The greatest thing about this World Cup is that the notion that "Ronaldo is a rapist" has become a public consensus instead of being dismissed as the "opinion of Messi fans"
The backstory of the guy on the left is a really sad when you found that he was protesting angrily against the Indian authorities for being responsible for the death of her sister in Kashmir only for him to receive the same similar mockery as the disabled guy on the right
People literally made a meme out of a man who had a disability from a broken jaw.
Making of poor working class people from the subcontinent is par for the fucking course on this fucking hell site
Imagine the sheer hubris to lecture people getting electrocuted in rain water.
@mybmc is a WhatsApp uncle in the form of an institution: corrupt, incompetent but full of gyan.
Every time this account comes up on my feed it sends me into a rage. Motherfucker are you living on the same planet?? Children are getting killed by electrocution, a grown adult died by falling into a manhole literally TODAY. Look outside your window ffs.
200 MM Rain and Mumbai is running as if nothing happened
Not possible in any other city of the World.
Tokyo, HK, Singapore, London, NY drowns in less than 100 MM rain
Siyonist işgalciler katliama devam ediyor.
Aşırı hassas içerik⚠️
gazze'de İsrail hava saldırısında bir Filistinli çocuk, yıkıcı bir kafa travması geçirdi. Ciddi travmaya ve son derece sınırlı tıbbi kaynaklara rağmen, doktorlar onun hayatını kurtarmayı başardı.
I saw it. You saw it. Millions if not billions around the world saw it. Iran were hindered from progressing in this World Cup because the powers-that-be didn’t want them to progress. But we’re all meant to shrug our shoulders, and say ‘they were just unlucky’ and move on as if what we saw with our own eyes never happened.
Will they ask Christian Pulisic or Weston Mckennie what do they think about their country inflicting a genocide in Gaza and bombing Iranian kids? Why are these type of questions always asked to Asians and Africans?
Zakariya has spent 17 years in prison.
Seventeen years.
For almost a decade and a half, his trial did not even begin. During all these years, he was out for less than a week in total.
He couldn’t even visit his ailing mother.
And this is not just any mother. It is Beeyumma, now in her seventies, who has spent years fighting for justice for the son she believes was falsely implicated.
Beeyumma’s struggle went far beyond seeking justice for her son. She approached the Supreme Court challenging the use of the draconian UAPA, turning her personal grief into a larger fight for civil liberties.
The irony is painful.
The trial in the Bengaluru blasts case began only a few years ago and is now almost complete. The Supreme Court had directed that it be concluded within months.
But yesterday, the Karnataka High Court transferred the case from the trial court to another court.
Another court. Another delay. Another set of years.
And then there is Quadir. Another prisoner in the Bengaluru blast case.
He died in prison just weeks ago. Even if he had ultimately been convicted, the maximum punishment for the offence he was accused of was three years. Instead, he spent 17 years behind bars until his last breath.
In India, justice delayed is not merely justice denied. Sometimes, it becomes a life sentence without a conviction.