Indian Political Discussion

congress job is not to help hindus but help Indians.


Yes ,Congress has been Helpful ONLY to
MINORITIES , NOT to Hindus AFTER the Death of Rajiv Gandhi

Rajiv Gandhi Wanted Ram Temple
That is why he allowed Shilanayas

PVN Rao was a Pro Hindu Leader

He helped us in Demolition in 1992

Infact , After Rajiv Gandhi , Congress has been captured by Christians and Muslims
Like Sonia , AK Antony , Salman Khurshid
And Ahmed Patel
 
Yes ,Congress has been Helpful ONLY to
MINORITIES , NOT to Hindus AFTER the Death of Rajiv Gandhi

Rajiv Gandhi Wanted Ram Temple
That is why he allowed Shilanayas

PVN Rao was a Pro Hindu Leader

He helped us in Demolition in 1992

Infact , After Rajiv Gandhi , Congress has been captured by Christians and Muslims
Like Sonia , AK Antony , Salman Khurshid
And Ahmed Patel
Once Italian bar lady and her family is kicked out of the congress party , it will return to its roots
 
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One idiot and his stupid son who is good for nothing, have decided to join hands with their arch rivals so that the stupid son can become a CM at the expanse of those who worked for them. The latest formula is that while AUT will be the CM, the ministers will be divided 40:40:20 between NCP:Congress:SS. So all the MLAs of SS who could have become ministers will now be just MLAs only because AUT has to become CM for just about two years.
 
One idiot and his stupid son who is good for nothing, have decided to join hands with their arch rivals so that the stupid son can become a CM at the expanse of those who worked for them. The latest formula is that while AUT will be the CM, the ministers will be divided 40:40:20 between NCP:Congress:SS. So all the MLAs of SS who could have become ministers will now be just MLAs only because AUT has to become CM for just about two years.
Nothing is fixed , first meeting between NCP and Congres is already cancelled today. Lol just enjoy.
Both BJP and SS have disappeared and whole media attention is on NCP and Congress
 
Yes ,Congress has been Helpful ONLY to
MINORITIES , NOT to Hindus AFTER the Death of Rajiv Gandhi

Rajiv Gandhi Wanted Ram Temple
That is why he allowed Shilanayas

PVN Rao was a Pro Hindu Leader

He helped us in Demolition in 1992

Infact , After Rajiv Gandhi , Congress has been captured by Christians and Muslims
Like Sonia , AK Antony , Salman Khurshid
And Ahmed Patel

yes, when you realize thatBJP is a failure, you can call COngress a hindu loving party too :)
Rajiv Gandhi appeased everyone - shah bano for mulsims and mandir for hindus
PVN tried to milk it
 
are you an idiot? When all articles clearly state that tfr in Kerala is well below replacement levels and those of Bihar are well above those, you want to look at ‘trends’. Bad enough that you’re ignorant, you bring pseudo analysis to the picture.
in Kerala population growth has stabilized and is falling. In north states, population growth continues, even if at a lesser rate than before. It will halt only in mid 2040s, ie 50 years after Kerala achieved it’s objectives. The growth in northern states has been so pervasive that they overcompensating for declines in southern states and pushing India population highe and higher.

Progressive clownish fraaand. Does this analysis of "backwardism/bhakt" still apply when you break up of your bolding-stronk selected northern states..... by religious persuasion and look at those specific TFRs? Or suddenly thats a no go idea for reason of offending? Coz you will find yourself calling mullahs as bhakts? Then you can look like useful but funny idiot to other side too :D.... win win.
 
Hindu and muslims have only one difference when it comes to corruption.

Muslim will loot 6 keep 4 and spend 2 on charity
Hindu will loot 6 keep 6 and loot 2 from charity as well
 
Progressive clownish fraaand. Does this analysis of "backwardism/bhakt" still apply when you break up of your bolding-stronk selected northern states..... by religious persuasion and look at those specific TFRs? Or suddenly thats a no go idea for reason of offending? Coz you will find yourself calling mullahs as bhakts? Then you can look like useful but funny idiot to other side too :D.... win win.

what the hell are you blabbering you stupid man. Look at your’trend’ , you missed 500 million people. I suggest you don’t drive. You’re the type that’ll miss a truck coming towards you on the highway when fantasizing in your own world.
Progressive clownish fraaand. Does this analysis of "backwardism/bhakt" still apply when you break up of your bolding-stronk selected northern states..... by religious persuasion and look at those specific TFRs? Or suddenly thats a no go idea for reason of offending? Coz you will find yourself calling mullahs as bhakts? Then you can look like useful but funny idiot to other side too :D.... win win.

what the hell are you blabbering you stupid man. Look at your’trend’ , you missed 500 million people. I suggest you don’t drive. You’re the type that’ll miss a truck coming towards you on the highway when fantasizing in your own world.
 
SC refers Sabarimala review pleas to 7-judge bench

PTI, New Delhi, Nov 14 2019,

The Supreme Court on Thursday said restrictions on women in religious places were not limited to Sabarimala alone and was prevalent in other religions as well as it referred all review pleas to a larger seven-judge bench.

Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi, reading the verdict on behalf of himself and Justices A M Khanwilkar and Indu Malhotra, said the larger bench will decide all such religious issues relating to Sabarimala, entry of women in mosques and of female genital mutilation in the Dawoodi Bohra community.

The CJI said the endeavour of the petitioners was to revive the debate on religion and faith.

The apex court, by a majority verdict of 4:1, on September 28, 2018, had lifted the ban that prevented women and girls between the age of 10 and 50 from entering the famous Ayyappa shrine in Kerala and had held that this centuries-old Hindu religious practice was illegal and unconstitutional.
 
Casting the Net wide: on Kerala’s plan for free Internet roll-out

Kerala’s plan for providing free Internet access to the poor is worthy of emulation by others

If things go as per plan, Kerala could have near-universal Internet access in a little over a year’s time. Last week’s nod by the State Cabinet for the Kerala Fibre Optic Network project clears the path for a Kerala-wide optical fibre network by December 2020. At ₹1,548 crore, it is, without doubt, an ambitious project. But what makes it commendable is its recognition that Internet access is a basic human right. No other Indian State has recognised Internet access in this manner till now. This is also in sync with what the UN has been articulating in recent years, based on the Internet’s role in enabling freedom of speech and reducing inequality, among other things. And so, embedded in this plan to touch every household in Kerala is a provision to deliver free Internet access to over two million BPL families. The idea is to charge affordable rates for other families. The network, to be set up by the Kerala State Electricity Board Ltd. and the Kerala State IT Infrastructure Ltd., will also connect 30,000 government offices and educational institutions. When complete, Kerala, a State that already tops in human development indicators in the country, will be ready for a steep digital evolution.

Kerala’s plan for Internet roll-out, therefore, is also worthy of emulation by other States, given that Internet have-nots still exist in the millions. There is no doubt that India has made huge leaps in providing Internet access to its people in recent years. To be sure, a good part of the growth till now can be attributed to cheap data plans, triggered in no small measure by the advent of Reliance Jio. According to a recent study by the Internet and Mobile Association of India and Nielsen, the country has 451 million active Internet users. But this number masks huge access gaps. Internet penetration is significantly higher in urban areas than it is in rural areas; it is also significantly higher for men than it is for women. The best-performing State, Delhi-NCR, has an Internet penetration of 69%. The second-best is Kerala, with just 54%. Global technology companies have in recent years eyed the huge population of Internet have-nots as an opportunity. Some, like Facebook, even came up with an idea of free access to a list of chosen sites, a severely skewed version of the Internet which endangered its basic values. While such ideas were thankfully rejected by the government, the gaps are there nonetheless. There is no doubt that governments need to play an interventionist role in plugging this gap. Kerala could set a healthy example.
 
Casting the Net wide: on Kerala’s plan for free Internet roll-out

Kerala’s plan for providing free Internet access to the poor is worthy of emulation by others

If things go as per plan, Kerala could have near-universal Internet access in a little over a year’s time. Last week’s nod by the State Cabinet for the Kerala Fibre Optic Network project clears the path for a Kerala-wide optical fibre network by December 2020. At ₹1,548 crore, it is, without doubt, an ambitious project. But what makes it commendable is its recognition that Internet access is a basic human right. No other Indian State has recognised Internet access in this manner till now. This is also in sync with what the UN has been articulating in recent years, based on the Internet’s role in enabling freedom of speech and reducing inequality, among other things. And so, embedded in this plan to touch every household in Kerala is a provision to deliver free Internet access to over two million BPL families. The idea is to charge affordable rates for other families. The network, to be set up by the Kerala State Electricity Board Ltd. and the Kerala State IT Infrastructure Ltd., will also connect 30,000 government offices and educational institutions. When complete, Kerala, a State that already tops in human development indicators in the country, will be ready for a steep digital evolution.

Kerala’s plan for Internet roll-out, therefore, is also worthy of emulation by other States, given that Internet have-nots still exist in the millions. There is no doubt that India has made huge leaps in providing Internet access to its people in recent years. To be sure, a good part of the growth till now can be attributed to cheap data plans, triggered in no small measure by the advent of Reliance Jio. According to a recent study by the Internet and Mobile Association of India and Nielsen, the country has 451 million active Internet users. But this number masks huge access gaps. Internet penetration is significantly higher in urban areas than it is in rural areas; it is also significantly higher for men than it is for women. The best-performing State, Delhi-NCR, has an Internet penetration of 69%. The second-best is Kerala, with just 54%. Global technology companies have in recent years eyed the huge population of Internet have-nots as an opportunity. Some, like Facebook, even came up with an idea of free access to a list of chosen sites, a severely skewed version of the Internet which endangered its basic values. While such ideas were thankfully rejected by the government, the gaps are there nonetheless. There is no doubt that governments need to play an interventionist role in plugging this gap. Kerala could set a healthy example.

This is ridiculous. They have not built ONE SINGLE STATUE and are wasting money o internet etc, Commie and Sickular influence is showing.
 
This is ridiculous. They have not built ONE SINGLE STATUE and are wasting money o internet etc, Commie and Sickular influence is showing.
It is ridiculous , nothing should be free as nothing is free. Tax payers will fund free internet.
As always Commies rely on free free free
 
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