The bar has been set for a lifetime. Either match it or go home. Stop taking the Indian audience for granted. The cultural baseline of Indian cinema has been reset. Films built on mediocrity and lazy intent will no longer be accepted.
🚨🚨 ALPHA REVIEW— JUST SHAME🚨🚨
Before release, Alia’s PR aggressively pushed #Alpha as a film that “celebrates Indian soldiers” and is completely “propaganda-free.”
Yet the actual movie delivers the complete opposite: Indian agents are repeatedly shown as traitors, with even Anil Kapoor’s character — the chief of R&AW — turning out to be a villain.
Instead of focusing on Pakistani terrorists as the real threat, the film once again turns Indians into the primary villains. This isn’t bold storytelling; it’s a tired, shameful trope that undermines our intelligence agencies and soldiers for cheap drama.
#Alpha joins the long list of films that prefer to betray Indian characters rather than honor them.
Shameful work, #YRF.
Time to shut down the studio and rethink what kind of cinema you’re putting out.
IT IS HIGH TIME TO BOYCOTT #YRF ‼️
This woman is holding a newspaper that she has kept since 2011.
The paper contains an article by Bill Gates called "Depopulation through Compulsory Vaccination". Gates thinks it would be the most "environmentally friendly solution".
No one gave it much thought at the time.
Gioggia Meloni visita un poverissimo paese della Basilicata e chiede al sindaco quali siano le tre priorità per rilanciare la zona.
«La prima è l’ospedale: c’è, ma mancano i medici».
Lei tira fuori il telefonino, parla per un paio di minuti e poi annuncia:
«Fatto. Entro una settimana arrivano i medici».
«La seconda è l’acqua: c’è, ma una miniera a monte ha inquinato le falde».
Lei riprende il telefonino, altre due parole, e dice:
«Fatto. Entro un mese le falde saranno bonificate e la proprietà risarcirà gli abitanti».
«E la terza?» chiede lei.
«La terza sono i telefonini» risponde il sindaco.
«Qui non prende niente».
People get fined for overspeeding, wrong parking, no seatbelt and many other violations.
But no government official is ever punished for robbing citizens of their basic dignity on the road.
Pumpfun is using automated market makers / ai (I’m told they are called ladder bots) to counter trade their own users- making it statistically impossible for their users to profit on those specific launches. They then have a massive network of influencers and bots on social media to delude them into thinking it’s a skill issue, but there is no skill issue, it’s just a scam.
O MAIOR EXPOSED DO ANO E NINGUÉM TÁ FALANDO SOBRE…
Simplesmente usuários do Reddit expuseram que a empresa Amazon e o Vinted estão permitindo anúncios de crianças à venda de forma velada.
Os ped*filos usam da seguinte estratégia: anunciam brinquedos, ursos, bonecas e roupas de bebês com preços absurdamente caros que não condizem com o valor do produto, e na descrição, colocam as características da criança.
Na descrição, colocam informações como “prematuro”, idade, cor dos olhos e cabelo, quantos kg pesa, altura e gênero.
A plataforma Amazon está apagando comentários que falam sobre essa situação e o Vinted limitou os comentários de todas as redes sociais, não deixando ninguém comentar.
Quem for pesquisar sobre isso no tiktok, verá que todos os usuários que expuseram essa nojeira alcançando milhões de views estão tendo seus vídeos banidos da plataforma.
25 June, 1975.
Indira Gandhi gifted Emergency to India.
Democracy got the first bullet.
Everyone remembers the arrests.
The censorship.
The dark nights.
But no one asks what was running parallel.
Quietly.
Systematically.
With foreign money.
Six months before Emergency.
December 1974.
Henry Kissinger completed a classified document.
NSSM 200.
National Security Study Memorandum.
A populous nation gains power.
Power threatens American interests.
Solution?
Reduce the population.
13 nations targeted for population reduction.
India was number one on that list.
Then look at the money that followed.
World Bank: $66 million.
USAID: $123 million per year.
Ford Foundation.
Rockefeller Foundation.
Total foreign aid into India: $1.5 billion annually.
Much of it tied to one quiet condition.
Reduce the population.
Then Emergency was declared.
And one man got unlimited power.
No election won.
No public mandate.
Not an MP.
Not an MLA.
Just a surname.
Sanjay Gandhi.
He ran the sterilization campaign like a military operation.
Targets were set.
Quotas were enforced.
Officials who missed targets lost their salaries.
Men were picked up from streets, fields, and buses.
8 million+ sterilizations in a single year.
Thousands died from botched procedures.
Ration cards denied to families who didn't comply.
Government jobs blocked.
The campaign had a slogan too.
"Hum Do. Hamare Do."
But here is what nobody says aloud.
It applied to one community.
The other was protected by personal laws.
Exempt.
Untouched.
The population ratio shifted.
It is still shifting.
It will not reverse.
India is aging.
And it will accelerate.
So the question is not whether Emergency was dark.
Everyone agrees it was.
The question is whether Emergency was also a cover.
A cover for something far more calculated.
Something that aligned perfectly with a classified American document.
Coincidence?
Maybe.
Maybe not.
Something that targeted one people and protected another.
Today the same political lineage waves the Constitution.
Calls itself the guardian of democracy.
Before that performance, answer below question.
The Constitution you wave today.
Was it protecting India?
Or protecting the agenda?
That question has no answer.
And they know it.
Emergency didn't just silence a democracy.
It altered the bloodline of a civilization.
A reality from 1971:
When Indira Gandhi was Prime Minister, Field Marshal Manekshaw was the Army Chief.
Indira Gandhi ordered him to launch an offensive against Pakistan.
In response, General Manekshaw said, "The soldiers are ready, but we will wage war at the right time." However, being an extremely arrogant woman, she ordered an immediate attack. Yet, the army launched the offensive only when the time was right, transforming East Pakistan into Bangladesh in just 13 days.
When the opportune moment arrived, General Manekshaw told Indira Gandhi, "I do not interfere in your governance; likewise, you should not interfere in military operations."
That was all it took; being an arrogant woman, she felt her "Iron Lady" reputation had been slighted. Out of pique, she stopped General Manekshaw's salary immediately after 1971.
Yet, this worthy son of Mother India never demanded his salary.
Twenty-five years later, when Manekshaw was in the hospital in his old age, Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam—then the President—went to visit him.
During the conversation, President Kalam learned that the warrior who had fought 5 wars for his country had not been paid his salary since 1971.
He took immediate action and had the outstanding amount—a cheque for approximately ₹1.3 crore—sent to him.
Even such a heroic warrior was humiliated and left in the lurch by the vile Gandhi family. It is a matter of utter shame.
This was the same Indira who abandoned 300 of our prisoners of war to languish and die in Pakistani jails.
In my view, those who support the Congress are among the most despicable human beings. Those who continue to lick the boots of the Congress—even after knowing its dark and despicable politics and history—feel no shame.