He used to r@pe his 3 daughters on regular basis
this time he was trying to r@pe his 4th , 6.5 yrs old daughter - but all 3 elder daughter cut his penn¡is.
This is from Keralam, no prizes for guessing their religion
@zoo_bear will fact check
An old video of Brigadier Aryan Verma has come to light in which the general officer is motivating UPSC aspirants. A two time NEET aspirant himself, the distinguished officer tells them that they too can become like him. Don't miss the gunmen's pose in the beginning of the video.
@Khan2535181@theskindoctor13 Ispe baat baad me hogi. Pehle ye btaa ki source milne k baad baat kyu palat di chudammad ki bawasir k khoon ki boond 🤭
Typical chudammad follower 🙂↕️
In 1990, Sarla Bhat, 27, was working as a staff nurse at Srinagar’s SKIMS hospital to support her family, even as fear forced her community to flee.
On April 15, 1990, Sarla was abducted from her hostel. For four agonizing days, JKLF terrorists subjected her to brutal torture and sexual assault. When her body was dumped in Mallabagh on April 19, her killers had carved the acronym "JKLF" directly into her flesh from a knife.
The horror continued for her family. When Sarla’s bullet-ridden body returned to Anantnag, the neighborhood was already a ghost town emptied by the exodus. Marooned and helpless, the grieving family could not find enough people to carry her to a funeral pyre. As they attempted her final rites, a grenade was hurled at their home. This targeted terror forced the last remaining Hindu families to flee.
Systemic apathy followed. Though a police complaint was filed in 1990, the file was buried. It took until 2025 for a Special Investigation Agency to reopen the case, naming four terrorists. Two are dead, one is absconding, and one is imprisoned: Yasin Malik, who was once pampered as a Damaad by New Delhi, invited to the high table as one of the esteemed "stakeholders in the Kashmir peace talks." Yesterday, chargesheet was filed in this case.
Sarla’s case is not isolated. Thousands of women faced similar brutality in Kashmir during the late 1980s and 1990s, leaving behind stories that have been completely erased from the records today.
Europeans are crying heatwave at 30-40 °C while we in India live comfortably even at 45-50 °C.
Actually, it's not a fair comparison. Temperature is not the only thing that decides how uncomfortable you'll feel in summer.
1. Humidity : India's peak summer heat is generally dry. In dry air, sweat evaporates instantly, which triggers the body's natural cooling mechanism. Europe’s heatwaves are heavily humid due to surrounding oceans. When the air is already saturated with moisture, sweat cannot evaporate; it sits on the skin, trapping internal body heat and creating a suffocating feeling. It's like, Mumbai 40°C feels significantly worse than a Delhi 40°C.
2. Architecture: European infra is engineered to trap heat, while Indian architecture is designed to reject it. European buildings feature thick insulation and double-glazed windows to survive freezing winters. During a heatwave, they act like ovens, absorbing heat all day and radiating it inward at night. Conversely, traditional Indian houses utilize high ceilings, cross-ventilation, marble or stone floors, and external awnings to block direct sunlight.
3. The AC deficit: Artificial cooling zones are standard infrastructure in hot regions of India through ACs or desert coolers. In contrast, residential AC is incredibly rare in Central and Northern Europe, present in fewer than 10% of homes. When a heatwave strikes, people have nowhere to hide, facing relentless exposure at home, on public subways, and in local shops.
4. Geography: Because Europe sits at a much higher latitude, summer days are significantly longer, with the sun setting as late as 10 PM. Buildings and asphalt are baked under direct sunlight for up to 16 hours a day. This leaves a brief 8-hour nighttime window that is too short for the ground and walls to cool down, causing the heat to compound aggressively day after day.
5. Acclimatization: Your body physically acclimatizes to its environment over time; populations in hotter climates naturally develop higher sweat rates and adjusted blood flow to handle thermal stress. Apart from that, Indian lifestyle adapts to the sun, streets empty out and businesses slow down during peak afternoon hours. Europe lacks this baseline, and because heatwaves are episodic, daily routines and heavy physical labor continue as normal, leading to rapid exhaustion.
I am happy for him that he left this cult and came back, but I would have been happier if he had known the reality of Islam and spoken with full confidence..
People like him need Islamic classes from Ex-Muslims
As a Muslim Afghan, I’m praying for this hero. He is the only person who truly understands how dangerous the Pakistan is to humanity.
Dear World: Listen to this man before it’s too late.