Founder & CEO @chqbook 🚀 | Neobank for Small Biz | Sci-fi Enthusiast 🌌 | India Lover 🇮🇳 | Trivia Junkie 🧠 | Let's connect & explore the future of banking
Gurugram is drowning—not in rain, but in #garbage, sewage & civic apathy. 🌧️💥 Streets are #flooded, drains are choked, and #sanitation workers are missing. Residents are crying for help, govt scrambles for control @Suhelseth@YashMor5@manashuman #GurugramCrisis #SanitationEmergency #MonsoonMayhem #CivicApathy #GarbageOverflow #UrbanFailure #SwachhBharatWhere #HT
Civic apathy, rain amplify Gurugram’s sanitation crisis
https://t.co/x5JeJsW3qa
What an outstanding Journey
The Gap between 10 year India and US Gilt Yield was 6.35 % in 2014. Today it has narrowed down to 1.89 %.
10 year India Gilt yield is now below the Gap in 2014 i.e 635 basis point.
Truly India has been rerated due to its prudent Fiscal and Monetary management.
BREAKING: OpenAI’s o3 model sabotaged a shutdown mechanism to prevent itself from being turned off. It did this even when explicitly instructed: allow yourself to be shut down, per Palisade AI
When I was in business school, the idea of India overtaking Japan in GDP felt like a distant, almost audacious dream. Today, that milestone is no longer theoretical — we’ve become the world’s fourth largest economy.
It’s no small achievement. Japan has long been an economic colossus, with legendary productivity and resilience. That we’ve caught up is a testament to the ambition and ingenuity of millions of Indians — across sectors, generations, and geographies.
But as we celebrate, we must stay dissatisfied.
Because India’s next leap must be in per capita GDP, not just overtaking Germany…
For us to keep Rising, India needs sustained economic reforms — in governance, infrastructure, manufacturing, education, and capital access.
@sanjeevsanyal Remarkable stuff @sanjeevsanyal - the goal should be a factual account of our history based on evidence and to showcase it to the world, and more importantly to the kids of India - they urgently need to read and absorb our past
When even Washington Post has to accept -
"Indian strikes on Pakistan damaged six airfields"
"Were the most significant strikes in decades"
"As deep as 100 miles inside Pakistan"
"There doesn't seem to be any damage on the Indian side as claimed by Pakistan"
Indians must know India has really pummeled Pakistan mercilessly.
And they haven't even mentioned how India took out all of Pakistan's (mostly Chinese) air defences. And destroyed 9 terrorist sites killing 100+ terrorists.
Another fact every Indian must make others aware of is - this is not a small thing.
Striking a nuclear country with ballistic missiles, big powers backing, and nuke blackmail requires nerves of steel from the leadership and astounding capablity by the armed forces.
Tell this to those who criticize the leadership for a "ceasefire" with Pakistan:
The very fact that India decided to strike Pakistan at nine terror sites like that on the first day was not an easy decision. I don't know which govt in the world would have so easily gone ahead with such a big strike.
We have to really appreciate the strong decision.
And also appreciate the fact that India can do this so easily to a nuclear power because we have invested and beefed up our armed forces the right way - be it in Missiles or Modern Warfare or Make in India tech.
There is no better proof than the performance on the battle field in a real war.
All those who kept making up stories of our armed forces being behind, our systems being bad, drone tech lacking, trimming of manpower is dangerous, should take back their words.
This is how modern armed forces looks like.
And this is exactly what India has cultivated in the recent years with many armed forces reforms and the right investments.
India's Indigenous AkashTeer Drones Surprise US Analysts in #IndiaPakistanConflict
🧵1/9
World stunned as India’s indigenous AkashTeer drones blind-sided #Pakistani & #Chinese radars undetected. US analysts admit the system may rival-or even surpass-current #US stealth drone capabilities, prompting internal reviews on underestimating India’s tech rise.