@TheSincereDude What you are posting is deliberately selected to make you feel happy. Why are you asking whether some context is missing or not? You wanted to circulate only this particular clip, and that is exactly what you did. Be happy Mr Sick.
@_Aksshay@TA_Purvesh This is funny Akshay.. I am not into your countless arguments but I have to reply on your last line.. The Maurya Empire ruled over the region of undivided Maharashtra in the 4th and 3rd centuries BCE. Maurya Empire belongs to Bihar state. Now your turn my historian friend.
This issue should not be politicised. The Jain community living here is also part of Maharashtra and includes Maharashtrian families as well.
But, as per my understanding, the Jain community also shares some responsibility in this matter. They should have informed the local municipal authorities in advance and formally requested permission or arrangements for creating a temporary pathway. Proper prior notice should also have been given to the housing societies nearby.
No individual or community can take matters into their own hands and make changes in public spaces without coordination. Public spaces belong to everyone, not to any one specific community.
At the same time, people should avoid turning every issue into a political or communal debate. Ultimately, we all have to live together with mutual understanding and respect.
First South Indians.
Then Gujaratis.
Then Marwadis.
Then Hindi speakers.
Now Jains.
The problem is not the community being targeted,
it's the mindset that needs a new target every time.
Tomorrow, even logical Marathis will be their target.
@Kapil_Jyani_ We do not know what the actual ground circumstances were at that time. We cannot blame anyone solely on the basis of current political theories. No one wanted the nation to be divided except Jinnah. Partition always leaves deep wounds for the people living on both sides.
I actually do not understand why the government or anyone cuts old trees in the name of development and then pretends that planting a few small saplings (which they call replacement trees) is enough. Most of these plants do not even survive for long. What sense does that make?
Today, we hardly see old Peepal and Banyan trees in our localities anymore. It feels strange and disturbing. We are suffering from increasing heat largely because of unnecessary destruction of the environment. Small hills and mountains are slowly disappearing due to excessive stone extraction for development projects. Rainfall patterns have become uncertain, and pollution levels are at an all-time high.
The government must take stronger and more practical steps to protect our land and environment. Old trees, hills, water bodies, and open lands are gradually disappearing in the name of тАЬdevelopment,тАЭ while many replacement efforts seem symbolic rather than genuinely effective.
A very old Peepal or Banyan tree is not just тАЬone tree.тАЭ Over decades, it becomes:
тАв a natural cooling system,
тАв shelter for birds and insects,
тАв a major oxygen source,
тАв a protector of groundwater,
тАв an absorber of dust and pollution,
тАв and an important part of the local ecological balance.
Replacing a 70-year-old tree with a tiny sapling can never be environmentally equal in any realistic sense. Even during plantation drives, many saplings are:
тАв poorly maintained,
тАв die within months,
тАв or never reach maturity.
#WorldEnvironmentDay
@Ansari4bihar@RajatSharmaLive@narendramodi Kaun nafrat kar raha hai mere bhai. Eid Al-Adha Mubarak ho. Sabse pehle hum insaan hai. God ko humne he alag alag maan liya hai, wo ek he hai. Tum kisi aur naam se bula lo, hum kisi aur naam se bula le.
Interestingly I asked to @ChatGPTapp that Just imagine you are a human being. How would you look, what would be your gender, and what would be your IQ level? Please describe yourself and create an image of yourself.
And see below the image he shared. Lovely #ChatGPT