I truly don’t understand this ruling, do you? Why would the Supreme Court rule that way especially when the evidence confirms it is true? So glad this son won his battle against this and that his Mom shared his story 🙏
“The picture on the left was my son after more than a gallon of glyphosate was tipped over his neck and shoulders during a work accident. This is why I won't stay quiet. My healthy, 6 ft 5, 18 year old son was taken down to 125 pounds after glyphosate seeped into his pores.
That picture? He'd turned a corner then. We all felt like he just might make it. We were celebrating. He could stand. He could get out of his hospital bed. He didn't want a picture taken at his worst - with no hair from rounds and rounds of chemo, looking more shrunken, bigger tumors. A few months before this left picture, he was at death's door, stage 4 lymphoma and the doctors didn't give us much hope he would live.
I'm one of the fortunate mothers. My son battled like a warrior. He survived and the right picture is him now. But there was a brutal seven year battle with all the alternative methods, all the chemo... so much that he became chemo resistant. Then when nothing else would stop the tumors from growing back, a stem cell transplant that wiped out his whole immune system in the hope it would restart. Many mothers.... many families are not so fortunate. They lost their loved one.
Last week the Supreme Court voted 7 to 2 that glyphosate didn't need a cancer warning. Monsanto won. Bayer won. Two of the largest companies in the world won against thousands of families. My son, our entire family and thousands of others families who have had glyphosate impact their lives felt this blow in our guts.
Eleven years ago the WHO announced it "probably causes cancer." We want the "probably" word gone. We want this monster named for who it is and what it does.
We lost the fight last week. But the battle will keep going. Mothers like me won't stop. Because we know.”
-Serene
I am having a drink this evening with a friend in a Chiswick pub. Two policemen have just come into the pub and asked me to step outside. I have stepped outside and they have threatened me because I tweeted about a councillor banning seating outside pubs in Chiswick. They admit on video (watch it!) that I did not break the law at all. They came to threaten me. To warn me off tweeting about councillors and the council. This is modern Britain. This is the police state. Please, please, please watch this video. It does involve me using very bad language, but this has got to be seen. Police coming out to threaten someone who hasn’t committed a crime. I’m fuming.
🚨 BIG! Telangana Police ARRESTED Mohd Osman, owner of Osman Meat Shop in Mallepally, and Mohd Jahangir Pasha, a worker at Ayan Beef Shop, for allegedly supplying beef mislabeled as mutton to local hotels.
Around 50 kg of meat was SEIZED. Further investigation is underway.
BRUTALISED. LOADED INTO WASHING MACHINE. DUNKED INTO TOILET BOWLS. TODDLERS BRUTALISED.
Their wails shocked a nation.
But the Bengaluru police are yet to arrest the 5 accused "care givers" of Capgemini day care center! In fact, even if arrested the accused won't even spend 5 years in jail if convicted because the charges filed by the police are disproportionately lenient.
People get fined for overspeeding, wrong parking, no seatbelt and many other violations.
But no government official is ever punished for robbing citizens of their basic dignity on the road.
Look at joy when they discuss how a vegetarian Hindu governor was tricked into eating mutton-mixed soup by family of this Khalistani. No different from Islamists.
🚨 JAPANESE LADY : "A small group of only 224 Pakistanis in Hokkaido have taken over the entire area.
They have created a "no-go zone" for Japanese. We Japanese can't go there 😳
They chase you out if you're Japanese"
Same Story everywhere !!
🇮🇳 India has uncovered its earliest known inscriptional record of Halley's Comet in a 15CE copper plate charter from the Vijayanagara Empire. The copper plate inscription is preserved at the Mallikarjunaswamy Temple in Srisailam, Andhra Pradesh. It was identified during the detailed editing of a set of 21 unpublished copper plate charters (comprising 78 leaves) held by the temple authorities.
🇮🇳 Dr. K. Munirathnam Reddy, Director of the Epigraphy Branch at the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), announced the find in June 2025. The inscription is written in Sanskrit using the Nagari script.
□ Date: Śaka 1378, Dhātru Āshāḍha ba. 11 → Monday, June 28, 1456 CE.
□ Issuer: Vijayanagara ruler Mallikarjuna (or associated authority).
□ Purpose: A land grant (agrahāra) of the village Simgapura (in Kelajhasima of Hastinavati Vemṭhe) to a Vedic scholar named Limgaṇarya from Kaḍiyalapura (likely modern Kaḍiyapulanka in Kadapa district, Andhra Pradesh). The scholar was likely well-versed in astronomy.
🇮🇳 The grant was explicitly made in order to mitigate the great calamity believed to arise due to the appearance of a comet and the associated meteor shower. A key phrase reads the grant was made to pacify the calamities that might arise from the illuminating comet and meteor shower upon the king and his kingdom.
🇮🇳 This reference aligns perfectly with the well-documented 1456 apparition of Halley's Comet (1P/Halley). The comet was visible across Europe, Asia (including China and Kashmir), and other regions during the summer months. It was a spectacular and widely noted event, often interpreted as an omen of misfortune or calamity in medieval societies worldwide. The inscription’s timing and description of both the comet and a subsequent meteor shower match historical astronomical records of this return. While ancient and medieval Indian texts (such as the Rigveda, Atharvaveda, and Brihat Samhita) contain generic references to comets, this is the first confirmed epigraphical record tying a specific dated event to Halley’s Comet.
Let’s unearth the true depth of our history, one incredible story at a time. Join the journey to #KnowTheRealBharat
𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗔𝘀𝘁𝗿𝗼𝗹𝗼𝗴𝗲𝗿 𝗪𝗵𝗼 𝗧𝗶𝗺𝗲𝗱 𝗜𝗻𝗱𝗶𝗮'𝘀 𝗕𝗶𝗿𝘁𝗵
𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗡𝗶𝗴𝗵𝘁 𝗧𝘄𝗼 𝗔𝘀𝘁𝗿𝗼𝗹𝗼𝗴𝗲𝗿𝘀 𝗢𝘂𝘁𝗺𝗮𝗻𝗼𝗲𝘂𝘃𝗿𝗲𝗱 𝗮𝗻 𝗘𝗺𝗽𝗶𝗿𝗲
The British Empire is leaving India. They pick the date.
August 15. Final. Non-negotiable.
Two astrologers look at the chart and see a problem nobody in Whitehall thought to check.
𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗣𝗿𝗼𝗯𝗹𝗲𝗺
Pandit Hardeo Sharma Trivedi of Solan and Suryanarain Vyas of Ujjain tell Babu Rajendra Prasad, soon to be India's first President, the truth no one wants to hear:
August 15 is astrologically inauspicious. A nation born on a broken date inherits a broken chart.
But Mountbatten will not move the date.
𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗪𝗼𝗿𝗸𝗮𝗿𝗼𝘂𝗻𝗱
If the day cannot change, the hour still can.
Hardeoji does the math. Not once. Three times over.
◆ The Moon must sit in Pushya Nakshatra.. the Maha Nakshatra, the single most trusted placement for any Muhurta in the tradition
◆ The lagna must be Vrishabha.. fixed, grounded, built to hold weight for centuries, not collapse under it
◆ The moment must fall inside the Abhijeet Muhurta.. the narrow, most auspicious window the day offers
All three converge at exactly one point.
Midnight.
𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗠𝗼𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁
Nehru rises at the Constituent Assembly. The line that gets memorised in every school:
"At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom."
It was a Muhurta.
Jinnah swears in Pakistan under Mesha lagna, Moon afflicted, hours earlier. Within a year the country is at war internally. Within decades it fractures.
India holds. Democracy holds. The chart holds.
𝗪𝗵𝘆 𝗧𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗠𝗮𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘀 𝗡𝗼𝘄
This is not a fringe theory. Sir Woodrow Wyatt confirmed it in The Times, London, in 1988, defending Reagan for consulting astrologers by pointing out India herself was born on one.
Shri KN Rao, one of the most rigorous names in modern Jyotish, calls Hardeoji among the great mundane astrologers of independent India.
Hardeoji went on to found the Vishwavijay Panchang in Solan.. still one of the most respected Hindi almanacs in the country.
Note: This is an enhanced image of Shri Pandit Hardeo Sharma
#bharat #india #astrology #jyotish
In the UK, Police officers would have special "cop nights" run by the Pakistani rape gangs where they were allowed to gang rape grooming gang victims as a "Thankyou" for turning the other way.
Bring back capital punishment 😡
He used to r@pe his 3 daughters on regular basis
this time he was trying to r@pe his 4th , 6.5 yrs old daughter - but all 3 elder daughter cut his penn¡is.
This is from Keralam, no prizes for guessing their religion
@zoo_bear will fact check
Seven million dead. No harvest for two years. Shah Jahan ruled from the Red Fort while the Deccan turned into a cemetery—and the East India Company was still twenty years from real power in India.
The famine lasted from 1630 to 1632. It swept through the Deccan, Gujarat, and Khandesh—three of the wealthiest regions under Mughal control.
Contemporary accounts recorded scenes that belong in the darkest chapters of human history: cannibalism in the streets, entire cities abandoned, corpses left unburied because there was no one left with the strength to bury them.
This was not a British famine. Not a colonial famine. Not an East India Company famine. This was a Mughal famine. Shah Jahan sat on the throne in Agra. The Peacock Throne. The same emperor who would build the Taj Mahal sat at the centre of an empire watching millions of his subjects starve to death.
The Company had trading posts at Surat and a few coastal footholds—nothing more. The British conquest of India was still a century away. The men who would win Plassey in 1757 had not yet been born.
Two monsoons failed. The rains that fed the subcontinent's harvest simply did not come. Crops withered. Grain stores emptied. Prices spiked beyond what any peasant could pay. The Mughal administrative system—impressive on paper, vast in scope—could not move food from surplus regions to starving ones fast enough. Or perhaps it did not try.
Contemporary writers recorded the horror but the empire's response remains almost invisible in the historical record.
The death toll may have reached seven million. Some estimates go higher. The exact number is unknowable—record-keeping in rural India was patchy, and in a famine of this scale, who was left to count?
What we do know is that entire districts were depopulated. Villages that had stood for centuries were abandoned and never resettled. The demographic wound took decades to heal.
And then history forgot.
Not immediately. The famine was recorded by European travellers, by Mughal court chroniclers, by merchants who saw the devastation firsthand. But it faded. It did not fit the narrative that took hold in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries—the narrative that famine came to India with colonial rule, that starvation was a uniquely British import, that the subcontinent had known only plenty before the Company arrived. That narrative is tidy. It is emotionally satisfying. It is also wrong.
India knew famine long before British administration. The Deccan famine of 1630–32 was neither the first nor the last. The Mughal Empire presided over a system in which millions could starve while the court built monuments. That does not make the later British famines—Bengal in 1770, or the horror of 1943—any less real or any less damning. But it does make the history more complicated than the stories we tell ourselves.
The full record survived. The contemporary accounts are still there, in archives, in the writings of travellers and merchants who saw the Deccan in 1631 and recorded what they found. But the famine itself dropped out of popular memory. It became a footnote.
An inconvenient detail. A chapter that did not serve the broader argument and so was quietly shelved.
Shah Jahan completed the Taj Mahal in 1653. It took twenty-two years and twenty thousand workers. It is one of the wonders of the world. He built it while the memory of seven million dead was still fresh. The Deccan had not yet recovered. The villages were still empty.
History is not a morality play. It is not a story with clear villains and virtuous victims. It is a record of what happened—complicated, contradictory, and often brutal in ways that resist easy narratives. The famine of 1630–32 happened. Millions died. The Mughal Empire could not save them, or chose not to. And the East India Company was nowhere near.
Police rupture the farmer's son's testicles after he complains about the bribe in India.
The farmer’s son was called to Govardhan police station and brutally kicked in the private parts by the chowki incharge after he filed a complaint on the CM portal about a ₹20,000 bribe demand.
A Mother is fighting for JUSTICE for her 10 Year Daughter for 10 months now💔
In Presidium school, sector 31, Noida a 10 year old Girl child has found dead, and SEDATIVES found in her organs, no explanation..no action..no FIR for 23 days..this mother is fighting alone with whole system.
>WHO GAVE SEDATIVE?
>REPORT HIDDEN FOR MONTHS
>16 CCTV OF SCHOOL NOT WORKING >NO ARRESTS IN TEN MONTHS?
@Uppolice@myogiadityanath Please Help the mother & family🙏