
माननीय मुख्यमंत्री @vishnudsai जी
ऐसे रोड पर खड़े होकर आम नागरिकों से धन उगाही करने वाले पुलिसकर्मी सिर्फ पुलिस ही नहीं, सरकार की छवि भी खराब करते हैं।
वायरल वीडियो में साफ दिख रहा है कि छत्तीसगढ़ पुलिस का एक अधिकारी रात में अपनी पत्नी और बच्चों के साथ मूवी देखकर लौट रहे युवक को अंधेरे में रोककर परेशान कर रहा है। युवक का आरोप है कि उसे मारा-पीटा गया और दबाव बनाया गया।
सबसे चिंताजनक बात यह है कि वीडियो वायरल होने के बाद कार्रवाई की जगह पुलिस उसके बचाव में उतरती दिख रही है। आरोप है कि युवक जिस मकान में किराये पर रहता है, उसके मकान मालिक तक पर दबाव बनाया जा रहा है ताकि उसे घर से निकाल दिया जाए।
वीडियो में युवक पुलिस के सामने कहता है कि उसे मुक्के मारे गए। इसके बावजूद कैमरे के सामने ही उसके साथ आक्रामक व्यवहार किया जाता है।
अगर वाकई पुलिस का पक्ष सही है तो निष्पक्ष जांच होनी चाहिए। लेकिन अगर कोई नागरिक सिर्फ इसलिए संदिग्ध मान लिया जाए कि वह "लोकल नहीं लग रहा था", तो यह बेहद गंभीर सवाल खड़े करता है। कानून का काम नागरिकों की सुरक्षा करना है, उन्हें डराना नहीं।
@ChhattisgarhCMO@vishnudsai@CGPoliceDept
📍Ulwe, Navi Mumbai.
This woman gets up at 6 am to go for work and returns home at 11.30 pm– getting barely 6 hrs to sleep.
For past week there was power cut in her area every night. She couldn't sleep.
Her complaints fell on deaf ears. She posted on SM. People advised her to buy an inverter.
She couldn't afford an inverter. So she took her pillow and went to the electricity office to sleep instead.
The other day, I was having conversation with a friend who is an unwavering Modi supporter.
The conversation drifted to the rupee.
He immediately launched into a detailed explanation of why the rupee’s weakness has nothing to do with the government.
“Look at the global situation,” he said.
“The dollar is strong. Oil prices are volatile. There are wars. There is uncertainty in the global economy. Every currency is under pressure.”
I nodded.
Everything he said was correct.
Then I asked him, “So you’re saying a currency’s value isn’t determined only by the government in power?”
“Of course not,” he replied confidently.
“Global factors matter.”
Excellent.
I then pulled up some old speeches and headlines from 2013.
I reminded him how Narendra Modi had relentlessly attacked the UPA over the falling rupee.
Back then, every decline in the rupee was portrayed as a national embarrassment.
Every fall was presented as proof of weak leadership.
The famous line was that the Congress and the rupee were competing to see who could fall faster.
Suddenly my friend became uncomfortable.
So I continued.
“In 2013, when the rupee was around ₹60 to the dollar, India was still one of the fastest-growing major economies in the world. Even during difficult global conditions after the 2008 financial crisis, India managed years of strong GDP growth. Infrastructure expanded, telecom exploded, the IT sector flourished, foreign exchange reserves were far stronger than in the crisis years, and India remained one of the world’s most attractive emerging markets.”
He interrupted.
“But there were problems too.”
“Of course there were,” I replied.
“No government is perfect. But that’s not the point.”
The point is consistency.
If today’s rupee weakness is due to global factors, then the UPA was unfairly blamed.
If the UPA was responsible for every fall in the rupee, then today’s government must also accept responsibility.
You cannot blame Manmohan Singh for a rupee at ₹60 and then discover international economics when the rupee is much weaker.
You cannot spend a decade telling people that a falling rupee is proof of failed governance and then suddenly explain that exchange rates are influenced by global markets, capital flows, oil prices, interest rates and geopolitics.
My friend looked at me and said:
“Politics is different.”
And there it was.
Not economics.
Not GDP.
Not exchange rates.
Not global factors.
Just politics.
I smiled and replied:
“Exactly. The rupee remained a currency. It was the explanation that got demonetised.”
He laughed.
I laughed.
Then I told him:
“What’s truly remarkable is that when the rupee was around ₹60, everyone was apparently a currency expert. Today, to discuss the rupee, you need a doctorate in global economics, a specialization in geopolitics, a thesis on crude oil, and a fellowship from the US Federal Reserve.”
By this point, my friend had quietly stopped defending the rupee and started defending the argument.
And that’s when I realised something.
The economics never changed.
The rules never changed.
The global factors were always there.
Only the political interpretation changed.
In 2013, a falling rupee was a slogan.
In 2026, a falling rupee is a seminar.
The rupee’s exchange rate changed over the years.
The exchange rate of excuses changed even faster.
> Hindus want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> Muslims want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> Sikhs want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> Christians want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> SC/ST want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> OBC want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> GCS want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> Students want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> Congress want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> The Left want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> AAP want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> Every regional party wants Dharmendra Pradhan to resign
> Even many BJP supporters want Dharmendra Pradhan to resign.
> Every street is demanding Dharmendra Pradhan's resignation.
But this man is still shamelessly clinging to his chair, and the BJP top leadership is defending him by transferring officers. This is one of the lowest points for the BJP.