Migrant Studies- History Buff - Humanist - Short Story Writer -
Motto in life - World exists in stories and nobody can tell your story better than you.
Tech Layoffs : New crisis of Capitalism?
Useless class ! Will Marx' prediction come true?
जाबलेस ग्रोथ ? मार्क्स की भविष्वाणी और क्या ये पूँजीवाद का नया बड़ा संकट है ?
https://t.co/UZ91dCZtYb
SAD seems to have conceded defeat by involving Akal Takht even before the battle began.
Sukhbir badal need to learn something , and he doesn't need to look far a way to learn this.
My vlog in Punjabi
https://t.co/Xv1XCN8fzt
कश्मीरिओं को पाकिस्तान ने आज़ादी का एक झुनझुना पकड़ाया हुआ है , उस झुनझुने की सचाई अब सभी के समाने है , कोई नहीं देख रहा तो सिर्फ पाकिस्तना ही नहीं देख पा रहा ! मेरा वीलाग !
Freedom of Kashmir- A falsehood which has been laid threadbare by current events in Pak occupied Kashmir. My vlog
https://t.co/1Qe4HWbVx4
Why "vote chori" is a hoax created by a certain ecosystem and need to be debunked.
My vlog on the issue.
W Bengal Vote Chori Debunked | Lies of international media | Saaransh w... https://t.co/Z5KQdPy4v9 via @YouTube
@AadeshRawal heard you saying that there are 169 seats where deleted votes are more than BJP victory margin in W Bengal. That is dead wrong. Please share the data you are quoting.
West Bengal 2026 Elections : Looking at data it is very clear that SIR had minimal impact on formation of New government in WB . Rather by just focusing on SIR alone, TMC might have frittered away the advantage it may have gained due to its welfare schemes.
Vlog on this issue soon!
TN: Lessons ruling elite refuse to learn:
If a party has won the mandate let it rule.
Give it a year and it will start looking like other parties.
Any party ,be it BJP ,DMK,or AIADMK which dare to stop TVK will be surely out of reckoning for next 10 years.
Period.
Assam and Bengal elections 2026:
Unabashed sectarianism (hindu/muslim) does not auger well for any democracy!
A captive vote bank yields diminishing returns in the long run. It not only forces political parties to chase short-term wins, but it also makes pundits lazy and resistant to new ideas.
When even well‑meaning analysts assume minority votes will automatically converge to one party, they lose the moral ground to criticise counter-polarisation.
The main opposition should look inward and avoid repeating mistakes the TMC made. Bengal may be ripe for a fresh opposition (it might take time, maybe 10 years), but the INC must build an inclusive, credible alternative rather than falling into a simple captive-vote trap.
If the Congress is reduced to about 1/6th of seats in Assam despite roughly 34% minority vote in the state, will Bengal be any different for other opposition parties?
Until 2014, BJP didn’t exist in Bengal, Assam, the NE, Orissa, Telangana (100 seats). Today, it looks set to win a majority of these regions in the next decade, making it more formidable than ever.
#WestBengalLegislativeAssemblyelection2026 #bjpbengal #inc
Punjab’s political scenario perfectly articulated by @Navchetan1
Bengal’s ruling elite or the so-called “BhadraLok” has effectively kept itself wrapped around the power; the Left didn’t consider the cast as an entity because of its ideological dogmas, and the TMC simply carried on from where the Left, left off. The result is that despite 23% of the Bengali population being from the SC community, they never got their share of power. It’s not surprising that this constituency voted wholeheartedly for the BJP this time.
Punjab’s “Bhadralok” has been as self-obsessed as West Bengal’s, or as in many other places. First, they dismiss the idea of change, then they protect their turf by hiding behind religious and cultural identity. But when they sense change is inevitable, they’re quick to jump on the bandwagon and become the brightest brand ambassadors—sometimes in flashy clothes. This happened in West Bengal in 2011, when the so called left intelligentsia shifted loyalty to the right to fight the TMC, though lumpen-left elements joined the TMC to maintain their only source of livelihood.
Punjab’s ‘Bhadralok’ is even more hypocritical and ambivalent than Bengal’s: they’re willing to join the BJP as long as they’re in the driver’s seat with the BJP as a hanger-on. But if the BJP itself wants to be in the driver’s seat, it becomes their cultural-religious duty to fight BJP! Such hypocrisy may give them the strength to resist but that resistance is not likely to hold longer!
It’s worth noting that cultural and religious ethos are not static. Punjab is, at heart, a cosmopolitan landscape at least in aspirational terms where for finding some basic jobs we look toward Amreeka,Kanada ,England and Europe. A community that takes pride in sending 22 MPs to the Canadian Parliament and 11 to the British Parliament—alongwith its internal squabbles and corruption—can it pose a potent challenge to a national party trying its luck in the state? 2017 and 2022 are worth revisiting. Punjab’s intelligentsia from both the Left and the Right supported AAP, yet it failed miserably in 2017. In 2022, Punjab’s intelligentsia labelled it as an outsider—calling Kejriwal a “Bania” and Sandeep Pathak and Raghav Chadha “Bhayie”—and declared AAP a taboo. That aside, AAP went on to win one of the largest majorities in the Vidhan Sabha. This was the key reason Punjab’s intelligentsia failed to gauge the election outcome accurately.
Even after all this it must be said that BJP doesn’t have a chance to win Punjab in the coming elections, but they’re ready to play the waiting game, as they have done in Assam, West Bengal, and Odisha, and as they likely will pursue in Kerala and Punjab.
Fun Fact: BJP has contested around one third of Punjab’s VS constituencies over years (including general elections) where it has won multiple times, with the support of Punjab’s Bhadralok.
In Kerala , if the Left goes out, will be first time left wont have govt in any states in country. Once out , will it go EB and Tripura way, that is the bigger question.
The election which we thought would be a run of the mill election, may have long term implications for Indian polity:
1 In WB , BJP is here to stay ,even if they don't form govt this time there have enough heft and resources to wait for another five years.
In TN , rise of TVK will mark and end to rotation of Dravidian parties which after AAP/Punjab will be another incident of rise of cadre less parties. on one hand It shows faith in democracy but OOH reflects disenchantment with traditional type of politics on offer.
I if BJP’s template holds, it could lead to Congress and Akalis withering away in long run, making BJP the automatic choice to fill the vacuum. This episode has set the tone for the hustle and bustle of Punjab politics for the next nine months leading to February 27.5/5
BJP’s interest is in the next election if AAP repeats its government rather than Congress returning to power. It will help BJP play its long-waiting-game, a template it has used in Odisha and is trying in Kerala in the forthcoming election.2/5
Some may think BJP will try to form the government in Punjab. It may very well try but is unlikely to succeed in the next election. Instead it will be happy to give AAP a second term, considering Congress will drag it into a hellhole due to its infighting.4/5