His name is Sarthak Goswami, and I believe the entire country needs to watch his reporting, understand it, and become more aware. If this isn't stopped now, it may never be stopped.
This video gives you an idea of how dangerous ethanol factories can be. Not only that, producing ethanol also consumes a huge amount of water, as many of you may already know.
The Ethanol Minister seems to be prioritizing personal interests over the risks of pollution and worsening water shortages. Across the country, many people oppose ethanol blending—except, it seems, the Ethanol Minister
and his son.
What are your thoughts on this?🤔
His name is Sarthak Goswami, and I believe the entire country needs to watch his reporting, understand it, and become more aware. If this isn't stopped now, it may never be stopped.
This video gives you an idea of how dangerous ethanol factories can be. Not only that, producing ethanol also consumes a huge amount of water, as many of you may already know.
The Ethanol Minister seems to be prioritizing personal interests over the risks of pollution and worsening water shortages. Across the country, many people oppose ethanol blending—except, it seems, the Ethanol Minister
and his son.
What are your thoughts on this?🤔
SEBI has issued a new code stating that social media influencers with over 5 lakh followers will be treated as celebrities, with stricter financial endorsement rules. But SEBI should also pay attention that even those with under 5 lakh followers give advice on social
@SEBI_India
Wake Up Babe, a brand new scam just dropped by another ministry.
Department of Social justice and Empowerment launched a SHATAYU Geriatric Caregiver Portal
- जहां पर बड़े लोगों के caregivers के profile access kar sakte hai.
Social justice department ne saare 34000 profile fake bna diye.
Check the website at - https://t.co/wVSskAX9tr
#amitkilhor #kilhor #latestscam #shatayu #dosje
social media पर लोग झूठे स्टॉक प्रॉमिसेस के चक्कर में आ रहे हैं। चमकदार ग्राफ़ और तेज़ प्रॉफिट के वादे अक्सर लोगों को गुमराह करते हैं। कृपया, बिना गहरी रिसर्च के पैसे न लगाएं। हमेशा भरोसेमंद सोर्सेज़ से जानकारी लें और अपना पैसा सुरक्षित रखें।
" #investing
Repeated NEET paper leak controversies raise serious questions about the accountability and preparedness of the Education Ministry and exam authorities.
NEET is not just an exam; it represents years of hard work, pressure, sacrifice, and hope for millions of students. Students deserve a secure, fair, and transparent examination system.
Instagram, YouTube और Telegram पर नकली profit screenshots और fake luxury lifestyle दिखाकर लोगों को फँसाया जा रहा है।
“Join Now”, “100% Accuracy”, “Guaranteed Profit” जैसे वादों का अक्सर कोई असली logic या proof नहीं होता।
असली ट्रेडिंग ज्ञान, धैर्य और रिसर्च से होती है
“भारत में लोगों को जल्दी अमीर बनने और आसान प्रॉफिट का सपना दिखाकर शेयर मार्केट के नाम पर बर्बाद किया जा रहा है। कुछ लोग दूसरों का पैसा डुबोकर अपनी जेब भर रहे हैं। आजकल ज्ञान से ज्यादा झूठे वादे बिक रहे हैं। लालच नहीं, समझदारी और रिसर्च जरूरी है। #शेयरमार्केट#India”
#jaihind 🇮🇳
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj was born on 19 February 1630 at the Shivneri Fort near Junnar in the Pune district of Maharashtra, India
#indianking#shivajimahaaraj🇮🇳🙏
While you’re scrolling, stop here and read this. 🙏
Uttarakhand’s forests are burning alive. 🆘🦺🔥
Every year, when forests in Uttarakhand and Himachal burn, we react the same way.
Blame is thrown in every direction, statements are issued, funds are released, and after a few weeks, silence returns.
But the truth is uncomfortable: these fires are not just accidents.
They are the outcome of a system that has slowly disconnected forests from the people who once protected them.
There was a time when forests were not “managed” by departments sitting in offices, but by the daily lives of villagers. Women and men from nearby villages would regularly go into forests. They collected dry leaves to use as bedding for cattle. They gathered fallen branches for cooking fuel. Old and weak trees were identified and cleared in a controlled way.
Nothing was wasted. Nothing was left to accumulate.
Even controlled burning had a purpose. It was not destruction, it was management. It allowed fresh grass to grow, reduced excess dry biomass, and kept the forest floor from becoming a layer of fuel waiting for a spark.
This was not policy. This was survival-driven sustainability.
Then things changed.
Migration increased. Villages started emptying as people moved to towns and cities in search of better opportunities. At the same time, LPG and modern fuel replaced firewood. Fewer animals meant less need for dry leaves. The daily interaction between people and forests started disappearing.
And when people stopped going to forests, forests were left unattended.
Year after year, dry leaves piled up. Broken branches remained where they fell. The forest floor, which was once actively cleaned, turned into a dense layer of combustible material.
At this stage, it doesn’t take much. A small mistake, a careless act, or sometimes even intentional burning is enough to trigger a fire that spreads uncontrollably.
This is where the system steps in.
With rising incidents, the forest department and government increased their involvement. Funds were allocated for fire control, prevention measures, and forest management. On paper, this looks like action.
But in practice, we all understand how such systems often function.
Preventive work like clearing dry biomass, maintaining forest lines, or engaging local communities rarely happens effectively. Oversight is weak. Accountability is minimal.
What does happen consistently is post-fire response.
Fire breaks out → attention rises → funds are released → temporary action is taken → and then everything resets.
Over time, a pattern begins to form.
When fires happen every year, funding also comes every year.
And when funding becomes predictable, incentives start shifting in the wrong direction.
Instead of preventing fires, the system adapts to responding to them.
Because prevention is silent, but disaster brings visibility, urgency, and money.
This creates a dangerous cycle: Neglect of forests → accumulation of fuel → fire incidents → government funding → weak implementation → continued neglect → next fire.
And slowly, different groups become part of this cycle.
Villagers who migrated are not wrong, they left for survival.
But their absence removed the most effective layer of forest management.
People who act carelessly, or sometimes intentionally start fires, add to the problem.
Government institutions, which should focus on prevention, often remain reactive and inefficient.
And somewhere in between, a realization spreads that this cycle benefits certain parts of the system, directly or indirectly.
So the fires continue.
Not because we don’t know the solution, but because the system no longer aligns with it.
The real solution is not just more funding or better fire-fighting equipment.
It is restoring the relationship between people and forests.
It is making prevention more important than post-disaster response.
जब एक विधायक ही ऐसा बोले कि ये देहरादून है, यहाँ बड़े बड़े बदमाश आते है और वापस नहीं जाते है। कहावत है हमारे बारे में जहाँ खड़े सरकार से बड़े। गोली मारनी है जहाँ मारनी है बता देना।
लोकतंत्र में कोई भी व्यक्ति, चाहे वह मुख्यमंत्री हो या विधायक, 'सरकार' और 'संविधान' से बड़ा नहीं हो सकता। विधायक का काम कानून बनाना और जनता की सेवा करना है, न कि खुद को कानून से ऊपर बताकर 'बदमाशी' या 'गुंडागर्दी' को महिमामंडन करना।
"गोली मारनी है जहाँ मारनी है बता देना" जैसे शब्द किसी सार्वजनिक मंच से बोलना अराजकता को न्योता देना है। यह भाषा अपराधियों की हो सकती है, एक जिम्मेदार विधायक की नहीं। ऐसी बातों से समाज में यह संदेश जाता है कि बाहुबल ही सब कुछ है।
ये "हवाबाज़ी" आने वाली पीढ़ियों को बर्बाद करती है। जब बच्चे और युवा अपने नेताओं को इस तरह की "गैंगस्टर वाली भाषा" बोलते देखते हैं, तो वे अनुशासन और कानून के बजाय हिंसा को ही सफलता का रास्ता मानने लगते हैं।
देवभूमि की पहचान उसकी सौम्यता और शांति से है। इस तरह के भड़काऊ बयान न केवल राज्य की छवि खराब करते हैं, बल्कि बाहरी असामाजिक तत्वों को भी यह संदेश देते हैं कि यहाँ कानून का डर नहीं है।