Unbelievable Power of OCCULT
Many would disbelieve this video ..
I don't blame them..
Its not easy to digest this..
But I can put my words on it..
Many people at different levels in Occult science and who have various siddhis ..
Can do it easily ..
I personally know many who just by hearing your voice & seeing your picture can tell everything about you ..
They don't need birth chart or anything ever..
That's the real power of Occult Vidhya..
There is little to no discussion on LinkedIn about the abuse of children at the daycare facility of Capgemini in Brookfield, Bengaluru.
The victims were the children of the employees who worked at the company.
These infants were stuffed inside washing machines, narrow water-filled pipes and bathrooms if they dared to cry.
The count of victims is in the range of 40-50. There were 5 employees who were tasked to take care of these children.
Instead, they would beat, torture and threaten the infants. The good news is that these 5 criminals have been booked by the Bengaluru police.
But there is one more concerning part to the story: There was one employee who first flagged the issue internally.
The whistleblower was promptly fired from his job. But, he chose to do the right thing.
The man had a good conscience, and he reported the matter to the police, which led to the rescue of the doomed children.
Reportedly, Capgemini employees were not allowed to check on their own kids at this on-campus day-care facility, which ensured that the abuse of children continued unabated.
Capgemini is now in a firefighting mode. First, it has temporarily stopped operations at the facility.
And through media portals, it is being clarified that the day care is being run by a 3rd party vendor. Wow
This is what we call typical corporate escapism when it comes to taking accountability.
#Capgemini
Modi received something remarkable in the Netherlands.
On May 17, 2026.
Over a month ago.
You are wondering why I am speaking of it now.
Because nobody told you what it actually meant.
Geopolitics rarely speaks in statements.
It speaks in acts.
In objects handed across a table.
In ceremonies nobody explains properly.
This was one of them.
The plates weigh 30 kilograms.
Copper.
21 large sheets, three small.
Bound by a bronze ring.
Sealed with the royal mark of Rajendra Chola I.
Not a gift.
A state record.
Eleven centuries old.
Written in Tamil, sealed in Sanskrit.
An order from a Chola king.
Granting land to a Buddhist monastery in Nagapattinam.
Built by a Southeast Asian king.
Under Chola protection.
Around 1700, a Dutch missionary took them.
No clean paper trail exists for how.
They sat in Leiden for three centuries.
India asked since 2012.
Pressed formally since 2019.
This year, they came home.
Now the real story.
Long before Leiden, the Cholas faced a problem.
The Malacca Strait was the world's richest waterway.
Srivijaya controlled it.
Every ship.
Every trader.
Every cargo.
Taxed.
Tolled.
Squeezed.
Harassed.
Chola trade with China ran straight through that noose.
In 1025.
Rajendra Chola stopped asking.
He sent his fleet.
Not from the north, where Srivijaya's navy waited.
From the south.
Where nobody was watching.
Palembang fell.
The king of Srivijaya was captured.
A jeweled war-gate was carried home as proof.
Then the Cholas did something almost nobody remembers.
They left.
No garrison.
No colony.
No new province in Sumatra.
They broke the monopoly, and walked away.
Trade did the rest.
Tamil guilds ran that corridor for a hundred years.
Not conquest for its own sake.
A civilization that understood power over possession.
Before that strike, there was a staging ground.
Islands most people forget still belong to India.
The Andaman and Nicobar.
Named Ma-Nakkavaram in an inscription from 1050.
A forward base of the Chola Empire.
In 2024, Port Blair was renamed.
Sri Vijaya Puram.
By the Modi government.
Not nostalgia.
Memory, placed exactly where it happened.
Today those islands carry three naval air stations.
An 9.5 billion dollar port rises at Galathea Bay.
The Great Nicobar Project.
Sitting exactly where the old corridor still runs.
Toward Malacca.
Toward the world.
Now connect it.
Bharat reclaiming the copper plates.
Bharat renaming Port Blair.
Bharat building its biggest township and port.
That is today's Bharat.
Reclaiming its lost glory.
Someone is watching this and calling it provocation.
You now who they are.
The Cholas never claimed the sea.
They refused to let anyone else own it either.
Today, Bharat is doing exactly the same.
A copper plate does not lie.
It needs no press release.
It needs no permission to exist for a 1000 years.
Power fades.
Fleets rust.
Empires dissolve into footnotes.
Memory, engraved properly, does not.
Bharat is rising.
Vipin Kumar is an Indian construction worker in Romania.
One day, while he was walking near Nicolae Romanescu Park in Craiova, he saw a girl slip through a thin layer of ice and start struggling in the sub-zero water. Her father tried to reach her but became trapped in the broken ice.
Without any hesitation, Vipin used a nearby sledge to slide toward her. When the ice broke beneath him as well, he plunged into the freezing water, managed to grab the child, and held her above the surface for nearly 30 minutes until emergency crews arrived.
Both Vipin and the girl suffered severe hypothermia and were rushed to the hospital, where they received treatment.
Romania granted honorary citizenship to Vipin Kumar for his bravery and for risking his own life to save the girl.
Nowadays, social media is filled with hate against India, and Indians are increasingly being targeted. But when stories like this emerge, they rarely receive the same attention. They are not shared as widely, and somewhere along the way, these stories get buried and forgotten.
Tilak Verma came in when India were 88-3 in 8.2 overs. He’s just been dismissed scoring 13 off 13 balls - at No.5 you don’t just let the scoring rate dip man
#IndvsEng
Citizen Vigilante is a 2026 action-thriller film directed by Uwe Boll, starring Armie Hammer as a wealthy American businessman in Croatia who becomes a vigilante targeting criminals, inspired by a real-life case. Released in theaters and digitally on June 19, 2026, the film follows his brutal campaign against violent criminals and corrupt officials, making him a wanted man and a public hero. It's described as a modern-day Death Wish and was distributed by Quiver Distribution.
Why would they jeopardise the future of their children, for your children?
- S. Jaishankar (External Affairs Minister): Son Dhruva Jaishankar: Lives and works in Washington DC as Executive Director of ORF America.
- Piyush Goyal (Commerce & Industry Minister): Son Dhruv Goyal: Lives in New York; CEO of FourLion Capital (previously at Evercore and BlackRock).
- Hardeep Singh Puri (former Minister): Daughter Tilottama Puri: Lives in the New York City area; works as an international lawyer at the World Bank.
Many more…
Deeply devastated by the tragic news from the Gulf of Oman. Three innocent Indian civilian seafarers — Patnala Suresh, Shivanand Chaurasiya, and Aditya Sharma — have lost their lives following a targeted US precision military strike on the commercial oil tanker, M/T Settebello.
These men were not combatants. They were civilian mariners doing their jobs, caught in the crossfire of a geopolitical standoff.
I strongly support the Government of India's swift and firm response in calling out this unacceptable overreach. By summoning the US Chargé d'Affaires to lodge a strong protest and forcefully raising the matter at the United Nations, New Delhi has made it clear that Indian lives are not acceptable “collateral damage”.
While the US enforces its maritime blockade, it must cease and desist from targeting commercial civilian infrastructure and crews. A military strike on an engine room, knowing civilians are on board, is unjustifiable.
Global maritime forces have plenty of non-lethal methods to intercept, redirect, or board non-compliant vessels. Resorting to missile strikes that kill civilian crews must stop immediately. Freedom of navigation must apply to the safety of the sailors who power global trade. I hope india firmly demands this of its US interlocutors since practically every ship in those waters carries Indian crew.
Our deepest prayers are with the bereaved families. We stand with you. 🕉️ शांति!
Ms. Susila Samiyappan madam , Deputy Secretary of the Women's Wing All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) in Karur District, has joined our People's Movement today.
On behalf of our entire team, we extend a warm welcome and wholeheartedly invite her to be a part of our journey.
Welcome! Welcome! We are delighted to have you with us. 🌹🤝
@annamalai_k #Annamalai
@WTLFoundation
#WeTheLeaders #Welcome #LeadTheChange #PeoplesMovement #TamilNadu
My long term followers know that, as a rule, I don't delete my old tweets. They are a reflection of what my views were at that point in time.
There are some immature, outright stupid, and cringeworthy tweets in there as well. Those still stand as a testimony to my stupidity.
Lately, I've been trying to push myself a step further. Communicating in decent language, never being personally abusive, sticking to data and facts, and remaining civil when sharing my views.
No view or tweet will perfectly stand the test of time. The world changes, and we change. However, there should be no guilt over how we communicated those views. The tone of the communication, rather than the content itself, is what should stand the test of time.
Watch & listen to the Audio
People are saying that Firebrigade is very late, has not arrived
Half burnt foreigners are desperately jumping on mattresses to save lives
Remember - Fire station is 3 mins away from this incident.
Imagine you are out on a vacation, you pay ₹3000 for a hotel, and then you die in a fire. Not an accident but a pre-planned disaster!
This is what happened today in South Delhi's posh Malviya Nagar. 21 people perished inside a hotel named Flourish Stay B&B.
The reason: There was no fire exit. Only one point of entry and exit for guests.
To add to the impending disaster, the hotel had permission to operate 6 rooms. It was operating 25 rooms.
The building did not have a fire NOC as well.
Some guests were charred alive, and others jumped to their deaths from the windows.
21 lives lost. Many of the deceased were foreign nationals who had come to India for medical treatment.
The consolation prize is a ₹2 lakh aid from the government.
And the owner, Lokesh Bajaj, is reportedly absconding!
Again, don't call it an accident.
It was a man-made incident, the groundwork of which was laid many years ago through strategically flouting all possible rules.
No accountability of the police, fire department, municipality, or anyone, as usual.
One American company is now worth almost as much as every company on India's stock market combined. All five thousand of them. It is Google, and the $80 billion it just raised is the part Uday Kotak is calling a wake-up call for India.
His numbers hold up. Over the past year Google made about $160 billion in profit, which is about what all of India's listed companies earn between them. It is worth around $4.5 trillion. One firm in California, about the size of an entire country's stock market.
Google is selling brand-new shares to cover this, even though it sits on one of the largest piles of cash on earth. Issuing new stock leaves everyone who already owns Google with a slightly smaller slice of it, an odd move for a company this rich. One of the buyers is Warren Buffett. For twenty years he called Google the one that got away. His own insurance company, Geico, was one of its earliest advertisers, and he still never bought the stock. His firm, Berkshire Hathaway, only started buying in late 2025, and it is now adding another $10 billion. About $30 billion of the $80 billion goes somewhere dull: covering the tax bill on shares Google hands its own staff.
The profit is flattering too. Google's latest quarter showed $62 billion, but close to $29 billion of that was paper gains, profit it made only on paper because companies it has invested in, like the AI firm Anthropic, shot up in value. Nothing was actually sold. Strip those gains out and Google's core search and cloud business earned about what it usually does. The company is quietly cashing in on the same AI boom it is spending a fortune to win.
And the raise is the small number here. Google will spend around $185 billion this year on the data centers behind its AI, more than every listed Indian company earns in a year, and it has told investors 2027 will be bigger still. That is the size of the future Kotak wants Indian companies to start building toward.
Businessman Uday Kotak (@udaykotak) posts, "Google which is cash surplus, just announced an additional capital raise of $80 bn. Google annual profit is $160 bn, last quarter $62 bn, and market cap $4.5 trillion. That is close to total profits and market cap of all Indian listed companies put together. It’s a wake up call to all companies to invest into the future, whatever the present maybe. Now that IPL is done and dusted, time for India to focus on business of business."
Lost one more Shasan Ratna to reckless driving. With Diksha paryay of 26 years, Panyas Pravar Pujya Shri Omkarshekhar Vijayji Maharaj got hit by a speeding vehicle. While we are sure when will this end, his sadhu parivar will start their routine vihar tomorrow.
@sanghaviharsh