Former CPIM MLA & Devaswom Minister Kadakampally Surendran, who is facing an SIT probe for the Sabarimala gold theft, visits Congress Home Minister Ramesh Chennithala.
Now it explains, why this entire case was deliberately kept on hold. Congress link to this massive scam is becoming clearer day by day, both parties are working overtime to save each other!
#APAKADAMPolitics #രണ്ടല്ലഒന്നാണ്
On the morning of September 11, 2001, a flight attendant went to work—and became one of the heroes whose courage helped save countless lives.
Sandra "Sandy" Bradshaw boarded United Flight 93 just as she had many times before. The 38-year-old flight attendant from Greensboro, North Carolina, had worked for United Airlines for eleven years, flying only a couple of trips each month so she could spend more time with her family.
At home were her husband, Phil, a US Airways pilot, their young daughter Alexandra, their baby son Nathan, and Sandy's teenage stepdaughter, Shenan.
For Sandy, it was supposed to be another ordinary workday.
Instead, history had other plans.
At 9:35 a.m., four hijackers took control of the aircraft. Armed with knives, they forced their way into the cockpit and attacked members of the crew.
Despite the chaos, Sandy managed to contact United Airlines, reporting what was happening and describing the hijackers. She also reached her husband by phone.
As passengers made calls to loved ones, they learned about the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. They quickly realized their own plane was also being used as a weapon.
A decision spread through the cabin.
They would fight back.
Sandy immediately went to the galley and began boiling water, preparing it to use against the hijackers.
During another phone call with Phil, she calmly explained what they planned to do. She told him she loved him and the children before ending the call.
Meanwhile, other passengers gathered whatever they could use as weapons.
At 9:57 a.m., the passengers and crew launched their courageous counterattack.
Sandy's final words to her husband were simple.
"Everyone is running up to first class. I've got to go. Bye."
Moments later, the sounds of shouting and a fierce struggle filled the aircraft as those onboard fought to regain control.
At 10:03 a.m., United Flight 93 crashed into a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
All forty passengers and crew members lost their lives, along with the four hijackers.
Investigators concluded the aircraft was likely headed toward either the U.S. Capitol or the White House.
Because of the bravery shown aboard Flight 93, it never reached its intended target.
Countless lives were saved.
Sandy's final moments were not defined by fear but by courage. She was a devoted mother saying goodbye to her children, a loving wife speaking one last time to her husband, and a flight attendant doing everything possible to protect strangers.
After her death, Phil raised their children alone, making sure they grew up knowing exactly who their mother was and what she had done.
Each year, Sandy's name is honored at the Flight 93 National Memorial alongside the other passengers and crew members whose sacrifice changed history.
In 2014, Congress awarded the passengers and crew of Flight 93 the Congressional Gold Medal, recognizing their extraordinary bravery and selflessness.
Sandy Bradshaw left for work expecting an ordinary day.
Instead, she became part of one of the greatest acts of courage in American history.
She never returned home.
But her actions helped ensure that many others did.
Sandra "Sandy" Bradshaw was more than a flight attendant.
She was a devoted wife.
A loving mother.
And a hero whose courage will never be forgotten.
The Anti Bibi Axis will be thrown into the dustbin of history.
Netanyahu will be etched into history as one of the greatest statesmen and leaders humanity has ever known.
History will not only remember him, it will thank him.
Share if you want to thank Bibi now. 🇮🇱
JUST IN: 🇯🇵🇮🇳 Ahead of her departure for India, Japanese PM Sanae Takaichi said cooperation with India is becoming "increasingly important" amid growing global uncertainty, as both nations share fundamental values and strategic interests.
She added that over 150 Japanese business representatives are joining the visit, aiming to expand public-private cooperation and strengthen economic ties.
समुद्र की व्हेल fish अपने बच्चे को पानी के अंदर दूध पिलाती है। उसका दूध इतना गाढ़ा कि पानी में घुलता नहीं है एक बार में 200 लीटर दूध पीने के बाद व्हेल का बच्चा 90kg का हो जाता है
प्रकृति का अद्भुत चमत्कार है
पानी के बीच भी मां अपने बच्चे को जीव�� देने का अनोखा तरीका रखती है
#WATCH | Delhi: Army Chief Gen Dhiraj Seth says, "It is a matter of pride and humility for me to assume the office of the 31st Chief of Army Staff of the Indian Army today. I accept this responsibility with an unwavering commitment to the ideals of 'Duty, Honour, and Nation First'. I express my gratitude to the Prime Minister and the Defence Minister for placing their trust in me and entrusting me with the honour and responsibility of leading the Indian Army. I also pay my humble tribute to those brave soldiers who made the supreme sacrifice in the service of the nation; their courage, devotion to duty, and selfless dedication will continue to inspire future generations"
The level of service in India is next level.
Hear my story about what happened at the Mumbai airport.
This would NOT happen in America.
#india#mumbai#airport#america
🚨 BREAKING:
Bad news for Netanyahu, who wanted to go on vacation to the Maldives with his wife.
The Maldives has announced that it will not allow the Israeli state leader or anyone holding a passport from that country to enter the Maldives.
Happy to see Kerala schools practising this
Every meal should begin with gratitude. And when the children chant it together it is complete bliss. The beauty of Sanatan sanskar practiced in our schools.
A 🇵🇱 Polish woman travelled across India by bus. She was blown away by how beautiful, clean & well-organised it was, and now highly recommends it as one of the best tourist destinations.
But unfortunately, only Anti-India posts seem to go viral. Elon's X algo rarely pushes this kind of positivity.
This statue at S.R.Nagar junction right near the Metro is that of Chadalavada Umesh Chandra, one of the finest cops ever, who took on both the Naxals and Factionists.
And paid for it with his life at a very young age of 33, this is where he was gunned down by Naxals in broad day light on September 4, 1999.
University, joined the IPS in 1991.
His very first posting was in Warangal( Rural) dt between 1992-94, then a hotbed of Naxals. Both as a trainee and ASP he cracked down ruthlessly on Naxals, leading teams.
Then served in Kadapa dt twice, first as ASP( Pulivendula) between 1994-95 and later SP( Kadapa) from 1995-97. Took on the powerful faction lords, ruthlessly cracked down on gambling dens, anti social elements.
Again between 1997-98 served in Karimnagar, another Naxal hotbed, where he ruthlessly cracked down on many.
He was also known as a people's cop, interacting with ordinary citizens, hearing their problems, organizing Jana Jagruti sessions.
Sadly thanks to dirty politicking of some top police offers, he was transferred Welfare and Sports dept, as AIG. Even there he led initiatives for computerization, welfare of police employees.
Questions were raised to the top brass as to why proper protection was not given to him, knowing he was on the hit list of Naxals.
A true hero, who died young, who earned the respect of fellow police, ordinary people, Chadalavada Umesh Chandra, salute.
Special Post ..
A Must Read ,
The Arabian Sea. About 220 kilometers off the coast of Mumbai. 30 August 2010. 6:55 a.m.
A massive wave suddenly crashed over the Indian Navy submarine INS Shankush. In an instant, three sailors were thrown into the raging sea, drifting farther away with every passing second.
Standing watch was Lieutenant Commander Firdaus Mogal, the submarine’s Executive Officer. He didn’t wait. After reporting the incident over the radio, he simply said, “There’s no time. I’m going after them.” Then he plunged into the turbulent waters.
His first act was to rescue an injured sailor hanging alongside the submarine, hauling him to safety. Without hesitation, he then swam with two combat divers toward the three men being carried away by the waves.
One by one, he ensured that everyone else had a chance to survive.
Finally, the rescue rope reached them. Firdaus could have climbed aboard first. Instead, seeing that the two divers were exhausted and drifting away, he made an extraordinary decision. Using his own body as a bridge, he shouted through the crashing waves:
“Climb over me! Get to the submarine!”
The two divers obeyed, stepping over his shoulders to reach safety.
Everyone made it back.
Except him.
Just as Firdaus began pulling himself aboard, the violent swell rolled the 1,800-ton submarine into him, striking his head with devastating force. He was airlifted to a naval hospital, but the injury proved fatal.
That morning, Lieutenant Commander Firdaus Mogal saved the lives of six sailors.
He lost his own.
He was posthumously awarded the Shaurya Chakra, but perhaps his greatest legacy was not a medal. As his wife, Kerzin, later said, “If someone else had died and Firdaus had survived, he would never have forgiven himself.”
Many people wear the rank of a leader.
Very few choose to be the last one to reach safety.
Jai Hind 🇮🇳
An Indian company just went shopping this weekend.
Not for Versace.
Not for Gucci.
Not for a Louis Vuitton store on Fifth Avenue.
They went shopping for a real company.
A German technology company listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.
This post is for those praying for India's economic collapse.
For those who predicted Indian IT is finished.
For those still saying "learn from China."
For those still saying "get inspired by the US."
While some were complaining about how bad Indian roads are,
while buying Whisky, vodka and popcorn,
picking a Netflix series,
Persistent Systems was in a different kind of theatre.
They were acquiring one.
Now, you know Apple.
You know Meta.
You know Google.
But you probably have not heard of Persistent Systems.
That is exactly the problem.
Persistent Systems was founded in Pune in 1990 by Dr. Anand Deshpande.
No VC money.
No valuation drama.
No unicorn stupidity.
No founder PR podcasts.
No Silicon Valley blessing required.
Just 35 years of compounding, disciplined, unglamorous hard work.
Today they are recognised as the fastest growing IT services brand globally in 2026.
24 consecutive quarters of revenue growth.
Six straight years.
Every single quarter, bigger than the one before.
That is not a startup fairy tale.
That is real hard work and architecture.
This weekend, they launched a takeover bid for Nagarro.
A company listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.
1.1 billion euros.
140% premium over market price.
Not a partnership.
Not a pilot project.
An outright takeover.
Nagarro has 18,500 employees.
Across 40 countries.
1 billion euros in revenue last year.
Their biggest clients are four top European automotive manufacturers.
Eg.
BMW.
Volkswagen.
Mercedes-Benz.
Nagarro builds the software that runs inside these companies.
Supply chain tools.
Dealer management systems.
Engineering interfaces.
Once this software is in, it does not leave.
These are relationships measured in decades.
Persistent wanted that access.
And they paid to own it.
Before this deal, only 9 percent of Persistent's revenue came from Europe.
After it closes, that becomes 22 percent.
The combined company will have $2.9 billion / year.
46,000 employees across 40 countries.
37,000 of those employees will be Indian.
And not just that.
Coforge (NIIT Technologies) bought Encora.
TCS bought Coastal Cloud.
Infosys bought Optimum Healthcare IT.
Indian companies are not the back office anymore.
We are the buyers now.
Still waiting for that collapse?
His name was E. C. G. Sudarshan.
He was born in Kerala in 1931 and became one of the greatest theoretical physicists India has ever produced.
Yet most Indians have never heard his name.
In 1963, while working in the United States, he solved a fundamental problem in the quantum theory of light.
His work introduced a new way of describing every possible state of light, laying one of the foundations of modern quantum optics.
Over the decades, an entire field of research grew from those ideas.
In 2005, the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded for pioneering work in quantum optics.
The decision revived a controversy that had existed for decades.
Many physicists argued that Sudarshan’s 1963 work had been fundamental to the field and deserved far greater recognition.
The mathematical representation at the centre of that debate is still widely known as the Glauber Sudarshan representation.
Sudarshan himself believed his contribution had been overlooked.
He wrote to the Nobel Committee, saying that no one had the right to take his discoveries and ascribe them to someone else.
Several scientists also publicly argued that his role had not received the recognition it deserved.
The Nobel Prize was never changed.
It was not the only disappointment.
Over a career spanning more than half a century, Sudarshan was nominated for the Nobel Prize several times but never received it.
He died in Texas in 2018.
One of the greatest minds in modern physics remained almost unknown in the country where he was born.
His name was E. C. G. Sudarshan.
Much of modern quantum optics rests on ideas he helped create, and whether he should have shared the Nobel Prize remains one of the most enduring debates in modern physics.
Follow for stories India deserves to remember.
THESE TRICKS CAN SAVE YOUR LIFE ONE DAY
1. Choking alone — Thrust your belly hard against a chair edge. It pushes the blockage out.
2. Heart attack — Chew one aspirin immediately. Chewing gets it into your blood 3x faster.
3. Bleeding won’t stop — Press hard for 10 full minutes without lifting. Lifting resets clotting every time.
4. Someone faints — Lay flat, lift legs 12 inches up. Blood returns to the brain instantly.
5. Burns — Run cool water for 20 minutes. Never use ice. It makes burns worse.
6. Electric shock victim — Never touch them. Kick the power source away with a dry wooden object first.
7. Severe allergic reaction, no EpiPen — Keep them sitting upright. Lying flat drops blood pressure fast. Can be fatal.
8. Seizure — Don’t hold them down. Turn them on their side and time it. Over 5 minutes — call 911.
9. Broken bone, no help nearby — Never straighten it. Splint it as it is. Movement causes more damage.
10. Panic attack — Press tongue to roof of mouth, breathe through nose only. Nervous system calms in 60 seconds.
11. Heart beating too fast — Bear down hard for 10 seconds. It triggers the vagus nerve and slows your heart.
12. Deep cut, blood pumping fast — Raise the limb above heart level while pressing. Gravity slows the bleeding.
Repost for others to learn !!
🚨 MASSIVE : Israel Turns to India to Build Iron Dome's Tamir Missiles as War Drains Its Arsenal and India Emerges as the World's Next Missile Manufacturing Hub
Just months ago, Israel was offering India access to its highly regarded Iron Dome air defence technology. Today, the equation has changed dramatically.
Israel's leading defence company, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, is exploring partnerships with India's defence industry to manufacture Tamir interceptor missiles, the backbone of the Iron Dome system. The move reflects not only Israel's urgent need to replenish its missile stockpiles but also India's rapid emergence as a trusted global defence manufacturing powerhouse.
The Tamir interceptor is the missile that enables the Iron Dome to neutralize incoming rockets, drones, artillery shells, cruise missiles, and other short-range aerial threats. Guided by advanced radar and fire-control systems, these interceptors are designed to destroy multiple targets simultaneously, making them the heart of Israel's layered air defence network.
At the same time, global demand for Israeli air defence systems continues to rise. Balancing domestic military requirements with export commitments has forced Israel to look beyond its own industrial base for large-scale manufacturing capacity.
India has emerged as the preferred partner.
Competitive manufacturing costs, a highly skilled defence workforce, an expanding missile ecosystem, and a mature supply chain capable of producing advanced propulsion systems, composite structures, electronic modules, and launch systems have transformed India into one of the world's fastest-growing defence manufacturing destinations.
The proposed partnership also builds on an existing foundation. Rafael already collaborates with India's Kalyani Group through manufacturing facilities in Hyderabad, where components for advanced missile systems such as the Barak-8 are produced..
“My childhood was stolen. I was taken as a captive to the Gaza Strip, where I was sold to a Jihadist, and forced to marry him and bear two children. I lived there for years in slavery.”
— Fawzia Amin Sido, Yazidi survivor of ISIS sexual slavery, freed from Gaza by the IDF