@AmaalMallik Oh stfu. What she did was wrong in all ways, but what you're nattering about is a positive emetic. Have you ever even talked to a woman, and asked how she negotiates the topic of relationships/marriage with her parents? Don't you dare tell women what they have/can/should do. Yuck
🚨READ PLEASE🚨
Most people do not understand the finer points of the tamasha that is brewing with TMC MPs and SS (UBT) MPs; many still talk of Left- and Right-wing politics and parties.
The NDA currently has 293 MPs, add another 20-22 from NCPI+TMC, 7 from SS (UBT) and 25+ from SP (in the ) and this number shoots to 345-350, i.e. 12-17 short of a two-third majority in the LS (another Rs 100-200 cr and this too becomes achievable) .
Add another 15 MPs by allurement (yet another Rs. 100-200 cr), and the NDA gets its sought after two-thirds in the RS. NDA already controls more than two-third of India’s states. India’s abject surrender to the Zionist forces is now complete and total. All that is needed is a repeat of the omnibus 42nd Constitution (Amendment) Act which would, inter alia, rewrite the basic structure of the Constitution. Some of the salient features may include:
1. Removal of ‘socialist’ and ‘secular’ from the Constitution and amendment to the ‘Republic of India’ nomenclature
2. Shuffling of the Union, State and Concurrent Lists to remove most rights states presently enjoy
3. Sharing of taxes between the Union and States
4. Dispensing of the Collegium system of nomination for the higher judiciary
5. Dispensing of current rules relating to recruitment to posts, civil and defence, under the Union and States and substitute with lateral entry from the ruling party alone
6. Dismantling the civilian bureaucracy in favor of a spoils of office system
7. Centralizing all licensing, prospecting, mining, drilling, survey, etc. of all natural and environmental resources in the Union
8. Extend the life of Parliament to ten years for each House with retrospective effect; delimited MPs would have a tenure coterminous with the life of the House, i.e. 10 years
9. Pass the Delimitation Act without representation for women
10. Bring in the UCC, only for Muslims
11. Tighten the registration and regulation of small political parties
12. Remove all curbs on political party financing and render them tax-free
13. Centralize the appointment of top civil service posts in States for the Union
14. Amend the anti-defection law to proscribe defection/merger with two-third MPs into other parties
15. Dismiss all opposition-ruled govts en route to One Nation One Election and the proclamation of an executive President for life and Governors in states
16. Do away with state assemblies and CMs under the pretext of enhanced representation in the Union Legislature
17. Bring critical List items like education and law and order within the ambit of the Union List onl
18. Introduce nomination of panchayat bodies by the Union
19. Rewrite rules of tendering for govt. contracts and immunity for those involved in the awarding and payment processes
20. Rewrite rules of banking to include state opening of lockers and arbitrary deductions from bank accounts
21. Recast, in toto, Union-State financial relations, laws of contract, water sharing, animal conservation, etc. vesting control in the Union
22. The electronic media, notably Internet space, will be severely regulated, requiring individual users to register with their Aadhaar cards and biometrics.
23. The Apex Court will be limited to a Constitutional role.
24. Restrictions on foreign travel and to India.
25. Force Indians to empty their hoarded gold by invoking the Gold Control Order, 1962
There is much more to add but space and reader interest is limited. Enabling legislation will pass at least once every day.
All this and much more between in the next 3-9 months, and before the current President’s term ends in Jul, 2027. And all it would have taken is a measly ~Rs. 1000 crore to achieve.
The bottom-line is India’s tryst with democracy is a write-off because politicians prostituted the system. And we silently watched from the comfort of our living rooms while India turned into Russia and DPRK.
Dmitri Mendeleev, creator of the Periodic Table, was nominated for the Nobel Prize 9 times but never won because a scientist he once criticized sat on the committee and blocked him every single time.
@Timurid_Mughal Aurangzeb was a political animal first and foremost. He exhibited those sides of him as he chose, whether it was a commander, an austere and orthodox patriarch, a cold dad, a cruel despot, or a kind benefactor. He pretty much picked and chose his Sufi moments, as he wanted.
Who will investigate why LIC holds 10.8% of Rajesh Exports – a company which so many market voices have flagged as a fraud over the past several years?
Why is LIC the only institutional investor in a company which has had no brokerage coverage for the past five years?
@peeleraja What. At a time like this, when so many kids are shocked/shattered, it doesn't make sense to extol the value of learning well over getting good grades. The reality is that grades matter; they start us off on a journey to a place where we can sit back, relax and pontificate thus.
@CJP_for_India Yes, I agree. Under his rule the entire govt machinery got compromised. The pillars of democracy imploded horribly. The media went all Times of India - full bikau. So no accountability. And worst of all, the culture of violence and Othering became a concrete reality. No way out.
Our demands are simple ,we want a strong, modern, fair and developed India. 🇮🇳
• Free & world class public education for every child
• Free, accessible & high-quality healthcare for all
• AQI below 25 in every major city
• Clean air, clean rivers & safe drinking water
• 5%+ GDP investment in R&D, science & innovation
• Indian universities in the global Top 100
• Strong public schools, libraries & research institutions
• End brain drain ,create opportunities at home
• Migration by choice, not compulsion
• A balanced mixed economy , strong private sector with strong public welfare
• Industrial Revolution 2.0, 3.0 & 4.0 revival in India
• Manufacturing led growth & high-skilled employment
• MSME empowerment with easy credit & lower compliance burden
• Energy security through renewables, nuclear & domestic production
• Global level infrastructure in transport, logistics & digital connectivity
• Smart villages & smart cities growing together
• Modern railways, ports, highways & public transport
• Affordable housing & planned urban development
• Zero hunger & zero extreme poverty
• Better wages, dignity & social security for workers
• Farmers with stable income, modern technology & market access
• Food processing & rural industrialization revolution
• Women’s safety, workforce participation & equal opportunity
• Skill development linked directly to industry needs
• AI, semiconductor, biotech & deep-tech leadership from India
• Data privacy, cybersecurity & digital rights protection
• Merit-based systems with innovative affirmative action
• Transparent & accountable governance at every level
• Faster, fairer & free judicial access for citizens
• Police, judicial & administrative reforms
• Strict action against corruption & misuse of taxpayers’ money
• Zero freebie politics,investment over appeasement
• Taxpayer money spent on productivity, education & healthcare
• Decentralization with empowered local governments
• National security with economic strength
• Strong diplomacy with strategic independence
• Sustainable growth without environmental destruction
• Sports, arts & culture investment at global standards
• Equal opportunities regardless of caste, religion, gender or region
• Dignity, opportunity & constitutional rights for every citizen
• Free judicial remedies and equal access to justice for every citizen
• Free and world-class education for all
• Free, accessible and high-quality healthcare for every Indian
• Beyond education, healthcare and justice, nothing else should be permanently free
• Welfare should empower citizens, not create dependency
• Taxpayers’ money must be invested in productivity, infrastructure, research and human development
• Subsidies should be targeted, transparent and temporary
• A nation grows through opportunity, innovation and merit , not freebie politics
A developed India is not a dream.
It is a national decision, a collective responsibility, and a generational mission. 🇮🇳
His name is Mohammad Aamir Khan.
On the night of February 20, 1998, his mother asked him to buy medicines from a shop in Old Delhi. He was 18 years old.
He never made it to the shop.
Men in plain clothes stopped him on the street. He did not know they were police officers. They took him to an abandoned building. For seven days, he was held in illegal custody. He was tortured. He was forced to sign blank sheets of paper.
Then the Delhi Police Special Cell produced him in court and charged him with 19 counts of bombing across Delhi, Ghaziabad, Rohtak and Sonepat between December 1996 and October 1997.
He was presented to the media as a terrorist.
His family was never informed. They spent days searching police stations before finding out what had happened.
He spent 14 years in prison. Through torture. Through solitary confinement. He watched case after case fall apart in court as evidence was shown to be fabricated.
In 2012, he was acquitted in 17 of 19 cases. Two cases remain pending. He had already served more time in jail than the maximum sentence he could have received even if convicted on all charges.
He walked out of prison in January 2012.
His father had died while he was inside. His mother had suffered a stroke so severe she no longer recognised him when he walked through the door.
The National Human Rights Commission directed the Delhi government to pay him compensation.
The amount was Rs 5 lakh.
No officer from the Delhi Police Special Cell was charged. No one was suspended. No inquiry was ordered.
He wrote a book about what was done to him. He called it Framed As A Terrorist. My 14 Year Struggle To Prove My Innocence.
He now helps other wrongfully accused prisoners navigate the system that destroyed him.
India gave him Rs 5 lakh and called it justice.
Follow for real stories India never makes headlines about.
Hindutva Hate Speech vs Gandhian Satyagraha Speech
On April 29, 2026, the Supreme Court of India ruled that no cognizable offense was made out in the speeches of Anurag Thakur and Parvesh Verma.
Six years. That is how long we waited. Six years of faith, however fragile, that the highest court of the land would look at what happened in Delhi in February 2020 and call it what it was.
Six years of believing that the institution would hold. That the Constitution these men had weaponized as a prop would be honored by the court sworn to protect it.
The Supreme Court delivered justice. Just not natural justice. A special type of Hindutva justice.
No FIR. No prosecution. No cognizable offense. Clean chit, handed down by the one institution that was supposed to be beyond the reach of the men who needed it most.
Umar Khalid has been in jail for more than five and a half years.
Read that again slowly.
In the winter of 2019, India's Parliament passed the Citizenship Amendment Act. The law did something no Indian law had done before. It made religion an explicit criterion for citizenship.
It offered fast-tracked naturalization to persecuted minorities from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan. Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, Jains, Zoroastrians. Every persecuted minority from every neighboring country. Except Muslims.
The message was not subtle.
Across India, people poured into the streets. At Shaheen Bagh in southeast Delhi, Muslim women, grandmothers, mothers, daughters, sat in peaceful vigil for months. They held the Tricolor. They read from the Constitution. They sang the national anthem. They were asking, simply, to be recognized as citizens of the country they had always called home.
The BJP was fighting a Delhi assembly election.
Into this atmosphere, of protest, of anxiety, of a minority community asserting its constitutional belonging, BJP leaders arrived with a different kind of speech.
On January 27, 2020, Anurag Thakur, a sitting Member of Parliament and Union Minister, stood at an election rally and led a call-and-response chant: "Desh ke gaddaron ko", and the crowd roared back "goli maaro saalon ko." Shoot the traitors of the nation. He did not stumble into it. He led it.
Deliberately. At a microphone. In front of cameras.
The very next day, Parvesh Verma, another BJP leader campaigning in Delhi, told voters what would happen if the protestors were not stopped. They will enter your homes, he said. They will rape your sisters and daughters. They will kill them.
Both speeches were filmed. Both were broadcast. Neither man has spent a day in jail.
Days later, Delhi burned.
Fifty-three people died. Forty of them were Muslim.
Numerous mosques were burned and desecrated.
A Muslim man was forced by Delhi Police to sing Jana Gana Mana as he lay beaten on the ground. He died two days later.
Homes were looted.
Families were displaced.
It was the worst communal violence the capital had seen in decades. Scholars who study such events called it, plainly, a pogrom.
The Supreme Court looked at this chain of events and found nothing worth prosecuting.
Now read what Umar Khalid actually said.
On hate: We will not respond to hate with hate. If they spread hate, we will respond by spreading love.
On violence: We will not respond to violence with violence. If they beat us with lathis, we will hold aloft the Tiranga.
On resistance: If they fire bullets, we will hold the Constitution and raise our hands.
Khalid delivered these words at a protest in Amravati on February 17, 2020, six days before Delhi burned.
His declared weapons were ahimsa and satyagraha. He said this explicitly.
He named Gandhi. He named the Constitution. He asked people to stand peacefully, flag in hand, against a law that had told Muslims their belonging was now conditional.
CONT++