One good thing about the E20 outrage is that, unlike the outrage over UGC act, NEET paper leak or the Ram Mandir donation scam, it won't simply fade away.
People are reminded of it every time they fill up their tanks or when their vehicles breakdown.
Ethanol policies, Ram Mandir controversies, constant irregularities in exams, NEET, SSC, UPSC, CBSE OSM what not? What exactly is this culture of silence?
No press conferences. No accountability No answering questions Just labelling everyone as "anti-national"
Ajeeb log hain yaar instead of demanding accountability after multiple failures, they're busy looking for loopholes and cooking theories about how Sonam Wangchuk is faking his hunger strike
> invited abp news journalist megha prasad to interview him in his private jet
> thought it’ll be another scripted interview where he’ll flex his achievements
> got visibly irritated by uncomfortable questions since it was an unexpected attack
> avoided giving direct answers and repeatedly shifted the conversation
> when she mentioned the mileage drop in her own car, asked her to prove it
> when asked about brynihat’s pollution due to ethanol factories, denied claims
> when asked about vehichle damage issues, told people to claim insurance
> warned that he could file a defamation case against her as well
> repeatedly dismissed criticism instead of addressing the concerns raised
> turned a public accountability interview into a defensive exchange
> this is our official road & unofficial petroleum minister - Nitin Gadkari aka Jhola chaap mantri
India has a rape culture and it permeates every fucking thing, until we undo that, nothing is going to change. Rules and laws serve nothing if the people equipped to provide justice are basically Andrew tate in black coats.
Environmental activist and former IIT professor G. D. Agrawal died after a 111-day hunger strike in 2018, demanding stronger legal protection for the Ganga River.
Neither the media covered his protest nor did the government listen to him.