Sonam Sir @Wangchuk66 your fast has united this country’s youth in their war for justice. Your goal is reached. Govt doesn’t care about your life or that of crores of youth. But your life matters to us. Pls call off fast & continue the fight.
Sanghis are now targeting Christians in Bengal.
A cross of newly built Church in Subhasgram (Baruipur, Bengal) was destroyed amid chants of Jai Shri Ram.
I hope the world is watching what these terr0r!sts are doing to minorities in India.
@jawharsircar Thus speaketh a true disciple of Fr. Gilson. You were lucky to have interacted with him when he was in his prime. I am probably his last student. But I still worship him. I am a voracious reader today because he led me into the Wonderland of books. 🙏🏻😥
.@BJP4India doesn't just fail women, it fosters a climate where those accused of heinous crimes appear to believe they enjoy political protection.
Where political connections seem to influence justice.
Where influence appears to speak louder than the rule of law.
Where disturbing questions arise over whether political pressure is overshadowing the pursuit of justice.
That is the real tragedy behind the Baruipur horror!
BJP came to Bengal promising women's safety and security. Instead, every such incident raises fresh questions about its HOLLOW PROMISES.
The silence is equally telling.
No protests.
No outrage.
No demands for accountability.
No demands for resignations.
No sudden awakening of conscience.
When justice becomes selective and outrage becomes political, it is not only the victim who suffers, it is society that pays the price.
Extremely shameful state of affairs.
A poem for Didi. @MamataOfficial
*She Who Would Not Bow*
There are souls who arrive like the quiet dawn.
And there are souls
who arrive like fire.
She came as fire.
Not the fire that destroys,
but the sacred flame
that refuses to die though every wind conspires against it.
Courage was never her ornament.
It was her birthright.
Resistance was never her strategy.
It was the language of her heart.
Again and again, when darkness gathered over the Republic, when fear was stitched into the fabric of public life, when silence became the safest refuge,
she chose the difficult road—
the road that asks for sacrifice before it offers victory.
The 1993 afternoon burned.
The July sky watched.
The streets of Bengal trembled beneath marching feet.
One cry rose above the smoke, above the sirens, above the blows of lathis, above the crack of rifles—
“No identity card, no vote.”
It was not merely a slogan.
It was a prayer.
A covenant between the citizen and democracy itself.
Then came the bullets.
Young lives fell like blossoms before their season had ended.
Thirteen dreams were folded into the earth.
Blood flowed upon the stones.
Her own blood mingled with theirs.
Yet she did not stop.
With crimson upon her brow, she walked forward,
as though every wound had become another reason to continue.
History remembers victories.
But democracy remembers those who bled before victory arrived.
Today, when millions carry their voter identity cards close to their hearts,
few hear the silent echo
of that long-forgotten afternoon,
or see the crimson thread that runs invisibly through every card—
woven from sacrifice,
from defiance,
from faith.
She did not ask history for kindness.
She demanded justice.
She did not inherit democracy.
She earned it,
step by wounded step.
For power has always spoken in the language of command.
But freedom
has always answered
in the language of courage.
When mighty empires mistook intimidation for strength,
she became gentler—
and therefore stronger.
When institutions bent before power,
she remained upright.
When others calculated,
she believed.
When others surrendered,
she endured.
When others sought shelter,
she became the shelter.
The storms came without mercy.
Accusations gathered like monsoon clouds.
The weight of Delhi descended,
armed with power,
armed with suspicion,
armed with endless designs to diminish her.
Yet towering mountains do not debate the petty winds.
Rivers do not seek permission to flow.
And certain spirits
cannot be instructed to kneel.
So she stands—
not because standing is easy,
but because the earth beneath her feet
remembers every drop of blood
offered in the name of democracy.
Bengal has always known
that freedom is not inherited.
It is defended.
Again.
And again.
And again.
Until resistance itself
becomes a song.
And the song
becomes a people.
And the people
become unafraid.
Then the flame is no longer one woman’s.
It belongs to the nation.
It belongs to every citizen
who believes
that the smallest vote
is greater than the mightiest throne.
And so she walks on—
unbowed,
unbroken,
bearing neither crown nor sword,
only the fierce certainty
that truth may stumble,
justice may be delayed,
democracy may bleed—
but so long as even one fearless heart
refuses to kneel,
the light
shall never leave the land.
I stand with Advocate Ashish Goel's message. A nation cannot thrive if citizens are afraid to question power. Accountability, constitutional values, equal justice, and the dignity of every Indian must come before politics. India deserves better. 🇮🇳 #Constitution#Democracy#India
On Wednesday morning Sinoj, who runs a lottery shop at Kochi developed severe chest pain while driving himself to a hospital. As traffic came to a standstill, he collapsed inside the car.
Two nurses - Anjali Baiju and Ardra Raj, who were travelling in a bus, noticed the commotion on the roadside. They immediately got off the bus, rushed to the car and began cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).
A passer by Ranjith, took over the car and drove Sinoj to the hospital. The two nurses continued CPR inside the vehicle until Sinoj reached a hospital.
Doctors said he had regained signs of recovery by the time he arrived.
Respect to the two sisters. God bless
This truly made my day
@sh97237891@theliverdoc He doesn't "pretend" to be a doctor. He is a doctor, a genuine one, highly qualified, and even more highly knowledgeable. Calling him an idiot doesn't demean him; it simply indicates your lack of education.
A few days back, Shri Nitin Gadkari openly challenged saying, “*Show me one vehicle anywhere in the world which had problems because of E20 petrol.*”
Today, the Central Government told the Supreme Court that “*Ethanol mixing is an experiment—results will come by next year.*”
*An experiment on 3.6 crore Indians.*
Let that sink in.
While the Minister challenges the world, the Government admits in court that they don’t even know the outcome. Meanwhile, on our roads:
•Mileage is plummeting—hard-earned money is burning faster than fuel.
•Engines are getting bust—repair bills are crushing common families.
•9 out of 10 vehicles in India are not compatible with E20. That’s 3.6 crore vehicles.
This policy was rolled out without consensus, without public consultation and without remorse. You cannot call a national fuel shift an “experiment” after forcing it down our tanks. You cannot challenge citizens to prove damage when your own data is still pending.
Common people are not guinea pigs. Our roads are not test tracks.
Our pockets are not your trial budgets.
Roll back E20. First, prove. Then, deploy.
@theliverdoc 2nd CM of West Bengal. He was born and died on July 1 (in 1882 and 1962, respectively). The day was established to honor his contributions to medicine and public health, and it recognizes the role of doctors across the country.
@theliverdoc Hats off to you sir! I salute your relentless pursuit of the scientific and the logical. Please also inform people about: In India, National Doctors' Day is observed on July 1 in memory of Dr. Bidhan Chandra Roy, a renowned physician, freedom fighter, and the (contd in comments)
💔 Sometimes, the size of the punishment raises bigger questions than the act itself.
A contractual peon in Bokaro, Jharkhand, was dismissed from service after he allegedly took leftover biscuits from an official meeting home for his children.
Authorities treated the incident as "serious corruption" and terminated his employment.
The decision shocked many.
The matter eventually reached the Jharkhand High Court.
The Court quashed the dismissal, observing that the punishment was grossly disproportionate to the alleged misconduct. It also criticized the authorities' handling of the matter and directed that the peon be reinstated.
The case has sparked a wider public conversation about proportionality, fairness, and accountability in disciplinary action.
Rules matter.
Integrity matters.
But so does justice.
A fair system is not only judged by how it punishes wrongdoing, but also by whether the punishment is reasonable and proportionate to the act.
This case has become a reminder that compassion and common sense should have a place alongside rules.
What do you think?
Was the High Court right to overturn the dismissal?
👇 Share your views respectfully.
#Jharkhand #Bokaro #JharkhandHighCourt #Justice #Accountability #RuleOfLaw #IndiaNews #PublicService #Fairness #CurrentAffairs