Shreyas Iyer lives on Mars or what? 🤡🤡 He isn’t aware of Vaibhav’s popularity. Peak jealousy!
Everyone knew about lobbying and politics in Indian cricket, but in Vaibhav’s case, they’re being so openly biased.
A pack of jokers scared of being overshadowed by a kid.
श्रेयस अय्यर के हिसाब से वैभव सूर्यवंशी को इसलिए नहीं खेलाया क्यूंकि टी-20 वर्ल्ड कप में अच्छा खेलने वालों को कैसे बाहर बैठाते?
तो भाई पहले तो ख़ुद को बाहर बैठा दो क्यूँकि तुम तो उस टीम में थे भी नहीं।
और अभिषेक शर्मा ने एक आधी फिफ्टी छोड़कर पूरे टूर्नामेंट में क्या कमल किया था जरा वो भी बता दो।
सीधा बोलो कि सब हड़क गए हैं वैभव की पॉपुलैरिटी से
टी-20 के वर्ल्ड चैंपियंस आयरलैंड से 2-0 से हारकर लौट रहे हैं।
काहे भाई..
काहे कि अहंकारी टीम मैनेजमेंट ने हाल में IPL के प्लेयर ऑफ़ द टूर्नामेंट और श्रीलंका के ख़िलाफ़ दस दिन पहले रिकॉर्ड तोड़ पारी खेलने वाले वैभव सूर्यवंशी को तीन महीने पहले टी-20 वर्ल्ड कप में किसने क्या किया था ये देखकर बाहर बैठा दिया।
नए लड़के सूर्यांश को तो खेला लिया लेकिन वैभव से ओपनिंग कराकर अगर संजू सैमसन को 4 नंबर पर खेला लेते तो इज्जत ख़राब हो जाती।
वैसे और भी वजहें हैं हार की, ये इकलौती वजह नहीं है लेकिन ये ग़लत एटीट्यूड सबसे बड़ी वजह है हार की।
चार दिन में सब भूल जाएँगे। बपौती है, चलने दो।
गजबे है।
"I am Hindu, my wife is Hindu, our 2 children's are Hindu. And we eat BEEF."
Funny how these “I’m Hindu and I eat beef” propaganda videos always appear with the same agenda — normalize disrespect for Hindu traditions first, then slowly disconnect people from their roots, culture, and sacred values.
For centuries, invaders and conversion campaigns understood one thing clearly: if you weaken a community’s respect for its own traditions, the identity collapses from within. So yes, when someone turns sacred symbols into social media rebellion for applause, people have every right to question the motive behind it.
Proudly mocking a civilization’s deeply held sentiments and presenting it as “progress” is not bravery — it’s manufactured propaganda.
A tree cut from its roots may stand for a while — but not for long.
Confessions and realities
42M, 55LPA
I am a 42-year-old man with a senior job in IT. I have a house in Chennai, a supportive wife, and two children. On paper, everything about my life looks perfect. I have achieved all the things society says a man should achieve.
In my twenties, life felt different. I had friends to spend time with. We would hang out at Marina Beach and Besant Nagar beach, watch movies at Rohini, Udayam, and Kasi theatres, and ride around Mount Road on my RX100.
In my thirties, I had colleagues to talk with over tea breaks. We would discuss apartments, onsite trips, and share random stories about life and work.
But now, in my forties, life has turned into a quiet routine. My phone rarely rings for anything personal. Most calls are about office work, bank alerts, or someone from home asking me to pick up milk on the way back.
The loneliness of a man in his forties is unusual. I am not physically alone, but I often feel like a machine.
When I enter my home, I am simply “Appa.” I am the person who pays school fees, fixes the Wi-Fi, and handles repairs. My wife is busy with her work and the kids. My children are teenagers now, living in their own worlds and their own rooms. They love me, but they mostly see me as the person who provides comfort and stability. They no longer see me as an individual.
At the office, I am the senior person. I am expected to have all the answers. I cannot tell my team that I feel tired. I cannot tell my boss that I sometimes struggle to keep up with new technologies. I must appear confident and strong, even when I quietly worry about the future.
Sometimes I drive home slowly from work just to spend a few extra minutes in the car. I listen to songs from my college days.
For those fifteen minutes, I am not a manager or a father. I am simply myself again.
I realize that I have not had a real conversation about my feelings with anyone in years.
My old friends now exist mostly as names on WhatsApp. We send “Happy Birthday” or “Congratulations” messages, but rarely talk. When we meet at weddings, our conversations revolve around our children’s grades or the cars we drive. We never talk about what we actually feel.
The hardest part is that I cannot even complain. If I tell my family that I feel lonely, they look confused and say, “But we are all here with you.”
They do not understand that a person can be surrounded by people and still feel like they are on a desert island.
Society teaches men that if they provide money and security, they have succeeded in life.
But no one teaches us how to deal with the silence that comes with it.
I have built a beautiful life for everyone around me, but sometimes it feels like there is no space left for me inside it.
And maybe… this is what life in your forties feels like.
Pakistan’s contribution to Global Peace:
1. Mumbai 26/11 Attacks 2008
2. Pahalgam Terror Attack 2025
3. Pulwama Terror Attack 2019
4. Uri Terror Attack 2016
5. Nagrota Attack 2016
6. Pathankot Terror Attack 2016
7. Indian Parliament Attack 2001
Never Forget.
Never Forgive.
His name is Sanjiv Chaturvedi.
IFS 2002 batch. Engineer from MNNIT Allahabad.
In Haryana he exposed fake plantation schemes. Illegal tree felling. Misuse of government funds.
He was transferred 12 times in 7 years.
In 2012 he became Chief Vigilance Officer at AIIMS Delhi.
In two years he investigated 200 corruption cases.
Rs 3,750 crore irregularity in campus expansion. Fake medicines being sold inside hospital premises. Corrupt officials at every level.
CBI cases were registered against senior bureaucrats.
In August 2014 he was transferred out of AIIMS.
The health minister who transferred him later became party president of the ruling party.
In 2015 he won the Ramon Magsaysay Award.
He donated the entire prize money to AIIMS for treatment of poor patients.
AIIMS returned his cheque.
He has been in non-field postings for 9 years since then.
16 judges have recused themselves from hearing his cases.
No government in India wants him posted in their state.
That is how you know he is doing his job right.
His name was Manjunath Shanmugam.
He was an IIM Lucknow graduate.
He got a job with Indian Oil Corporation as a sales officer.
His territory was Uttar Pradesh.
He found that petrol pump dealers were adulterating fuel and cheating customers.
He reported it. He sealed the pumps.
On November 19 2005 a petrol pump owner shot him dead outside his office.
He was 27 years old.
The killers were convicted. Sentenced to life imprisonment.
His parents did not get compensation for 15 years.
His college created the Manjunath Shanmugam Trust in his name to fight corruption.
Some men die because they refused to look the other way.
India forgets them too quickly.
CASE STATUS UPDATE 🚔
Earlier complaint: Ball going missing.
New complaint: Entire batting lineup going missing.
Our assessment: This is not a law & order problem.
This is Bumrah. 🎯🇮🇳
#INDvNZ#T20WorldCup2026Final
~50 crore Indians are watching cricket today.
Semi-final.
T20 World Cup.
New Zealand vs South Africa.
14.4 crore on streaming alone.
Tomorrow?
India vs England.
Wankhede. Mumbai.
That number will triple.
But yes.
Tell me again.
India has "huge problems."
India has "Air Problem."
India has a "Compromised PM."
Meanwhile, let's check on the rest of the world.
Middle East?
On fire.
Ukraine?
Still burning.
America?
Its politicians are busy explaining why they were friends with Epstein.
China?
People aren't even allowed to whisper.
And their own leaders are quietly fighting each other.
In silence. Ofcourse.
Because that's the only option.
But India.
India has PROBLEMS.
The same India where 70 crore people can sit in peace, open an app, and watch cricket.
Not ducking missiles.
Not rationing bread.
Not hide in Bunkers.
Not deleting WhatsApp before the government finds it.
Just... watching cricket.
This is what safety looks like.
And to everyone asking "where is our tax money going?"
It went into building a country stable enough for a handful of elites and liberals to sit comfortably and complain about it.
You're welcome.
The world is on fire.
India is on JioHotstar.
We did not stumble into this stability by accident.
Someone built it.
Someone is maintaining it.
Someone is paying for it.
That someone is you.
And the India you live in.
Respect it.
Or at least, stop embarrassing it.
#T20WorldCup #T20WC26 #NZvsSA