Like China, India remains a big domestic market, which will continue to attract investment, but the US tariffs will make India unattractive for future investments.
As the discussions in the centre progressed, it became clear that the establishment of a border force was not just a response to immediate threats but part of a broader strategy.
Compassion and cohabitation with animals are ingrained in the Indian value system. A humane solution must be found for the rising conflict between man and free-range animals.
A lesser-known reality of the GST is that it has a total of eight tax slabs, excluding the exemptions. These start at 0.25 and go all the way up to 28 per cent.
While bond yields tend to fall amid low inflation & interest rate cuts, market experts say they’ve been rising due to concerns over tax collections, fiscal deficit & potential impact of US tariffs.
To be truly functional and durable, even eternal, a state doesn’t just need a leader, a party or an ideology. It needs functional and robust institutions.
Sometimes I wonder whether these so called intellectuals so deep in their subject that they forget the other dimensions or aspects of any issue or for that matter a rememberance like partitions horrors. They forget that this is not a utopian world but a world where things can happen again as the author quoted. A person who has suffered can not be given a moral lecture of ethics when they recall their miseries. The person here a country will not need a moral lecture when it is mourning. Since these things can happen again we need to remind our population and recognise the events precursor to the horrors. The history needs to be taught so that people are able to recognise the events and stop it before it spreads. They need to remember that it started on the day when the Muslim league and its backers and followers went on rampage on the direct action day. They need to remember that voices like the Muslim league are raising again and the people need to recognise it and they need to nip it in the bud so that they don’t have to see the horrors that our people had to see during partition of 1947. There is no ethics in suffering so they author can take their ethical lecture somewhere else
No wonder Mr. Rakesh Batabyal teaches at JNU.
He. and others of his ilk, has never voiced concerns about the violence unleashed on Bengali Hindus in Bangladesh ever since Md. Yunus assumed power after Sheikh Hasina’s exit. The gangrapes and abductions and forced conversions of Hindu women, murders of Hindu men and destruction of Hindu owned property does not bother them at all.
But a Bengali Hindu’s remembrance of the Partition horrors upsets them.
Very very thought provoking writeup. Reminds me of the time when the public intellectuals were the true keeper of our public conscience and were one of the great pillars of our civic society.
( Unlike the present R.W.A)
Sometimes I wonder whether these so called intellectuals so deep in their subject that they forget the other dimensions or aspects of any issue or for that matter a rememberance like partitions horrors. They forget that this is not a utopian world but a world where things can happen again as the author quoted. A person who has suffered can not be given a moral lecture of ethics when they recall their miseries. The person here a country will not need a moral lecture when it is mourning. Since these things can happen again we need to remind our population and recognise the events precursor to the horrors. The history needs to be taught so that people are able to recognise the events and stop it before it spreads. They need to remember that it started on the day when the Muslim league and its backers and followers went on rampage on the direct action day. They need to remember that voices like the Muslim league are raising again and the people need to recognise it and they need to nip it in the bud so that they don’t have to see the horrors that our people had to see during partition of 1947. There is no ethics in suffering so they author can take their ethical lecture somewhere else
No wonder Mr. Rakesh Batabyal teaches at JNU.
He. and others of his ilk, has never voiced concerns about the violence unleashed on Bengali Hindus in Bangladesh ever since Md. Yunus assumed power after Sheikh Hasina’s exit. The gangrapes and abductions and forced conversions of Hindu women, murders of Hindu men and destruction of Hindu owned property does not bother them at all.
But a Bengali Hindu’s remembrance of the Partition horrors upsets them.
Very very thought provoking writeup. Reminds me of the time when the public intellectuals were the true keeper of our public conscience and were one of the great pillars of our civic society.
( Unlike the present R.W.A)
if the victim was Muslim it was remember to shame Hindus . now don’t cry.