Advocate; Author; Teacher of Law & Indian Polity; Interested in Governance, International Relation, Environment, History & Humour; Retweets are not endorsement.
10 Timeless Lessons from Elon Musk:
1. If you do something like read a lot of books and talk to a lot of people, you can learn almost anything.
2. Criticize the action, not the person. We all make mistakes.
3. It's OK to be wrong. Just don't be confident and wrong.
4. When hiring, look for people with the right attitude. Skills can be taught. Attitude changes require a brain transplant.
5. Don’t aspire to glory; aspire to work.
6. Failure is irrelevant unless it is catastrophic.
7. Never ask your troops to do something you're not willing to do.
8. The measure of success in my life is: “How many useful things can I get done?”
9. Physics is law. Everything else is a recommendation. I've met many people who can break the laws of man, but I have never met anyone who could break the laws of physics.
10. When something is important enough, you do it even if the odds are not in your favor.
"It’s their choice and their decision. But it does tell you something about how they regard their customers."
What about the customers? Should they wait or shouldn't!!!!
Restaurants that don’t allow you to book because they want you queue up are -in the final analysis-showing contempt for their customers by treating them like props in some social media extravaganza. They want long lines so that they can show off about how popular they are and create more hype for their restaurants.
It’s their choice and their decision. But it does tell you something about how they regard their customers.
The Taste https://t.co/B4ZlwH5x1M
@ChekrishnaCk Only students pay the price for being late in the society . Nobody else. Why? If society is so serious about punctuality then everyone- from king to paupers - should be punished for being late.
A high-level meeting between Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan and Communications Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia discussed measures to prevent NEET paper leaks. A proposal was placed to involve the Indian Air Force in transporting question papers for enhanced security.
— @saurabh3vedi reports
City after city in India has waged war on the poor in the name of "beautification" and "world-class infrastructure". Hawkers and street vendors, the very people keeping cities fed, affordable and alive, are treated like dirt to be swept away so urban spaces can be "cleansed".
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This person claims that Bhojashala is 'biggest fraud of Indian history'.
She further claims that 'Bhojashala' was coined only 70 years ago. That it had never existed before.
That there is no inscription or text predating 20th century that mentions any Sarasvati temple or Bhojashala at Dhar.
Is this really true?
This thread does a Fact Check