@mnreindia Can a CBG plant claim govt subsidy if the plant & machinery is acquired through leasing instead of a term loan
Looking for clarity on subsidy eligibility, asset ownership requirements, and disbursement mechanisms under the applicable CBG guidelines.
cc @JoshiPralhad
@JioMart_Support There was wrong price tag in front of a product in yr store. After payment I realized that I am charged extra. Your staff have issued a credit note.
Why don't you refund the amount instead.
@SMARTBazaarIn I am sharing on DM. But please answer my question- is there a policy of not refunding in your system. This is what we are told. Credit note is only way to settle the matter.
@SMARTBazaarIn There was wrong price tag in front of a product in yr store. After payment I realized that I was charged extra.
I spoke with cashier. They accepted the mistake and have issued a credit note.
Why don't you refund the amount instead.
Why should I b penalized fr yr mistake.
@rpomumbai I had an appointment with Malad Passport Seva kendra on Mar 4, 2026.
Police Verification and documents sharing done on April 11. However, the status of application is not available on site.
Pl help me get status of application.
Cc
@passportsevamea
He worked in a lab so small & hot that his sweat would often ruin his notes. He did not build a bomb/a satellite, but he solved a puzzle that was killing millions. In 1959, from a Silo in Calcutta, Sambhunath De discovered the secret pump that drains human life. He is the father of ORS: the ghost behind the most successful medical intervention in history. He was nominated for the Nobel by the world’s greatest giants, yet he died in 1985 traveling by local bus, unrecognized by the very people whose children he had saved.
Born in 1915 in a small village in West Bengal, S.N. De did not come from a family of elite scientists. He worked at the Nil Ratan Sircar (NRS) Medical College, Calcutta. While elite scientists were building rockets, De was working in a tiny, cramped lab with barely any ventilation. He did not have high-end sensors. He used his own intuition & rudimentary tools to study how certain invisible forces acted on human cells.
S.N. De solved the mystery of Cholera, but in a way that was pure Fluid Physics & Biophysics. For a century, the world thought Cholera was a blood infection. In 1959, in his tiny lab, De proved it was a toxin that attacked the fluid-transport mechanisms of the gut. He discovered the Cholera Toxin (CT). He demonstrated how the toxin created a pump that sucked water out of cells, a masterclass in osmotic pressure & molecular transport.
This discovery is the direct reason why ORS (Oral Rehydration Salt) exists. If we/anyone we know has ever been saved by a packet of ORS, we owe our life to S.N. De.
In 1954, Nobel Laureate Joshua Lederberg wrote to the Nobel Committee saying that S.N. De’s work was worthy of the prize. He was nominated multiple times, but like many Indian scientists, he was a Ghost in a colony. The prize never came.
In 1978, the Nobel Foundation organized a symposium on Cholera. They realized the man who started it all, S.N. De, was still alive in Calcutta. They invited him, & he arrived at the high-end gala in a simple suit, looking like a retired clerk.
He was a man of aggressive humility. He lived in a small house, traveled by local buses, & never sought patents for his discovery. He wanted the Signal (the cure) to be free for the world. His own family knew him as a dedicated doc who went to the lab every day. They had no idea that Nobel Prize winners in Europe & America were referencing his 1959 paper as 1 of the most important scientific documents of the 20th century.
That is the fraud.
American power on screen is “craft.”
British power on screen is “heritage.”
Indian power on screen is suddenly evidence of political conditioning.
Same cinema. Same nationalism. Different skin colour.
The Economist has a wonderfully colonial rulebook for cinema. When America straps a camera to Pentagon hardware and sells state power with a soundtrack, it is “spectacle.” When a film is made with CIA-adjacent mythology around national revenge, it is “serious storytelling.” But when India puts its own enemies and terrorist attack scars on screen, suddenly the magazine reaches for the psychiatrist’s couch.
That is the real joke here. Fighter jets, spies, commandos and national vengeance are perfectly acceptable as long as the flag fluttering in the background is American or British. Then it is culture. It is craft. It is cinema doing what cinema does. The Economist has invented a very elegant little rule for cinema: Top Gun: Maverick can fly on Pentagon muscle, RAMBO & Zero Dark Thirty can ride CIA mythology, James Bond can sell six decades of British spy glamour, Dunkirk can turn wartime memory into national legend, and all of that is called storytelling. But the moment India puts terror, retaliation and national memory on screen with Dhurandhar, the magazine starts diagnosing the audience instead of reviewing the film.
What @TheEconomist cannot digest is not one film. It is the fact that Indians are no longer outsourcing their memory to London’s approval. A country that has lived through decades of Pakistan-sponsored terror is apparently expected to process all that pain in whispers, with tasteful disclaimers, and preferably under the supervision of foreign editors who still think they are qualified to explain India to Indians.
And that is why the review reeks. Not of sophistication, but of the old imperial tic: Western nationalism on screen is a nation telling its story; Indian nationalism on screen is a pathology requiring diagnosis. The costume has changed. The sneer has not.
The funniest part is that The Economist probably thinks this is fearless criticism. It is not. It is just another imported lecture from people who never mind propaganda when it wears aviators, a tuxedo, or a CIA badge, but develop exquisite moral sensitivity the moment India stops being apologetic on its own screen.
Just FYI: Decades of Pakistan-sponsored terror are apparently meant to be processed quietly, apologetically, and preferably without ever producing a mass-market cultural response. That is the old script. India is no longer following it.
She is Princess Irene of Greece 🇬🇷 and Denmark🇩🇰 , a member of the Greek royal family, sister of Queen Sofía of Spain 🇪🇸 and King Constantine II of Greece.
👉 Lived in India with her mother for several years.
👉 Studied Indian (Vedantic/Hindu) philosophy at the University of Madras.
👉 Influenced by Hinduism, she helped rescue cows from slaughter in Europe in the 1980s and had them transported to India.
👉 A devotee of Kanchi Kamakshi and Kanchi Shankaracharya Jayendra Saraswati Swamigal.
Yes, the same Shankaracharya whom the Congress government under Sonia Gandhi had arrested. 😔
The so-called leftist animal lovers will never speak about her, but we Sanatanis must.
May her soul find peace. Om 🕉️ Shaanti. 🙏
@ajaykraina@IndiainDenmark
@MoCA_GoI@RamMNK Sir I think the govt still has time on its side to help the citizens. Pl pull up concerned airlines to refund excess amount charged to helpless passengers https://t.co/FXTeharTPR
cc @PMOIndia
If SIR is an issue why did your people not present 6 people in Bihar whose voter rights were deleted unjustly?
You couldn’t produce 6 out of 65 lakh voter IDs?
Stop your fake propaganda @_YogendraYadav
Today is *Uttana Dwadashi* in the month of Karthika which is celebrated as *Tulsi Puja*.
Also oberved as Ksheerabdi Dwadashi Vrata it is the day where the Chaturmasa vrata ends.
Must read article by @surnell significance & rituals to be performed
https://t.co/ZeoUI51fpV