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Indians From Shithole Criticise US : American Professor

The way Asians (South-East) are arguing here and trying prove each other that they are even worse speaks for itself that why this region remains backwards and the rest of western world moves forward. If Asia was peaceful and works together to pull its people out of poverty and misery together than Asia would've been on Par with America and Europe.

Carry on insulting each other...
Trying to reconcile with Indians behind a shared "Desi" identity is a lost cause, you can trust a snake more over these people. Best is to just focus on and worry about ourselves. They are the ones always starting these fights and bringing their deluded hyper-nationalist and political BS into every single conversation and thread.
 
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There are Indians on this forum who have multiple IDs posting low quality troll threads 24/7 and who have constantly been trolling on this forum for the past decade 24/7 whilst claiming they aren't obsessed and "don't care about Pakistan" :lol:
If you were triggered by my last two comments & are trying to feel good about yourself by jamming your bhai then then you should know that I'm with only one profile :lol:
Obsessed ones are those who have been taking cheap shots with racial garbage videos while own home is an opium turmoil.
 
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If you were triggered by my last two comments & are trying to feel good about yourself by jamming your bhai then then you should know that I'm with only one profile :lol:
Obsessed ones are those who have been taking cheap shots with racial garbage videos while own home is an opium turmoil.
Oh I wasn't referring to you, but certain members on this forum. And there are a lot we had on here.
 
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You said population? Do your research before you comment.

China is still considered a developing country based on the criteria of the World Bank and the United Nations. Bringing daddy?

Yes I am bringing your daddy China in the argument. The same Daddy that killed Indian soldiers and is CURRENTLY occupying 1000 sq km of your land🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

https://www.google.com/amp/s/thekas...controls-1000-sq-km-of-area-in-ladakh-report/

Did you even fire a single bullet at them?😉
Yes population is a factor. China is way above of being a developing country Lol Check their per capita.

Better read up the article for yourself. The 1000 sqkm is in the sense that India has been demanding since Sino Indian war, just like China demands India's territory.
How long are you gonna make these vague celebration? Pakistanis literally don't have control over their country & you're worried about Ladakh :)
 
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Yes population is a factor. China is way above of being a developing country Lol Check their per capita.

India has a population of around 1.4 billion so that should potentially mean at least one billion capable and socially-contributing workforce but what is most of the Indian workforce contributing to except in religious fanaticism obscenity and regressiveness and turning the country into a disharmonious and environmentally polluted place ?
 
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waiting for Indians to somehow blame Pakistan and get Pakistans name involved

That is strong words, even with Indonesian army dealing with rebel in Papuan island who are majority Christian, statement like that never been made by US high rank official like the like of Blinken to Indonesia.

Please find one if any of the member dont believe.....( after 2000 )

In the past, maybe there are some for our soldier miss conduct in East Timor, but never to Papua. East Timor is understandable since we invaded the country just like Russian did to Ukrainan
 
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That is strong words, even with Indonesian army dealing with rebel in Papuan island who are majority Christian, statement like that never been made by US high rank official like the like of Blinken to Indonesia.

Please find one if any of the member dont believe.....( after 2000 )

In the past, maybe there are some for our soldier miss conduct in East Timor, but never to Papua. East Timor is understandable since we invaded the country just like Russian did to Ukrainan
Indonesia is a great country not being run by rabid hindutva fascists, people don't realize this (except Pakistanis) but all forms of indian government, institutions, military, etc have been infested with the hindutva ideology.
 
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India has a population of around 1.4 billion so that should potentially mean at least one billion capable and socially-contributing workforce but what is most of the Indian workforce contributing to except in religious fanaticism obscenity and regressiveness and turning the country into a disharmonious and environmentally polluted place ?
Typical response like a dedicated Islamist.
I never saw Indian Muslims being so cautious about development & pollution stuffs before Modi came. Everything was great till Islamic appeasement was followed & sharia fantasy was entertained no? You people can hate certain country just because it doesn't tow to Islam.
As you guys are always obsessed push religion into every random argument, you should also know that even after 70 years of appeasement & giving most subsidies Muslims have the lowest literacy in India, even lower than SC STs, most poverty, least public & private sector job contribution, most poverty, most crime rate. So lets not go there.
Whatever we're right now, is certainly better than we were decade ago. Specially the pace of development & digitization we have since 2016. Pollution part is also due to rapid industrialization.
 
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Indian doctors earn more than other because they are better than others, this is common sense.

Let's be careful not to engage in reverse racism.

There is some truth to her statement. Throughout history, every race and religion has had its heyday where they were the dominant civilization on the planet or region. So we conclude that all races and cultures are capable of achievements.

However, the fact remains that today's industrial age is the result of Western white accomplishments. It would be ridiculous to deny that. Whatever ill-gotten gains they received from colonialism aside, no reasonable person can deny the scientific achievements of Europe which laid the foundations of the modern technological age.

And it is also true that much of the criticism of whites is based on envy and resentment because it has become fashionable to do so.
 
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Indonesia is a great country not being run by rabid hindutva fascists, people don't realize this (except Pakistanis) but all forms of indian government, institutions, military, etc have been infested with the hindutva ideology.
Ironically you belong to Pakistan & Islam is your constitution :lol:



waiting for Indians to somehow blame Pakistan and get Pakistans name involved
Fart statement due to Russian gas purchase & the straight answer they got yesterday during the joint briefing.
They wouldn't compromise relation with India at any cost.
India plays by own rules. These hollow threats have lost it's relevance.
 
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Typical response like a dedicated Islamist.

Well, I indeed am an Islamist because I am a Communist. :) Modern Communism is the culmination of all progressive ideas in history including Islam. For example, in the 1800s Europe learnt from Islam to give rights to the female in marriage and a little bit of that was adopted by progressive Hindus in the next century :
When we examine marriage laws in their historic context, it is interesting to note that the universally accepted notion that marriages are contractual rather than sacramental originates in Muslim law, which was accepted by the French law only in the 1800s and incorporated into the English law in the 1850s and became part of codified Hindu law as late as 1955. Today it appears to be the most practical way of dealing with the institution of marriage. Treating marriage as a sacrament which binds the parties for life has resulted in some of the most discriminatory practices against women such as sati and denial of right to divorce and remarriage, even in the most adverse conditions.

The cornerstone of a Muslim marriage is consent, ejab-o-qubul (proposal and acceptance) and requires the bride to accept the marriage proposal on her own free will. This freedom to consent (or refuse), which was given to Muslim women 1,400 years ago, is still not available under Hindu law since sacramental rituals such as saptapadi and kanya dan (seven steps round the nuptial fire and gifting of the bride to the groom) still form essential ceremonies of a Hindu marriage. Even after the codification of Hindu law, the notion of consent is not built into the marriage ceremonies.

The contract of marriage (nikahnama) allows for negotiated terms and conditions, it can also include the right to a delegated divorce (talaq-e-tafweez) where the woman is delegated the right to divorce her husband if any of the negotiated terms and conditions are violated.

Mehr is another unique concept of Muslim law meant to safeguard the financial future of the wife. It is an obligation, not a choice, and can be in the form of cash, valuables or securities. While there is no ceiling, a minimum amount to provide her security after marriage must be stipulated. This is a more beneficial concept than streedhan which is given by choice and usually by the natal family. In addition to Mehr, at the time of divorce, a Muslim woman has the right to fair and reasonable settlement, and this is statutorily recognised under the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986 as per the 2001 ruling of the Supreme Court in the Daniel Latifi case.

It is also important to address polygamy and triple talaq, two aspects of Muslim law which are generally used to discredit the community and argue in favour of a uniform civil code. While sharia law permits a man to have four wives (before 1956 Hindu law permitted unrestrained polygamy), it mandates equal treatment of all wives. If a man is not able to meet these conditions, he is not permitted to marry more than one woman. (Quran 4:3; Yusuf Ali’s translation)

On the other hand, though codification introduced monogamy for Hindus, the ground reality has not changed and Hindu men continue to be bigamous or polygamous. The most disturbing aspect is that while men in bigamous/adulterous relationships are allowed to go scot-free, it is the women who are made to pay the price. Women in invalid relationships with Hindu men are denied maintenance and protection and are referred to as “mistresses” and “concubines”, concepts specific to the uncodified Hindu law. Any attempt to codify Muslim law to bring in legal monogamy should not end up subjecting Muslim women to a plight similar to that of a Hindu second wife. This is an important concern which needs to be taken into account while reforming the Muslim law.

And lastly, the much maligned triple talaq or talaq-ul-biddat, which the Prophet himself considered as the most inappropriate form of divorce. Fortunately, in 2002, in Shamim Ara vs State of Uttar Pradesh & others, the Supreme Court laid down strict Quranic injunctions which must be followed at the time of pronouncing talaq, hence now fraudulent practices adopted by errant husbands (including email and SMS talaq) can no longer constitute valid talaq. Yet, after a decade and a half, very few know challenge the validity of such divorces in court as they are unaware about this ruling.

Though Muslim law stipulates many different ways to end a marriage, including a woman’s right to dissolve her marriage (khula), divorce by mutual consent (mubarra), delegated divorce (talaq-e-tafweez), judicial divorce (fasq)
Non-Muslims shouldn't look at the Tableeghi Jamaat and Angry Indian Burqa Girl Muskan and think that they are being Islamic. No, they are being more Hindutvadi than Islamic.

Everything was great till Islamic appeasement was followed & sharia fantasy was entertained no? You people can hate certain country just because it doesn't tow to Islam.

What is this "Islamic appeasement" when Muslims in India have been subject to riots / killings for decades ? I quote about the Bhagalpur anti-Muslim violence of 1989 where the police colluded with the Hindutvadis :
In their book, Splintered Justice: Living the Horror of Mass Communal Violence in Bhagalpur and Gujarat, Warisha Farasat, a lawyer practising in Delhi, and Prita Jha, a legal activist and researcher based in Ahmedabad, closely examine the state’s accountability in two instances of mass communal violence. The first occurred in 1989, in Bhagalpur district in Bihar, when clashes between Hindus and Muslims continued for over two months, resulting in nearly 1,000 deaths, of which over 900 were Muslims. The second was the Gujarat riots of 2002, when Hindu mobs led attacks on Muslims in the state, resulting in the deaths of close to 1,100 people, including nearly 800 Muslims and over 250 Hindus. “A recurring feature of such episodes of bloodletting is that elected and selected public officials fail to uphold their most sacred constitutional duty—to provide equal protection to every citizen,” write Harsh Mander and Navsharan Singh in their introduction to the book. Mander is an activist and writer who works with victims of mass violence and the director of the Centre for Equity Studies, and Singh is a senior officer with the Canada-based International Research Development Centre. “They fail not because they lack the mandate, authority or legal powers. They fail because they choose to, because of the pervasive prejudice and bias against these disadvantaged groups that permeates large segments of the police, magistracy, judiciary and the political class.” Splintered Justice builds upon the findings of a 2014 book, On Their Watch: Mass Violence and State Apathy in India, in which scholars from the CES collated information they had gathered, through RTIs and extensive study of case files, on various incidents of mass violence in India.

In the following excerpt from the first part of the book, which focuses on Bhagalpur, Farasat recounts how the accounts of the victims and survivors indicated that the police had colluded with the rioters. Several witnesses said that they heard police officers encouraging the attackers. Farasat writes that the police also misled the Border Security Force and the army—both of which had been called in to help contain the violence—by giving them incorrect information about which villages to reach. Many survivors noted that KS Dwivedi, the then senior superintendent of the police, played a key role in enabling the Hindu mobs—an allegation that a commission of inquiry later upheld.


The police’s role in the Bhagalpur carnage was questionable, if not downright criminal. Instead of protecting Muslims, they watched as mobs put them to sword, or worse still, joined the perpetrators. This eroded whatever trust Muslims had in the enforcers of law, so much so that eyewitnesses preferred to lodge complaints in courts rather than with the police.

Mohammad Iqbal, now nearing 75, of Rampur village in Rajaun, watched as his nephew Salim was slain. “Upon Ajay’s order they started hitting Salim, relentlessly on the head with axes and sickles. At that time we all were at an approximate distance of about 150 yards,” he recounts the horror. Before Iqbal and his fellow villagers could do anything to save Salim, the rioters saw them and leapt in their direction. They fled, ran into a police contingent and sought their help to save Salim, to no avail. Iqbal and his companions crossed the river and, from the other bank, watched as the rioters killed Salim, cut his body into small pieces and threw them into the river. Sometime later, the police did visit Rampur village, but did not take any action against the rioters; the visit was a mere procedural formality.

The Muslims had no faith left in the police, but even had they wanted to approach them, it was fraught with great risk: passing through Hindu neighbourhoods to go to a police station was suicidal. So, when the situation improved, Iqbal, Adil, and other villagers approached the Banka court to register a complaint; that too only when two Hindu friends from Nandlalpatti, Raipokhar, agreed to go along. Approaching the police was unthinkable, Iqbal says, after how they had behaved when his nephew was killed. For Iqbal, there was no difference between the rioters and the policemen. On their plea, a case was registered in the Banka court on 11 December 1989 in the name of Adil. In the plea, Adil had named 14 persons as accused. The accused were prosecuted on the basis of testimonies of the three witnesses and sentenced to life imprisonment by a court in Bhagalpur. They, however, appealed their conviction in the Patna High Court and got bail, pending disposal of their appeals. All of them are still out on bail.

CURRENT ISSUE​

APRIL 2022

The shameful stories of police indifference, or worse still, complicity, in the carnage were repeated across Bhagalpur. When Terah Mile, a village in then undivided Bhagalpur now falling under Banka district, was attacked, the police did nothing to stop the rioters. Instead, eyewitness testimonies reveal, they encouraged the mob to kill and pillage the Muslims. In the police contingent present on the spot, three personnel were Muslim, and they did try to stop the rioters, but their efforts came to naught as the overwhelming number of their Hindu colleagues abetted the rioters.

Bibi Fareeda, 65, from Nurpur Mohalla in Nathnagar village, is still struggling to overcome the trauma of the carnage. She lost her younger son Ashraf, 20, to the riots, while her older son, Asad, was shot and critically injured. She vividly remembers the horror she witnessed on 25 October 1989. She remembers overhearing Inspector KK Singh instigating rioters, and asking them to not only loot but also kill Muslims.

Bibi Fareeda is in no doubt that the Bihar police were complicit in the pogrom. They gave police uniforms to the rioters and incited them to kill Muslims. As in Terah Mile, the police were divided along religious lines across Bhagalpur. Muslims in Nurpur were lucky; a Muslim Inspector, Mohammad Rehman, commanded the contingent of the two-dozen policemen posted there, and that was the only reason most of its Muslim residents survived. Shah Bano of Bhagalpur town says the rioters entered her house while the police watched. In fact, she heard the Station House Officer urging the mob to not leave a single Muslim alive. Shah Bano says when the survivors sought refuge at the police station, the personnel there screamed at them, bundled them into vehicles and dumped them at the Marwari school relief camp. Shah Bano’s mother and grandparents were killed in the carnage; her mother and grandmother were dragged out to Budhanath Mandir Chowk, barely half a kilometre from the Kotwali police station in Bhagalpur, and killed. Her 75-year-old maternal grandfather was tied down on a cot in their house and burnt. His body was later thrown into the Ganga.

The Bihar police did not just participate in the carnage of Muslims, but also prevented armed forces sent to contain the riots from doing their job. They misled both the army and the Border Security Force (BSF), who were heavily dependent on them for information about the prevailing situation, which resulted in the anti-Muslim violence spreading to rural areas of Bhagalpur. Instead of guiding the army and the BSF to a village where Muslims were being attacked, the police deliberately sent them to a different village. By the time the security forces reached the affected village, it would be too late.



Hours before Muslims were massacred in Chanderi village, the local police had asked the army to leave and patrol ahead, falsely assuring them that they would ensure the safety of Muslims. But as soon as the army left, the police joined the rioters and participated in the bloodbath of Muslims. The army returned to find 66 Muslims In localities where the police did not participate in the carnage, they watched as the Hindu mobs ran riot. Senior officers were as complicit as the constabulary. Survivors have maintained that the then Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) of Bhagalpur, KS Dwivedi, played a direct role in the riots. As the top officer in charge of law and order, he not only failed in his duty to stop the riots, but also issued instructions to his force to target the Muslims. This is not just an exaggerated claim made by the survivors, as the government’s Commission of Inquiry (CoI) in its final report also held Dwivedi “wholly responsible” for the carnage, saying he was “communally biased” against the Muslims. Indicting Dwivedi, the CoI noted:

We would hold Dwivedi, the then Senior Superintendent of Police, Bhagalpur, wholly responsible for whatever happened before October 24, 1989, on 24th and after 24th. His communal bias was fully demonstrated by his manner of arresting the Muslims and by not extending adequate help to protect them.

The CoI report stated that Dwivedi’s communal bias was apparent from an infamous incident, sometime before the carnage. On the occasion of Moharram, he had delivered a hate speech, saying he would make Bhagalpur another Karbala, implying a massacre of its Muslim residents. At the time, the district magistrate had to seek Dwivedi’s apology for this statement. The CoI report also named several other public officials for not taking adequate steps to control the anti-Muslim violence, either deliberately or due to incompetence. The carnage took place when the Congress was in power in Bihar and its veteran leader Satyendra Narayan Sinha was Chief Minister. When Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi visited Bhagalpur during the riots, he ordered the immediate transfer of SSP Dwivedi. This triggered protests from the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and other Hindu right-wing groups, forcing Rajiv to revoke his transfer order. The vehement protests against Dwivedi’s transfer, by Hindu fundamentalist groups, should have come as proof of the officer’s complicity in the carnage. Instead, the government buckled under pressure and let him continue. Even today, survivors emphasise that had the transfer of Dwivedi not been revoked, many lives would have been saved.

Besides the findings of the CoI report, the definitive account of the survivors about the shameful role of the local administration, particularly the police, in the carnage comes from the report of AK Singh, the then Additional District Magistrate (ADM) of Bhagalpur. Singh reported that as soon as DIG Ajit Dutta—one of the few officers who stood out as honourable exceptions to the police’s general conduct—left Charha Bargaon in Shahkund, four Muslims, who had brought him to the village to recover their belongings, were lynched. One of them was a polio-affected man and two were elderly women. This happened on the watch of ASI RN Jha and his subordinates, who stood laughing as the four Muslims ran towards Radhangar in a futile attempt to save their lives. Yet, despite their complicity in this gruesome crime, no action was taken against Jha and his constables.

Across Bhagalpur, says Salman Ali, the police supported the rioters. And where they did try to help, it did not make much difference. Had it not been for the Border Security Forces (BSF), many more Muslims would have been killed.
If Hindutvadis were scattered in the administrative services many decades ago they are more so now.

And if you don't want "Islamic appeasement" do you want Hindutvadi appeasement ? The BJP is the largest vote bank party in the world, the membership of the BJP being more than 180 million so how is that not Hindutvadi appeasement on a massive scale ? You cannot accuse others of appeasement while you are doing it yourself.

And "Sharia fantasy" ? If actually even some bits of the Islamic socio-economic system had been used in India - non-interest-based economics, prohibition on speculation - then those 350,000+ Indian farmers who suicided just between 1995 and 2015, they would not have done so. Their deaths as with most injustices in India are to be blamed on the foul book Manusmriti and the Hindutvadis who follow it and want it to be the Indian constitution replacing the current one whose drafting leader was the Dalit leader Ambedkar. Ambedkar did the brave thing of publicly burning the Manusmriti in 1927. However, if his followers now do that they will be lynched and that is one of the manifestations of Hindutvadi appeasement done by the Modi government. But Hindutvadi appeasement has existed since 1947 because groups like RSS, VHP, Hindu Mahasabha, Bajrang Dal, Sri Ram Sene, BJP, Hindu Janajagruti Samiti etc have existed since 1947. In 1966 Hindutvadi terrorists launched an attack on the national parliament :

50 years ago, an anti-cow slaughter mob nearly stormed Parliament House. Those who launched attack constitute the core of ruling establishment today.​


We are great at celebrating silver jubilees, golden jubilees and diamond jubilees. One such occasion has just passed unnoticed. November 7 marked the 50th anniversary of the very first assault on Parliament. On this day, in 1966, thousands of sadhus of different varieties and denominations and many others gathered near Parliament demanding an immediate end to cow slaughter all over the country. Incited by the rabble-rousing Bharatiya Jan Sangh (BJS) MP, Swami Rameshwaranand, who represented Karnal in undivided Punjab, the huge crowd marched towards the Parliament House complex with a clear intent to storm it. Finding the gates closed, the agitationists launched a free-for-all attack on government buildings on Parliament Street. The Congress president, K. Kamaraj, who was in his house nearby, had a narrow escape. After about an hour of mayhem not seen in Delhi since 1947, the police responded and brought about some semblance of order. Official numbers put the death toll at seven or eight but the loss to commercial property was substantial.

Dealing with crisis

The Prime Minister was just less than 10 months in office and she was unsure of her political position both within her own party and in the country. In fact, on that very day, a no-confidence motion against her was being debated and voted upon in the Lok Sabha. It was the fourth crisis to confront Indira Gandhi in her very first year of office after the monsoon failure, the controversial devaluation, and the contentious reorganisation of Punjab. On each of these three occasions, she had shown courage, something her critics are loath to admit. This time also was no different.

Indira Gandhi sacked her Home Minister Gulzarilal Nanda the very next day. As patron of the Bharat Sadhu Samaj, he was widely seen to be sympathetic to the protesters, if not actually a co-conspirator in the agitation in the precincts of Parliament. Ironically, the Congress bosses thought that he and Indira Gandhi were in the same “left-of-centre” camp when it came to economic policy although what she did in June 1966 was quintessential “right of centre” — devaluation, liberalisation of imports, delicensing, and opening up to foreign investment.

After the February 1967 elections in which the Jan Sangh more than doubled its tally, Indira Gandhi knew that she had to do something on the issue. She confabulated with her colleagues, and on June 29, 1967, the formation of a high-level committee under the chairmanship of A.K. Sarkar, who had just retired as the Chief Justice of India, was announced. The committee was given a wide-ranging mandate that included examining the feasibility of a national law to ban cow slaughter by amending the Constitution. The composition of this government committee was unusual. Perhaps it has been without parallel in recent Indian political history. It had M.S. Golwalkar, the head of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, R.P. Mookerji, a retired judge and elder brother of the founder of the BJS, and the Shankaracharya of Puri as prominent members. Two Chief Ministers — Charan Singh of Uttar Pradesh and D.P. Mishra of Madhya Pradesh — were included as were some other anti-cow slaughter activists. Three non-politicians were also made part of the committee — V. Kurien of the National Dairy Development Board, Ashok Mitra, economist and then chairman of the Agricultural Prices Commission, and H.A.B. Parpia, Director of the Central Food Technological Research Institute.

The committee was given six months to submit its report. It began actively, had numerous meetings and met a large cross-section of society. But it never actually submitted a report. Questions would keep getting asked in Parliament and the answers would be of the usual “the matter is under examination” type. Finally, after 12 years of its existence, Morarji Desai wound up the committee in 1979 when he was Prime Minister.

Both Kurien and Dr. Mitra have left delightful accounts of the committee in their memoirs. Kurien, for instance, has written in his I Too Had a Dream that Golwalkar admitted to him in so many words that the RSS had launched the November 1966 campaign to embarrass the government and with definite political objectives in mind. Dr. Mitra too, in his A Prattler’s Tale, makes critical observations of the obscurantism of some of his fellow members on the committee and recounts with great glee what happened in Anand during a tour by the committee. Coming to know that the Shankaracharya of Puri was very fond of cottage cheese, Kurien sent boxes of paneer to everyone. Golwalkar was delighted, but there was great consternation in the Shankaracharya’s camp when the Amul man casually remarked the next day that cheese prepared at Amul used rennet from the fifth or seventh intestine of young calves.

Ecological consequences

The cow protection issue was to galvanise the conservation community as well. People like ornithologist Salim Ali and conservationist Zafar Futehally had been worried about the impact of cattle grazing on sanctuaries like the famous Keoladeo Ghana Bird Sanctuary at Bharatpur. Futehally was to write in a leading newspaper in November 1967 that the Sarkar committee should examine the ecological consequences of having a large and uncontrolled cattle population. He persuaded Dillon Ripley of the Smithsonian Institution to support a study to be conducted by the Bombay Natural History Society on this very subject. An overenthusiastic Ripley wrote to Indira Gandhi directly on October 3, 1967 expressing his views on the issue of cattle and conservation. She did not reply, but U.S. Ambassador Chester Bowles reprimanded him on November 7, 1967, saying, “At my request, my deputy Mr. Greene found an opportunity the other day to sound Mrs. Gandhi’s right-hand man, P.N. Haksar about your letter. Haksar readily confirmed that it had been received… and as much said that he thought it better to leave the complexities of the cow problem to the Government of India”.

Fifty years later, those who launched that attack on Parliament constitute the core of the ruling establishment. Such are the vicissitudes of democracy. It was a watershed and continues to reverberate.

Jairam Ramesh is a Congress Rajya Sabha MP.
It may be derived that Hindutvadis are a danger to humanity. They even have the nuclear button. Hence last year there was a conference in the West attended including by progressive Hindus called Dismantling Global Hindutva. As expected the known organizers and the attendees of the conference were given rape threats and death threats even before the conference began. Their college lectures were disrupted by Hindutvadi thugs - in the West.

As you guys are always obsessed push religion into every random argument, you should also know that even after 70 years of appeasement & giving most subsidies Muslims have the lowest literacy in India, even lower than SC STs, most poverty, most public & private sector job contribution, most poverty, most crime rate. So lets not go there.

Ideologically, Hazrat Muhammad advised Muslims to seek knowledge even if they have to go as far as China but I agree that ordinary modern Indian Muslims have unfortunately concentrated on ritualism in the manner of Brahmin priests unlike Muslims elsewhere like in the USSR, Egypt, Libya, Palestine, Syria, Iraq, Algeria, Somalia etc who raised themselves up technologically and politically. Especially since the mid-2000s Indian Muslims have become drowned in non-Islamic ritualism hence the effluence of the Tableeghi Jamaat and Angry Indian Burqa Girl Muskan. A massively more percentage of Indian Muslim females wear the burqa than in neighboring Pakistan and certainly than in Bangladesh. I don't see most of these particular modern Indian Muslims any more brainwashed, regressive, anti-intellectual and anti-human than the 500 million Hindutvadis.

Whatever we're right now, is certainly better than we were decade ago. Specially the pace of development & digitization we have since 2016. Pollution part is also due to rapid industrialization.

In what ways is India better now than before 2014 ? What is this new development ? Does India have a small settlement on Mars, humanity's first ? Has India become an evolved, advanced and harmonious society ? About "digitization" a dozen e-payment systems while the surrounding socio-economic system remains the most Capitalist in human history, you call this development ? Again about digitization and Hindutvadis, the lovely and brilliant Shehla Rashid said these about useless-to-humanity software-code-monkey-with-an-MBA crook Hindutvadis like @Cheepek taunting Indian Muslims as being "Punctureputras" :
 
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