@redBus_in@amazonIN@Manekagandhibjp@BlueCross_ I am currently traveling in this bus from Bangalore to Coimbatore and there is a dog that is being carried in the luggage under the bus and it is continuously barking . Is this even allowed?
A little surprised that Priyanka and MaKaPa aren't hosting the swearing-in ceremony with a special thanks to DAC developers, powered by Poorvika mobiles.
ஏப்ரல் 23 – தமிழ்நாட்டு வாக்காளப் பெருமக்கள் உங்கள் ஜனநாயகக் கடமையை ஆற்றிடுங்கள்!
5 ஆண்டுகள் எனக்கு அளிக்கப்பட்ட கடமையை நான் சரியாகச் செய்திருக்கிறேன்; தமிழ்நாட்டை அனைத்துத் துறைகளிலும் முதன்மை மாநிலமாக உயர்த்தியிருக்கிறேன்.
எது அடிமைத்தனம், எது தைரியம்? எது நடிப்பு, எது உழைப்பு?
சிந்தித்து வாக்களிப்பீர்! ஆதரிப்பீர் மதச்சார்பற்ற முற்போக்குக் கூட்டணி வேட்பாளர்களை! 🌄
#DMKWinningBig #VoteForDMK #SayNoToNDA #வெல்வோம்_ஒன்றாக
I personally felt this in the last-over thriller back when CSK needed 26 off the last over and CSK lost by some runs on the last ball. Since then I have stopped going to Chinnaswamy. Everyone was enjoying MS hitting those sixes out of the park. But when the match ended, everyone surrounded the people wearing yellow jerseys and started abusing them and showing middle fingers.
When you come out of the stadium, the same thing happens in the metro, in traffic and everywhere. Nothing against the franchise, but the city which has one of the engineering colleges known for education and IT sector doesn't let you even enjoy a match with your family.
Anyone who thinks this is just fake should buy a ticket, wear that yellow jersey and go to Chinnaswamy. You will regret visiting Bangalore again. It's one of the horrible experiences in recent years.
I challenge anyone who utters nonsense to just send their family and watch their reactions. If not avoided there would be some crazy episode happening out the stadium.
What started on social media has reached to the stadiums.
This isn’t banter anymore. It had started to cross limits in real
Came across an interesting video involving former Kerala (oops Keralam) CM Oommen Chandy’s son, Chandy Oommen (yes, his name is actually his father's name in reverse).
He’s the Congress Party MLA from Puthupally in Kottayam. Unhappy with the pace of development in the constituency, local BJP leaders announced a protest march that would culminate at his residence.
Anticipating tensions and a possible clash between supporters, the police were deployed in advance.
Chandy Oommen is seen telling the police beforehand to allow the march to proceed and not block BJP workers. The police didn’t entirely follow that line, and there was a minor scuffle -- but nothing serious.
What stood out was what happened next. Once the protest concluded, Chandy Oommen walked straight into the middle of the BJP supporters, exchanged pleasantries, and had an open conversation with them.
The BJP leaders and protesters responded warmly, urging him to consider some of the demands they had raised. In the end, there was laughter, handshakes, and a surprisingly cordial atmosphere.
😁
The Dravidian agitation didn’t just challenge North Indian cultural dominance—it rewired Tamil Nadu’s political instincts. What began as a linguistic and social justice movement hardened into a non‑negotiable principle: Tamil Nadu must be ruled by leaders rooted in Tamil identity, not by parties headquartered in Delhi. Once this sentiment crystallised through the anti‑Hindi agitations and the Self‑Respect movement, it became stronger than any administrative achievement. Even a universally respected Congress Chief Minister like K. Kamaraj, whose governance remains a benchmark, could not withstand the tidal pull of this new political consciousness. Good governance was admired, but it could not override the deeper demand for political autonomy.
From that moment, Tamil Nadu’s politics became a fortress of Dravidian self‑rule. National parties could enter the arena, but only through alliances where Dravidian parties retained primacy. This produced a long, tactical see‑saw between Chennai and Delhi—cooperation without surrender, partnership without subordination.
Jayalalithaa embodied this dynamic with unmatched clarity. She treated Delhi as a negotiating table, not a throne. She could support a national government one day and topple it the next, always signalling that Tamil Nadu’s mandate was not for sale. Atal Bihari Vajpayee was perhaps the only Delhi leader who managed a stable working relationship with Tamil Nadu, largely because he understood and respected this autonomy. His equations with both the AIADMK and DMK were built on political courtesy rather than central overreach.
Every attempt by Delhi to reshape Tamil Nadu’s political landscape—whether Indira Gandhi’s engagement with MGR or later efforts to influence Dravidian alignments—has ended up strengthening a new Dravidian pole instead of reclaiming space for national parties. The Dravidian agitation created not just parties but a political immune system that instinctively resists central dominance and continually regenerates local leadership.
448 Government school students clearing JEE Mains is more than a result - it is the quiet revolution of the Dravidian Model unfolding in classrooms across Tamil Nadu.
When leadership believes that education is the strongest instrument of social justice, doors that were once closed begin to open. Under the visionary guidance of Hon’ble Chief Minister Thiru @mkstalin, and through our collective commitment to strengthening government schools and Model Schools, students who once stood outside the gates of premier institutions are now walking in with confidence.
Praveen (99.53), Naresh (99.50) and Velmurugan (99.42) - and every student who succeeded - represent a generation shaped by opportunity, equity and belief.
This achievement belongs to the students, their teachers, and a governance model that places people first.
The journey continues...
#DravidianModel #EducationForAll #TamilNadu #JEE #ModelSchools
Day 1 of the AI Impact Summit turned to be a pain for us.
I came genuinely excited, it was the first time the summit was being hosted in India, and I wanted to show up personally to support the ecosystem and the government’s push.
But what happened next was shocking.
At 12 noon, security personnel arrived to sanitise and cordon off the area ahead of the visit by PM Modi visit at 2pm.
I explained that we’re building India’s first patented AI wearable at NeoSapien and requested a chance to showcase it.
One officer told others to let me stay, and they left.
Then another group came and ordered us to leave immediately. Seemed like there was lack of co-ordination between the security itself.
I asked: “Should we take our wearables?”
They said, others are leaving even laptops behind, security will take care.
Trusting them, I left. Hoping that the wearables will be safe, and If I am lucky, it might catch the eye of PM Modi.
Gates were closed from 12–6pm. Much much longer than expected.
Later we found out that our wearables were stolen.
Think about this: We paid for flights, accommodation, logistics and even the booth. Only to see our wearables disappear inside a high-security zone.
If only security and official entourage had access, how did this happen?
This is extremely disappointing.
KSRTC is giving city buses a fresh new look!
From interiors to exteriors, our refurbished fleet is ready to serve passengers with enhanced comfort and reliability.
#Karnataka#KSRTC#CityBus#Refurbishment#PublicTransport
The @CMOTamilnadu @mkstalin’s new year and Pongal greeting card features the Porunai Archeological Museum, Tirunelveli. I don’t see any other top Indian politician being this interested in archeology! Wishing you all the very best, sir!