Not Priyanka, Priyank, Kharge or Gandhi's, but selfless swayamsevaks of the RSS who left their families behind and worked 24X7 to rescue innocents during devastating Wayanad Floods
Public TV journalist Arun Badiger takes on Priyank Kharge over his letter to Mohan Bhagwat with a series of points
1) Rahul Gandhi carries the Constitution everywhere. Then under which provision of the Constitution is registration mandatory for an organisation? He adds that registration is required only when Orgg wants to take Govt Benefits or Public donations.
2) Responding to MB Patil's support for Kharge, he asks how many Dalit organisations and pro-Kannada organisations are registered and whether the same standard is being applied to all.
3) He adds that RSS functions through multiple affiliated organisations which are duly registered and that those entities follow the rule of land perfectly
4) He asks how writing a public letter demanding answers from RSS becomes a legal process. If there is a legal issue, why not approach the court and get the registration issue settled, also in letter no where it has been mentioned that which article of the constitution?
5) Talking about Unregistered Organization there are a lot in Bengaluru and Karnataka which takes donation from Public and misuses it for personal use. So Home Minister who has power can declare only Orgg with legal right can work
6) In case of registered Organization only those above 18+ can become members but in RSS anybody from any age can join and RSS only gives the teaching of Patriotism and Dharma so minister should say what is wrong in it?
My take on Kannada media 👇
Unlike Malayalam or Tamil media the Kannada media have full ethics they won't blindly follow agenda set up by Congress. Priyank Kharge will be questioned for pulling this Political stunt without any reason and Congres plan of witch hunt on RSS won't go unchecked.
@PriyankKharge You are a minister and you have every right to file a case, point out the law which is being broken, take necessary legal action.
Why are you not taking that route ? Anything is stopping you? Or do you want every drama only on the media ?
Siddaramiah, a day before relinquishing his office, sanctioned ₹71 crore towards backward class community halls constructed by private organisations.
Out of 155 organisations, 85 belong to his community.
He has even sanctioned ₹50 crore towards the Rakesh Siddaramiah Trust Gadag for the construction of a student hostel.
The state government should explain on what basis these organisations were selected for cores of rupees from government grants?
Have the organisations submitted building plans and estimates to seek government grants?
Why were grants not used to construct hostels by the state government itself?
Why were private players sanctioned crores of rupees?
Why did Siddaramiah sanction on the day he was stepping down?
Will the now-CM dare to probe the background of the organisations and their antecedents? @Narendramurthy@Nimmabhaskar22@Vishwasshettre
Since 2023, Karnataka has endured its worst drought in 123 years, 48 lakh hectares of crop loss and over 1,100 farmer suicides.
But Minister Ramalinga Reddy resigns over getting the Irrigation portfolio because he wanted Bengaluru Development. 👏🏽🙏🏽
Ever heard of Dr. R. Ganesh? He’s a Padma Bhushan awardee (2026) who has unlocked the latent power of the human brain through an ancient Indian tradition called 'Avadhana'.
Here’s why his feat is mind-bending: 🧵
Imagine locking Dr. Ganesh in a room with no pen, paper, or tech. 100 people enter, one by one, each whispering a unique code in any language.
He doesn’t just repeat them; he remembers the exact sequence. Ask him about person #47, and he’ll tell you instantly.
He doesn’t just store data; he captures context. If a bell rang during that 100-person event, he can tell you exactly how many times it chimed.
He is a 'Shatavadhani'—someone capable of performing 100 tasks simultaneously with perfect recall.
Why does this matter in the age of Google?
People ask: "Why memorize if we have AI?"
I ask: "Why go to the gym to build muscle if we have machines?"
Training your brain is essential for cognitive strength. Our kids are struggling with basic grammar and communication—we are losing the ability to think critically.
Dr. R. Ganesh speaks 18 languages, has written hundreds of books, and performed thousands of times. He is living proof of our ancient 'Vishwa Guru' heritage.🇮🇳
It’s time to bring 'Avadhana Vidya' into our schools.
We will be discussing about Avadhana Vidya in the next thread. Till then stay connected.🔗
📽️ inbministry
India doesn't have a manufacturing problem. India has a respect problem.
We respect the guy who cracked CAT more than the guy who can build an engine from scratch.
And that concludes the whole story.
TVK Chief Vijay holding a photo of Jesus in his victory road show after winning Tamilnadu Elections.
But Secularim and Constitution come under danger if any one says JAI SHREE RAM!!
That is how Secular Leftist larpers justify their propaganda.
Have you seen people like him talk about issues like this
https://t.co/genEPHsu0V
It’s only separatism! People speaking Tulu, Konkani or Kodava have no right to question congress ? Is this the Kannada love you show ?
#Shame!
@garudyaan@BibekRoyC If wrong on this Bengal one May 4th, I will lock and hibernate my account myself for months. If someone wants to take my handle will sell it and shut up once for all.
When a computer tracks the Indian classical dancer in this video, it picks up perfect circles, triangles, and curves in every movement. There are exactly 108 of them. All 108 were written into a manual over 2,000 years ago.
That manual is the Natya Shastra. Six thousand verses, written somewhere around 200 BCE. It describes 108 specific dance movements for Bharatanatyam, one of the oldest dance forms in India. Each movement spells out three things: where your hands go, what angle your body holds, and the exact path your legs trace. Roughly 150 step combinations grow out of those 108 base movements. A trained dancer spends years learning 70 to 80 of them.
Watch the dancer's legs in the video. The bent-knee squat creates a diamond shape. Palms together make a triangle. When researchers plotted these positions in three dimensions this year, they found the moving body carves out twisted spirals and bowl-shaped curves, the kind of shapes you see in an engineering textbook, not a dance studio. Every limb holds a specific angle and moves a measured distance.
The rhythm is math too. A 7-beat song gets filled with dance steps of 3 and 4. Scale that to 35 beats and the groups of 3 and 4 repeat five times. Choreographers work out these splits in their heads while performing live. All 108 movements are also carved into the stone walls of a 12th-century temple in Tamil Nadu called Chidambaram, many panels still carrying the original Sanskrit description next to them. A choreography textbook in granite, still legible after 900 years.
A 2013 study put 25 people on a walkway rigged with motion-capture cameras. Every human stride has two parts: when your foot is on the ground and when it swings forward. The ratio between those two parts came out to 1.620. The golden ratio is 1.618. Your foot lifts off at 61.8% of every step you take, and it has done this your entire life. A Bharatanatyam dancer takes that same built-in proportion and amplifies it across 108 movements, each one tracing shapes that were set down in writing over 2,000 years before the tracking software in this video existed.