தேவதைகளின் தகப்பன்
I never think of the future-it comes soon enough-♻ Einstein
யாதுமூரே!யாவரும்கேளிர்
To us all towns're one,all men our kin
-கணியண்பூங்குன்றன்
பயணங்கள் தொடரட்டும்: 23+23=46!
23 கீச்சுக்களில் மகத்தான பெரும் பயண அனுபவமும் வாழ்வின் அற்புத கணங்களும் !
Top 10 quick topics:
1. Travel more. Journey well✈️
2. Check-in limit – 2 x 23KG/luggage🧳
3. Arrival – New world🌎
4. Collection of life books📚 x 2 copies
1/23
If you have 1 apple and someone gives you another, you have 2 apples. But in mathematics, proving that 1 + 1 = 2 can take many pages.
Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell wrote Principia Mathematica, a three-volume work on the foundations of mathematics.
They started it in 1903 and expected to finish in one year, but it took about 10 years.
In the second volume, after more than 300 pages, they finally showed that 1 + 1 = 2.
This video is an example of outdated Ayurvedic alchemy which in current practice is associated with heavy metal poisoning.
Claims of Ayurveda-prescribed and described purification (Shodana) techniques do not, in reality, purify mercury to become safe, and is a delusional argument that Ayurveda practitioners live by.
Shodana includes heating toxic metal with herbs and fats like ghee and boiling them in animal urine etc. This does not, in any way make mercury "less" toxic.
Ayurveda is the single most common "healthcare" practice in the world that has heavy metal poisoned thousands globally.
✅https://t.co/bErLgqNyEy
Mercury is extremely toxic. It is not medicine even if your belief of it has survived 2000 years.
✅https://t.co/ak9vpJx18l
By combining over 20 years of Hubble Space Telescope observations with new data from the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers have finally detected a stellar-mass black hole within the massive Omega Centauri cluster. In the zoomed-in view, the black hole’s presence is revealed by a visible companion star orbiting the unseen object.
Omega Centauri is the Milky Way’s largest globular cluster, located approximately 17,000 light-years from Earth. It contains around 10 million stars, spans roughly 150 light-years in diameter, and is approximately 12 billion years old. Note the stunning resolution of these space telescopes.
@HilaalAlamTamil Human need to focus/solve on bigger problems. Need Humanoids to solve what we're encountering with. Future is going to awesome! Science brings magic into life!
மனித ரோபோட்டுகள் நமக்கு தேவையா?
( என் கருத்து: தேவை. Dark Factory அடுத்த மிகப் பெரிய அலையாக உருவெடுக்கப் போகிறது)
என் mentor பேரா சீராம் ராமக்கிருட்டிணா (முன்னாள் NUSNII, NUS & சீனாவின் சிங்கைவா பல்கலையின் தற்போதைய பேரா) - ன் உரை.
https://t.co/zKNsVJLN0L
The much celebrated Papaya leaf extract for low platelet count in chemotherapy patients has now received an Expression of Concern from the Journal due to doubts regarding fraud after I notified the Journal.
https://t.co/5Q41eLEbqc
This is a black spot on Tata Memorial Cancer Hospital.
This is also a warning of sorts and also genuine advice to all institutions of repute trying to dabble in "integrative medicine" research taking money from alternative medicine industry or Ayush Ministry.
Either publish the truth, or do not indulge in such shameful research looking to promote Ayush nonsense. The Institutions of repute will have a globally bad name. Please stop doing this to your credibility.
If you stand outside any metro station in Delhi you'll watch a man spit on the road.
Then the same guy would walk in, stand quietly behind the yellow line without dropping a single wrapper. :)
It tells you everything about what civic sense really is.
But first, what happened in Chennai.
CMRL has raised the fine for making a nuisance in trains and stations. Loud calls. Speaker mode. Music or videos without headphones. It went from ₹500 to as much as ₹2,500. Staff can also throw you out of the station.
The rule is already there in section 59 of the Metro Railways Act since 2002.
But the Jan Vishwas Act this year, and a Housing Ministry notification dated 19 June gave it teeth now.
I am fully for it. Every metro in India should do the same. Then buses. Then sleeper trains, where it is honestly ten times worse.
Now, I understand the anger in the thread. I have been on that train. Someone watching reels at full volume at 8 am, and you sit there hating your life.
The diagnosis is wrong; it is not about people being illiterate.
Ireland's national railway is fining people €100 right now. For playing music out loud on trains. For feet on seats.
In Britain there is a whole political fight going on about this. They even have a name for it. Bare beating.
These are the countries we Indians point at as proof that we are uniquely uncivilised.
So how did other places sort it out?
Go back to New York in the 1980s. Every subway car was covered end to end in graffiti. Filthy. Genuinely dangerous.
They did not fix it with a public appeal to New Yorkers' better nature.
They ran a programme where any train with graffiti on it got pulled out of service. Yes, pulled out of service. Every single day, for years. It cost an enormous amount of money.
By the end of the decade the fleet was clean. And it stayed clean.
Or take Singapore, the city everyone holds up as naturally spotless.
Singapore in the 1960s was a mess. Lee Kuan Yew launched a clean-up campaign in 1968 and then spent decades fining people for littering, for spitting, for chewing gum. The world laughed at them. They called it a fine city.
Two generations later, Singaporeans do not litter because they cannot imagine doing it.
My favourite example is drink driving in Britain.
Before the breathalyser came in 1967, having a few pints and driving home was completely normal. A respectable man did it. Nobody thought less of him for it.
Then came the law, the enforcement, and forty years of grim advertising.
Today if you tell a room in London that you are driving home after four pints, the room goes awkward.
Even here, smoking inside a restaurant was completely normal in India in 2005. Today it is unthinkable.
Which brings me back to the man outside the metro station.
Nothing about his upbringing changed when he walked through that gate. What changed was that inside there are cameras, guards, an announcement every ninety seconds, floors so clean you feel bad dirtying them, and a real chance of being fined in front of a hundred people.
Civic sense is not a thing a people have or lack. It is a thing a system builds, with money, enforcement, repetition and patience. Usually across a generation.
Calling people half literate is just the version of this that requires no effort from us.
So what should happen now.
Please collect the fines. A rule nobody enforces is worse than no rule, because it teaches everyone that rules are decoration.
Make it visible. People need to see one person get fined before they believe it is real.
Back the staff. The guard who asks a man to switch off his speaker needs to know his boss will not abandon him when the shouting starts.
And keep it human. ₹2,500 is a lot of money for a daily wage passenger. A warning first, a fine after, is fair and works just as well.
Do this for five years, and none of it will be needed.
The kid growing up on a quiet metro will just think that is what a train is.
A cartoon of the Prophet was drawn.
Many Muslims found it offensive.
Most moved on with their lives.
But some decided the best way to defend the Prophet was to hunt down and kill the people behind it, so no one would dare do it again.
And then people wonder why some non Muslims fear Islam.
The truth is, not every negative view of Islam comes from ignorance or hatred.
Sometimes it comes from the crimes committed by extremists who claim to act in Islam's name.
You can keep saying "Islam is a religion of peace."
But if people are being murdered over cartoons, blasphemy, or criticism, those actions will always speak louder than the slogan.
Seychelles has a nominal GDP per capita of approximately $21,630.
India has a nominal GDP per capita of approximately $2,820.
Meanwhile, this is the condition of an ambulance serving tribal areas of Gujarat after 32 years of BJP rule.
Yet, Modi Ji gifts ambulances to a country much far far richer than India, using money paid by Indian taxpayers?🤔🤔
Bin mir nicht sicher, ob ich das als Mann öffentlich machen darf. Aber meine Frau sagte, ich soll zeigen, wie sehr sie mich schätzt und schützt. Deshalb hat sie mich – genau wie ihr Tablet oder Smartphone – mit einer Schutzhülle versehen.
Praktisch, auch als Schattenspender!
Mein Mann und meine Söhne sind wertvoller als ein Smartphone, so wertvoll wie ein Tablet.
Um sie vor wolllüstigen Blicken anderer Frauen und Mädchen zu schützen und unsere Familienehre zu bewahren, haben wir, also ich, entschieden, dass sie sich nun immer bedecken müssen.
Respektiert das.
India is the largest vegetarian experiment on earth, which makes its healthiest state faintly embarrassing.
It is called Kerala, and it eats meat. Perched on some of the richest fishing grounds in the Indian Ocean, all but a few percent of its people eat fish, most of them most days, alongside chicken, beef and pork.
By the numbers, Kerala is the state the rest of India measures itself against. Life expectancy among the highest in the country, around 75. Infant mortality the lowest by a wide margin, recently down to 5 per thousand, below the United States. The best human development score in India. The lentil-and-paneer states sit several rungs beneath it on nearly every chart.
Now the honest part, which cuts deeper than the boast. The fish deserves none of the credit. Kerala's success was built on female literacy, clean water and one of the developing world's finest public health systems.
And that is precisely what stings. Give people schooling, doctors and clean water, and let them eat fish twice a day, and they turn into the healthiest people in India.
A daily plate of animal protein was never the thing standing in their way.