@bykarthikreddy It is an age old disease in Bangalore. Most often, it is the policemen who do this kind of jobs. Ideally it is the job of municipal cooperation. They are absent and these cops have to do this. I have seen this 1000 times.
अभिनेत्री इला अरुण यांची मुलगी…
कलेचा किती नेमका वापर केला आहे बघा
अग्रवाल फॅमिली सेलिब्रेशन, राम रहीम बेल, बलात्काऱ्याचं जंगी स्वागत
समाजातील ढोंगीपणा, पैशाची ताकद आणि विकृत सेलिब्रेशन संस्कृतीवर एका फ्रेममध्ये इतका तीक्ष्ण कटाक्ष टाकणं…
हीच खरी कला.
No students from Karnataka in top 10 COMED-K rank list
Interestingly, of the top 10 performers, five are from Jharkhand, and one each from Andhra Pradesh, Punjab, Chhattisgarh, Bihar and Uttarakhand.
https://t.co/CkzLHNW2FL
@ushrit2020@ajay43@suri_anil NEET was intentionally leaked and cancelled by the govt to stop 5 lakhs mbbs aspirants of bangladeshi origin. You may or may not know that there is a medical jih@d going on. After WB results, those aspirants have been sent back to BD. 😀😀😀😀😀
🚨 1 Million Fake Doctors, Nurses & Engineers? India Busts Shocking Racket Selling 100K+ Counterfeit Degrees — Global Trust in Crisis
Is Your Doctor Actually a REAL Doctor?
MAJOR BUST: Kerala Police arrested 11 suspects in a massive pan-India fake degree racket. Over 100,000 counterfeit certificates seized from 22 universities — medicine, nursing & engineering — with estimates of up to 1 MILLION fake degrees in circulation worldwide.
Raids across Kerala, Tamil Nadu & Karnataka uncovered printers, fake seals, holograms & forged signatures. Degrees sold for ₹75k–1.5L each, used for jobs & visas abroad, including in the U.S.
Lives are on the line. How many “qualified” professionals slipped through?
Integrity matters.
#FakeDegrees #IndiaNews
In 1937, a nineteen year old woman graduated summa cum laude in chemistry. She applied to fifteen graduate schools. Not one offered her funding.
She was told laboratories did not hire women. She never earned a PhD. She later received the Nobel Prize and helped save millions of lives.
Her name was Gertrude Belle Elion.
Born in New York City in 1918 to immigrant parents, Gertrude was brilliant from childhood. She skipped two grades, graduated high school at fifteen, and entered Hunter College during the Great Depression. Her family could only afford college because Hunter offered free tuition to women.
Then tragedy changed her life forever.
When Gertrude was fifteen, her beloved grandfather died painfully from stomach cancer. Watching doctors fail to save him gave her a purpose she never abandoned. She decided she wanted to fight disease through science.
She graduated from Hunter College in 1937 at just nineteen years old, but the scientific world had little interest in hiring women. Graduate schools rejected her requests for funding. Laboratories turned her away. Some employers openly admitted they did not want female chemists.
So she worked wherever she could while studying at night.
Everything changed in 1944 when she joined Burroughs Wellcome and began working with scientist George Hitchings. Together, they pioneered a revolutionary method called rational drug design — creating medicines by understanding disease at the molecular level instead of relying on trial and error.
Their discoveries transformed medicine.
Elion helped develop 6-mercaptopurine, one of the first successful treatments for childhood leukemia. Before it existed, most children diagnosed with leukemia died within months.
She later helped create azathioprine, the first major drug that made organ transplantation possible, along with groundbreaking antiviral medications that changed treatment for herpes and helped pave the way for AIDS therapies.
In 1988, Gertrude Elion received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
She was seventy years old.
And she still did not have a PhD.
The young woman fifteen schools rejected ended up reshaping modern medicine anyway.
He was checkmated twice in school elections, but DK #Shivakumar refused to give up. Those early setbacks only fuelled his ambition to lead.
Here is the fascinating school journey of DKS, who is set to become #Karnataka’s next CM.
Read👇
https://t.co/aeU81o0iv7
@timesofindia
Roberto Carlos 1997 freekick illustrating the Magnus effect.
The Magnus Effect is a physical phenomenon where a spinning object generates a low-pressure area on one side and a high-pressure area on the other, resulting in a force that pushes the object towards the low-pressure zone.
The Magnus Effect is closely associated with Bernoulli's Principle, which indicates that an increase in fluid velocity leads to a decrease in pressure. As the spinning object accelerates the fluid on one side and decelerates it on the other, it causes the object to curve.
1000 musicians performed Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit”
At the Rockin’1000 “That’s Live” festival in 2016, creating a powerful, unified live rendition of the song
A lot of politicians have mastered the art of false victimhood — a tactic they seem to have learnt from Narendra Modi.
Take Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, for instance. He comes from a reasonably comfortable socio-economic background, yet he claims, “If not for the Constitution of India, I would have remained a farm labourer. I would never have been educated, become an MLA, a Minister, or Chief Minister.”
Many leaders like him retrospectively attribute their entire political success to the Constitution of India. But history tells a very different story.
Siddaramaiah belongs to the Kuruba (Yadava) caste of the Shudra varna — the same caste as Harihara and Bukka, the founders of the mighty Vijayanagara Empire. Which Constitution made them kings? In their time, the only “Constitution” in force was Manusmriti. Yet it was the Sringeri Sankaracharya, Sri Vidyaranya Swami — a Brahmana — who guided, mentored, inspired, and anointed the two Kuruba brothers as kings.
Go back even further. Chandragupta Maurya, founder of the Maurya dynasty, is widely believed to have belonged to the Shudra varna. Who made him emperor? It was Chanakya — again, a Brahmana — who mentored, trained, and installed him on the throne. Once more, the only “Constitution” in force was Manusmriti.
If Manusmriti truly ordained caste discrimination and barred Shudras from rising to power, how did Brahmana scholars and saints repeatedly crown them as kings and emperors? In fact, there are thousands of big, small and local examples throughout history of people from any varna or caste rising to power and prominence under the Manusmriti framework.
The hard modern reality is this: in the name of electoral democracy, the anti-India Constitution of India may have created a handful of new political lords and robber barons, but it has left nearly 80% of Indians as paupers — trapped in substandard education, chronic unemployment, and humiliating dependence on government freebies, including free food grains. All they are left to do is monetise their votes for a pittance to elect the very same robber barons.
The real lesson is simple. If a person has talent, capability, and a bit of luck, he will rise to great heights — whether the system is Manusmriti or the Constitution of India. No document can stop a capable person, and no document can create success where there is none.
@PoojaPrasanna4