One moment, you call them your partners in farming.
You depend on them to plough your fields, carry your burdens, and work tirelessly under the scorching sun. They help grow the food that reaches our tables. They give their strength, their sweat, and often their entire lives in service to humans.
And then, the moment they become exhausted and collapse from fatigue, pain, or weakness, they are beaten mercilessly.
This heartbreaking bull collapsed while working in the field, yet instead of receiving compassion, he was met with blows and cruelty.
Imagine working until your body gives up, only to be punished for being unable to continue.
These gentle souls cannot speak. They cannot cry for help. They cannot tell us how much pain they are in. All they can do is silently endure.
For generations, animals have been used for agricultural work, but incidents like these force us to ask a difficult question: how much longer should animals be made to bear such suffering?
Far too many working animals are pushed beyond their limits, denied adequate rest, proper medical care, and basic kindness. Many spend their lives working endless hours, only to be treated as tools instead of living, feeling beings.
This is not discipline.
This is not farming.
This is cruelty.
No animal deserves to be beaten for being tired.
No animal deserves to suffer because humans lack patience and compassion.
The pain in this bull's eyes is heartbreaking. We must do better. We must remember that these animals are not machines. They are living beings capable of fear, pain, exhaustion, and suffering.
Compassion is the least we owe them.
#AnimalAbuse
Stop asking her stupid questions like:
“What’s your favourite colour?”
" Which is your favourite food"
" How many are you in your family"
Here are 20 powerful questions that separate you from every other guy.....
@sil_vee_yah Im a Wedding Planner based in India. The bride and groom usually pay for the flights and accomodation and even for airport transfers. All meals and activities are fully paid. They get gifts while coming back. And the weddings we do are big fat luxury ones.
A restaurant owner shared his 1-week income data from online food delivery platforms.
- Platform for Restaurants
A = Order value, GST, and discounts
C = Delivery charges and other basic fees, commissions paid by restaurants
D = Tax paid by the restaurant to Zomato
E = Ads run to get orders
F = Ingredients purchased
- Platform for Customers
Platform fees, delivery fees, packaging fees, rain fees, GST
Food delivery platforms are exploiting customers, restaurants, and gig workers. If you don't run ads, you don’t get many orders.
Business is yours, but these platforms are controlling it.
Mika Singh humbly appeals to the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India to kindly consider refraining from any actions that may adversely affect the welfare of dogs.
I respectfully submit that I have sufficient land at my disposal and am fully prepared to donate 10 acres of land exclusively for the care, shelter, and welfare of dogs. My only request is support in terms of proper manpower and caretakers who can responsibly look after these animals.
I am willing to provide the land for the construction of shelters and for all initiatives aimed at ensuring the safety, health, and well-being of dogs.
I run a desert shop, we are available on zomato and Swiggy.
For 12 orders Customer item total is ₹4,047
We gave discount which is already ₹562 (100% restaurants bare this from their pocket)
Then zomato charges 24% commission + 18% gst on this 24% commission + they charge ₹15 delivery fee for orders at 4-6km and ₹35 delivery fee on orders above 6km delivery + gst on this.
This is not all you need to run ads in zomato to get orders. We end up spending minimum ₹1,000 per week.
After factoring in all this we loose almost 50% .
@NalinisKitchen if you need the same price in the restaurant and aswell on zomato, that isn’t going to be possible. Better go to restaurant and pickup the food for yourself. If you want convenience, you have to bear the charges.
Most people in India don’t know this…
but there is a completely legal way to drive a brand new Creta EV for almost free.
Yes, free. And people have been using this trick for years.
Here is how it works.
Step 1
Do not buy the EV in your own name. Buy it in your company’s name on a loan.
Step 2
Put only 4 lakh as down payment.
Take the 16 lakh you would have spent upfront and invest it in mutual funds at around 12 percent returns.
Step 3
Since it is an EV, your company can claim 40 percent depreciation every year plus the interest paid to the bank.
In 5 years, that is around 22.5 lakh written off the books saving nearly 6 lakh in taxes.
Step 4
After 5 years, the car’s book value drops to about 1.5 lakh.
Your company sells it to you at that book value.
This is completely legal and fully audit proof.
Step 5
You now own it personally.
Sell it in the open market for around 10 lakh.
The gains are tax free because it is now your personal asset.
Meanwhile, the 16 lakh investment has grown to about 28 lakh.
Even after interest and inflation, that is still a profit of around 4 lakh.
Add the 10 lakh resale.
Add the 6 lakh tax savings.
Across 5 years you practically drove that Creta EV for free.
Genius tax planning or a trick your CA never told you?
Follow @AshishMeher7 for more such useful money saving updates.
@NalinisKitchen@SEBI_India It isn’t accurate to conclude that the company’s market valuation was objectively ₹8,700 crore in July and then it “jumped” to ₹70,000 crore.The ₹8,700 crore figure seems derived from a low-percentage share-buy-back with special terms, rather than a full independent valuation