@hellwala Israelis smoke weed, dance like mad men, and are not great on hygiene. But no Israeli has ever been accused of smoking or drinking at a public place, eve teasing or involved in road rage or petty fights. Can you say the same of Haryanvis (or a particular Haryanvi community).
I don’t have proof, but this is my theory and I’m sticking to it:
The Egyptians who are credited with building the pyramids, actually found them already there, built by the “gods”, which was actually a previous advanced civilisation.
They tried their best to imitate the style, which is why the oldest pyramids are the most sophisticated, and the newer additions are the ones that actually look primitive.
If you look at the Old Kingdom of Egypt, which are the earliest Dynasties, you have the Great Pyramids with mathematical masterpieces with 70 ton granite beams and laser-flat finishes of millimetre precision.
Then for some reason, as you move forward in time to the Middle and New Kingdoms, the pyramids start to get smaller, the stones get sloppier, and eventually, they just start building with mud bricks.
If those mfs “invented” the tech, they would have gotten better at it. Instead, they clearly lost the manual. They became squatters in structures they knew nothing about building.
There is a literal stone tablet called the Inventory Stele found at Giza and it explicitly states that Khufu, the Pharaoh supposedly responsible for the Great Pyramid found the Sphinx and the Temple of Isis already built.
Mainstream archaeology calls the stele a “pious forgery” created 2,000 years later by priests because if the stele is true, the entire timeline of Egyptology collapses. They would rather believe the Egyptians lied about their own history than admit the pyramids are older than 4500 years.
About the Sphinx, geologists like Robert Schoch have pointed out that the Sphinx and its enclosure walls show deep marks caused by thousands of years of heavy, cascading rainfall.
The problem is that Egypt hasn’t had that kind of rain for at least 12000 years. By the time of the Dynastic Egyptians 4500 years ago, the region was already a desert.
In other words, the Sphinx was already old and heavily eroded when the Pharaohs first saw it. They didn't build it, they wouldn't know how to, so they just re-carved the head to look like a Pharaoh, which is why the head is tiny and less weathered than the body.
Archaeologists claim the pyramids were burial tombs. They probably were, for the Dynastic Egyptians. The Egyptians were the world’s greatest restoration artists. They found these resonance chambers and, which were actually power plants, cleaned them out, and used them for their own religious purposes.
The granite in the King’s Chamber inside the Great Pyramid of Giza isn’t even from the same geological formation as the limestone of the structure. Why import 70-ton blocks from 500 miles away unless those specific material properties mattered for a non-decorative function?
Anyway, the hypothesis I subscribe to argues that thousands of years ago, there were catastrophic global floods, which is why many cultures have their own version of the “Flood of Noah” fable.
Most coastal civilisations were submerged after this cataclysmic event.
This explains why archaeologists find silt and sea shells at the base of the pyramids. They were submerged during this Great Reset.
The survivors were pushed back into a Stone Age survival mode. By the time they rebuilt enough to return to Giza, they had lost the high-frequency technology, but they still remembered the “gods” who built the original structures.
Imagine a global catastrophe today. In 2000 years, a new tribe finds the ruins of the Three Gorges Dam. They can’t make electricity with it, so they use the dam as a massive fortress and bury their chiefs in the turbine rooms because they feel holy.
Future archaeologists would find the bodies, see the tribe’s pottery, and conclude that the Three Gorges Dam was a primitive tomb built by people who worshipped the Water God. That is exactly what Egyptologists are doing with the pyramids.
Again, I don’t have proof, but nor do the anthropologists
@hdfcsec@tarugoel@SEBI_India These are two different communications received today.
First communication says that KYC is done and account is activated (which is not true). In the subsequent communication your branch manager is asking me to send documents in hard prints to your Thane branch.
What's going on?
@hdfcsec
why my account has been deactivated citing "it's been inactive for over a year". My account has been very much active for the past 5 years, and the last trade was done on 20 jan 2026
All your CC guys and RM are clueless. What kind of sick joke is this?
@hdfcsec@tarugoel I received an email from HDFC that the account has been activated but evidently it's not.
What kind of sick joke is that?
@SEBI_India
@thekaipullai Britannia was the first to tolerate non-violent descent and address it on the lands being governed abroad and at the angla terra proper. Their approach can be safely called the harbinger of the modern democratic system.
@thekaipullai Empire can be created by winning the battle but sustaining it over centuries requires more than that. Britishers were unique in keeping the military away from civil matters. In this expansive empire of their massacres are rare, intervention in religious and social matters minimal
@SandeepMall Thank you @SandeepMall for the thread.
What do you think should be the action plan if one observes these deviations. Especially if followup tests don't show anything unusual. And, I feel, a physician is unlikely to listen seriously if I say "my RHR is higher than usual"
@aravind I don't know what all this craze for Solar is about. Utilisation Factor is less than 25%, requires huge power back ups, increases net carbon footprint.
OTOH, Nuclear & Hydro don't have these handicaps, generate employment, and have much lower carbon foot print and externalities