Most fucked up thing in India: Hindus are always collateral damage.
1985-1995: Thousands of Hindus systematically killed in Punjab by Khalistanis.
Yet no one talks about it.
Worse so-called 'human rights activists' supported that terror movement. How can you back killers and still call yourself a human rights activist?
Selective outrage = hypocrisy.
Just a small list of Khalistani Terrorism
Air India 182 Bombing
Dhilwan Bus Massacre
Gobindgarh Bus Massacre
1984 Train Massacre
Punjab Violence Jan 1984
Moga Killings
New Delhi Blasts
Dresi Ground Killings
Khudda Bus Massacre
Delhi Birthday Party Killings
Lalru Bus Massacre
Haryana Bus Massacre
Geeta Bhawan Massacre
Geeta Bhawan Massacre
Delhi Diwali Killings
Kahri Sarai Massacre
Punjab Killings
Amritsar-Ludhiana Killings
Kharar Killings
Punjab & Haryana Blasts
Rural Asal Massacre
Moga RSS Killings
Thapar College Massacre
Abohar Killings
1991 Punjab Killings
Baranala Killings
Can you share it please !!
@AdityaRajKaul To the film’s credit, it partially acknowledges that a few policemen took advantage of the chaos & did crimes. However, this is only mentioned and not shown. What’s shown is mostly black and white. Since both sides of the argument are valid, that balance is missing here.
On the debate sparked by ‘Satluj’, I see many people here asking “why Hindus have never managed to align themselves politically in Punjab?!”.
As a Punjabi Hindu I feel this is because we have never managed to see Sikhs as separate from us. We have never really understood why we have been targeted and killed by Khalistanis.
Disputes over state boundaries, river water sharing, language…were these kind of petty reasons enough to tear the blood bond that Punjabi Hindus and Sikhs shared for centuries and start a lame separatist movement?! Was it not obvious that the country’s only martial community was being weaponised against itself by vested interests?!
Is it fair to blame all Hindus for the heinous crimes of 1984 for which only one political party was responsible?!
Is it fair to bury the thousands of stories of violence and rape by Khalistanis before 1984?!
To me, the widening rift between Hindus and Sikhs is a source of personal anguish.
A Sikh brother once said to me, “Hindus and Sikhs are like a finger and its nail: They are inseparable.”
Praying that all Punjabis can see past their anger, something which they are prone to, to find love and brotherhood again, which they are known for.
🙏🏽🤍
I grew up in Punjab during the brutal years of militancy. I remember reading newspaper headlines about buses being stopped and innocent passengers being pulled out and killed. I also remember accounts of young men being picked up, detained and tortured, despite having nothing to do with the movement. Including from my village.
Those memories are precisely why I don’t believe we should become so uncomfortable with difficult chapters of our history that we stop telling stories about them.
@GulPanag My father, who is from Mumbai, was a medical rep in Chandigarh and narrowly missed being killed when a bus crossing his was stopped instead and Hindus were singled out in a field and shot dead. He decided to move back home after that even though he wanted us to settle down there.
@BDUTT@kbssidhu1961@sushantsareen@gurinipspb@kushal_mehra My father who was a medical rep, narrowly missed being killed by Khalistanis in the late 80’s when they chose to stop the bus travelling in the opposite direction of his bus, lined up the Hindus in a field and shot them. It got so bad later that he decided to move back to Mumbai.
@EndymionYT Because they would be pummelled in Greece, that’s why. Having said that, I don’t think they are going to fare any better in Mumbai either. We don’t appreciate this woke nonsense either.
Fascinating mouse experiment from the 1960s reveals why so many people are single and men stopped trying.
Humanity should pay serious attention to the results of this experiment.
@TheRanaSanga Honestly, Aditya Chopra is overhyped. He inherited an empire and then repackaged previously used Indian movie concepts back to an Indian audience that had minimal exposure to world cinema, undeservedly being hailed as a cinematic genius for doing so. Classic trial room effect.
@rootofall3vil You know, this is such a western media playbook, the idea of creating a false equivalence to cover up mediocrity. In this case, instead of India and Pakistan, the comparison is between a realistic spy movie with some stylising versus an outright over the top mediocre movie.
@tanejamainhoon The general public is too connected and aware to not notice your selective bias here. Getting caught accidentally is part of an agent’s life. For the people you are trying to tower over, why don’t you compare realistic gun battles versus dodging bullets like a superhero?
@RealAtlasX Direction and production team. Christopher Nolan and his team are the guiding light behind DNEG’s use of CGI and its integration with the production design and photography principles of IMAX quality.
@mynerdyhome I remember how he was trying to force down the elseworld delegation onto the DCEU last year when Disney’s Superman was released. He said he couldn’t relate to Wonder Woman in her movie. 😂
@Stunt_ManMik3 I remember his nonsense with these Reel Rejects people before and during last year’s Disney style Superman where they were putting out reactions to DCEU movies and force feeding the else worlds narrative on their subscribers. Shill is an understatement.