This civilization must not fade into the annals of history. we must invest aggressively in LLMs, GPUs, semiconductor fabs, nuclear power stations, jet engines, hypersonic missiles, drones & heavy-lift space vehicles. Nations that lead in these fields will shape the century, nations that neglect them will be shaped by others.
We invaded almost every country within our security realm from Mauryas to Cholas, from Bappa Rawal to Zorawar Singh Kahluria.
Even Meitis conquered up to Thailand border.
Everytime for National Interests & Security.
Raise your kids with Courage, don't instill cvckness in them.
I've taken screenshot & going to quote it every time I see them begging for tech transfers & arms imports from any country. Shameless people are using people's money for all this debauchery, even when we don't have a test bed for jet engines. Our engines have been waiting for so long in Russia for high altitude testing slots, which makes us completely dependent on a country like US which is hand twisting us by deliberately slowing deliveries of GE F404 engines for Tejas Mk1A.
> be Puṣyamitra Śuṅga.
> literally the Senapati (Commander-in-Chief) who looked at a crumbling empire and said, "Fine, I’ll do it myself."
> year is around 185 BCE. The Mauryan Empire has gone soft. Decades of state-sponsored pacifism have left the borders porous and the military demoralised.
> The Yavana-Mlecchas (Indo-Greeks from Bactria) are mobilising. They think India is free real estate.
> Last Mauryan Emperor, Bṛhadratha, is completely clueless and too weak to defend Āryāvarta.
> Puṣyamitra organises a massive military review (Senā-darśana) at Pāṭaliputra.
> casually draws his sword and assassinates the Emperor in plain sight of the entire imperial army.
> The army doesn't mutiny. They literally cheer for him and declare him the new Samrāt. Absolute Senāpati supremacy.
> Western historians cope by calling it a "military coup." Indian history calls it civilizational course-correction.
> The Greeks, led by Demetrius and Menander, breach the frontiers and march deep into the heartland, besieging Sāketa (Ayodhya), Mathurā, and threatening Pāṭaliputra itself.
> Puṣyamitra drops the hammer. He rallies the fractured Indian forces and utterly obliterates the Hellenistic war machine, driving the Greeks all the way back to the Indus.
> Greek phalanxes met Vedic steel, and the Greeks lost.
> but wait, he wasn't just a warlord. He was the ultimate restorer of Sanātana Dharma.
> single-handedly ended the era of state-enforced religious pacifism and revived the martial and spiritual ethos of the Vedic civilisation.
> to assert absolute, unquestionable sovereignty, he revives the ancient 'Aśvamedha Yajña' (Horse Sacrifice).
> He didn't do it once. The Ayodhya Inscription confirms he performed the Aśvamedha twice (Dvir-aśvamedha-yājin). Absolute paramountcy.
> Let the majestic sacrificial horse roam free across the subcontinent. He puts his teenage grandson, Vasumitra, in charge of guarding it with a contingent of cavalry.
> The Greeks try to capture the horse on the banks of the Sindhu river.
> Teenage Vasumitra absolutely massacres the seasoned Yavana forces, rescues the horse, and secures the frontier. The Chad bloodline is genetically undeniable.
> Puṣyamitra writes a letter to his son Agnimitra basically saying: "Your boy just styled on the Greeks. The horse is safe. Pull up to the Yajña." Peak grandfather flex.
> His court was the ultimate intellectual hub. The legendary sage Patañjali - author of the Mahābhāṣya (the greatest treatise on Sanskrit grammar) - was his contemporary and chief priest.
> Patañjali literally uses the defeat of the Greeks as a grammar example in his book: “Aruṇad Yavano Sāketam” (The Yavana besieged Ayodhya - implying an event that just happened and was crushed by his patron).
> Buddhist texts (like the Aśokāvadāna) cope and seethe, painting him as a villain because he showed zero tolerance for certain monasteries that acted as fifth columns and aided the invading Greek armies.
> treason gets you the sword. No exceptions when the civilisation is at stake.
> Senāpati, Samrāt, Yavana-Destroyer, Patron of Patañjali, and the architect of the Brāhmaṇical Renaissance.
> The man who refused to let India fade into the dark pages of history.
This original medieval-style dance piece is in G minor, with a chord progression that alternates between Gm and Cm, incorporating variations like Gm6 and Cm6 for that hypnotic flow.
Modi has done few things right. Like infra push and connectivity improvement. Or changing the status quo of Kashmir.
And he has done many things wrong. But the most costly miss by the Modi Government is not been able to emerge as a large scale self-reliant defence manufacturer.