@SandeepUnnithan True. Voting for money is a clear signal to people that the parties are fundamentally corrupted. One cant complain peope that they ignored development. Dravidian parties (at least DMK) should stop 20th century politics.
@poonamkachanddd Bigotry. Agreed.
Filthy. Agreed.
But will I condemn her or condemn the radicalists who are threatening to kill her. I'll do the latter. Because I know the difference. Imagine, (god forbid) if something happens to her, don't you think you carry some of the blood stains too?
People have leaked my home address and Mobile Number and have threatened to send Pork to my address. There are already life threats against me. This isn't the first time. The same person in 2023 had sent Pork to my address and shared the shipping address on Twitter. I am have filed a complaint before @DCPEASTBCP. Trust that @CPBlr@DgpKarnataka takes this threat seriously at least this time. Last time when I filed a complaint, the FIR was closed after a few months.
@siddaramaiah@DKShivakumar
@thekaipullai Surprisingly, Indian RW, LW, and Liberals are united in believing India failed, with a large narrative surrounding this. Please read this post that rejects these narratives as superficial rhetoric: https://t.co/5rgYOuySO7.
A General on the March Does Not Chase Bunny
Following the recent escalation in tensions between India and Pakistan, a narrative proclaiming "India’s failure" or its "humiliation" has rapidly gained traction in international media.
Remarkably, this view has permeated not just Western mainstream outlets but also many voices from the Global South.
Yet upon reflection, such narratives are largely superficial rhetoric—something India need not overly concern itself with. Indeed, a key vulnerability among many Indian observers is precisely this tendency to place excessive weight on external evaluations, often valuing rhetoric more highly than tangible outcomes.
The most critical attribute a country of India’s scale must cultivate is strategic composure.
So long as India maintains its enormous population, geopolitical positioning, and robust government, the optimistic fundamentals underpinning its risea will always remain, and impervious to fleeting outside critiques.
Moreover, I've observed that some Indian commentators lean heavily on conspiracy theories, attributing negative discourse to supposed "Chinese conspiracies."
This perspective reveals a fundamental ignorance and underestimation of China!
China's rise rests on the very same strategic composure outlined above: patience, diligence, resilience, and unwavering focus.
After all, it has been a nation that, first and foremost, minds its own business, neither easily distracted by others nor intent on distracting them.
A General on the March Does Not Chase Bunny
Following the recent escalation in tensions between India and Pakistan, a narrative proclaiming "India’s failure" or its "humiliation" has rapidly gained traction in international media.
Remarkably, this view has permeated not just Western mainstream outlets but also many voices from the Global South.
Yet upon reflection, such narratives are largely superficial rhetoric—something India need not overly concern itself with. Indeed, a key vulnerability among many Indian observers is precisely this tendency to place excessive weight on external evaluations, often valuing rhetoric more highly than tangible outcomes.
The most critical attribute a country of India’s scale must cultivate is strategic composure.
So long as India maintains its enormous population, geopolitical positioning, and robust government, the optimistic fundamentals underpinning its risea will always remain, and impervious to fleeting outside critiques.
Moreover, I've observed that some Indian commentators lean heavily on conspiracy theories, attributing negative discourse to supposed "Chinese conspiracies."
This perspective reveals a fundamental ignorance and underestimation of China!
China's rise rests on the very same strategic composure outlined above: patience, diligence, resilience, and unwavering focus.
After all, it has been a nation that, first and foremost, minds its own business, neither easily distracted by others nor intent on distracting them.
If you want evidence of how India slowly lost the image of the ‘Leader of the Global South’ and got itself alienated due to the disinformation and divisive online campaigns, read the links below.
Many portals may not be known to average Indians, but some have very large bases.
@kejimao India should learn from China: less rhetoric, more work. Indian RW media needs a complete overhaul. However, the liberal claim that India has lost its image and is alienated globally is true only within Twitter's echo chamber.
@DefiantDevii - India lost.
- Alienated.
These are your wishes, Devi, not the truth. India is now overtly right-wing, which I regret. That doesn’t mean the world has alienated us. The world retains some sanity, unlike you. Read this if you have time: https://t.co/5rgYOuySO7
A General on the March Does Not Chase Bunny
Following the recent escalation in tensions between India and Pakistan, a narrative proclaiming "India’s failure" or its "humiliation" has rapidly gained traction in international media.
Remarkably, this view has permeated not just Western mainstream outlets but also many voices from the Global South.
Yet upon reflection, such narratives are largely superficial rhetoric—something India need not overly concern itself with. Indeed, a key vulnerability among many Indian observers is precisely this tendency to place excessive weight on external evaluations, often valuing rhetoric more highly than tangible outcomes.
The most critical attribute a country of India’s scale must cultivate is strategic composure.
So long as India maintains its enormous population, geopolitical positioning, and robust government, the optimistic fundamentals underpinning its risea will always remain, and impervious to fleeting outside critiques.
Moreover, I've observed that some Indian commentators lean heavily on conspiracy theories, attributing negative discourse to supposed "Chinese conspiracies."
This perspective reveals a fundamental ignorance and underestimation of China!
China's rise rests on the very same strategic composure outlined above: patience, diligence, resilience, and unwavering focus.
After all, it has been a nation that, first and foremost, minds its own business, neither easily distracted by others nor intent on distracting them.
@karanbirtinna The ONLY right thing Modi Government has done in the last few weeks,
is asking for a ceasefire.
Ironical that they are getting abuse from every quarter for the ONE thing they did right.
PS: Btw, the truth/news is always in the national interest.
“One might have thought the world would stop ascribing moral equivalence between acts of terrorism and acts of punishing terrorism. It has not happened that way.” regretted Theodore Bikel.
This must change ! Our partners, that too strategic partners everywhere, must indeed make a morally right choice now and stand with India when it is seeking to fight cross-border terrorism not just to protect itself, but to save the world from the scourge of Pakistan-sponsored terrorism and mayhem!