I don't hate any castes at all.
We need each and everyone to fight the big battle AGAINST Radicalised Peaceful.
BUT
I am against the loudmouths of GC who keep abusing OBCs (eg. Teli- Modi) & SC-ST ( as Bhimta).
I am against SC-ST also, who keep abusing our GOD.They are not real Hindus at all.
@SushilSatyarth1@barandbench@prashantjha996 She didn't name anyone.
But these teacher named her and his leaked her son school and abuses her badly.
This is not criticising. It was a criminals act.
@Manish74134066@DrDhruvchauhan Haa ye sab galat hai isyle Faizal khan ko jo ek room mai 1000 ko baithta janwar jaise bina fire safety norms follow kiye usko bhi chor dena chahiye 🤡🤡.
Braindead.
Don't comment here.
Only a true Bihari can truly understand the depth of what Vaibhav Suryavanshi said about Bihar.
His words reflect the fragrance of Bihar's soil, the pain of its struggles, the strength of hard work, and a deep sense of pride in one's identity.
His message touches the heart of every Bihari who feels a strong connection to their culture, heritage, and roots.
#VaibhavSuryavanshi
#BiharCricket
#RajasthanRoyal
#Samastipur
Looks like cutting Basalt Rock with steel tools is not enough to produce a Kailasnath Temple. Mystery! Did Indians have access to some other tech to achieve this feat?
Kailasa was just scanned with lasers, and if you haven’t been following this place, hold on.
What’s being uncovered here won’t just rewrite Indian history. It could rewrite human history and prove Ancient India had tools far more advanced than we’ve been told.
But first, you have to understand what you’re looking at. Kailasa wasn’t built. It was removed from the side of a mountain. That means there was no room for mistakes while carving one of the hardest rocks on Earth. Between 200,000 and 400,000 tons of basalt were removed to create it. The first mystery is simple: we don’t know where it all went. We also don’t truly know when it was built. The main dating sources are two land grants, but that doesn’t tell us when the actual carving began. Dating matters because it would tell us what tools they had. Ancient India had steel by 600 BC, which later became the famous Damascus steel. But basalt is hardened lava. It’s around a 6 on the Mohs scale, meaning steel barely scratches it. In 1682, a Mughal emperor ordered 1,000 workers to destroy Kailasa. They failed. That alone shows how hard this stone is. Even with modern alloys, humans barely make a dent. Russian researchers tested this by having people strike basalt with modern tools, then measuring the removed volume with photogrammetry. The result? One person working every day for 3 years could remove only about 1 cubic meter. And since Kailasa is unfinished, we still have tool marks. Those marks show cuts deeper than what modern hydraulic breakers can achieve. To penetrate basalt that deeply, we’d normally need huge machinery. But machines that size wouldn’t fit in many of these spaces. So clearly, they had different tools. Not just powerful tools. Precision tools. The detail in Kailasa’s carvings looks like work done in soft soapstone, except it’s carved into basalt. What we know for sure is that our assumptions about ancient India are wrong. At minimum, they were far more advanced than we give them credit for. At most, something was happening back then that we still don’t fully comprehend.
Front-page news in Dainik Bhaskar😀 (Check the image)
The estimate was around 1 lakh people, but only 200-400 protestors actually showed up.
In reality, the protest was a complete flop.
Yet Dainik Bhaskar presented it as a massive success.
This is exactly how mainstream media has been fooling the public for the last 100 years.
This is how Nehru became a "legend", Indira the "Iron Lady", Rajiv an "innovator", and Sonia a "symbol of sacrifice".
They failed with Rahul Gandhi only because social media had arrived by then.
Never trust mainstream media.
The bigger the brand, the bigger the dishonesty.