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The Speaker Once Said!
Since Speaker Rt. Hon. Anita Annet Among is currently trending for all different reasons, I have put together a list of controversial quotes/ remarks made during her speakership (2022 – present).
Disclaimer: Exact verbatim quotes are not always easy to find in public records, as many of the controversies revolve around her rulings, actions, or paraphrased comments rather than clear soundbites. However, these compiled 10 quotes have sparked significant public backlash, media attention, and opposition criticism. In some cases, outrage from religious leaders. Others were variously condemned as biased, blasphemous, or as normalising misconduct. They are among the most clearly documented, with credible news reports, context, rough timing, and an indication of why they were considered controversial.
1⃣ . On the Opposition (April 2026)
She was accused of being openly partisan and dismissive of multiparty democracy when she said, “In the 11th parliament, the opposition got swallowed. In the 12th parliament, it is going to be walloped. Not swallowing, because when you wallop, it will not even come out.”
2⃣ . Linking the Opposition to “Evil” Homosexuality (November 2025)
Critics said she was weaponising the Anti-Homosexuality Act for political ends and equating an opposition party with “evil.” She stated, “For us, we are saying you would rather be in a bus (NRM) which delivers you to the next destination than being in an umbrella (NUP) which is covering evil, because the evil we are talking about in that umbrella is homosexuality.”
3⃣. On Corruption (widely cited 2024–2025)
She remarked that “corruption is like a child who eats and brings home.” The Uganda Law Society and sections of the public condemned this as a way of normalising graft at a time when Parliament was embroiled in the iron sheets and other scandals. Many saw it as downplaying serious corruption allegations involving her and the institution she leads.
4⃣. Equating Museveni and Muhoozi to the Trinity (June 8, 2025)
During a public appearance, she said, “We believe in the Trinity. We believe in God the Father, and God the Father is President Museveni. God the Son is MK (Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba), and now you are the Holy Spirit. Therefore, vote for them.” Religious leaders and the opposition described this as blasphemous and cult-like, accusing her of deifying politicians and undermining the separation of church and state.
5⃣. On the Kyabazinga’s Polygamy (November 2023) While responding to criticism of the Kyabazinga of Busoga’s wedding over his having multiple wives, she said: “Who says a man should have only one woman?” The remark was taken by many as promoting polygamy and undermining Christian and monogamous values in a culturally sensitive debate.
6⃣. The “Bedroom” Metaphor to Norbert Mao (April 2026)
Speaking about cooperation with other political parties, she said: “We do cooperate with different political parties, but the cooperation does not mean that if we are cooperating, you come up to my bedroom … you remain in the compound … the bedroom this time round is the Speakership.” The comments were widely seen as rude, exclusionary and undignified coming from the Speaker towards a senior politician and ally. Norbert Mao publicly described the remarks as “bad manners,” further fuelling the drama around the speakership race.
7⃣ . To Musicians on the Copyright Bill (March 2026) After passage of the Copyright Bill, she told musicians, “You can now go and make noise that the bill has passed. And we are not ignorant.” Many artists and members of the public considered this arrogant and dismissive of musicians’ concerns, reinforcing the perception that Parliament was out of touch with the creative industry.
8⃣ . On MP Term Limits
In a discussion touching on constitutional matters, she said, “The Parliament of Uganda is a creature of the Constitution … I know when you come to Parliament, you will think of changing (MP term limits) from five to seven years like other countries.” This raised fears about tampering with the Constitution and extending political power, and attracted strong criticism from the opposition and legal experts.
9⃣ . Downplaying Rumours of Presidential Ambitions (2026)
Addressing speculation about her possible presidential ambitions, she said, “I am saying 2031, I am retiring from active politics. If my brother (Gen Muhoozi) is standing, or anybody that President Museveni shows me support, that is the person I will support.” The statement was read as an attempt to downplay talk of her own presidential plans while still signalling support for a continuation of the current political dynasty.
🔟. (Add any quote that you feel should be here.

#LongPostAlert I #ExpertOpinion
Dear @UgandaMediaCent, here is some free (but expensive-sounding) advice on patching your brand before attempting to fix ‘brand Uganda’.
To be honest. Right now, the centre feels more like a notice board. In a world where governments are building media ecosystems, the centre still issues statements and communicates as if it’s 2003. Here are 10 expert suggestions for how you can fix it.
1⃣. The centre has no identity, or does it? If it does, it’s a borrowed identity. The national emblem is not your logo in its entirety. It’s everyone’s logo. If you want to be taken seriously as a modern communications institution, build a distinct visual identity, including colours, fonts, templates, and brand elements (that can easily be associated with Uganda). You need to start thinking less of the “coat of arms” and be cleaner, sharper, and more recognisable. Even the central banks and revenue authorities have distinctive identities.
2⃣. What exactly are you as a media centre? Are you an NRM government mouthpiece? A national information hub? A media liaison? President Museveni’s personal media dissemination centre? Right now, you’re trying to be everything and, honestly, landing nowhere. Clear positioning builds trust. Without it, you are just another voice in an already noisy government choir.
3⃣. The media centre needs to communicate like humans. Like Ugandans! Not like circulars. Ugandans don’t read statements. A majority of today’s news consumers scroll on their phones. If your communication sounds like it was drafted by three government committees and approved by ten people, it’s already lost. Simplify. Be direct. Be understood. Also, your press releases are a little too frequent. Your press conferences are too long. You might need to review that.
4⃣. Your digital presence needs an urgent revamp. Let’s not sugarcoat it. Your digital platforms feel scattered, inconsistent, and underwhelming. Your website is not befitting. It’s ugly. You have a paltry 7K followers on Instagram, and your Instagram page looks like a content-dumping ground. You have no strong LinkedIn presence (you’re missing out on engaging policymakers, professionals, and global stakeholders). There is an unbranded YouTube channel for a certain Uganda Media Centre with a paltry 700 subscribers (they should at least be double that). Visibly, there is no real YouTube content strategy beyond numerous clips of press briefings. No Flickr presence, your visual assets and depository. No Tik Tok. Visual identity? Inconsistent at best. Meanwhile, globally, over 60% of people now consume news via social media. That means your first impression is digital, and right now, it’s your weakest entry.
Here is what you (could) need:
▪️A cohesive visual system across platforms.
▪️A content strategy, not just uploads. Invest in a studio setup and podcast format (owned and managed by Uganda Media Centre).
▪️Create some engaging formats featuring Ugandan voices from business, tourism, sports, and culture. Uganda is not short of interesting personalities for this. You have @wekesa_amos for tourism, and Joshua Baraka (currently a major export of Ugandan music). You have @rkabushenga et al. You can also partner with leading clean podcasters in the diaspora. The idea is for you to create a community. Please note that news narratives are no longer sourced; they are now scripted and produced.
5⃣. Not everything warrants a press briefing. The weekly podium-style media engagement format (with shabby banners in the background) needs to evolve. It’s tired and boring. Shouldn’t the media centre be a centre of excellence? Shouldn’t it be a brand custodian for the whole country? To break away from, or at least mix in with, these many press briefings, start by turning lesser-known policies into short videos, infographics, and explainers. That recent AI-generated video from filmmaker Loukman Ali was a weak attempt at content creation. For example, the recent copyright law that provoked debate among different stakeholders could have been fodder for the kind of content the media centre can break down for the public. What can you tell a 22-year-old Ugandan about it? If a Gen-Z doesn’t find your press briefings impressive in 30 seconds, you’ve lost an entire generation.
6⃣. Once again, media relations are not necessarily about hosting press conferences. Journalists don’t need an open-tent gathering every now and then; they need a partner. Build relationships. Visit newsrooms. Engage and cultivate media influencers. Recognise them monthly. Rethink the idea of media awards. Blogger awards. The most influential TikToker or YouTuber. Work with credible digital voices. Better yet, train and empower emerging media creators. If you don’t shape the narrative ecosystem, the naysayers will, and they already are.
7⃣. How ready are you for crisis communication? Uganda’s PR challenge is not breaking news, and we all know what is missing. ‘Bad news from Uganda’ is beginning to seem normal. The centre needs structured responses, including up-to-date fact sheets, rapid-response messaging, and consistent alignment among spokespersons. Recently, we were in a crisis over news that Uganda would send troops to Iran to defend Israel. This was triggered by X tweets from top officials. A Ugandan UN ambassador responded differently. A foreign affairs official responded differently. A friend of the top official involved in the debacle responded as well, differently. Uganda Media Centre didn’t pronounce itself on the matter. The centre was silent. The silence on such issues creates confusion and erodes reputation.
8⃣. Too many voices, no single message! With Uganda’s PR and communications today, the Uganda Police say one thing, the parliament’s spokesperson says another, the judiciary adds spice, and the Minister of Youth voices yet another opinion. The result? Confusion and, most times, global embarrassment. The Uganda Media Centre should coordinate messaging rather than compete with it.
9⃣. Not All Audiences Are the Same (And that’s the point). Gen Z, foreign investors, foreign diplomats, and foreign media are all different. And yet the Media Centre should be designed to speak to all of them using different tones. How does one respond to an article in The Economist, a professor at Harvard, a would-be Chinese investor, or a disgruntled youth in the Middle East? Segment your communication. Tailor your tone.
🔟. Lastly, the big question is: Who trusts you?
Have you ever measured your credibility? The Uganda Media Centre needs to carry out surveys and perception audits, gather feedback loops (from the Ugandans it serves), and, from this, build thought leadership by publishing insights, issuing newsletters, hosting experts, inviting scholars, and creating a network of credible voices tied to its platform.
This article is originally published on the Business Insights Africa I @Afro_Insights website here [link] https://t.co/SNHHPlvydn
#BrandUganda
![kezio_musoke's tweet photo. #LongPostAlert I #ExpertOpinion
Dear @UgandaMediaCent, here is some free (but expensive-sounding) advice on patching your brand before attempting to fix ‘brand Uganda’.
To be honest. Right now, the centre feels more like a notice board. In a world where governments are building media ecosystems, the centre still issues statements and communicates as if it’s 2003. Here are 10 expert suggestions for how you can fix it.
1⃣. The centre has no identity, or does it? If it does, it’s a borrowed identity. The national emblem is not your logo in its entirety. It’s everyone’s logo. If you want to be taken seriously as a modern communications institution, build a distinct visual identity, including colours, fonts, templates, and brand elements (that can easily be associated with Uganda). You need to start thinking less of the “coat of arms” and be cleaner, sharper, and more recognisable. Even the central banks and revenue authorities have distinctive identities.
2⃣. What exactly are you as a media centre? Are you an NRM government mouthpiece? A national information hub? A media liaison? President Museveni’s personal media dissemination centre? Right now, you’re trying to be everything and, honestly, landing nowhere. Clear positioning builds trust. Without it, you are just another voice in an already noisy government choir.
3⃣. The media centre needs to communicate like humans. Like Ugandans! Not like circulars. Ugandans don’t read statements. A majority of today’s news consumers scroll on their phones. If your communication sounds like it was drafted by three government committees and approved by ten people, it’s already lost. Simplify. Be direct. Be understood. Also, your press releases are a little too frequent. Your press conferences are too long. You might need to review that.
4⃣. Your digital presence needs an urgent revamp. Let’s not sugarcoat it. Your digital platforms feel scattered, inconsistent, and underwhelming. Your website is not befitting. It’s ugly. You have a paltry 7K followers on Instagram, and your Instagram page looks like a content-dumping ground. You have no strong LinkedIn presence (you’re missing out on engaging policymakers, professionals, and global stakeholders). There is an unbranded YouTube channel for a certain Uganda Media Centre with a paltry 700 subscribers (they should at least be double that). Visibly, there is no real YouTube content strategy beyond numerous clips of press briefings. No Flickr presence, your visual assets and depository. No Tik Tok. Visual identity? Inconsistent at best. Meanwhile, globally, over 60% of people now consume news via social media. That means your first impression is digital, and right now, it’s your weakest entry.
Here is what you (could) need:
▪️A cohesive visual system across platforms.
▪️A content strategy, not just uploads. Invest in a studio setup and podcast format (owned and managed by Uganda Media Centre).
▪️Create some engaging formats featuring Ugandan voices from business, tourism, sports, and culture. Uganda is not short of interesting personalities for this. You have @wekesa_amos for tourism, and Joshua Baraka (currently a major export of Ugandan music). You have @rkabushenga et al. You can also partner with leading clean podcasters in the diaspora. The idea is for you to create a community. Please note that news narratives are no longer sourced; they are now scripted and produced.
5⃣. Not everything warrants a press briefing. The weekly podium-style media engagement format (with shabby banners in the background) needs to evolve. It’s tired and boring. Shouldn’t the media centre be a centre of excellence? Shouldn’t it be a brand custodian for the whole country? To break away from, or at least mix in with, these many press briefings, start by turning lesser-known policies into short videos, infographics, and explainers. That recent AI-generated video from filmmaker Loukman Ali was a weak attempt at content creation. For example, the recent copyright law that provoked debate among different stakeholders could have been fodder for the kind of content the media centre can break down for the public. What can you tell a 22-year-old Ugandan about it? If a Gen-Z doesn’t find your press briefings impressive in 30 seconds, you’ve lost an entire generation.
6⃣. Once again, media relations are not necessarily about hosting press conferences. Journalists don’t need an open-tent gathering every now and then; they need a partner. Build relationships. Visit newsrooms. Engage and cultivate media influencers. Recognise them monthly. Rethink the idea of media awards. Blogger awards. The most influential TikToker or YouTuber. Work with credible digital voices. Better yet, train and empower emerging media creators. If you don’t shape the narrative ecosystem, the naysayers will, and they already are.
7⃣. How ready are you for crisis communication? Uganda’s PR challenge is not breaking news, and we all know what is missing. ‘Bad news from Uganda’ is beginning to seem normal. The centre needs structured responses, including up-to-date fact sheets, rapid-response messaging, and consistent alignment among spokespersons. Recently, we were in a crisis over news that Uganda would send troops to Iran to defend Israel. This was triggered by X tweets from top officials. A Ugandan UN ambassador responded differently. A foreign affairs official responded differently. A friend of the top official involved in the debacle responded as well, differently. Uganda Media Centre didn’t pronounce itself on the matter. The centre was silent. The silence on such issues creates confusion and erodes reputation.
8⃣. Too many voices, no single message! With Uganda’s PR and communications today, the Uganda Police say one thing, the parliament’s spokesperson says another, the judiciary adds spice, and the Minister of Youth voices yet another opinion. The result? Confusion and, most times, global embarrassment. The Uganda Media Centre should coordinate messaging rather than compete with it.
9⃣. Not All Audiences Are the Same (And that’s the point). Gen Z, foreign investors, foreign diplomats, and foreign media are all different. And yet the Media Centre should be designed to speak to all of them using different tones. How does one respond to an article in The Economist, a professor at Harvard, a would-be Chinese investor, or a disgruntled youth in the Middle East? Segment your communication. Tailor your tone.
🔟. Lastly, the big question is: Who trusts you?
Have you ever measured your credibility? The Uganda Media Centre needs to carry out surveys and perception audits, gather feedback loops (from the Ugandans it serves), and, from this, build thought leadership by publishing insights, issuing newsletters, hosting experts, inviting scholars, and creating a network of credible voices tied to its platform.
This article is originally published on the Business Insights Africa I @Afro_Insights website here [link] https://t.co/SNHHPlvydn
#BrandUganda](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/HGHPKJEWoAAnrk4.jpg)
#MondayMotivation #LongPostAlert
Today marks 90 days in my role as Marketing Manager (Head of Marketing) at @VAALUganda, and I can honestly say, it has been one of the most defining chapters of my professional journey so far.
Stepping into the world of luxury real estate has stretched me in ways I didn’t fully anticipate. It has demanded more depth, more intention, and a sharper understanding that marketing doesn’t just sell property; it shapes aspiration, experience, and legacy.
Over these past three months, I’ve had the privilege of leading across a dynamic ecosystem; from Advertising, Marketing, and Communications to working closely with an incredible team spanning the Call Centre, Creative and Design, Events and Partnerships, Performance Marketing, CRM, Digital, and beyond. Each function, each individual, has played a role in advancing the vision.
These 90 days have been a season of learning, building, and proving. A period where I’ve forged meaningful relationships with colleagues who challenge me, support me, and help turn daily objectives into tangible outcomes. Together, we’ve reshaped narratives, experimented boldly with campaigns, tracked and converted leads, crafted bespoke client experiences, and aligned our efforts with management expectations.
What stands out most for me is this: leadership is not about what you say, it’s about what you do. To manage is to act. To show up consistently. To move with the team, not ahead of them. To build together.
As I continue to grow into this role, I am deeply grateful:
- To my team here in Uganda, your resilience, creativity, and commitment do not go unnoticed.
- To the Group digital team, for your constant guidance and collaboration.
- To my fellow Marketing leads in Kenya and Ghana, for the shared insights and inspiration.
- And to management, for the trust, the vision, and the opportunity.
The journey is just beginning, and the ambition is clear.
If you’ve been thinking about stepping into luxury real estate, not just as a purchase, but as a strategic investment, I invite you to visit the Cadenza showhouse. Come and experience what we are building. At VAAL Real Estate Uganda, we are committed to helping you unlock returns that will propel your ambitions and bring your vision of success to life.
Here’s to growth, to bold moves, and to building something that truly lasts.
#LuxuryRealEstate

#LongPostAlert
An American senior asked me last week,
“Do you bill for 15 mins per call and message that you attend to
for patients after work hours or more?”
when he saw me attend calls and reply to msgs all evening after work.
I laughed and just chuckled “Haha I wish.”
Most days I feel privileged to have the opportunity of being able to touch lives of so many people and to make a difference at their lowest times.
I often wonder if I would be able to live so fully and truly if I was doing anything else in life for a living.
And then there are those rare days when I think humans don’t deserve any niceness. The nicer you are, the more people take advantage of you.
This morning started with my resident having to face bad behaviour by a highly entitled patient,
who has been attended to over whatsapp for weeks,
whose hand has been held while she needed to be counselled, cajoled, motivated by me and my entire team multiple times over,
and who settled with us after taking multiple opinions,
who also claims to be emotionally attached to us because of the strength and confidence we have instilled in her.
The conversation below between the patient’s husband and my resident and her and me is 👇🏻
I have been in practice long enough to understand the desperation and frustration a cancer patient may go through and do not let people’s behaviour change my treatment protocol or care provided,
but a young mind ( my resident) who is trying to help to the best of her capacity cannot be treated with such disrespect and lack of accountability, just because she is an easy target.
Patients in India should be aware that access to health is a basic birth right and not a privilege,
but access to a health care worker anytime of the day outside the hospital/ beyond their work hours is NOT a basic right but a genuine privilege.
Globally a patient is entitled to healthcare only when they reach the hospital emergency department or call for an ambulance or book an appointment with the doctor.
No country including India mandates the treating doctor to share their personal phone number with their patients.
Yet most of us ( Indian doctors) stretch ourselves too thin as we understand the anxiety and stress of a patient and make ourselves accessible,
and the fact that most patients still can reach out to either their doctor or their doctor’s team on phone calls/ msgs in private healthcare is proof of that.
A privilege should however be valued and not abused.
Today is world health day and this episode reminded me of the conversation I had with the American last week.
Do not take your health for granted.
And also do not take your health care provider for granted.
#AajKaGyaan #DiaryOfAnOncologist

#LongPostAlert
#DiaryOfAnOncologist
No reason is ever too small or too silly for being sad.
Worry, inconvenience, disappointment, heartbreak, setbacks can weigh on anyone, and each feeling deserves to be acknowledged, not dismissed.
But then life sends you a reminder.
A cancer caregiver, someone who has been spending countless hours in the hospital for his mother, then his wife, all while caring for a bedridden uncle…
Someone who, just five days ago, survived a massive heart attack himself…
Looks at you and says,
“You look tensed today… not the usual happy and smiling Dr. Mansi we are used to?”
And in that moment, you are left speechless, you suddenly see strength, grace, and resilience standing right in front of you!
It’s such a miracle how the people carrying the heaviest burdens are the very ones who remind us to pause, breathe, count our blessings, smile and LEARN from them! 🥹🫶🏻
#SuccessStory #LongPostAlert
Lata - "Bhaiya, humne poori history padhi. Usmein bandar se insaan ka banna, uska aag se saamna aur aag ka istemaal karna, wheel ka aavishkaar aur uska instemaal karna, Jesus Christ, Guru Teg Bahadur, Prophet Mohammad, ancient history, modern history, revolutions, Indian independence, Gandhi, Nehru, sabke baare mein padha, par kahin bhi Ram, Krishna ke baare mein nahin Likha tha. Fir log inke naam par ye sab kyon karte hain?"
Me - "Nahin pata ki main aapke is question ka jawaab dunga ya nahin, par aap zindagi mein kabhi fail nahin hongi."
Today, I take pride in sharing one of my biggest success stories with you all. It isn't about a new job, a new fat figured salary, a new venture or a project, a new home or a car or a new mountaineering summit. It's about bringing a change in someone's life.
At the beginning of the year 2019, I learned about life's harsh slaps given to the lady working as our domestic help. Her two daughter's untimely passed away without even touching their teenage. Another daughter was suffering from a severe intestine problem and was surviving with an external food bag hanging outside her body. The fourth one (Lata), called-off her marriage just a month before her wedding day due to the hefty dowry demand. The series of incidents shook me to the core, but I was happy to see Lata taking a stand against the dowry demand. I was also satisfied with Lata's decision as this was saving her from getting married in the early age of 16 only. Lata attended a school in some village only till grade 3 in the past. She didn't know how to read and write. The sudden series of grievous events in life gave birth to a new wish in her. She now saw a dream to study.
Lata knew that she doesn't know how to read and write and probably has just a few years in her hands before she will be again asked to get married, but wanted to study till grade 12 and stand with her head high. Learning about her wish, I chose to teach her for free and got her enrolled to sit for class 10th exams through an open board. While Lata had the challenge to learn from the core while continuing to assist her mother in her job, I'd a challenge to let her not feel weak during the journey to achieve her dream. I adjusted my daily schedule and started to teach her. She was taught online as well as offline depending on my availability. After two years of hard work for her to learn from basics to what was there in her books, Lata sat to write her annual exams in January 2021. I was extremely happy to see her passing her exams in first attempt scoring 63.2% in total.
This success then filled me with confidence to invest more of me in teaching the less fortunate and bringing a small change in the lives around us. I decided to continue to teach Lata and also her remaining sisters to make them proud & stand independent on their feet under my dream project "Tu Khwaab Saja" @TuKhwaabSajaa
This story inspired many and through a small change in someone else's life, atleast 16 other people wrote their success stories too. Lata is married now, and pursuing her graduation. Her sisters are on path of writing their success stories too. If this story inspires you too, feel free to step ahead and I'll be happy to assist you. Let's come together and write more success stories. Let's continue to light the lamps of knowledge. Let's invest in the stock that will continue to give high returns.
Disclaimer: The reference to Lata's question about the existence of Ram or Krishna isn't to hurt religious sentiments, rather to share the evolution of questions in our minds, as we study something with an interest.

#LongPostAlert
Air pollution, Active citizenry and us...
Living with Manavi has taught me a lot more as a citizen of this country than the civic and political science subjects I learned in school and college! As a parent committed to her daughter's well-being, I have tried to reduce health risks and practice active citizenry. However, abating air pollution isn't entirely in our hands... the judiciary, executive, and legislative have a huge role to play!
Lately, for us as a family, it's really about survival given the years of impact of breathing polluted air in Noida and #Gurgaon. We now fall in the "vulnerable category at most risk". Pollution levels aren't seasonal...it's a year-round lived experience. Manavi is 23, and I too stand impacted by long-term exposure.
Advocating for clean air and healthy environment makes you realize many don't have a voice - be it senior citizens or people with disability or caste or socio-economic backgrounds. If everyone could speak up, the world would be happier, cleaner, healthier, and more sustainable…
We citizens have been doing our part at home, society level, and city level to raise awareness on pollution issues and conserve resources. But what we have are leaders who don't want to be questioned and create a 'placebo effect' – that all is well. This is treacherous and one of the biggest constraining factors in achieving a clean environment. It's incumbent on political leaders to put in place policies and measures that promote community progress ( read HEALTH) , not tokenism!
Diwali reminds us – good will win over evil... darkness has to give way to light. As a citizen and parent, my wish and prayer are that the conscience awakens in our leaders and officers to guide millions of families to live in a healthier environment and prioritize health and well-being of all.
#Health #Life #AirPollution #DelhiNCR
@gupta_rekha @NayabSainiBJP @PrinSciAdvGoI @CAQM_Official @byadavbjp @kiranshaw @drsangitareddy
@HospitalsApollo @ficci_india @MoHFW_INDIA @NITIAayog @csharyana @mohitgupta1962 @mariagorettiz @upasanakonidela @snehamordani @Ramkinkarsingh @raghav_chadha @preethareddy28 @KVishReddy @CBhattacharji @ShashiTharoor @JM_Scindia @DrAmbrishMithal @medanta @Arunesh73556467 @SauravDassss @Suhelseth @SupriyaShrinate @Kavita03348721 @priyanka23j @Warriormomsin @anandmahindra @anjanaomkashyap @hvgoenka @DrMariaNeira @vibharewal @vandymini @imVkohli @smritiirani @priyankagandhi @AnushkaSharma @ANI @talk2anuradha

Sadly many are suffering with the same situation and desperate helplessness.
@SethiRuchikaT
#FathersDay2025 | #LongPostAlert |Remembering My Father…
Warm wishes to everyone on this #FathersDay.
Today, my heart overflows with memories… of him. My father, my Bapi Moni.
I don’t remember the exact year, the date, or even how old I was: I was very little, but I do remember this: I was always his little one. The one he would hold close to his chest while I drifted to sleep. The one he would tell stories to: epic tales of Mahishasuramardini that I could recite fluently, word for word, just as he told them.
Every morning, we would walk hand in hand. When my school was near Hindustan Road, he would often come to pick me up. And the moment I saw him? My books, my bag - all forgotten. I would run. Straight into his arms. Hug him tight. And only then would I return for my things.
I remember once, in the dead of night, when my glass feeding bottle broke; it was Bapi who rushed out to get a new one. Not a second’s hesitation.
He read to me: poems, stories, novels. Made me fall in love with words. By the time I was in class five, he gave me a challenge: to memorize the entire Bhagavad Gita. His philosophy on education was simple but firm: Whatever the subject, master every page from cover to cover. That mindset shaped me more than I realized back then.
So many childhood memories revolve around him:
The twin parrots he bought me at the Rath’r Mela,
Playing "tiger-tiger" the night before Holi and accidentally hitting him with a pellet from a toy gun and passing him off,
And my birthday in '86 : sitting by the jetty near my uncle’s quarters in Haldia, my head resting on Bapi’s lap, the sun warming us as time quietly slipped away…
All of it : now, feels like a dream.
Sure, I complained to Maa when he was strict, but when he was harsh, it hurt deeply. Yet he never held back from sharpening any spark he saw in me. Whether it was studies, table tennis, cricket, or writing : he would find mentors, teachers, coaches - he made sure I had the tools.
Together we traveled across India and abroad. And above all, he was my friend. Especially in his later years, he loved sharing tales of his own childhood : growing up in the countryside, sailing down quiet canals at night, watching fireflies light up the darkness. “You’d have to see it,” he’d say. “Words can’t describe how divine it was.” And somehow, listening to him, I saw it too.
He had big dreams for me: some I’ve fulfilled, some still a work in progress, and some I may never reach.
But what I did receive - his love, his care, his unwavering warmth, I know few children are lucky enough to experience that. And for that, I am eternally grateful.
Bapi used to say: “You’ll understand a father’s love only when you become one.”
And now that I have my own son, Aaditya, I understand, deeply. Every moment with him echoes those words.
But the hardest part?
Neither my sister nor I were with him in his final moments. By the time we reached Kolkata, it was too late.
And here’s something strange, almost cruelly poetic…
Just a month or so before he passed, I had installed a new call recording app on my phone: one that saved every conversation automatically. But as memory filled up, I started deleting old recordings, including his.
Why? Because he was still around. I was talking to him every day.
I never thought…
Now my phone holds voices of clients, colleagues, acquaintances, but not his.
Not Bapi’s.
The man I thought would be my constant, my north star : he left quietly, gently slipping away from the bonds of this world, forever.
And now… only memories remain.
But what powerful, precious memories they are.
To all the fathers out there, and to all those remembering theirs today…
Hold them a little closer. Speak a little longer.
And never take their voice for granted. ❤️
#FathersDay #ForeverInMyHeart #Bapi #Baba #Daddy #Gratitude #LossAndLove #CherishThemWhileYouCan #MyFatherMyHero

#LongPostAlert
Despite him not being a fan of SRK,
it was amazing how he still knew,
that my face had no option but to instantly lit up with a smile when SRK songs were played.
I remember this incident from 2012 so vividly where I was quite low and upset about something and just getting inside the car when he had come to pick me up, and suddenly ‘Wanna Be My Chammak Challo’ blared out from the car speaker!
It was not even a favourite song of mine nor was it his type of song
but the comic timing of playing it was unbearably hilarious.
We burst out laughing and continued chuckling for the longest time after that.
I wish I could just preserve this memory and watch it in a pensieve like in Hogwart’s right now.
He had an SRK playlist on his music apps just for me for all our long drives, he would let me have some SRK time,
even when one of our biggest fights had been about SRK Vs Amir about Rab ne bana di Jodi vs Ghajini, both had released around the same time and we were defending our movies when in reality both were equally bad 🤣
I couldn’t recognise myself from this pic from our last vacay together 6 years ago,
then got on to the nostalgia train and couldn’t stop myself from journaling this!
#MemoriesBringBackYou
#GriefDiary
#Love #Grief #SRK

#LongPostAlert
Once VSO, Always @VSO_Intl !! I am back here briefly, in an advisory/ volunteering role supporting the global team putting together the Regional Health Promotion Conference (RHPC) 2025 in Nairobi, Kenya!
So this is a call for all health experts, practitioners, and enthusiasts - whether you are in the development sector or the corporate space - this is your invitation (and opportunity) to join the #Movement4 Universal Health Coverage (UHC).
At RHPC 2025 (18th-19th March, Safari Park Hotel), we will be convening regional leaders, innovators, influencers, and change-makers from across the region (East Africa inclusive) to showcase, learn, and shape the future of #HealthPromotion.
WHAT'S IN STORE?
✅ Bold discussions on UHC and #HealthPromotion.
✅ Regional best practices and success stories.
✅ Networking with policymakers, researchers et al
✅ Face-to-face interactions with partners
#RegisterNow (MPESA payment available) by signing up here:
https://t.co/5KwtfXZmqw
If you are interested in attending as a speaker, you can email our team at:
[email protected] with your proposed topic and a brief profile.
#RHPC2025
#UniversalHealthCoverage
#HealthPromotion
#HealthInnovations
#NetworkingOpportunity

#longpostalert
I seen this journey of painful divorce through a close friend of mine , its not easy .. the level of of mental pain and harassment , financially you get exhausted paying for those fees … there is always one person suffering most .. and other one just mocking the process and law .
It took almost 10 years for my friend to get a legal divorce , exhausting almost 12 lacs on proceeding and above all her father , a cancer patient waiting to get justice for his daughter and granddaughter who was never accepted by the biological her father . After 10 years of filing case , the fellow agreed to give divorce, when he was caught red handed by my friend getting married to someone else for an year and having a child with that lady, it was illegal what he did . That fellow was so stubborn about not giving divorce for 9 years just because he didn’t want to give a single penny to my friend and their daughter..for monthly allowances and alimony he left job on paper and filled his return to just 20 k pm from 2L pm .. transfer all his properties to parents name … anyhow when he got married for second wife, his lawyer asked him to settle and give divorce , yes my friend got some time for lifetime maintenance of her daughter (believe me this amount is not even 25 % what this lady claimed in atul’s case ) . But she got relieved from that mental illness .
It’s not about all women or all mens are wrong , gender could be either .., devil doesn’t have a gender specific identity.
Feeling sad for Atul , that judge , his wife failed as human … shame on them !!!
#JusticeForAtul
Following the #ccgeek trends. Here's our take for our cards used in 2024 and hopefully will continue through 2025.
P.S: This is not a recommendation or a push for referral. DYOR and choose cards that best suit your spending needs!
#longpostalert
1A. HDFC Bizblack:
IMHO, the best card in India. 16.5% reward rate on taxes, GST, Utilities, flights via MMT Mybiz and 10x on flights via smartbuy, minimal exclusions, what else can you ask for in a card. 4.3% regular reward rate (with milestone benefits).
1B. HDFC Bizpower:
Have this in the family. Use this for spends on my Google Ads account. 6% back on those spends. Solid card for anyone doing digital marketing via Google ads.
2. AMEX Plat travel:
"The 4L card" comes out of the pocket wherever AMEX is accepted. Using this at HP petrol pumps, paying taxes and online spends. As soon as I reach 4L, this goes back in the drawer. Can count on this card each year to earn 50k MR and 10k Taj vouchers.
3. Yes Marquee:
One of the best offerings from Yes bank in their current portfolio. 4.5% on online spends, that's where this card is used the most. Low forex fee compared to others in my wallet.
4. IDFC Vistara:
Got this right before the issuance stopped. Clubbed this with IDFC Rupay card and using that for UPI spends and earning AI miles and vouchers.
5. AMEX MRCC:
Comes out of the drawer once a month, complete monthly milestones and then a month long nap for these cards.
6. Plat Charge:
Upgraded Gold to Plat charge. Upgrade gave crazy value. Got 10K points to renew Gold -> Upgraded to Plat Charge with offer being 135k MR on old fee structure -> Fee refunded for Gold on a pro-rata basis. So essentially got 145k MR points + 10k Taj voucher for 60k + GST. Primary use case of the card - AMEX lounges, unlimited lounge access, 10X on Air India flights, and 15k voucher on 1L travel spends with AMEX travel desk. Will not renew though.
7. IndusInd Eazydiner Signature:
Use this card for those free movie tickets #IYKYK and dining discount on Eazydiner app. This card gives me benefits which are more than the annual fee and hence will be in my pocket for some time.
What I don't have:
1. I don't have any cashback cards in regular usage at the moment. Bullish on the miles and points game.
2. Zero forex card - as long as there is a 2%+ net positive reward rate I don't mind paying forex charges.
Other cards in the drawer (all LTF) - they will come out in case there's an offer:
1. ICICI Amazon Pay
2. ICICI Coral
3. ICICI Rubyx
4. Tata Neu Infinity
5. SBI BPCL
6. One card
7. Axis Samsung Infinite - 12k/24k card
8. Axis Neo
9. HDFC Mariott Bonvoy - free night each year
I also hold an AMEX US LTF card. This is used for tranfering MR points to US account and then to airlines at 1:1. Easily provides 30% more values to my MRs. Zero forex.
Another US card is Capital One Venture X. Great welcome offer, 12% miles on flight bookings and 24% miles on hotel bookings. Zero forex.
Closed this year:
1. Axis Atlas
2. SBI Cashback

#LongPostAlert
Till now I didn't talk about this topic because it wasn't serious enough. But this November 1st it crossed all limits. Few people campaigned for separate Tulunadu and Kalyana Karnataka states and few people also celebrated Black day. Their claim is that successive govts ignored their region and hence they deserve to get separated. Fair enough, I fully agree that govts ignored non-OMR regions completely and it's high time they get the development they deserve. Tulunadu was always cheated when it comes to state grants and govt support to the language and culture and we have every right to fight and ask for it.
BUT..
The thing I don't understand is how a separate state or Black day campaign will solve the issue ? Being from Tulunadu I will say it from my perspective ( NK people can add theirs). Our people/politicians even today couldn't get proper Blr-Mlr road connectivity and is it practically possible to have separate state or even if we have what is gonna achieve if the public representatives are of same calibre ? Moreover there is a big contribution of the people of Tulunadu too in the overall development of Bengaluru and you want to let go of such a place for nothing ? Tulunadu is a place which has natural geographical and demographic disadvantages ( due to Western Ghats and proximity to Kerala). Make a separate state, within the next 5 years Tulunadu will be converted to Byarinaadu and I don't have to say anything after that ( it's also true that majority of these separate state activists have links to Kerala for obvious reasons because no True Tuluva will want a separate state because we hardly think about these language issues).
Second thing is a BSY or SM Krishna govt with Karnataka will be more beneficial than a Nalin Kateel govt of Tulunadu. If the public representatives are good and people demand accountability development will automatically happen. This is proved in places like Mysore. Our people hardly come on streets for basic things like roads or Netravati rivers or jobs and you think they will come for revolutions like a separate state ? Someone who can't pass SSLC will he be able to get rank in CET ? Nobody on the ground wants a separate state. By posting such meaningless stuff you are only making a joke of yourself. People need to understand their strengths and weaknesses and by using their strength to their advantage and avoid the weaknesses they need to plan the road ahead. ಕೈಲಿ ಮೊಬೈಲ್ ಇದೆ, data pack ಇದೆ, time ಕೂಡ ಬೇಕಾದಷ್ಟು free ಇದೆ ಅಂತ Twitter ಲಿ ಬಂದು ಯದ್ವಾತದ್ವಾ tweet ಮಾಡೋದಲ್ಲ.
🚨#LongPostAlert: Today was a whirlwind of excitement @ManorSeniorHS during our 2nd round of parent and community member instructional power walks! ✨ Seeing so many engaged faces visiting classrooms to witness teaching and learning in action was simply electric!
Our parents and community members are now our official trend spotters, tasked with identifying #TrendsOfGreatness and #OpportunitiesForGrowth based on what they observed. Because let’s be real: #Compliance does NOT equal #Engagement!
We focused on three key areas today: (1) Economy of Language, (2) Student Engagement, and (3) Student Voice & Active Participation. Talk about a #rocksolidfoundation for learning!
Yes I value transparency—it’s what helps us all grow together! #ItsOkayToBeNosy about your child/children education! Looking forward to reading those “I Like…I Wonder Statements! 🤗 #YesIValueTransparency #MovingLearningForward #CommunityRocks
#ThanksAgainParents
#ThanksAgainCommunityMembers
#OurTeachersAreAmazing
#OurStudentsAreGeniuses🥰
Focus Areas Defined:
Economy of Language: This means using just the right words to explain ideas clearly and quickly. It’s like saying a lot with a little—getting your point across without extra words.
Student Engagement: This is when students are interested and excited about what they’re learning. You can tell when someone is engaged because they pay attention, ask questions, and join in activities.
Student Voice: This is when students share their thoughts, ideas, and feelings about what they’re learning. It’s important because everyone’s opinion matters, and it helps teachers understand what students need.
Active Participation: This means students are involved in their learning by doing things, like discussing, working with others, or answering questions. It’s not just sitting and listening; it’s being an active part of the classroom! @ManorISD @DrBentzMISD
#longpostalert🚨 PLEASE READ!
There was a highly coordinated effort to keep me off the Louisville Metro Council last year. People who sit in elected/appointed seats wrote letters, made calls, tried to influence the vote & even messed up the Democratic Nomination process. It had to be redone in my race. Good people who believe in participatory democracy reached out and helped me by telling me what happened and how to respond. I was able to hire a lawyer and appeal in time. The vote was in my favor and held up by the state party. I ran all 3 of my races for political offices as a lifelong Democrat. I serve on Louisville Metro Council now... with truth, integrity, respect, and the people's voice.
Nima asked for my help and I said yes because of what happened to me. I've watched State Representative Nima Kulkarni since she was elected as Kentucky's first Indian-American State Representative in 2018. She has undoubtedly served well, has been attentive to her constituents, introduced meaningful legislation. During the Kentucky Primary in May, she received 80% of the vote from the people in her district!
Let's send Nima Kulkarni back to Frankfort, Kentucky, by making sure she is the Democratic Nominee on the 🗳 ballot. After the recent decision to create a vacancy for the District 40 seat, she is eligible for the nomination process.
It's an open process with a tight window for all applicants. Like my process, there will be interviews and a vote to decide who represents the democrats. Nima Kulkarni is the best choice, and the people of her district have already chosen. Let's not confuse voters.
Show up for the process on Friday and share this information below so that everyone can be informed. Contact the Jefferson County Democratic Chair Logan Gatti with any questions here: [email protected] or [email protected]
* Ask those who are able to vote to be all in for Nima like we are for #KamalaHarris. #localpoliticsareeverything
Application Link for Vacancy here:
https://t.co/bmOX4M8qXp
#goodnightpost🌙 #voteyourvoice #sharingiscaring #ImallinforKamala #ImallinforNima

Pursuant to Article X, Section B2 of the Kentucky Democratic Party bylaws, we are convening the nominating committee of Legislative District 40 on Friday, August 30th at 5:30PM to interview applicants and nominate an individual 1/3
https://t.co/wl8pyiObJy
#LongPostAlert
To truly change our country, the focus should be on reforming institutions. If EACC can function, if judiciary can function, if the legislature can function, if government institutions can function, then we will truly have a chance for transformation. Constant chaos and disruptions do not work. You can’t protest your way to a job, you can’t protest your way to a good country.
The way things have been going, we are more likely to slip down into a failed state.
The push for transformation need a proper strategy. Occupy this and that do not work.
Here are my thoughts
1) The best way to change how leadership is done is from the inside. Organise and mobilize so that you can put the kind of people you want leading us.
2) Push for institutional reforms. Do not use chaos for this. LSK has shown support for the movement, use these lawyers to push for changes in a constitutional way. The US has shown us that with two successive chaotic presidencies, proper institutions make the country run.
3) Allow brilliant minds. Allow divergent views. The only way you know you have brilliant minds in your ranks is when you have divergent views. Echo chambers simply mean no one is thinking.
4) Do not be triggered easily by talk. If someone speaks to you in a way you don’t like and you react shows that you are easy to manipulate and anyone can choose how to manipulate you for their own selfish agenda.
5) settle on a 3-5 action items and have those implemented first. Change is a progressive and incremental process.
6) Avoid being guided by people who only know disruption, chaos and anarchy.
Finally, accept that there’s a lot we don’t know and in as much as we claim to have the answers to our problems, we could be terribly and utterly wrong. Remain humble.
#LongPostAlert #rahulgandhinextpmofindia #RahulGandhiVoiceOfIndia #resignAmitmalviya
𝗜𝗠𝗣𝗔𝗦𝗦𝗘 𝗨𝗣𝗗𝗔𝗧𝗘 𝗜𝗡 𝗗𝗘𝗟𝗛𝗜
1. Everyone including Modi is unsure of the swearing in tomorrow.
2. Chandrababu Naidu and Nitish Kumar do not want Amit Shah to become the Union Home Minister. They don't want to risk anything and would not want any police or other agencies being directly under Amit Shah.
In fact one of them doesn't want him in the Union Cabinet.
3. Naidu will not compromise on the Lok Sabha speaker's post because the two criminals have misused this position everywhere to break parties.
4. Chandrababu Naidu also wants the Union Finance Ministry so that all these raids and subsequent arrests etc are not misused to break away opposition political parties. His own arrest last year is fresh in his mind.
5. BJP is unwilling to part with four ministries that are part of national security - Home, Defence, Finance and External Affairs. Additionally, it doesn't want to give the position of the speaker. This rigidity is further fuelling speculation about Modi and Amit Shah's real intentions in future.
6. It seems BJP reached out to Nitish Kumar to mediate and was offered the position of Deputy Prime Minister for the job. It seems that's not going down well with Naidu as he sees this as a brazen attempt to drive a wedge between the two king makers.
7. Besides this, it seems Amit Shah and Yogi Adityanath almost came to blows while trying to put the UP's debacle blame on each other. The situation went almost out of hand when Yogi stormed out of the meeting and flew down to Lucknow. Amit Shah has reportedly held back his two deputies, Brajesh Pathak and Keshav Prasad Maurya, in Delhi for further discussion. The two deputies are basically Modi's men who were appointed to keep Yogi under watch and ward. Yogi was so infuriated that he called an emergency cabinet meeting even though the deputies were not there.
8. Meanwhile reports in Delhi about 7/8 BJP MPs switching sides in West Bengal has unnerved the Modi, Amit Shah, and Nadda. But none of them are able to firefight the emerging crisis in Bengal because they are ceased of the crisis in Delhi that's put spanner into Modi's immediate prospects of becoming the PM once again.
Overall the situation is dire for the BJP. Maharashtra has almost slipped out. Both NCP and Shiv Sena rebels are kind of waiting on the lines to be readmitted into their respective parties.
Shivraj Singh Chouhan who has been four full term Chief Minister and delivered all 29 Parliamentary seats and also removed as Chief Minister is sulking not in any hush hush manner.
Nitin Gadkari is openly disregarding the authority of Modi and Amit Shah. He was the only MP who did not rise to applaud Modi upon being announced as the PM candidate.
BJP party MPs are also pissed off. They were asked to assemble but were reduced to just headcount and nothing more. With the authority and command both taken a severe beating, both Modi and Amit Shah have never appeared this tentative and vulnerable.
Congress in the meantime, watching all this happening from the sidelines, has thrown in its towel into the ring. It seems it has sent feelers to Nitish Kumar for making him the Prime Minister and to Chandrababu Naidu to give the speaker's position. Besides, a generous package to both the states will be given under the special category status.
Extremely interesting times ahead until 6 PM tomorrow.
This way or another, snap polls look certain in India. And Modi's PMship has never looked so uncertain and tentative ever since 2014.
Tyrants, fascists, criminals et al anywhere and everywhere have a shelf life and an expiry date.
I'm not a journalist. This is a summary of my discussion with friends in the media in Delhi. And I am absolutely not ashamed or unhappy about all this. Rather I'm happy and proud that democracy is back in vogue and our Constitution is inviolable for the time being and can't be harmed unless we have a bigger Modi with bigger evil designs.
We owe a big thank you to you Rahul Gandhi for saving the country just in time.
- Sufyan Sadiq
#LongPostAlert
Smokeshow during the #IPLfinal in Chennai last night. We have also seen some tifos during the tournament. Good to see the fan culture being spread to the Gentleman's game as well. It is to be noted that this culture was brought to Indian sports & football
(1/6)
#Longpostalert: It’s been eight years since I had a heartbreak, and today I have come to know how it feels again. For a few, it might be another coach leaving another football club, but for anyone who has loved Kerala Blasters FC, Ivan Vukomanovic was beyond just a coach. #KBFC

#LongPostAlert (All characters are fictitious and any resemblance to any person living / dead is purely coincidental.)
…
He lost 90 per cent of wars. Never came close to ruling Bharat. But made promises galore. He wanted to locate all wealth in the country & redistribute.
For that, Prince Robinhood wanted to do a pilot. After all when he ascends the throne what if he doesn’t get time !?!
He set his minions out to locate wealth. Some landed on the door of top merchants & bizmen. But all acknowledged they weren’t wealthy enough. True wealth lay across & away.
…
Prince Robinhood’s minions searched door to door. City to city. Town to town. Village to village. Then finally one day landed in a remote village where the wealthiest people lived.
It was a cluster of houses. Thatched. Not gold plated. The minions had their hearts in their mouth. After all they were soo close to getting their hands on something that had eluded them soo long !
In one of the houses they stepped in, on the courtyard a middle aged man was sitting on a stool & puffing his hooka.
“Are you the wealthiest man here ? How much wealth do you have ?”
The man didn’t bother to look up and signalled him to sit. Offered him his huka.
“I’m forty-eight, still have perfect vision, no ailments, till my land, walk ten miles daily, my health is a breeze. My brothers, relatives stay closeby and we get to meet, interact and engage daily. I sell what I produce. Eat simply. Live frugally. Have son & daughter. Son helping me in the field & also pursuing his studies. Daughter running for Panchayat elections. She wants to change the face of the village one day. What more does one want ?”
“Ok. Ok but how much is your wealth ?” Blurted the minion.
“Ah, when I’m perfectly healthy, have the bliss of great relationships, tons of time for family and self and satisfaction permeating every inch of my life, what more wealth you need ?”
“What about money ? Land ? Property ?”
The man smirked, and brushed it off.
The minions left. Went to all other houses and the responses were same.
They found : True wealth lay in great health, relationships, time and satisfaction. Something physical wealth can’t buy.
Health, relationships, time & satisfaction lay in the grasp of each Bharatiya. How to redistribute what’s already with all ? - the minions pondered !
…
Meanwhile, Prince Robinhood seemed to care less. He fantasised the kickbacks, commissions, that would flow to his family coffers when he ascends the throne. The cool flow of liquid cash…but but why it smelt so horribly obnoxious …!?!
Prince Robinhood got rudely jolted & awakened by Pidi (his pet dog) relieving on him !
….
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