🚨 #ExpressInvestigation | Since he took oath as CM of Madhya Pradesh on December 13, 2023, Mohan Yadav’s family and their real estate companies have bought at least 137 plots, adding up to 168 acres, for Rs 45 crore, in zones most benefited by this infrastructure push, an investigation of land records by @mazoomdaar has found.
https://t.co/FEMW9VC7hm
Kaviraj Singh nailed it.
These days, every controversy becomes a chance for clout. The same pattern we saw with Samay Raina, we're seeing again.
"Every mistake is a content opportunity" What a line 🔥
#PranitMore
The reason why guys are never going to approach girls & why there is dearth of genuine dating nowadays is because of so much normalisation of public humiliation by leaking chats
There is nothing wrong in the chat ,it's just a guy approaching a girl but the Low IQ chomu girl decided to take advantage of the burning controversy
Instead of buying a refrigerator online, I purchased it from a nearby store to support local business.
After adding the 3% card swipe charge, the final price became almost equal to online platforms.
Difference is:
Online gives cashback, EMI, exchange offers, doorstep delivery and no drama.
Offline gives attitude, hidden charges and “card pe extra lagega.”
Then offline retailers cry that e-commerce is killing them.
No sir, customers are leaving because many local stores still behave like it’s 2009.
Vivek Agarwal's father was admitted to MAX Hospital. Seven members of his family were staying at the ill-fated Hotel Flourish Stays, where the fire broke out.
Not a single one of them survived.
Entire family was wiped out because some fire officer allegedly took a bribe to issue a fire clearance, some government babu never checked the building plans, and authorities ignored the illegal restaurant operating in the basement.
Now they will find the owner and put all the blame and act as if they are serious. But they won't allow anyone to talk about the system failure that made this tragedy possible.
Sadly, the news cycle will move on, and so will most people.
@rameshofficial0 I’ve always been enthusiastic about adventure sports. But over time, I’ve realized that in India, safety standards often depend more on luck than systems. Poor regulation, untrained operators, & casual attitudes toward risk make many activities far more dangerous.
Competition exams are not just about knowledge. They are about mental fortitude, luck, sleep, diet, stress, timing, environment, and hundreds of invisible factors working together on one specific day. #NEET
I am in my small car. I give left indicator and am turning left into the side road.
There is a 2 wheeler on my left side. He has already seen my indicator and has also noticed that I have slowed down and am turning.
Yet, he cuts straight across. He wants to go straight.
Majority of times in these scenarios, the 2 wheelers come in the blind spot of the car driver. We can't see the 2 wheeler.
How can the 2 wheeler assume that I know that he wants to go straight?
What goes in the mind of the 2 wheeler?
Not always the 4 wheeler driver is at fault. So many times, 2 wheeler guys are at fault and drive rashly.
#Safedriving
Indian society has become amoral and apathetic
After a boat capsized and people died due to criminal negligence - people are sharing MAA KI MAMTA caricatures instead of Holding the authorities ACCOUNTABLE
As a general rule, you should immediately flee if you hit someone in a small village, town, or locality. Indians always look for an opportunity lynch someone. And when they see a pedestrian being hit by a car, they turn into zombies just because the car owner looks affluent.
India has a strange blind spot when it comes to eggs. For starters, we have, against all common sense, declared it non-veg, which automatically comes attached with moral baggage, and then on top of that, even in families that eat meat, the idiotic idea that eggs are “heating” (taseer) reduces its daily/weekly consumption.
📍Hapur, Uttar Pradesh: A speeding Hyundai i20 coming from the wrong side rammed into a bike.
After the impact, the car climbed onto the divider. Two children and a woman were injured in the accident.
This wasn’t just a random accident- it’s a pattern. Wrong-side driving is becoming normalised to “save time,” especially in smaller cities where enforcement is weak. Add to that overspeeding and poor anticipation, and even a small mistake turns into a serious crash. The bigger issue is mindset: shortcuts over safety. Until stricter enforcement, fines, and actual fear of consequences kick in, these incidents will keep repeating.