@carlwheless Bos indicus cattle ( Zebu or humped cattle, as Brahman and Nellore) are considered inferior for premium meat compared to Bos taurus breeds (like Angus or Hereford) because they genetically produce meat that is significantly tougher, less marbled, and highly variable in texture.
@carlwheless Vast majority of the beef eaten in the US is Bos Taurus, breeds like Angus, Hereford, and Charolais.
Whereas, Hindus worship Bos Indicus (especially cow, as a sacred symbol of life, motherhood, and non-violence)
So, your position will likely be acceptable to many, who knows.
@martinmrmar Step 1: Join the center, It will create a triangle of side 9,10,11 units.
Step 2: Find the area of triangle(in step 1) using Herons Forumla.
Step 3 : Find each angle of Triangle using Cosine Rule.
Step 4: Now find the area of 3 sectors that are created in each circle on .....
@farzlicioustahe Was that Beula or Behula or Bela? I am aware of the name Beula from some Jewish community from Kerala though there were Jews who indeed came to Calcutta and adopted Bengali, Farsi & English as language, but that name is very uncommon. On contrary,Behula and Bela was very common.
hey @grok
based on my tweets history state -
what is my physical age?
what is my mental age?
what is my IQ?
what is my EQ?
what is my ideal profession?
🚨Another Hindu has been killed in Habiganj District, Bangladesh.🚨
Kamdev Das, a Hindu youth, was lynched and murdered by Islamist radicals in Bodolpur village, under Ajmeriganj Upazila.
Say it clearly:
Hindus are being hunted for their identity.
This is not “communal tension.”
This is not “mob violence.”
This is targeted religious persecution.
Each killing follows the same script:
identify the Hindu → isolate → terrorise → kill → silence follows.
When the victims are Hindu and the response is muted,
impunity becomes policy and murder becomes precedent.
This is not Bangladesh’s internal matter anymore. It is a human-rights emergency unfolding in plain sight.
@UN@MEAIndia@bdhc_delhi@bdhc_kolkata
#JusticeForKamdevDas
#HindusUnderAttack
#Bangladesh
#StopHinduPersecution #HinduLivesMatter
AMRIT AFTER DEEPU.
Another mob lynching in Bangladesh and yet another Hindu life lost. Amrit Mandal (29) was beaten to death by a mob in Rajbari’s Pangsha area, barely days after Dipu Chandra Das. Allegations were made, no trial held. The Islamist mob is judge, jury, executioner and executive.
Another night of terror. Another Hindu village reduced to ashes in West Banik Para, Chittagong, Bangladesh.
The world’s response to Bangladeshi Hindus:
S I L E N C E. #SaveBangladeshiHindus
In Rauzan, Chittagong, barbaric Muslims locked the doors of Hindu homes from the outside, poured petrol, and set them on fire. Houses were burned to ashes. The Hindus managed to escape their homes with great difficulty and saved their lives. On what hope will they rebuild their homes again? Will Yunus take action against the Hindu-hating barbaric Muslims? Will he provide compensation to the Hindus? Or will he ignore it because this news has not spread abroad? Will he let Hindus burn to death?
"Acknowledging rising Hinduphobia’: 1st ever US university to recognise Hindu Heritage Month."
@FinancialXpress writes about the win at @UCBerkeley following the year-long push by CoHNA Youth Action Network.
https://t.co/9hjZYUar0h
In Lakshmipur, Jamaat–Shibir locked a house, poured petrol, and set it on fire—killing a 7-year-old child trapped inside. After #DipuChandraDas was burned alive in public, now a child is murdered the same way. Extremist terror is spreading in Bangladesh, enabled by the Yunus government’s silence.
#BangladeshCrisis #Bangladesh
#JusticeForDipuChandraDas
Dalits in India need to reflect on this:
Dipu Chandra Das, who was lynched and burnt alive by Islamists in Bangladesh, was a Dalit. Almost all victims of such targeted violence in both Bangladesh and Pakistan are Dalits.
Yet, voices that claim to represent Dalits, self-styled Dalit leaders, influencers, and neo-Ambedkarite activists, are largely silent on these atrocities. Their engagement is selective. The focus remains inward, amplifying divisions within Hindu society and encouraging hostility among communities, a strategy that sustains their political relevance, visibility, and influence.
In contrast, the people who consistently raise concern and extend solidarity are ordinary Hindus across castes, who see Dalits not as a political tool but as brothers and sisters facing real persecution beyond India’s borders.
I hope you wake up to notice the pattern.