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Crossing the line

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It was a Thursday. And for the first half hour almost everything about it was normal. After it, in a split second, the time it takes you to read one full sentence, the day changed forever. And not just the day but the perspective, attitude and thinking of a nation changed.

For eleven days before that Thursday, I had been blocking a news. The hurt too deep and the resentment so strong that denial had kicked in. From Kargil War to JNU, from Pathankot to Pampore, over the time, blocking news had just become a habit. Ideologies were long locked away. It shouldn’t have hurt.

The truth is it always did.

Eleven days after our 19 brave hearts were martyred in Uri, The Indian Army Special Forces crossed the Line of Control. We would call it Surgical Strikes. India would remember it forever.

It was probably just another day at work in the mind of Indian Army. Another Op, a hard one yes, but not the final. But for a nation, it was a paradigm shift from whatever was meant to be the corner stones of it’s perspective. The Rubicon was crossed, the psychological advantage taken. Condemnation had given way to aggression.

In our minds, India had become a strong country. Our morale so high, you could identify an Indian on a local train from the spark in their eyes. The regular ‘elevator nods’ now had hidden fist pumps. Pride was touchable. You could call it the goosebumps of a true blue civilian. But then the perspective of a nation lives in the attitude of its people. We are docile or aggressive by thought, victim or hunter by choice. The spirit of India that had been long chained to its own outdated graciousness was unleashed.

We had arrived, on the other side of the line.

We had done it. It was as much difficult to do it, as much it was to say that we did it. We had successfully done both. I remember blitzing through the news with surging panic until the final line said ‘no casualties to own side’.

Then I sat down to read about Kargil. About the heroes who went there to fight the enemy, who not only was at a higher altitude, but had been gifted the psychological advantage that India wouldn’t cross the Line of Control.

I searched for news bites about Uri, about Pathankot, about Pampore about the many raw cuts and wounds in the heart of India. Revenge has a great power. It makes you immune to pain. It makes healing a possible thought. It makes you want to do it more often. And in rare times, it brings purpose to life.

Terror attacks wouldn’t stop. Our soldiers would still embrace Martyrdom. But we had become and would remain a strong nation. The nation had morally and emotionally assembled behind it’s Army.  We were in it together. Show us the path and we would walk the fire. I am positive that it truly was one of the greatest moments you could live through as an Indian.

I remember talking to a veteran many months later about a certain date And a “when?” was answered with “Five days after Surgical Strikes”. The date had to be remembered. It would be blasphemy to forget.

And remember we did. Remember we will always do.

It was on September 29th 2016 that we crossed the line.

Why reviling Modi isn’t working

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Attempts to burn Narendra Modi at the stake are not new. Those who call him “Tughlaqi” and “Feku”— such as Congress’ Digvijaya Singh— apparently don’t see the contradiction. You can’t be the two at the same time.

Then there are those who lie freely. Remember when Sagarika Ghose pooh-poohed Narendra Modi’s pro-poor image by pointing out his Louis Vuitton shawl—only to be told by the company that they don’t make such shawls!

Rajdeep Sardesai called Modi a “mass murderer” and “hero of hatred in an HT Summit on stage. He took a call which lawfully is one of investigating agencies and Courts and who, incidentally, have ruled in Modi’s favour.

Rahul Gandhi calls Modi a peddler of lies. He cites the Rs 15 lakh-in-each-bank account lie which has been attributed to Modi ad nauseam. There is this exact video on 15-lakh and viewers can see it for themselves how Modi’s speech has been twisted by the Left-Liberal ecosystem.

(It’s the same which this shameless mafia had spread about Atal Bihari Vajpayee calling Indira Gandhi a “Durga”. View Vajpayee’s denial and judge it for yourself).

Rahul once termed Modi’s dispensation as “Khoon Ki Dalali” and which was similar to the spin his mother Sonia Gandhi once used for Modi, namely “Maut Ka Saudagar.”

Sitaram Yechury, CPI (M) general secretary, called Modi no better than a “pick-pocket” of people’s money in January this year. Nobody asked him—nor was he decent enough to apologize—when such “cheated” people brought BJP to power in UP by a historic mandate in a matter of few weeks.

Arvind Kejriwal has no compunction in calling Modi a “coward and a psychopath.” An Imam in this country announces fatwa and a Rs 25 lakh cash award for anyone who could blacken Modi’s face.

It is this same set of people who call Modi anti-farmers. Those in search of truth could easily make up this mind by knowing how transformative this government has been to farms and farmers.

Never ever a public figure has been subjected to so vile lies and propaganda as Modi.  The filth by Digvijaya Singh, Manish Tewari and Mrinal Pande is fit for Huns and barbarians.

Lately, there has been a particular surge in branding Modi as a “Jumla_Man”. Twitter abounds in hashtags such as Jumla, Feku, Jumlanomics, JumlaMan, Jumla Diwas, Jumla Maharaj, National Pheku Diwas and National Jumla Day. Everyday on WhatsApp you come across an image portraying Modi as a “feku.”

Let’s examine whether this (a) “Jumla_Man” image fits PM Modi; (b) and whether it’s an image which people have come to accept or reject at large.

Jumla_Man: Propaganda and Reality:

Quality Council of India (QCI) over six months carried out a massive survey of rural sanitation—Swacchh Survekshan Gramin research covered 140,000 households across 700 districts. Each household was personally visited. Every household was geo-tagged. The positive results are staggering: Nine out of 10 households now have toilets and they use it—they are not turned into stores as propagandists claim. So are the results of 53 out of 74 cities surveyed. The draining cost on health due to open defecation, faeces in groundwater, encephalitis, diarrhea is being tackled head on.

That’s Swacchh Bharat for you.

Modi government has come a long way in providing a basic safety net to every Indian. Be it food, electricity, housing, toilets, gas-based cooking, insurance coverage, micro-loans, all-weather road or some employment.

The financial inclusion drive through Jan Dhan-Aadhar-Mobile (JAM) trinity has removed leakages, ghost accounts and fake beneficiaries from Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT),

Massive infrastructure build up is being reflected in railways, national highways, rural roads, housing, air connectivity and rural electrification.

National Investment and Infrastructure Fund is providing equity-risk capital with global investors.

Atal Innovation Mission scheme is rarely written about. And same about Mudra Programme and India Aspiration Fund. The success of StartUpIndia could be measured if one visits IIT campuses. The strides in renewable energy, electrical vehicles and financial services are not mentioned.

Bankruptcy Code and an Alternative Assets Industry is now finally in place.

And we haven’t come to talking about Surgical Strikes, Doklam and mass cleansing of terrorists from Jammu & Kashmir!

Jumla_Man Branding: Very few believe it!

I looked up at hashtags such as Jumla, Pheku, Jumlanomics, JumlaMan, Jumla Diwas, JumlaMaharaj etc on twitter and was surprised at the low traction it has managed in three years. The #JumlaMaharaj, for example, initiated by Congress spokesperson Sanjay Jha has only 85 tweets so far. JumlaJayanti has been there for over two years. The others too don’t have the traction.

Every trick—and more—have been tried in the last three years. From doubting surgical strikes to EVM; to dragging Modi’s mother and wife with fake news;  to running down country itself by hobnobbing with the Chinese and in US.

What more proof do you want of this insidious industry as it can’t find even one good thing in the Modi government which is massively backed by people of this country, sweeping one state after another with record margins?

And what do you call them?

“Feku.”

What’s up with WhatsApp?

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“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us..”

-Charles Dickens

While reading these lines from one of my favorite classics ‘A Tale of Two Cities’,  my thoughts took a detour, and before I could lose my thoughts, I jotted down few conversations that I have had during my visit to India. Disclaimer, it’s not about the cultures of the west and the east, it’s an experience which seems like a déjà vu, and could hold true for any location in the world.

Scene 1: Friends Forever?!

Friend: Are you on WhatsApp?!

Me: No!

Friend: What?! Why?! Is everything alright? But you would be coming on WhatsApp right?

Me: Not Sure

Friend: Kya Yaar! It would be so much fun, you know that classmate (to whom we never spoke, when in college) is the Admin of our college WhatsApp group, then we have that hostel wing mate (whose presence we never acknowledged back then) is in our WhatsApp group, and so on so forth.

Very soon the elevator pitch, to convince you to join the WhatsApp group, turns into a farewell speech. Okay! Keep in touch, nice meeting you.

By now, I would have been labelled as primitive, anti-social, or maybe I have something to hide.

Scene 2: The Family Saga

Now this is a tricky one, as here the connections are established, on the basis of blood. You would meet these faces in some or the other family functions.

Relative: Where have you been? No news (read: not able to stalk you on social media)

Me: I did call you last month

Relative: Yeah! But no instant access (Read: I am not able to send you random photos, videos and quotes)

Me: We can always text each other, or email (I am very prompt in my response)

Relative: Okay, what was your contact number?

Me: Really?!

Similar conversations I have had with different circles of my acquaintances, friends, cousins, colleagues etc.

One thing that is common in all those conversations is WhatsApp. If you are not part of WhatsApp, it seems as if you are not alive. My issue is not with WhatsApp, but the thinking that has developed around it. As if a new kind of sensory organ has developed in the WhatsApp users, who can connect with you only if they can add you on WhatsApp. Once you are part of their WhatsApp, you are like the appendix (vestigial body part), which they remember only in case of emergency. The emergency in case of WhatsApp user should be redefined: It could be an act where in a WhatsApp user has nobody to ping, or when they have nobody to share the sweet nothings with, till the time their most important person is available again to chat, or when their life on those candy Crush Sagas are back.

By now, I am sure, most of you would have listed all the benefits of WhatsApp, and how it has empowered each user, and also helped in solving crisis. It’s not that the writer is unaware of the impact of WhatsApp in empowering its each user. However, I fail to understand is –

How come being part of those friends and family groups the only way to stay connected?

Why the calls within minutes turn into ‘aur bata’, ‘hmmm’, ‘haan’, and mostly one sided conversation?

Whereas, a comment, or text, has all the fondness and affection of the world.

This does not mean, that I would dwell in the past when having a landline was a privilege, or show lack of faith in the future generation. Each generation is smart and knows what works the best for them.

What amuses me the most is that, it’s not the children of today, but the landline generation, Nokia mobile generation, the telegram generation are the ones who would reply to your What’s UP, only if you have WhatsApp!

Sampoorna

USA

The disappearing innocence of food in India and what you can do about it

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Do you remember watching foreign celebrity chefs coming to India, learn Indian dishes and then do the “great Indian food experiment”? They would proudly display their “twist” on their highly funded TV shows. Foreign audiences perhaps love the colour and drama inside the Indian kitchens. However, it’s hard to not cringe whenever they would put cumin seeds in cold oil or pour red chilli powder over a gravy without slowly roasting it before with other spices.Do you remember watching foreign celebrity chefs coming to India, learn Indian dishes and then do the “great Indian food experiment”? They would proudly display their “twist” on their highly funded TV shows. Foreign audiences perhaps love the colour and drama inside the Indian kitchens. However, it’s hard to not cringe whenever they would put cumin seeds in cold oil or pour red chilli powder over a gravy without slowly roasting it before with other spices.

And this is not all – one small mistake in preparing a gravy can ruin it completely. Though perfection is overrated – still one would expect the internationally acclaimed chefs to be a bit more careful while showing their expertise at Indian cooking.

It takes a lot of time to understand the right combination of spices for different vegetables and meats. Unlike most restaurants, who basically offer everything in four major gravies (red, green, brown and white), the food cooked in Indian homes is much more diverse.

There are numerous small tips that are passed on from one generation to another. These small nuances in cooking can not be learned in any crash course. Also, this nitty-gritty in the preparation and presentation of food make India’s food scene one of the most vibrant and distinct.

Over the centuries, India being a melting pot for different cultures has created a unique cuisine which carries elements from all across the world. In all these years there has been a pattern where people coming to India, adapted their cuisine depending on India’s geographical and cultural patterns. Goan cuisine is a fine example of this adaptation.

However, in the last few years, the world has seen a remarkable change in consumption patterns with the widespread use of Internet and smartphone. There is this new fad for finding the authentic flavors. Apparently, the Chinese, Mexican and Thai food that we have been served all these years in India is not authentic enough. The paranoia to discover the authentic is really dangerous for foodies who see cooking as an art form without boundaries – rather than a perfect science as being projected by the purists.

There is another parallel trend for finding healthier (organic) alternatives and superfoods. Experts claim that the red poha (flattened rice) is better than white poha, while white gud (jaggery) is better than the brown one. There are no scientific studies to prove these claims; however, they do make a good impact for those who are trying to gain attention and differentiation in the market with their so called “organic alternatives”.

The information pollution created by dieticians, health experts and nutritionists is so vast that it has impacted decision making for a normal healthy eating Indian. The atmosphere is overloaded with misinformation on what’s healthy and authentic, rather than simply what’s tasty and hygienic.

So here’s a simple way to rediscover what you have been missing in the recent times. Go back to what you or your family used to eat in the early 90’s.

Try answering these questions putting yourself in early 90s.

  • How many times in a year or a month did you eat pizza in the year 1990?
  • Did you really care about how much gluten or maida your noodles contain?
  • How many varieties of cheese did you know about, and how many did you use to consume?
  • Wasn’t your search of bread limited to simple bread – or it had to be a choice between 10 different varieties and brands?

Here’s what mothers have been telling to their kids since ages, and it still makes perfect sense.

Eat in moderation, Eat home cooked food, and avoid processed food.

However, times have changed. The present generation is being raised by parents who themselves weren’t able to understand the value of the above rule. These are the parents who believe that a meal can’t be completed without an aerated beverage. They devour chilli-chicken and chilli-potato and think that walking 20 minutes in a park is enough to remain healthy. They love chocolate in milkshakes, pastries, cakes, cookies and even corn flakes. They cringe at the thought of consuming humble Indian veggies like Lauki and Turai – restricting their veggie intake to select few.

One can’t expect such families who like going out and consuming pizzas, burgers and other trashy food on weekly basis to stay healthy for long. Hence, like the US, obesity and lifestyle related health problems are becoming a major challenge even for India. According to a Times of India report, India has seen a surge in obesity.

“It (India)had 0.4 million obese men, or 1.3% of the global obese population in 1975, but in 2014, it zoomed into the fifth position with 9.8 million obese men, or 3.7% of the global population. Among women, India has jumped to the third rank with 20 million obese women (5.3% of global population).”

The situation is obviously worse in urban centers. We have been led to believe that traditional Indian food made with spices and Desi Ghee is not good for health; while that made with Olive oil and exotic herbs is better. Again there is no scientific study supporting these claims. Rujuta Diwekar, a diet expert who has worked with celebrities like Kareena Kapoor, recommends eating Desi Ghee as it reduces cholesterol by increasing the contribution of lipids towards metabolism.

She has authored four books raising awareness about the goodness of Indian food.

“We should not wait for the West to acknowledge it (Indian diet) as something of value. A diet that is not culturally compliant is a diet that won’t last beyond two meals. Why is killing yourself at a gym and starving a better idea than giving food we grew up eating a chance?”

Rujuta Diwekar

Anything quoted as sugar-free and trans-fat free is good for health is a myth. There is no to consume dietary supplements and protein shakes. There is no need to separate egg yolks – they don’t make you fat – just make sure that you don’t consume 12 of them at a time. There is no need to consume complex cooking oils which claim to be low in cholesterol – natural oils (mustard, groundnut, and sunflower) are healthy enough.

Nonetheless, it’s not all doom and gloom. An average Indian spends more than 13 hours a week cooking, which is around double the international average. That’s right; majority of Indians are very particular about their food and they prefer it homemade. The Indian diet is diverse and complete in itself. Sticking with traditional food, cooked in traditional style can offer great benefits than obsessing about anything that’s from the West. The need is to recognize the quality and value of simple, freshly cooked Indian food and promote it with pride.

BJP government floundering on core concerns of its core voters

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Ever since Modi government took power at the Centre and majority of States thereafter, there was anticipation that the dark days of Minority Appeasement would be banished from our political lexicon.
Alas, it hasn’t been so.

Hindus in particular voted in the majority government for the first time in 30 years, the expectations were high and even today remain so despite nothing to show on ground by the BJP/RSS combine in terms of levelling the playing field. The tall Manifesto promises as usual are election sops to fool the electorate.

Modi himself railed against the Minority Appeasement and Votebank politics of the opposition in general and Congress in particular. However, in these three years except for some cosmetic changes, nothing concrete has been done to assuage BJP’s core voters.

In fact, apart from its affidavit on Triple Talaq and Jamia Millia (issue of withdrawal of minority status) there’s little to show. What concerns the core BJP supporters is the indifference of the government towards renouncing control of Hindu religious places whereas the Mosques and Churches are controlled by the respective communities.

Example of Karnataka, Kerala where Temple donations are used for all sundry expenditures except for betterment of the Temples and Hindus. Karnataka has used these donations for meeting expenses of various minority institutions like the Madarsas.

It’s a shame that an avowed Hindu nationalist party and government has quietly put these burning issues in a cold storage.

If it has failed miserably on this account, its performance on Right to Education is even more dismal. The flawed Act passed by the Parliament allows exemptions to the Minorities but forces the Majority Hindu institutions to respect the Law and full adherence to its provisions.

If RTE is made a fundamental right what exempts the Minority institutions from obligation of the Act? With absolute majority in LokSabha and near majority in Rajya Sabha, it’s time for bringing about radical changes in the RTE. Minority groups, institutions cannot be allowed to escape the Constitutional responsibilities in garb of Minoritism. If a child needs education it cannot be the duty alone of Hindu educational institutions, the duties and responsibilities must be shared by all in India. RTE needs wide ranging changes for universal implementation.

BJP had vociferously raised the question of Kashmiri Pandits resettlement in Valley, resetting or rehabilitating the Pandits is not even on the horizon. It is yet to form its response to the PIL in SC over Art 35 A which defines the Permanent Resident of the state of J&K. Art 370, a temporary provision is no starter, its alliance with PDP looks Unholy and Unhappy, so much for convergence of thought on Kashmir.

The cacophony over Triple Talaq having subsided, the government must focus on the core issue of a Uniform Civil Code for the country. It needs consultations, basic convergence of thoughts and long drawn process before it even goes into the pipeline. But three years, and the government hasn’t moved an inch except articulating its response to the query raised by SC on Triple Talaq.

We can forget about a Ram Mandir for the time being. As the government finds it difficult to even raise basic questions about the so called Secular issues of Uniform Civil Code, Right to Education, Reclaim Temples or even a little contentious Art 370.

Who knows that Modi will return in 2019 to fulfill these aspirations and promises, but so much time has been wasted. However there is still time, after all, well begun is half done!

MSM fake news monitor: Indian Express on BHU

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Facebook today came out with a full-page advertisement in Indian Express (September 26, 2017) with 10 tools for a reader to check if a news is fake. It asks readers to check headlines, evidence, photos, source to spot a Fake News. It’s a good reference point to monitor our English national dailies—Lutyens’ Media– who abound in Fake News. It’s a start today and we would gradually warm up to daily planting of Fake News by mainstream media.

Indian Express today had 7 stories on Banaras Hindu University (BHU) violence, running from its Front Page to multiple pages inside its Delhi edition. It fails the Facebook Fake News Challenge on multiple counts.

EVIDENCE: A front page piece attributes several issues which girl hostellers face in BHU. There is not a SINGLE source attributed. Further there is no attempt to investigate—in this or in any other BHU story in Indian Express today if there is truth in (a) Outside BHU elements creating ruckus; (b) attempt to destroy the University property; (c) police targeting only these “troublemakers” (d) BHU Vice-Chancellor alleging protests politically motivated.

Interestingly, THE PROTESTORS THEMSELVES SAY THE OUTSIDE ELEMENTS HAVE CAUSED THE TROUBLE! Why Express has made no attempt to investigate it? Or other news reports? (see image below)

Translation of the headline: The unrest at BHU was funded by various parties

SOURCE:  Seema Chisti writes thus on Edit Page in today’s Express: “BHU has pushed for no Wi-Fi (How can the new VC risk Wi-Fis, as girls would watch porn). Meat-eating must be curbed and early bedtimes enforced. The VC, who defended RSS ideas, was keen to stamp out any trouble in BHU.”

The Facebook Fake News Challenge asks readers to be sceptical of the source you don’t trust. Seema Chisti falls in this bracket. She never mentions she is Seema Chisti Yechury, wife of Communist powerhead, Sitaram Yechury. Readers can’t be faulted if she is perceived as part of Communist propaganda machine.

One, there is Wi-Fi in girls’ hostel (so they can watch porn, Ms Chisti). Two, meat-eating is not curbed (Extra Rs 30 ensure it); Three, early bedtimes are not enforced–Girl students can take permission from BHU authorities and stay out as long as they want.

Let’s not even stoop to reply her charge on the BHU VC having RSS leaning (And why readers must not presume you are a Communist loudspeaker, Ms Chisti?)

HEADLINES:  The Front Page headline of “Why women BHU students are separate and unequal” is classically ambiguous. You can interpret it both ways—that WHY SHOULD girls have separate rules or WHY SHOULD NOT there be separate rules. But for the standard tactics of misleading headlines, I would give a more concrete example.

On Page 11 of Indian Express, one of its exclusive story has this headline: “Rohingya illegal, purse-strings open for Lankan Tamil refugees”. Now this headline clearly aims to influence the readers that the Modi government is discriminatory; it has one policy for Rohingya Muslims and another for Non-Muslims. What it shamelessly hides is that Rohingyas are ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS and not REFUGEES! So the two instances can’t be compared. Unless the newspaper sees no difference between apples and oranges.

As an aside, click on this link to see how from politicians (Ashok Gehlot, Sanjay Sharma), to journalists (Mrinal Pande, Swati Chaturvedi) to lawyers (Prashant Bhushan) have blatantly peddled lies on the BHU affair and make up your own mind on these Fake News Promoters.

(Post Script: Mainstream Media Fake News Monitor isn’t exclusive to this writer. Any discerning reader who spots Fake News in our mainstream media can use the platform and share it with others—but don’t forget to tag the headline MSM Fake News Monitor. Only then we would know the extent to which Lutyens Media lies).

Why India cannot afford to have Rohingiyas

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For the past few days, the issue of Rohingiya is very much discussed in India and its neighboring countries. The loom of fire arising from Myanmar is now showing its effect on its neighboring countries and its impact is being seen on India as well. After all, why Rohingiya is in the spotlight and what is their identity? According to the United Nations, Rohingya is the world’s most persecuted community.

If seen from a historical perspective, Rohingiya’s culture and colloquialism are very similar to the culture of Bangladesh. Prior to 1940, they were originally the resident of Bangladesh, who were later brought by the British during World War II in the Rakhine region of Myanmar. But in the year 1982, Myanmar’s government refused to give citizenship to them and today the situation is that Rohingya has emerged as a community whose existence is endangered. But in the recent days, this issue was overwhelmed when Myanmar’s army started to torture these Rohingya. The number of Rohingyas in Myanmar is around 1.1 to 1.3 million, but in recent times many Rohingiya migrated to Bangladesh and its surrounding countries in the wake of the violence in Myanmar.

In India alone, about 40,000 Rohingiya lives in illegal ways. There are various such incidents happening within Myanmar, when Myanmar leadership is under a noble peace award winner, Aung Sung Kyi and where Buddhism is a dominant religion. Any type of violence with Rohingiya is like a stigma for humanity; however Myanmar is continuously denying this fact. But we cannot completely deny that some terror ideology is also growing within the Rohingiya community in Myanmar, which has affected Myanmar’s peace. One example of such terror outfit in Myanmar is “Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA)” .

On Aug, 25 the same terror outfit escalated an attack on 30 police posts in Rakhine region of Myanmar, where 12 members of the security forces are killed. In a return, Myanmar army started a “clean drive” against the Rohinigiya militants which resulted in killing of around 400 people in the Rakhine region of Myanmar where it is difficult to figure out among the militants killed and civilians killed. Myanmar may have some internal reasons for not rewarding Rohingiya community with citizenship but launching a direct action against Rohingiyas in the name of cleaning Rohingiya militant is simply halting peace in the country. In India, 40,000 Rohingiya residing has become a serious concern for all of us. These Rohingiya are present in small pockets in various parts of India, especially in the Jammu, Haryana, and in few parts of west Bengal. Some people in India, they term them as “Refugees” but in actual they are not “Refugees”, they are illegal migrants and there is a core difference between “Refugees” and “Migrants”.

The Government of India has decided to take these Rohingya out of India, after which the Government has been facing many criticism of this decision. Some people in our country believe that Rohingya should get shelter within India. But the government argued in the Supreme Court that Rohingiya is a threat to the security of India and to some extent this argument is also right. Many such cases have emerged, in which Rohingiya people have been found to have links with the terrorist. Its most recent example is the Bodh Gaya blast in India during the year 2013, in which Rohingya militants were found as main accused. In such a case, the question is true that by giving asylum to Rohingiya in India, are we are not putting our national security on fire?

It is also a matter of great surprise that terrorists like Hafiz Saeed are also raising the voice against the atrocities on Rohingiya. Is it wrong to say that if India gives shelter to rohingiya then this Rohingya would prove to be a pawn for terrorists like Hafiz? It may be wrong to frame that all Rohingya are terrorists but the possibility of their terror may not be ruled out. The Radicalization of Rohingiyas is not the only problem, in addition we are already an overpopulated country with limited resources. So, providing Rohingiyas shelter will put extra burden on our resources. For the time being, we may take 40,000 Rohingiyas less in numbers for a country having 125 cr population but these 40,000 can prove effective in changing the demography of a region, which may turn to be harmful for the harmony of our nation. Moreover, the appeasement policy which is being followed by some political class of this country may provoke Rohingiyas to carry out such things which may pose a threat to the “secular” structure of this country.

Today, some of the self-proclaimed champions of human rights are protesting against the move to deport Rohingiyas from India and demanding shelter for them in India. Unfortunately, they are the same human rights activists who remained silent when Kashmiri Pundits are massacred and forced to leave Kashmir. They are advocating to give shelter to illegal Rohingiya migrants in India but they refrain them from talking about the Rehabilitation of Kashmiri Pundits as it may not be an integral part of their agenda. Indian culture is known for welcoming everyone but it simply does not mean that we can keep compromising with the security of 125 cr Indians.

Few politicians and religious leaders are even trying to portray the step to deport Rohingiyas as a step against Muslims. How can someone try to politicize the subject of national security and protest a step which is being made for the safety of nation? It is also unfortunate that world’s most prestigious institution United Nation in a time, when they should put international pressure on Myanmar to take these Rohingiyas back and stop bloody game with Rohingiyas, the UN is passing a statement asking India not to deport Rohingiyas. However, India reserves the full right to deal with her internal security and as per the constitutional rights, India can deport anyone who are staying illegally in India. The whole world is talking about the human rights of Rohingiyas, but no one is coming forward to give them a place in their land. The question also need to be asked from the self-proclaimed boss of “Islamic Nations”, especially the middle east countries who are rich enough to accommodate these Rohingiyas. Why are they in a sleep mode? They must come forward and show humanity by providing shelter to Rohingiyas. When there is a lot of evidence that some people in the Rohingiya community are involved in terrorist activities, why do pseudo liberals want to see India becoming a dumping ground for Rohingiya?

By showing the mirror of humanity, can we play down the threat to the security and integrity of our country and how can it be justified. Atrocities against Rohingiya in Myanmar are condemnable in any form but first of all, India has the right to think about the security of the country. This is the time when Jihadist terrorism inside India is continuously expanding its footprints and if Rohingiya stays longer in India then there is a fear that Jihadi terrorists can easily make them their weapons.

Instead, the need of the time is to put constructive pressure on Myanmar to accept Rohingiyas and allow them to have them access to the basic facilities including education, so that they can emerge as a sensible community in near future.

The “Wright” Satya Pal & sinister media hacks

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Dr. Satya Pal Singh, just a fortnight into his induction as junior HRD minister, had a taste of Left-Liberal Cabal’s viciousness when he was lampooned for remarking that it was an Indian, and not Wright Brothers, who invented plane in 1895, a good eight years before.

The usual suspects—NDTVThe Wire and Lutyens’ Media—laid into the upright and erudite minister through hacks breeding in their cesspool. Spiteful headlines and ornery punchlines were stuffed in cadaver of philosophy. Little thought was given to an officer and a gentleman—whose long-stint as a police officer is the stuff of a legend. Nor the Minister’s academic background—an M.Phil in Chemistry—deserved a second thought from these stone-pelters.

The Wire in particular, a prototype of Scroll, Huffington Post, Quint etc with anything but good of India in their mind—laid into Dr. Satya Pal Singh with a gusto. It’s a painfully long read, sermonizing, forensically examining the credentials of the Indian in question, Shivkar Bapuji Talpade. The writer finds it a near heresy that Wright Brothers are not seen as ones who invented aeroplane. He chillingly asks us to be ready for a “long spell of darkness” in today’s India.

So, let me break his heart. The claims of Wright Brothers are being written out of history now. There is now a clinching evidence that it was a German, Gustave Whitehead, who flew a “condor” plane in August 1901, a good two years before the Wright Brothers did it. Take the word of the “Bible” of aviation history, Jane’s All the World’s Aircraft, for it.

Still unconvinced? Be forewarned that lawmakers of Connecticut–a US state with no connection to RSS, if you may-have moved a Bill to get Whitehead his rightful due.

Want more heat? Whitehead’s story has popped up every few decades in the last 100 years. No less that 17 eye-witnesses and newspaper reports backed Whitehead’s credentials. Fourteen of these accounts have been notarized. Aviation historians say there are compelling reasons to throw out Wright Brothers’ claims.

Jane’s Journal assiduously researched the claim of aviation expert John Brown and declared: “(Whitehead’s flight), it must be stressed, was more than two years before the Wright Brothers manhandled their flyer from its shed and flew a couple of hundred feet in a straight line…(thus) an injustice is rectified…”

Google would show you that some consider the stuff of Wright Brothers the biggest fraud in history. Reports abound that Wright Brothers didn’t as much do their flight as “catapulted” it –by going doing the hill off an inclining. Folks, there is a difference between a hop and a real flight.

Now steel up for this gut in the blow, you hacks. Wrights signed a contract to give the Smithsonian Museum the brothers’ plane with the clause that the museum would never declare another aircraft was the first to achieved powered flight! (check this link)

Aviation historian Tom Crouch says that the Wrights “stuck one clause into the contract that said if the Smithsonian ever says anybody flew before the Wright brothers, we have the right to take the airplane back”.

“That clause is in fact still in the contract.”

The claims of Wright Brothers’ being thus grounded, let’s turn our attention to Talpade, the poor chap, who has been dragged to cleaners by these unscrupulous jackals. The Wire goes to obscene lengths to deny Talpade the credit but still had to concede it was a “disputed—(and not false)—claim.” In their unscrupulous rush, they concealed facts such as:

(a)      There is a Wikipedia page on Talpade and his achievement which precedes Dr. Satya Pal’s assertion by years;

(b)     There are numerous newspaper reports, including Times of India,  in the last two decades on Talpade’s feat;

(c)      That just two years ago, a biopic Hawaizada, starring Ayushmann Khurrana, on Talpade’s aviation feat had an all-India release.

The Wire, quite stupidly, claims that Talpade’s was a primitive flight which didn’t go beyond 1500 metres in the air. Who are we to tell the online rag that Whitehead’s claim today is being acknowledged for only being 50 metres above the ground! And that Wrights’ first didn’t go beyond 115 metres and that too through an incline.

There is such a rush to “hunt down” any facts which supports India and its glorious past these days. It was the imperial policy of British Raj which was duly bequeathed to Indians educated in Western mores. Call them brainwashed or paid agents, whatever, but surely compromised nevertheless. In double quick time they jump to discredit our heritage, lest it becomes widespread and Indian masses wake up to their ancient glory.  A Rahul Gandhi can make a stupid claim of “All-NRIs” on foreign soil but you won’t find presstitutes go for his throat.

This academic mafia intends to make Hindutava advocates duck for cover and retreat into their shells. The narrative, in their view, must not be allowed to gain a traction. Have you read any follow-up on India having discovered “zero” at least 500 years before the accepted date as was recently found by the world? Or that India “invented” the Decimal System? Or our atom theory which the modern world acknowledges as quantum physics? Or India’s spectacular science of astronomy, never mind its astonishing advancements in steel-manufacturing?

It was famous historian Will Durant who had said: “India was the motherland of our race, and Sanskrit the mother of Europe’s languages: she was the mother of our philosophy; mother, through the Arabs, of much of our mathematics; mother, through the Buddha, of the ideals embodied in Christianity; mother, through the village community, of self-government and democracy. Mother India is in many ways the mother of us all”.

So, it’s time to stand up and applaud the Minister. Flush out all the facts on Talpade and give India’s forgotten hero his due. Present his credentials to Jane’s Journal or similar authorities. And a simple message to academic charlatans:
Shut Up.

How strong, media, the fourth pillar of the democracy is?

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Today Indian democracy stands at a juncture where one set of people are claiming that another set of people want to stifle their voice. The fact that the former set of people are being able to say this is evident of the fact that the latter set of people aren’t doing what they’re being blamed for properly.

It is the job of the media to report about happenings around the world to its readers/viewers. The media claims to be the fourth pillar of democracy in our country. It keeps on boasting about how it is the most ‘independent’, ‘unbiased’, and ‘fearless’. The media claims to be the torch bearer of democracy, and freedom of expression. The media perceives itself to be the watchdog of all the wrongdoings in society to present them before their audience.

While the media may claim to be doing all of what is mentioned above, what it actually does is bends down to the power of corporate funding without full disclosure. It selectively reports only those incidents which suit their agenda or pre-conceived notions. It keeps completely mum on even the slightest negative news about the high and mighty, on whose crumbs they live off, and never show anything damning to their own cabal despite it being the absolute truth.

It claims to be the torch bearer of democracy and freedom of expression but the Editors Guild or any of the other such powerful lobbying clubs shut their mouths when journalists not towing their line were killed in cold blood or when one of their created ‘intellectuals’ is exposed trying to sell off agenda as ‘expert opinion’. They do not even bat an eyelid when journalists are shooed away by career activists within the immediate vicinity of the Press Club of India for doing their job.

The Lutyens media haplessly continues to freshly brew new stories to fit their agenda day in and day out. Anyone who disagrees with their agenda will be denied any space whatsoever on any form of media. They will go to the extent of asking the employers of the people inconsistent with their agenda to sack them! Then they will come out with responses like ‘A book must be countered with a book..’ . It’s easy for them to say this because if you disagree with them and want your points of disagreement to be known and decide to write a book/article or if you’re lucky enough to make a movie, unfortunately it won’t see the light of the day. This is so because they or their ‘influential friends’ are the ones who control these industries, be it in the form of Directors of movies or Editors in prestigious publishing houses, or themselves as Editors or anything else in media houses.

If you try to expose them, they will black you out, they will slap defamation cases on you, they will name you and try to shame you on national media or national newspapers, they will run campaigns against you,they will label you as ‘bhakt’, ‘lumpen element’, and much more, they will make news stories about you without showing your side of it, but still call themselves the torch bearers of democracy and freedom of speech and expression.

Due to what it does to drown out or wipe off any contrary opinion to its agenda, the media is losing (if not already lost) it’s credibility at speed faster than that of light. The people who consume news through Main stream media (MSM) have gotten tired of the same agenda every single day. These consumers no longer take the word of media to be final and mostly turn to social media to cross check about the facts.

If the Indian media really considers itself to be the ‘fourth pillar of democracy’ then it should be ready to do what a pillar actually does, bear the weight of the structure (democracy). It must be accountable to the people just like other pillars of democracy. It cannot then function by keeping itself on a pedestal and by being above scrutiny . The media must be subject to scrutiny. The media house must give full disclosures about their financials, and also their ideological biases. They must be transparent and democratic in their functioning. They must show all the sides of the story. They must have zero tolerance to fake news or hitjobs. They should practice what they preach. But looking at the prevailing conditions within the MSM, this seems to be too much to expect.

Today’s youth, barring a few, do not know what a legend Ramnath Goenka was. One of the reasons for this is that the most of the journalists, who today have become the face of MSM, show no spine and do not tread on the path followed by him. The time has come for Ramnath Goenka of this generation to rise and clean up the media from the cesspool of nepotism, lies, propaganda, and holier than thou attitude. From the look of things, the next Ramnath Goenka is going to come not from the MSM but the social media.

Koran, Sharia and Non-Muslims

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Its often a debatable topic when it concerns to anything even remotely related to Islam. Many of the ‘Islamic Scholars’ claim Islam to be a peaceful religion so does the left. The people especially non-muslims who are now compelled to research this Arabia-originated faith owing to the current scenario, are generally frowned upon by Islamic Scholars and apologists of Islam shunning them down, even mocking their intellect. But still, in the times of universal deceit, standing by our ground is a prerequisite and equally courageous. So, lets discuss the most important part of Islam the ‘Sharia’.

What is Sharia?

Sharia or ‘Allah’s law’ as it is called are a set of laws  which are the most important part of Islam, or to be precise ‘They complete Islam’. Sharia is totally based on principles of Koran.

Islamic Scholars on Sharia: “Islamic Law (Sharia) is perfect; eternal since its based on ‘Mohammed’s deeds’. No other law is as perfect as Sharia.”

If you were to ask any believing and practicing Muslim to denounce sharia no one will ever do that.

The topics covered in Sharia are: How to eat, what to eat, how to live, how to pray, how to discipline your wife, how to punish a child, contract law, family law; basically every aspect of life!

Here are some examples of demands by Muslims with Sharia being the basis of them:

1. Prayer rooms at airports, workplaces etc.

2. Media should not be allowed to criticize Islam

3. Prohibition of Cartoon, joke on Mohammed.

4. Outrage on any critical content pertaining to Islam and Muslim Invaders.

Non-Muslims and Sharia:

Non-Muslims are often described as ‘Kafir’ in Koran. The argument is often made by various Islamic Scholars that ‘Kafir’ is the word described for a ‘non-believer’. Since Islam considers only Allah to be the God, once can easily conclude what ‘Kafir’ stands for. Under Islam every non-Muslim; be it Christian, Hindu, Buddhist, Jew or any other faith but Islam is a ‘Kafir’. There are not much laws devoted to Kafirs in Sharia because basically Kafir has very few rights under Islam.

There’s a reason why Islam is so controversial, Islam devotes a lot of energy on Kafir. About 64% of Koran is devoted to Kafir, neraly 81% of Shaira is on Kafir also the Hadith devoted 37% of text to Kafir. Overall the Islamic Trilogy devotes 51% of its content to Kafir. So; why should Islam terrify the Kafirs? Well if all the Islamic Trilogy is closely looked at one can infer that there are two types of Islam:

1. Political Islam

2. Religious Islam.

Political Islam should always worry us because thats what Mohammed did to Kafirs and now his Progeny aspire to.

Sharia References about Kafirs:

‘Al Walaa Wa Al Barra’:

Hatred for the sake of Allah and love for the sake of Allah. It is the fundamental principle of Islamic Doctrine and Sharia. A Muslim is to hate what Allah hates and to love what Allah loves.

Koran 40:35- “They (non-Muslims) who dispute the signs (verses) of Allah without having reached them are greatly hated by Allah and the believers (Muslims). So Allah seals up every arrogant, disdainful heart.

The above verse explains the hatred of Allah for those who do not believe in him. This verse is foundation of hatred for non-Muslims or more popularly ‘Kafirs’.

There are in all 109 verses in Koran devoted to Kafir; 6 of them are as follows:

1. Behead the Kafir:

Koran 47:4 “When you encounter Kafirs on the battlefield, cutoff their heads until you have thoroughly defeated them and then take prisoners and tie them up.”

2. Mock the Kafir:

Koran 83:34- “On that day the faithful will mock the Kafirs; while they sit on Bridal Couches and watch them; Should not the Kafirs be paid back for what they did?”

3. Terrorise the Kafir:

Koran 8:12- “Then your lord spoke to his angels and said, “I will be with you. Give strength to believers. I will send terror into the hearts of Kafirs, cut off their heads and even tips of their fingers.”

4. Muslims shouldn’t befriend Kafir:

Koran 3:28- “Believers should not take Kafirs as friends in preference to other believers those who do this will have none of Allah’s protection.”

5. Kafir is evil:

Koran 23:97- “Oh my lord I seek refuge with you my lord from their presence. I seek refuge with you from the suggestions of the evil.”

6. Kafir should be disgraced:

Koran 37:18- “Tell them, “Yes! And you will be disgraced.”

7. Kafir is cursed:

Koran 33:60- “They will be cursed and whenever they are found they will be seized and murdered.”

There are 109 verses like this in Koran invoking Muslims to slaughter all the non-believers. No atheist; free speech advocate is safe under Islam.

Jihad and Sharia:

Jihad is the war Muslims are ordered to wage on non-Muslims until Sharia is established.

There are various references to Jihad in Koran:

Koran 2:26- “You are commanded to fight although you dislike it. You may hate something that is good for you and love something that is bad for you. Allah knows and you do not”.

Koran 4: 89- “They would have you become kafirs like them so you all will be the same. Therefore, do not take any of them as friends until they have abandoned their homes to fight for Allah. But if they turn back find them and kill them wherever they are.

Islam basically advocates submission. Terrorism; Slaughter, Beheading are considered sacred in Islam. Yeah it does guarantee peace but only then when you have submitted to Alllah!