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Narendra Modi : Mega Discussion Thread

Why did BJP lose in West Bengal? Is it because of the large Muslim population in the state?

If so its kind of like the US in that way, as Democrats can only win the presidential election because of the minority vote, otherwise the Republicans would win if the voters were only Whites.

1. The BJP just has one trick. Plaster the faces of Modi and Shah in the campaign and hope that that will ride them to victory. After 7 years, people - including in West Bengal - can see through them and voted for their known, local face instead = Mamata Banerjee. The BJP didn't bother to have a tall local leader as a direct competition.

2. Their campaign was full of "Jai Shri Ram" and "Didi oh Didi" nonsense. Might work in UP/Bihar, but Bengalis are far cleverer than that. Among other things, they take women empowerment seriously, and a patriarchal North Indian party coming to dictate terms doesn't fly well with them. You see the same in Bangladesh across the border - women leaders are fairly successful there.

3. The Congress decided to skip campaigning in the election and their rout (along with the Left's) ensured that Mamata had only one foe to battle.

4. Past BJP MPs from West Bengal have showcased atrocious performances. For example, Babul Supriyo was an MP who presided over the shut down of a PSU of his own ministry in his own constituency. He consequently lost his MP seat in 2019, and couldn't win an MLA seat today as well. Same things happened to other high profile candidates like Locket Chatterjee and Swapan Dasgupta.
 
1. The BJP just has one trick. Plaster the faces of Modi and Shah in the campaign and hope that that will ride them to victory. After 7 years, people - including in West Bengal - can see through them and voted for their known, local face instead = Mamata Banerjee. The BJP didn't bother to have a tall local leader as a direct competition.

2. Their campaign was full of "Jai Shri Ram" and "Didi oh Didi" nonsense. Might work in UP/Bihar, but Bengalis are far cleverer than that. Among other things, they take women empowerment seriously, and a patriarchal North Indian party coming to dictate terms doesn't fly well with them. You see the same in Bangladesh across the border - women leaders are fairly successful there.

3. The Congress decided to skip campaigning in the election and their rout (along with the Left's) ensured that Mamata had only one foe to battle.

4. Past BJP MPs from West Bengal have showcased atrocious performances. For example, Babul Supriyo was an MP who presided over the shut down of a PSU of his own ministry in his own constituency. He consequently lost his MP seat in 2019, and couldn't win an MLA seat today as well. Same things happened to other high profile candidates like Locket Chatterjee and Swapan Dasgupta.

All that notwithstanding, the BJP is now the biggest opposition in WB with 77 seats in the assembly, up from virtually nothing the last time around. They have clearly gained considerable ground in WB. Even Mamta Banerjee would probably acknowledge that.
It's all for the greater good though. Better to have two strong parties battling it out. And the faster the flop shows of the past (Congress and the commies) disappear from the political scene, the better.
 
All that notwithstanding, the BJP is now the biggest opposition in WB with 77 seats in the assembly, up from virtually nothing the last time around. They have clearly gained considerable ground in WB. Even Mamta Banerjee would probably acknowledge that.
It's all for the greater good though. Better to have two strong parties battling it out. And the faster the flop shows of the past (Congress and the commies) disappear from the political scene, the better.

BJPs win in Assam has underlined the fact that demography can be countered.

You need to play developmental and identity politics, HBS has shown that.

Bjp only focused on the former in Bengal.
 
1. The BJP just has one trick. Plaster the faces of Modi and Shah in the campaign and hope that that will ride them to victory. After 7 years, people - including in West Bengal - can see through them and voted for their known, local face instead = Mamata Banerjee. The BJP didn't bother to have a tall local leader as a direct competition.

2. Their campaign was full of "Jai Shri Ram" and "Didi oh Didi" nonsense. Might work in UP/Bihar, but Bengalis are far cleverer than that. Among other things, they take women empowerment seriously, and a patriarchal North Indian party coming to dictate terms doesn't fly well with them. You see the same in Bangladesh across the border - women leaders are fairly successful there.

3. The Congress decided to skip campaigning in the election and their rout (along with the Left's) ensured that Mamata had only one foe to battle.

4. Past BJP MPs from West Bengal have showcased atrocious performances. For example, Babul Supriyo was an MP who presided over the shut down of a PSU of his own ministry in his own constituency. He consequently lost his MP seat in 2019, and couldn't win an MLA seat today as well. Same things happened to other high profile candidates like Locket Chatterjee and Swapan Dasgupta.

None of this explains why BJP got 38% vote.

and 4. Babul Supriyo lost in 2019? LOL he won the seat again in 2019.

Really hilarious seeing these uninformed lot giving information on PP. :))
 
4. Past BJP MPs from West Bengal have showcased atrocious performances. For example, Babul Supriyo was an MP who presided over the shut down of a PSU of his own ministry in his own constituency. He consequently lost his MP seat in 2019, and couldn't win an MLA seat today as well. Same things happened to other high profile candidates like Locket Chatterjee and Swapan Dasgupta.

Who gave you all this info, as I am sure you are not that naive(?). And which PSU was shut down during his tenure? You can ask the same friend who told you that Supriyo lost in 2019.
 
Why did BJP lose in West Bengal? Is it because of the large Muslim population in the state?

If so its kind of like the US in that way, as Democrats can only win the presidential election because of the minority vote, otherwise the Republicans would win if the voters were only Whites.

It doesn't matter how many Muslims vote anti-BJP. The only reason BJP can lose, is if the Hindus decide it.

And that's what happened in the final frontier Bengal. They couldn't even cross 100 and are now trying to focus on their improved performance.

They threw everything they could at it and failed. I wonder if any party has worked so hard on one state in history. And they still failed. Because sufficient Hindus rejected them.
 
They threw everything they could at it and failed. I wonder if any party has worked so hard on one state in history. And they still failed. Because sufficient Hindus rejected them.
lol, ardent bhakts are now dissing Hindus as to why didn't they vote for sanghis. So perhaps Hindus in Bengal are more intelligent than say Hindus in a North Indian state who could see through their destructive agenda.
 
lol, ardent bhakts are now dissing Hindus as to why didn't they vote for sanghis. So perhaps Hindus in Bengal are more intelligent than say Hindus in a North Indian state who could see through their destructive agenda.

If you go through Modi's twitter, there are a fair number angry with him for being too soft :yk2
 
lol, ardent bhakts are now dissing Hindus as to why didn't they vote for sanghis. So perhaps Hindus in Bengal are more intelligent than say Hindus in a North Indian state who could see through their destructive agenda.

Wrong assessment. in 2017 UP, BJP got around 39% votes. In 2021 Bengal, they got 38%. So the average intelligence of the hindus (assuming the votes were mainly from hindus) is almost the same for both UP and WB, if one goes by your criteria.
 
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's approval ratings have fallen to a new low, a survey showed on Tuesday, as the country struggles to contain a devastating second wave of the coronavirus pandemic.

Modi, who swept to power in 2014 and was re-elected in 2019 with the biggest majority of any Indian leader in three decades, has long fostered the image of a powerful nationalist leader.

But India's Covid-19 caseload surged past 25 million this week, exposing a lack of preparation and eroding Modi's support base, according to US data intelligence company Morning Consult's tracker of a dozen global leaders.

Modi's overall ratings this week stand at 63%, his lowest since the US firm began tracking his popularity in August 2019. The big decline happened in April when his net approval dropped 22 points.

That sharp fall came as the pandemic appeared to be overwhelming large urban centres such as Delhi, where hospitals ran out of beds and life-saving oxygen and people died in parking lots, gasping for breath.

Bodies piled up in morgues and crematoriums and anger grew on social media over the suffering and perceived lack of government support.

The situation has since eased in Delhi and Mumbai as cases have fallen but the virus has penetrated deep into India's vast hinterland where public health facilities are weaker.

"The people of India — or at least the vast majority — have... come to the conclusion that they have to rely only on themselves, and their families and friends, to protect their lives," said P. Chidambaram, an opposition leader.

"In the battle against Covid-19, the state, especially the central government, has withered away," he said.

Modi's government has said it is doing its best to tackle the "coronavirus storm", calling it a once-in-a-century crisis.

A survey among urban Indians by polling agency YouGov this month showed public confidence in the government's handling of the crisis has plummeted since February when the second wave began.

Only 59% of respondents at the end of April believed the government was handling the crisis 'very' or 'somewhat' well, down from 89% a year earlier during the first wave, it showed.

Modi does not face a national election until 2024 and despite the criticism he faces, the opposition is yet to mount a credible challenge to his authority, political analysts say.

Express Tribune
 
"Black Fungus A New Challenge, We Must Be Prepared," Says PM


Prime Minister Narendra Modi today warned against what he called the "new challenge of Black Fungus" and said the country must be prepared to fight the rare and potentially fatal condition that is increasingly seen in recovering Covid patients. He said vaccinations should be a mass movement in the long battle against Covid, describing the virus as an unseen and shifting enemy.
The PM also became emotional as he spoke about those who had died of Covid in a virtual address to health workers from Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh.

"This virus has snatched many people from us. Those who lost their loved ones because of Corona, I pay my tribute and I express my condolences," the Prime Minister said.

"Yoga and Ayush have bolstered people's strength in this coronavirus crisis. But this is not the time to be complacent. We have a long fight ahead."

Calling for special attention to rural areas, he said: "Our mantra will be, Jahaan Bimar, Vahi Upchaar (wherever there is illness, there should be treatment). The more we take wellness to the people, the less will be the pressure on our health systems.

"In recent days we have a new challenge of Black Fungus. It is important to prepare systems to tackle it," he said.

The PM talked about the threat to children and said they needed to be protected in the fight against Covid.

"There is a need to protect our children against COVID-19. We have had successes in the past in battling diseases which affect children, and we have successfully dealt with those illnesses and ensured the safety of our children. We must implement best practices and do all we can to ensure children are safe," he said, praising Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath's role in dealing with a disease affecting children.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/coronavirus-pm-narendra-modi-says-have-to-make-vaccination-a-collective-responsibility-2446341
 
https://www.timesnownews.com/india/article/bjp-not-to-celebrate-modi-govts-7th-anniversary-amid-covid-crisis/760433

BJP will not hold any celebratory events to mark the Narendra Modi government's seventh anniversary on May 30, amid a raging coronavirus pandemic, party chief JP Nadda said on Sunday.

The BJP chief said that the party will organise various welfare events and asked party-ruled states to launch programmes to help children orphaned by COVID-19 on May 30.

"On the 7th anniversary of Central Government on 30th May, all BJP ruled states to implement a large-scale scheme for children who were left orphans due to COVID-19. No programmes will be organised on the occasion due to the pandemic," he said.

The Narendra Modi-led NDA government at the Centre completes seven years in office and two years of its second term on May 30.

India on Saturday reported 2.57 lakh new COVID-19 cases in a single day, taking the tally of infections to 2,62,89,290.

This is the sixth consecutive day when the daily rise in coronavirus cases in the country remained below the 3 lakh-mark, the Union health ministry said on Saturday.

The death toll due to the disease climbed to 2,95,525 with 4,194 fresh fatalities, the ministry data updated at 8 am showed. The active cases further reduced to 29,23,400 comprising 11.12 per cent of the total infections, while the national COVID-19 recovery rate improved to 87.76 per cent.
 
Central Vista: Does Indian PM Narendra Modi really need a new house?

Rajpath has been a huge draw for Delhi residents and tourists over the decades
Rajpath (King's Avenue), in the centre of the Indian capital, is to Delhi'ites what Central Park is to New Yorkers, or the Champs-Elysees to Parisians.

The manicured lawns on either side of the wide ceremonial boulevard are a place for thousands to gather to soak up the winter sun or have an ice-cream on summer evenings.

But the 3km (1.8 mile)-long road, stretching from Rashtrapati Bhavan, the presidential palace, at one end to the India Gate war memorial at the other, now resembles a massive dust bowl.

The area is dotted with craters and mounds of earth - barricades stop people from getting close to men in reflective vests and yellow hard hats who are laying sewage pipes and tiled footpaths. A sign warns against taking photos and videos.

The work is part of the Central Vista project - a vast redevelopment plan that includes a new parliament, new homes for the vice-president and prime minister and multi-storey office blocks. It's expected to cost upwards of 200bn rupees ($2.7bn; £2bn).

The project has been mired in controversy since it was announced in September 2019, with critics saying the money could be better spent on people's welfare or cleaning up Delhi's air, which is among the filthiest in the world.

The government rejects those arguments, saying Central Vista will be a major boost to the economy. Urban Development Minister Hardeep Singh Puri has said it will generate "large-scale direct and indirect employment" and make all Indians "proud".

Construction work is continuing even as India battles a devastating second wave of Covid-19, which has fuelled further public resentment. Critics have questioned Prime Minister Narendra Modi's priorities, comparing him to "Nero fiddling while Rome burns".

Opposition leader Rahul Gandhi has called it a "criminal waste" and urged Mr Modi to focus instead on dealing with the pandemic. In an open letter to Mr Modi, scholars criticised the project as an extravagant waste of resources "that could be used to save lives".

Much scorn has been reserved in particular for the PM's new house, due for completion by December 2022.

"This is pure escapism," historian Narayani Gupta told the BBC. "At a time when the pandemic is killing thousands, crematoria are full and graveyards have run out of space, the government is building castles in the air."

Where does the PM live now?
By all accounts, Mr Modi's current accommodation is pretty fancy.

The 12-acre complex on Lok Kalyan Marg (formerly Race Course Road), with five bungalows and sprawling lawns, is some 3km from the presidential palace and parliament.

Besides the PM's residential quarters, the complex has accommodation for guests, offices, meeting rooms, a theatre and a helipad. A few years ago, an underground tunnel was built to connect it to nearby Safdarjung airport.

"The Indian PM occupies an entire street - in Britain, 10 Downing Street is just a door with a number," says Delhi-based architect Gautam Bhatia.

The property was chosen by Rajiv Gandhi in 1984. Intended to be temporary, it has been home to all Indian prime ministers ever since.

"Gandhi used three bungalows, the fourth and the fifth were added later on as the requirement to host more staff and security personnel grew," says political analyst Mohan Guruswamy, a regular visitor over the years.

"It's a relatively new construction," says Gautam Bhatia. However, it has been repeatedly refurbished "at a great deal of expense".

In recent years, Indians have had glimpses inside the closely-guarded complex as Mr Modi's office released videos of him feeding peacocks, doing yoga or pushing his mother's wheelchair.

What do we know about the new house?
It will be centrally located in Delhi's power corridor - between the Rashtrapati Bhavan at one end and the Supreme Court at the other, with parliament just across from the PM's house.

According to government documents, the prime minister will occupy 10 four-storey buildings on a 15-acre plot between the president's house and South Block, where offices of the PM and defence ministry are currently located. Rows of barracks built by the British in the 1940s and currently used as temporary offices will be demolished.

But further details about the residence are scarce. In an email to the BBC, project architect Bimal Patel's office said "for security reasons we cannot share the details/blueprints with you", refusing to say how much it would cost.

Architects, conservationists and environmentalists have criticised the authorities for a "lack of transparency".

"There have been no proper public hearings and the project details keep evolving so there is no clarity," said one architect, Anuj Srivastava.

Another, Madhav Raman, said building "such a massive structure" so close to South Block - a protected monument designed by leading 20th Century British architects Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker - was a cause for concern.

"The Archaeological Survey of India rules stipulate that there should be a minimum distance of 300m from a heritage structure but the new PM house will be just 30m away. There are also lots of trees on the plot, what will happen to them?"

So why does Mr Modi want to move?
Authorities say the PM's present home is "not well-located", is "difficult to secure" and needs "better infrastructure that is comfortable, efficient, easy to maintain and cost-effective".

They say it should be located in "close proximity" to his office since road closures during his travels "cause major disruptions to city traffic".

But Mohan Guruswamy believes the new house has more to do with Mr Modi's ambition.

"All real decision-making takes place in the PM's house. He has a staff of hundreds and they clear 300 files a day.

"He has centralised power in his hands. He is creating a presidential form of government and he needs a bigger building - a White House or a Kremlin."

Mr Guruswamy says Indian prime ministers have always lived in "buildings at the back". But with his new home, Mr Modi wants to put himself in the centre of Delhi's power corridor.

"But separation of power has to be physical too. He's not just making a new home, he's rearranging the institutions of government. Architecture changes the nature of power."

What will happen to the Rajpath area?
Rajpath is a public space popular for recreation and also for protests and candle-light marches.

And even though the government insists that it will remain a public space, critics say it's unlikely that large gatherings would be allowed because of the proximity to the PM's house.

Historian Narayani Gupta says the multi-storey office buildings, which will replace popular cultural centres like the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts, the National Museum and the repository of our modern history, the National Archives, would overshadow India Gate and drive away people.

"They are moving rare manuscripts and fragile objects to temporary locations. How do we know that there won't be any damage?"

Kanchi Kohli, of the think tank Centre for Policy Research, says land in Delhi is designated for specific purposes - such as recreational, semi-public or government - and authorities can't just take over an area and change its use.

"This is a land grab."

What is the government saying?
Minister for Urban Development Hardeep Singh Puri has defended the project.

Rejecting criticism of government priorities during the pandemic, he said the project cost was 200bn rupees over several years "while the government has allocated nearly twice that amount for vaccination".

In a series of recent tweets, he asked people to "not believe in fake photos and canards about ongoing work at Central Vista Avenue".

"The transformed Central Vista will be a world class public space," he said, adding "it will eventually be something every Indian will be proud of".

A senior bureaucrat who did not want to be named said Mr Puri was trying to "defend the indefensible".

"I do not doubt that the end result will be something every Indian will be proud of, but I do believe that the timing is completely wrong. What is the tearing hurry to erect yet another building when all around us people are dying?"

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-57189135
 
Being a Delhite, it pains me no end as to what dump this illiterate Gujju duo has converted Rajpath into which used to be one of the most sought after places for visitors! If only this guy was even semi literate!
 
BJP’s focus is UP polls instead of tackling COVID-19, claims Shiv Sena

An editorial in the Sena mouthpiece 'Saamana' said after failing to win the West Bengal Assembly polls, the BJP leadership has shifted focus to Uttar Pradesh.


At present, the entire focus has to be on the COVID-19 pandemic, said the Sena, which shares power with the NCP and Congress in Maharashtra. (File)
The Shiv Sena on Wednesday claimed the BJP, instead of tackling the COVID-19 pandemic, was working on how to improve its image and win the Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections due next year after it “did not do so well” in the panchayat polls there.

An editorial in the Sena mouthpiece ‘Saamana’ said after failing to win the West Bengal Assembly polls, the BJP leadership has shifted focus to Uttar Pradesh.

“Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union Home Minister Amit Shah and UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath held a meeting to discuss ‘Mission Uttar Pradesh’,” the Marathi daily claimed.

“It seems as if all issues in the country are resolved and there is only one work left of declaring elections and contesting them…holding massive rallies and roadshows to win polls,” it said in taunting remarks.

No doubt, elections are important in parliamentary democracy, but are polls a priority in the present situation? the editorial asked.

“The BJP is working on how to improve its image and win the UP polls after it did not do so well in the panchayat polls there,” it stated.

Earlier, there were demands that elections in Assam, West Bengal and other states be postponed or held in a single phase. But, the polls in West Bengal were conducted in eight phases, because of which the coronavirus spread not just in WB, but the entire country, the editorial claimed.

It further claimed that COVID-19 management has collapsed completely in UP and the BJP is likely to face trouble in the Assembly polls there and the Lok Sabha elections in 2024.

“COVID-19 is a national calamity and it was bound to hit big states like Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Maharashtra. The floating bodies in the Ganga river in UP brought tears in the eyes of the world,” it said.

At present, the entire focus has to be on the COVID-19 pandemic, said the Sena, which shares power with the NCP and Congress in Maharashtra.

“Otherwise, the Ganga river will be a carrier of Hindu dead bodies and this is not good for the country’s image,” it added.

https://indianexpress.com/article/india/bjps-focus-is-up-polls-instead-of-tackling-covid-19-claims-shiv-sena-7330784/
 
Delhi man detained after night-long search over PM Modi threat call

Several teams were formed to locate the caller, identified as Salman alias Arman, before he was traced to northeast Delhi’s Khajoori Khas

A man suspected to be a drug addict called the police control room around midnight and allegedly threatened to kill Prime Minister Narendra Modi, prompting a night-long search that ended with the caller’s detention in the early hours of Friday, officers aware of the matter said. The call sent the Delhi Police and the central agencies into a tizzy. Several teams were formed to locate the caller, identified as Salman alias Arman, before he was traced to northeast Delhi’s Khajoori Khas.

An Intelligence Bureau (IB) and Delhi Police’s Special Cell team was questioning the caller, who has not been arrested yet. A police officer, who did not want to be named, said a team engaged the caller in a conversation while the other traced his location to Khajoori Khas through technical surveillance. The central agencies were also alerted about the call, the officer said.

“The teams spotted him [the caller] near Khajoori Khas Chowk and overpowered him. He was brought to the Khajoori Khas police station where the IB and special cell officers also arrived and are questioning him. His identity has been established as Salman alias Arman, a resident of Loni in Ghaziabad. He appears to be a drug addict,” the officer added.

The officers said the interrogation team is trying to ascertain why Salman made the threat and whether someone had influenced him. Further legal action was likely to be taken on the basis of his questioning, they added

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cities/delhi-news/delhi-man-detained-after-night-long-search-over-pm-modi-threat-call-101622801056472.html
 
‘Berozgar Bhakt’ reveals ‘420 secrets that helped PM in India's employment growth

The author of a satire that went viral on Tuesday, when Amazon briefly published it, had lost his part-time job amid Covid cuts. He decided to make an empty book detailing the PM's success with tackling unemployment 'for a laugh'.

Titled 'Masterstroke' and published under the pseudonym 'Berozgar Bhakt' (Unemployed Devotee), the e-book made waves for several hours after it appeared on the Amazon website. Its cover, bearing a blurred image of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, promised to reveal "420 secrets that helped PM in India's employment growth". Inside were 56 pages, all left intentionally blank. It was available as a Kindle download priced at Rs 56, and free of cost for Kindle Unlimited subscribers. This was the work of an irreverent Redditor, who says he is a victim of the growing wave of unemployment in the country.

Over an online chat, the prankster, who requested to be identified only as 'an engineer from Jharkhand', called this idea "a product of an empty mind of an unemployed person". Claiming to be between jobs currently, he said his intention was to test how Kindle Publishing works. "So, I thought if I am going to put in some effort then I better get some laughs out of it." The satirical concept took 15 minutes to create. "In the morning I saw it got greenlit, and I thought to share this hilarious goof up by Amazon with fellow Redditors." According to its website, Amazon allows users to publish books within minutes and have them appear on Amazon sites within two days. In response to a request for comment, a spokesperson said: "The book is no longer available on Amazon."

'Masterstroke's description read: "How a great leader helped a struggling nation to emerge glorious in the war against Covid-19 and walk down the path of prosperity. This book has all the things Indian Prime Minister Modi did to increase employment among the Indian citizens". Within hours of its release, at least 57 Amazon users had given the book top ratings. Rave reviews, dripping with sarcasm, crowded the page. One user, Milind Alvares, wrote: "A very thorough rundown of some of the not-so-known facts."

Fellow customer Saad M's review noted, "Masterful, fluently explains the steps taken by our honourable PM and how hard he worked to increase employment opportunities for his fellow countrymen." The book's cover initially appeared with a clear photo but the author later blurred it for copyright reasons. The listing disappeared from Amazon's website by Tuesday evening, but the book remained available on another publishing platform, Smashwords.

Even before the pandemic in 2019, a Business Standard investigation highlighted that the Modi government had withheld a National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) report which showed the unemployment rate was at a 45-year-high. India's unemployment rate moved into double digits this May, touching 14.7 per cent in the week ended May 23, as per Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) data. The author of 'Masterstroke' is among those affected. "I lost my part time job due to Covid. I am preparing for government jobs but they don't have enough vacancies," he says. "Recently, while Covid cases were rising the Railway Recruitment Board (RRB) conducted non-technical popular categories (NTPC) exams and assigned centres to another state. The only train was cancelled, the buses were packed, and still candidates had to choose an exam over their life. Because they know there's a chance to get cured from Covid-19 but there is no chance that the government will roll out new vacancies next year," he says.

'Masterstroke' made multiple tongue-in-cheek references. Among them, the number 56 which was an allusion to a label by which Modi's followers call him ('the man with the 56-inch chest'), and the pseudonym "Bhakt" was based on a term critics often use to describe unquestioning voters of the incumbent central government. The Redditor is not active on Twitter -- where the book's listing was most widely shared -- and was not expecting it to go viral. So is he interested in publishing more books? "I do want to publish my book in the near future. But it will probably not be about politicians," he says, adding, "Depends on how long I will be unemployed!"

https://www.mid-day.com/lifestyle/c...g-immunity-booster-23175202?infinite-scroll=1
 
Upset Over Struggles, Tea Vendor Reportedly Sends Rs 100 To PM Modi To Get His Beard Shaved

He said, without any malice intention, he is sending Rs 100 from his savings to PM Modi so he shaves his beard.
In a letter to the PM, More also urged him to extend financial assistance of Rs 5 lakh to families of those who have had a Covid death and Rs 30000 for families hit by the lockdown.


We have grown accustomed to watching Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his new, customary long beard. However, one man in particular doesn't seem to be a fan, or so it appears.

A tea vendor from Maharashtra's Baramati has sent a money order of Rs 100 to PM Modi asking the latter to get his beard shaved, Lokmat reported.

Since the pandemic began, the unorganised sector has been adversely hit because of the covid-induced lockdown across the county. The problems have only mounted during the severe second wave leaving many without a source of income.

Upset over the regular struggles, Anil More, owner of a small tea stall had some advice for the Prime Minister.

“PM Modi has grown his beard. If he should increase something, it must be employment opportunities for the people of this country. Attempts must be made to accelerate vaccination for the population and there must be efforts to step up the existing medical facilities. The PM must make sure people are rid of their miseries that are caused by the last two lockdowns," he was quoted as saying by The New Indian Express.

He further went on to add that Prime Minister's position is the highest in the country and he has utmost respect and admiration for Narendra Modi. He said, without any malice intention, he is sending Rs 100 from his savings to PM Modi so he shaves his beard.

"I am sending Rs 100 for my savings to him so that he shaves his beard. He is the supreme leader and I don’t intend to hurt him. But the way in which the problems of the poor are growing by the day due to the pandemic, this is a way to draw his attention,” he said.

In a letter to the PM, More also urged him to extend financial assistance of Rs 5 lakh to families of those who have had a Covid death and Rs 30000 for families hit by the lockdown.

https://www.indiatimes.com/trending/social-relevance/tea-vendor-sends-rs-100-to-pm-modi-to-get-his-beard-shaved-542338.html
 
During the dispute over Babri Masjid, Ashis Nandy, a prominent Indian intellectual, began a series of interviews with R.S.S. members. A trained psychologist, he wanted to study the mentality of the rising Hindu nationalists. One of those he met was Narendra Modi, who was then a little-known B.J.P. functionary. Nandy interviewed Modi for several hours, and came away shaken. His subject, Nandy told me, exhibited all the traits of an authoritarian personality: puritanical rigidity, a constricted emotional life, fear of his own passions, and an enormous ego that protected a gnawing insecurity. During the interview, Modi elaborated a fantastical theory of how India was the target of a global conspiracy, in which every Muslim in the country was likely complicit. “Modi was a fascist in every sense,” Nandy said. “I don’t mean this as a term of abuse. It’s a diagnostic category.”

https://www.facebook.com/2253752175...ominent-indian-intellectual/2614231261966179/
 
India Today Mood of the Nation Survey's Data on Modi & Yogi Doesn't Add Up
Is the India Today survey underestimating PM Modi and overestimating Yogi Adityanath?


India Today's latest Mood of the Nation Survey came up with a surprising finding – that the proportion of people who find Narendra Modi as the most suitable person to be India's next Prime Minister has fallen from 38 percent in January 2021 to 24 percent in August 2021.

This is a massive fall and the PM's lowest popularity rating in the last seven years he has held office.

Since the fall has taken place during the last six months, it can broadly be attributed to the PM's handling of the COVID-19 second wave, his handling of the economy with inflation being the main factor, and the BJP's defeat in the Bengal Assembly elections.

This article will look at three aspects:

1. How credible are the findings of the survey regarding the fall in Modi's popularity?

2. Is the survey correct regarding the popularity of Yogi Adityanath?

3. What is the big picture emerging from the survey?

FALL IN PM MODI'S POPULARITY
The survey has a sample size of 15,000, which is decent for a national survey. It may not be very reliable if one is looking for specific insights from smaller states. For instance, it may not be useful to ascertain the popularity of the CM in a state like Goa or Manipur as the sample size from that state may be low. But to get a national picture, a sample size of 15,000 is fine.

However, there are a few aspects on the survey's biggest finding –PM Modi's decreased popularity – which do raise a few questions.

1. Comparison With Other Surveys

Most of the other national surveys conducted also indicate a fall in PM Modi's popularity in the last six months. However, their conclusion was that the fall took place around April-May when the COVID-19 second wave was at its peak.

The Quint had earlier reported on the factor that caused a 22-point fall in PM Modi's popularity. The data seemed to suggest that it wasn't just the pandemic, but the PM's decision to continue campaigning in Bengal that may have contributed to the fall.

This is based on data from at least two major surveys: CVoter's National Tracker and Morning Consult's Global Leader Approval Rating Tracker.

However, both these surveys also said that the PM's rating began improving in June and July. The fall in popularity predicted by these two surveys isn't to the same extent as the 'Mood of the Nation' survey. While the Morning Consult's poll deals with only approval ratings and not PM choice, CVoter's tracker deals with the latter as well.

According to CVoter's tracker, presently over 40 percent respondents picked PM Modi as their choice as India's next PM. There has been a fall even in this tracker, but it is not to the same extent as India Today's Mood of the Nation survey.

2. Best PM Rankings

One of the questions asked in the India Today-Karvy survey was: "Who do you think has been India's best prime minister so far?".

In response to this question, 27 percent respondents picked PM Modi, 19 percent picked Atal Bihar Vajpayee, 14 percent picked Indira Gandhi, 11 percent Manmohan Singh, 8 percent Jawaharlal Nehru, 7 percent Rajiv Gandhi, 6 percent Lal Bahadur Shastri, 3 percent PV Narasimha Rao, and VP Singh and Morarji Desai were at 2 percent each.

So this means a greater number of people picked Modi as "India's best PM ever" than those who wanted him to be "India's next PM".

It is curious that Modi fared better in competition with tall former PMs like Jawaharlal Nehru, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Indira Gandhi, VP Singh, et al as compared to present competitors, like Yogi Adityanath, Rahul Gandhi, Mamata Banerjee, Arvind Kejriwal, Sonia Gandhi, and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra.

Politically, this seems strange. From a survey point of view, this is possible but it could be the result of a distortion that is taking place in the survey. We will discuss this distortion later.

3. Satisfaction Rating

In the Mood of the Nation survey, 16 percent people rated PM Modi's performance as "outstanding", 38 percent rated it as "good", 30 percent rated it as "average", 11 percent as "poor", and 5 percent as "very poor". This means that 54 percent have a positive view of Modi's performance.

Now, let's assume that all those who have a positive view of Modi's performance would pick either him or someone else from BJP as most suitable for being India's next PM. But the combined preference for Modi (24 percent), Yogi Adityanath (11 percent) and Amit Shah (7 percent): is 42 percent. This means that at least 12 percent of those who have a positive view of Modi's performance, are choosing someone else as the next PM. Who can that be? Someone in the Opposition? Or another BJP leader whose name didn't get reflected in the survey? Or are they undecided?

It is strange that there is such a sizeable chunk of people who find Modi's performance "good" and yet isn't picking either Modi, Yogi, or Amit Shah as their choice as next PM.

This does indicate that the PM's popularity is being underestimated.

INCREASE IN YOGI'S POPULARITY
The distortion we were referring to earlier is UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath. With 11 percent picking him, the survey says he is the second-most popular PM choice after Modi. He is marginally ahead of Rahul Gandhi (10 percent), Arvind Kejriwal (8 percent), Mamata Banerjee (8 percent), Amit Shah (7 percent), Sonia Gandhi (4 percent), Priyanka Gandhi (4 percent).

Adityanath has gone up to 11 percent from 10 percent in January 2021 and 3 percent in August 2020.

However, Adityanath's own approval rating in his own state has gone down from 49 percent in August 2020 to 39 percent in January 2021 and 29 percent in August 2021.

So, this is curious. While Yogi's approval rating in his own state has gone down by a massive 20 percentage points in one year, people picking him as the next PM has gone up by 8 percentage points.

It is difficult to understand how this happened. It is highly unlikely that this eight percent increase has come from Uttar Pradesh, where his popularity has fallen substantially. And UP, being the most populous state, is bound to account for a sizeable part of the total sample size.

Just for the sake of comparison, according to CVoter's tracker, the proportion of people choosing Adityanath as the next PM is less than 3 percent.

It is possible that there has been a sampling error or a sizeable chunk of pro-Hindutva respondents tactically chose Yogi Adityanath over PM Modi in the Mood of the Nation survey. The tactical choice by Hindutva voters would also explain why Modi fares better in comparison to past PMs than present competitors as for a section of Hindutva voters, Modi may be the best PM so far, but Yogi could be a better one.

So, it's either tactical voting or a faulty sampling.

Even earlier, the India Today Mood of the Nation survey had used a faulty methodology and projected Yogi Adityanath as the most popular CM in the country, even though his popularity in his own state had gone down.

Why Yogi Adityanath is Best CM in 1 Poll, Below Average in Another
]Like Modi's popularity, the Yogi equation in the Mood of the Nation survey doesn't add up. It is possible that the survey is overestimating Yogi's popularity and underestimating Modi's.

THE BIG PICTURE PART TWO | WHAT LIES AHEAD IN NATIONAL POLITICS?
Three aspects from this survey are in line with other surveys, such as CVoter:

1. Economic issues are becoming more and more important. The economy is being considered the Modi government's biggest failure. Within economic issues, inflation is emerging as a bigger issue than unemployment.

Historically, inflation has been politically more harmful for incumbent governments than unemployment. Therefore, price rise could be a major contributing factor to the fall in the popularity of the BJP government.

2. Non-BJP CMs trump BJP CMs: The Mood of the Nation survey is again similar to the CVoter survey. In the MOTN survey, MK Stalin is the most popular CM in his own state, followed by Naveen Patnaik and Pinarayi Vijayan and Uddhav Thackeray. Only two out of the top 10 CMs are from the BJP: Himanta Biswa Sarma and Yogi Adityanath. Only one is from the Congress - Ashok Gehlot, while three are Congress supported CMs: MK Stalin, Uddhav Thackeray and Hemant Soren.

3. Flux in the Opposition space: The survey does reveal an improvement in the Opposition's prospects. According to the survey, if elections are held today, the UPA could get 105 seats and other non-NDA parties could get 140. The NDA is at 298. This means that if the Opposition does come together, it could make matters difficult for the BJP.

However, the survey reveals a flux within the Opposition space, with no one leader emerging as the main challenger to Modi, even though the individual popularities of Rahul Gandhi, Mamata Banerjee, and Arvind Kejriwal have marginally increased.

Though this might be stating the obvious, in the days to come a great deal would depend on the government's ability to either address economic woes or come up with a diversion. Conversely, it would be up to the Opposition to keep the focus on the economy. A lot would depend on what happens in UP. If Yogi Adityanath comes back to power with a sizable majority, his popularity within the BJP space could increase, possibly at Modi's expense. On the other hand, if he loses, it may provide a major boost to the Opposition.

This places Modi in a curious position - winning UP could strengthen a rival within his own party but losing it could strengthen the party's rivals.

If there's one thing this survey has done, it is to reopen the Modi-vs-Yogi debate.

https://www.thequint.com/news/politics/india-today-mood-of-the-nation-survey-pm-modi-yogi-adityanath#read-more
 
Next election is in 2024 and its just too far away. Having said that, I hope Modi dont run for another term. 10 years being in power is a long time and he will be too old at that time anyway. A statesman like him should not get voted out like Manmohan Singh in 2014...he should voluntarily quit.
 
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's popularity ratings fell from 66 per cent to 24pc — a huge difference of 42pc — over the course of one year as Covid-19's second wave led to record deaths and infections in the country.

A survey, titled Mood of the Nation, conducted by Indian publication India Today had asked respondents, "Who is best suited to be the next prime minister of India?"

According to the results of the survey published last week, Modi was the top contender, followed by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adyanath and Rahul Gandhi, the leader of India's main opposition party. However, Modi's popularity declined massively from 66pc in August 2020 to 38pc in Jan 2021 and finally to 24pc in Aug of this year.

Respondents cited Modi's handling of the coronavirus pandemic as the primary reason for lower ratings.

"While Modi was lauded for his handling of the first wave with a high 73pc approval rating in January 2021, the disruption experienced during the second wave has seen that figure drop to 49pc," the India Today report said.

Around 27pc of the respondents said that large gatherings, including election rallies, were responsible for the second wave in India, while 26pc said it was due to disregarding precautions against the coronavirus, Indian publication Scroll.in said in its report on the survey.

The respondents also displayed mistrust in the government's data of cases and deaths due to the coronavirus, with 71pc saying infections and fatalities were higher than the Indian government's figures.

In July, India became the third country to surpass 400,000 Covid-19 deaths. The surge was blamed on the Delta variant and the government's complacency after Modi declared victory over the virus in January.

Read | India's Covid deaths 10 times higher than reported: study

In response to the question, "What is the biggest problem India currently faces?", 23pc said it was Covid-19, 19pc said it was inflation while 9pc cited unemployment as the biggest problem.

Jammu and Kashmir's statehood

Another significant finding of the survey was the response to the question, "What should the union government do to restore normalcy in Jammu and Kashmir?". Forty-one per cent of the respondents said full statehood should be restored while 25pc were in favour of restoring both the statehood as well as Jammu and Kashmir's special status.

As many as 51pc of the respondents said they are scared to protest or express anything on any platform for fear of being arrested.

Respondents were also asked about the performance of the main opposition party — Congress. According to the results, 34pc said it was average while 29pc said it was good.

More than 14,000 people participated in the India Today survey which was conducted between July 10 and 22, according to Scroll.in.

The survey covered residents of 19 states, 115 parliamentary and 230 assembly seats, it added.


DAWN
 
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's popularity ratings fell from 66 per cent to 24pc — a huge difference of 42pc — over the course of one year as Covid-19's second wave led to record deaths and infections in the country.

A survey, titled Mood of the Nation, conducted by Indian publication India Today had asked respondents, "Who is best suited to be the next prime minister of India?"

According to the results of the survey published last week, Modi was the top contender, followed by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adyanath and Rahul Gandhi, the leader of India's main opposition party. However, Modi's popularity declined massively from 66pc in August 2020 to 38pc in Jan 2021 and finally to 24pc in Aug of this year.

Respondents cited Modi's handling of the coronavirus pandemic as the primary reason for lower ratings.

"While Modi was lauded for his handling of the first wave with a high 73pc approval rating in January 2021, the disruption experienced during the second wave has seen that figure drop to 49pc," the India Today report said.

Around 27pc of the respondents said that large gatherings, including election rallies, were responsible for the second wave in India, while 26pc said it was due to disregarding precautions against the coronavirus, Indian publication Scroll.in said in its report on the survey.

The respondents also displayed mistrust in the government's data of cases and deaths due to the coronavirus, with 71pc saying infections and fatalities were higher than the Indian government's figures.

In July, India became the third country to surpass 400,000 Covid-19 deaths. The surge was blamed on the Delta variant and the government's complacency after Modi declared victory over the virus in January.

Read | India's Covid deaths 10 times higher than reported: study

In response to the question, "What is the biggest problem India currently faces?", 23pc said it was Covid-19, 19pc said it was inflation while 9pc cited unemployment as the biggest problem.

Jammu and Kashmir's statehood

Another significant finding of the survey was the response to the question, "What should the union government do to restore normalcy in Jammu and Kashmir?". Forty-one per cent of the respondents said full statehood should be restored while 25pc were in favour of restoring both the statehood as well as Jammu and Kashmir's special status.

As many as 51pc of the respondents said they are scared to protest or express anything on any platform for fear of being arrested.

Respondents were also asked about the performance of the main opposition party — Congress. According to the results, 34pc said it was average while 29pc said it was good.

More than 14,000 people participated in the India Today survey which was conducted between July 10 and 22, according to Scroll.in.

The survey covered residents of 19 states, 115 parliamentary and 230 assembly seats, it added.


DAWN

Indian public should have realized about this charlatan after the utter failure of demonetization drama; however, this news is not good for Pakistan.

We actually want folks like Modi remain popular in India. They are doing an excellent job of radicalizing a big portion of general Hindu public in the name of “uniting Hinduz” (under the flag of hatred and malice against minorities)

It’s interesting to see that some Indian members here state that Indian public (80% Hinduz} does not have any alternative choice but Modi.

And I wonder if it’s a good thing or a bad thing?
 
the latest info is that Modi is not feeling well and he is not healthy, he will visit the doctors in US for consultation while attending UNGA meeting this month .....
 
the latest info is that Modi is not feeling well and he is not healthy, he will visit the doctors in US for consultation while attending UNGA meeting this month .....

And where did you get this "latest info" from? Zaid Hamid?
 
the latest info is that Modi is not feeling well and he is not healthy, he will visit the doctors in US for consultation while attending UNGA meeting this month .....

I guess he doesn't trust the hospitals, doctors, medicine, and vaccines might I add, in India.
 
PM Narendra Modi urges people to take part in e-auction of gifts received by him
Items at the auction included Paralympian Avani Lekhara and Bhavani Patel’s t-shirts. The racquet that PV Sindhu used in her bronze medal-winning Olympic match was also a part of the auction

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday urged people to take part in the auction of several gifts and mementoes that he has received over the years and said the proceeds would go to the ‘Namami Gange’ initiative.

“Over time, I have received several gifts and mementos which are being auctioned. This includes the special mementos given by our Olympics heroes. Do take part in the auction. The proceeds would go to the Namami Gange initiative,” the Prime Minister tweeted.

The e-auction, being organised by the ministry of culture, started on Friday, on the occasion of the Prime Minister’s birthday, and will continue till October 7. This is the third edition of such an auction, in which individuals or organisations can participate via the website: https://pmmementos.gov.in.

“The memorabilia includes sports gear and equipment of the medal-winning Olympians and Paralympians, a replica of the Ayodhya Ram Mandir, Char Dham, Rudraksh Convention Centre, models, sculptures, paintings, ‘angavastram’ among others,” the ministry had said in a statement.

Olympic bronze medalist Lovlina Borgohain’s boxing gloves received the highest bid at the e-auction. Borgohain’s gloves with a base price of ₹80 lakh, received a bid of ₹1.92 crore. Olympic gold medalist Neeraj Chopra’s javelin got a bid of ₹1.5 crore. Chopra’s javelin had a base price of ₹1 crore at the auction organised by the culture ministry.

Other items at the auction included Paralympian Avani Lekhara and Bhavani Patel’s t-shirts. The racquet that PV Sindhu used in her bronze medal-winning Olympic match was also a part of the auction.

Apart from sports gear, the e-auction also includes a replica of the Kedarnath Temple and the Statue of Unity, along with the portraits and photographs of the Prime Minister. The base price of Modi’s photograph and portraits are ₹2 lakh.

In 2019, the government had auctioned more than 4,000 gifts received by the prime minister. Proceeds of the previous auction also went to the Namami Gange Programme.

Namami Gange is an integrated conservation and rejuvenation programme initiated by the Central government in June 2014. It aims to ensure containment of pollution and conservation of the river Ganga.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/pm-narendra-modi-urges-people-to-take-part-in-e-auction-of-gifts-received-by-him-101632038517923.html
 
If the information turns out to be false in a few months, I assume you will come back to this thread and post that it was fake news.

After art 370 was diluted, similar "see in a few months" were said. We know what happened.
 
PM To Meet Kamala Harris, CEOs In US Today: 5 Key Points

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to meet US Vice President Kamala Harris and global CEOs on the first day of his US visit today. PM Modi's packed day one will also include bilateral meets with Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.

New Delhi: PM Modi in US: Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to meet US Vice President Kamala Harris and global CEOs on the first day of his US visit today.

Here are 5 points on Day 1 of PM Modi's US Visit:

==
At 7 in the evening today, PM Modi will meet global CEOs in Washington DC. The meeting will observe participation of Cristiano E Amon from Qualcomm, Shantanu Narayen from Adobe, Mark Widmar from First Solar, Vivek Lall from General Atomics and Stephen A Schwarzman from Blackstone, news agency ANI reported. Shantanu Narayen and Vivek Lall are Indian Americans.

==
The second meeting on PM Modi's agenda will be with Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. PM Modi and his Australian counterpart also spoke on the phone last week to review the progress of India- Australia Comprehensive Partnership which includes the pertinent 2+2 dialogue. On March 12 this year, PM Modi and Australian PM Morrison also took part in virtual bilateral talks.

==
The most talked about part of PM Modi's schedule for today will be his meeting with US Vice President Kamala Harris which will mark the first in-person meet between the two leaders. Harris, an Indian-American, and PM Modi had spoken over the phone in June amid the deadly wave of COVID-19 in India.

==
On his first meeting with Harris, PM Modi said in a tweet that he was "looking forward" to talks to explore opportunities for cooperation between US and India, particularly in the area of science and technology.

==
PM Modi will also hold a one-on-one meeting with Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga focused on bilateral ties between the two counties. In July this year, PM Suga had said in a video message on the occasion of the inauguration ceremony of the Varanasi International Cooperation and Convention Centre that both the countries shared the same fundamental values and have maintained cordial relations through the long history of exchanges. Earlier this year, Prime Minister Suga and PM Modi also talked about the challenges posed by China's expansionist moves in the South China Sea.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/pm-modi-us-visit-prime-minister-narendra-modi-to-meet-us-vice-president-kamala-harris-ceos-in-us-5-key-points-2550788
 
So this show pony will now show off him reading some papers! Is he doing any sort of ehsaan on us?
 

He loves camera lol. :inti

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A long flight also means opportunities to go through papers and some file work. <a href="https://t.co/nYoSjO6gIB">pic.twitter.com/nYoSjO6gIB</a></p>— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) <a href="https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/1440727343408893965?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 22, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
He loves camera lol. :inti

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A long flight also means opportunities to go through papers and some file work. <a href="https://t.co/nYoSjO6gIB">pic.twitter.com/nYoSjO6gIB</a></p>— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) <a href="https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/1440727343408893965?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 22, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
His subjects (ministers & other slaves) started tweeting this pic as if it's such a big thing.

Bunch of clowns.
 
LOL. NYT had to publish this rebuttal on their twitter account.

Koi sharam hoti hai koi haya hoti hai....

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is a completely fabricated image, one of many in circulation featuring Prime Minister Modi. All of our factual reporting on Narendra Modi can be found at:<a href="https://t.co/ShYn4qW4nT">https://t.co/ShYn4qW4nT</a> <a href="https://t.co/gsY7AlNFna">pic.twitter.com/gsY7AlNFna</a></p>— NYTimes Communications (@NYTimesPR) <a href="https://twitter.com/NYTimesPR/status/1442927211741212678?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 28, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
LOL. NYT had to publish this rebuttal on their twitter account.

Koi sharam hoti hai koi haya hoti hai....

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is a completely fabricated image, one of many in circulation featuring Prime Minister Modi. All of our factual reporting on Narendra Modi can be found at:<a href="https://t.co/ShYn4qW4nT">https://t.co/ShYn4qW4nT</a> <a href="https://t.co/gsY7AlNFna">pic.twitter.com/gsY7AlNFna</a></p>— NYTimes Communications (@NYTimesPR) <a href="https://twitter.com/NYTimesPR/status/1442927211741212678?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 28, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Modi didn’t make the fake pic, and anyone who took it seriously is delusional.
 
Modi didn’t make the fake pic, and anyone who took it seriously is delusional.

The picture was widely being used in Indian media and shared by BJP higher ups so much so that NYT had to disavow it...
 
Modiji’s PR is similar to Shastriji lol outdated but people are still gullible.

I recall Shastriji having a plane pic with papers lol
 
He loves camera lol. :inti

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A long flight also means opportunities to go through papers and some file work. <a href="https://t.co/nYoSjO6gIB">pic.twitter.com/nYoSjO6gIB</a></p>— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) <a href="https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/1440727343408893965?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 22, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

giphy.gif
 
The picture was widely being used in Indian media and <b>shared by BJP higher ups</b> so much so that NYT had to disavow it...

It was obviously photoshopped. You need to back up such allegations with cites.
 
Read up NYT's own clarification...

NO MORE REPLIES

Nice try. NYT doesn't say the picture was "shared by BJP higher ups". All it said was "This is a completely fabricated image, one of many in circulation featuring Prime Minister Modi. All of our factual reporting on Narendra Modi can be found at: https://nytimes.com/topic/person/narendra-modi".
 
He is looking at his phone while holding some papers in his hand. Look at the amount of light there lol. :inti
Remember his pics from his 'inspection' of Central Vista site after the US trip got over? How his slaves went gaga over them?
 
He will again be voted into power next election while you will complain to foreigners.

The "waste of space" is leading a government that is increasing FDI (the best measure of a modernizing economy) at a breakneck pace.

"India has attracted Foreign Direct Investment, FDI inflow of 27.37 billion dollar during first four months of this financial year which is 62 per cent higher as compared to corresponding period last financial year."

https://newsonair.com/2021/09/22/in...ing-first-four-months-of-this-financial-year/
 
Looks like Modichayan is once again going to take 2024 election with quite comfort...


P.S. What the hell is Congress doing in Punjab ????????? Is Raul Puppu a secret BJP agent ??? OMG
 
It is incredible. Congress is on a suicide mission. These Gandhis and their sycophants have no idea that they are destroying their own 100+ year old party.

If this trend continues, with elections in UP coming up in 2022, TINA (There is no alternative) might work again for BJP in 2024.

Also, in other news, Kanhaiya Kumar and Jignesh Mewani (along with Hardik Patel who had already joined) are inducted into congress. Way to take the party to extreme left.



Looks like Modichayan is once again going to take 2024 election with quite comfort...


P.S. What the hell is Congress doing in Punjab ????????? Is Raul Puppu a secret BJP agent ??? OMG
 
The "waste of space" is leading a government that is increasing FDI (the best measure of a modernizing economy) at a breakneck pace.

"India has attracted Foreign Direct Investment, FDI inflow of 27.37 billion dollar during first four months of this financial year which is 62 per cent higher as compared to corresponding period last financial year."

https://newsonair.com/2021/09/22/in...ing-first-four-months-of-this-financial-year/

When are you coming back to India and live permanently here? :inti
 
When are you coming back to India and live permanently here? :inti
I too asked him this but he is yet to respond. After all it's been 7 years since his messiah is in power, India must have turned into heaven for him to come back to his motherland.
 
When are you coming back to India and live permanently here? :inti

Do you ask the same question to Pakistanis who live abroad but post to this forum?

Anyway, economic development is economic development. Increase in FDI is the best signal of progress.

There is a reasonable chance I will be moving back to India within a decade.
 
Do you ask the same question to Pakistanis who live abroad but post to this forum?

Anyway, economic development is economic development. Increase in FDI is the best signal of progress.

There is a reasonable chance I will be moving back to India within a decade.

Why should I ask Pakistanis? I am not a Pakistani. I am in India. I know whats the situation here and why people like you leave this country. I am pretty sure you won't come back to India after living abroad for so many years. Once again I know that too because I have seen guys who have said the exact same thing but find it difficult to adjust again in India. :inti
 
I too asked him this but he is yet to respond. After all it's been 7 years since his messiah is in power, India must have turned into heaven for him to come back to his motherland.

Perfect time for all the NRI bhakhts to start living in India again. India has become a heaven under Modi. :inti
 
Why should I ask Pakistanis? I am not a Pakistani. I am in India.

You are on a Pakistani forum.

I know whats the situation here and why people like you leave this country. I am pretty sure you won't come back to India after living abroad for so many years. Once again I know that too because I have seen guys who have said the exact same thing but find it difficult to adjust again in India. :inti

Whether I return to India or not, economic development will make the life of most Indians better.
 
Honest Modi's friend...

Adani paid Rs 74.5 cr for Mangaluru airport assets valued at Rs 363 cr, says AAI union

The Airport Authority Employees Union (AAEU) has alleged that for three of the six airports that the Adani Group won bids for –Mangaluru, Lucknow and Ahmedabad– the amount that the Adani Group paid for the airports assets as per the final agreement is far less than what the Airports Authority of India’s bidding document states. Adani Enterprises has already taken over these three airports.

In 2018, six airports were chosen for privatisation by the Airports Authority of India (AAI). The Adani Group won the bid for all six airports in February 2019. Since then, controversy has followed, and the handover of these airports was delayed because Adani sought an extension due to the pandemic. Three airports have since been handed over and the company is likely to take over Thiruvananthapuram and Jaipur airports this month, as well.

The AAEU has alleged in a letter to the Prime Minister that while the bidding document says the final bidder should have paid Rs 1,330 crore towards AAI’s existing assets, Adani only had to pay Rs 499.84 crore in the end. The value of Rs 1,330 crore for the assets was pegged at the time when the Civil Aviation Ministry sought the approval of the Public Private Partnership Appraisal Committee (PPPAC). PPPAC is the Union government’s committee that looks into and approves Public Private Partnership projects.

The concessionaire agreement signed between Adani Enterprises and the Airports Authority showed that the amount that Adani reimbursed towards existing assets of the airport were at a fraction of the initial price.

As per the letter, the bidding document said that the amount to be paid towards assets were Rs 363 crore for Mangaluru airport, Rs 583 crore for Lucknow and Rs 384 crore for Ahmedabad. As per the final agreement, however, Adani had to pay Rs 74.5 crore for Mangaluru (a reduction of Rs 288.5 crore), Rs 147.93 crore for Lucknow (down by Rs 435.07 crore) and Rs 277.41 crore for Ahmedabad (down by Rs 106.59 crore).

The letter alleged that undue advantage was given to Adani and that almost all project parameters including the project’s scope, project cost, Minimum Reserve Price, Fair value of Existing assets etc “were neither ascertained nor published in bid documents”.

This is not the first time that the irregularities have been raised. In 2020, TNM reported that there were anomalies in the bidding process and how the Adani Group won the bid. “The process of approving the project report for Adani was done in a hasty manner to favour only one bidder,” an office bearer of the AAEU had told TNM at the time.
https://www.thenewsminute.com/artic...assets-valued-rs-363-cr-says-aai-union-156205
 
Its biggest lie ever that bigot isn't corrupt.

He is most corrupt Indian neta, ever! Just that the ever pliant godi media props him up whenever such questions are raised about his corrupt conduct.
 
Is the sycophantic Modi propaganda push a sign of weakness or strength?

After all, just earlier this year Modi joined an illustrious list of former world leaders like the Soviet Union’s Josef Stalin and North Korea’s Kim II Sung, in having a massive sports stadium be named after himself

including pressuring vaccination centres in Bihar to give doses ‘offline’ and then upload the data on September 17 so that India could set a record on Modi’s birthday.

https://thepoliticalfix.substack.co...Q.hFafjM2ZAgI-yz8ZAGF6I8QBgLVDtSE1Vg-AwKCkTOo
 
Sticking bigot's pics in place of the person who was supposed to visit those places is helluva funny & tragic at the same time. Tragic because it shows the collective lowering of IQ of the nation due to these sycophant sanghis.

Funny because the same sanghis used to bash Congress day in and day out for hero-worshipping Gandhis. These clueless sanghis have stooped even lower than Congressis in worshipping an insignificant and incompetent creature.
 
Spreads and encourages hatred and is also incompetent at everything else. What exactly makes this loser a beloved leader of his voters?

One of India’s more illustrious former coal secretaries has identified several decisions by the Modi government since 2016 which, he says, are responsible for the shortage of coal facing India today. Anil Swarup accepts this is “mishandling by hindsight”. He says as coal secretary in 2016, he frequently warned the government that there could be a shortage of coal stocks in four-five years’ time but, because at that time there were ample stocks and no shortage in sight, the government refused to heed his advice.

Instead, its response was, as he put it, “Why is the coal secretary shouting?” Swarup said the government is guilty of “indifference” to the problems that were clearly looming and identified by him. However, he shied away from describing the government’s indifference as irresponsibility. As he put it: “I was thinking five years ahead.” He said the government didn’t want to think that far and didn’t understand the situation he was worried about could develop. Today, what he predicted has happened.

First, the term of Sutirtha Bhattacharya, an “outstanding CMD” of Coal India, lapsed in 2017. It was neither extended, as it should have been, and for over a year, no replacement was appointed. As a result, the momentum and tempo built-up during his time was lost. Swarup says even today, there are many Coal India subsidiaries that do not have chairpersons.

Second, in 2016, Coal India had 35,000 crore reserves which should have been used to open new mines or expand existing ones. This would have ensured growth in Coal India output. However, the vast majority of this money was sucked out by the government as dividends to help balance the budget. As a result, the Coal India expansion did not happen.

Third, Swarup said hundreds of local mine managers were deputed to supervise digging toilets (he called them “*********”) under Swachh Bharat. As a result, their time and attention was diverted and deflected from Coal India to other matters. Swarup called this “ridiculous”.

Fourth, Swarup said that instead of investing in more mines, Coal India started investing in fertilisers.
 
Everybody who is not a devotee knows pretty well what an incompetent creature this feku guy is.

All this talk about him working for 18-19 hrs on daily basis is as true as him being an honourable man.
 
Everybody who is not a devotee knows pretty well what an incompetent creature this feku guy is.

All this talk about him working for 18-19 hrs on daily basis is as true as him being an honourable man.

Unfortunately when Bisht becomes PM this guy will look like a saint. Just like Vajpayee is now.
 
Unfortunately when Bisht becomes PM this guy will look like a saint. Just like Vajpayee is now.
This is true. Bisht will be our PM one day, unfortunately.

Regarding Vajpayee, yeah he definitely looks like a saint now which he surely wasn't. Had he got a spine, we won't have to bear with this feku creature!
 
Regarding Vajpayee, yeah he definitely looks like a saint now which he surely wasn't. Had he got a spine, we won't have to bear with this feku creature!

He wanted Modi out of the party after his handling of the ujarat riots. It was Thackeray and ironically Advani who lobbied to keep him :asif
 
He wanted Modi out of the party after his handling of the ujarat riots. It was Thackeray and ironically Advani who lobbied to keep him :asif
That's why I called him spineless. Despite being party's tallest leader by far, he couldn't remove someone who was neck deep involved in murders of innocent citizens of his state.
 
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Everybody who is not a devotee knows pretty well what an incompetent creature this feku guy is.

All this talk about him working for 18-19 hrs on daily basis is as true as him being an honourable man.

If the BJP government is really incompetent, how do you explain all the following good news about the Indian economy?

1. ndia's forex reserves have increased from $400 billion to $640 billion over the last 2 years https://tradingeconomics.com/india/foreign-exchange-reserves

2. "India attracts FDI inflow of 27.37 billion dollar during first four months of this financial year". More than double that for the previous financial year. https://newsonair.com/2021/09/22/ind...nancial-year/?

3. New areas of the economy are doing well
"India's got the next big thing in tech, and it could be worth $1 trillion"
https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/09/tech/india-software-saas-intl-hnk/index.html

4. etc.

Muck better than the alternative which at this point is Pappu Gandhi :)))
[MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION] [MENTION=134505]rhony[/MENTION] [MENTION=151383]Local.Dada[/MENTION] [MENTION=90888]Itachi[/MENTION]
 
It is incredible. Congress is on a suicide mission. These Gandhis and their sycophants have no idea that they are destroying their own 100+ year old party.

If this trend continues, with elections in UP coming up in 2022, TINA (There is no alternative) might work again for BJP in 2024.

Also, in other news, Kanhaiya Kumar and Jignesh Mewani (along with Hardik Patel who had already joined) are inducted into congress. Way to take the party to extreme left.

If the aim of the Congress, or whoever is funding them, is the destruction of India's democracy, then they're doing a damned good job.

The Congress has reached a stage where it can never capture power at the Centre, and they are the only alternative to the BJP at the national level.

And the BJP is only too happy to play along without realizing the threat to India's democratic system.

I hope the sane voices in the Congress throw the Gandhi family into the thrash can and take over the party before it's too late. A one party system is going to be everyone's worst nightmare.
 
Spreads and encourages hatred and is also incompetent at everything else. What exactly makes this loser a beloved leader of his voters?
Unfortunately for Indians, this will go over the garbage filled heads of devotees. In their own fantasy world, feku can do no wrong. He is reincarnation of God, no less.
 
If the BJP government is really incompetent, how do you explain all the following good news about the Indian economy?

1. ndia's forex reserves have increased from $400 billion to $640 billion over the last 2 years https://tradingeconomics.com/india/foreign-exchange-reserves

2. "India attracts FDI inflow of 27.37 billion dollar during first four months of this financial year". More than double that for the previous financial year. https://newsonair.com/2021/09/22/ind...nancial-year/?

3. New areas of the economy are doing well
"India's got the next big thing in tech, and it could be worth $1 trillion"
https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/09/tech/india-software-saas-intl-hnk/index.html

4. etc.

Muck better than the alternative which at this point is Pappu Gandhi :)))

[MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION] [MENTION=134505]rhony[/MENTION] [MENTION=151383]Local.Dada[/MENTION] [MENTION=90888]Itachi[/MENTION]
So India has become such a heaven! Btw, when are you planning to return to your beloved motherland?
 
I think a lot of people who are protesting BJP today are young and haven't witnessed life in India in the 80s or 70s. Congress was the only party around and was quite dynastic, dictatorial, fascist in true sense (Emergency, anyone?) and deeply involved in corruption in the guise of Socialism and Communism. India rotted under Congress for decades, till in 1991, when Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh threw away the old Congress book of socialism and liberated the economy and the country itself. What you see today is Congress simply going back to pre-1991 days, because all else has failed to get them back in power.

This may come to a surprise to a lot of people but during 80s, 90s and 2000s, BJP was the party of choice for urban, educated, liberal Indians (Oh yes, BJP was a big supporter of LGBTQ rights and women empowerment, against caste discrimination and communism, but thats not what we hear in the media). We see so many NRIs supporting BJP because they had all left India in 80s, 90s and 2000s, disgusted with the Congress rule. So when BJP came back in power in 2014, there was incredible optimism in India and abroad.

It is important to note that Modi came to power in 2014 NOT because he promised Hindutva, but he promised better economy, less government and a brighter future via libertarianism. (remember accha din?)

But what happened once he became the PM was entirely the opposite; Modi on one hand unleashed Hindutva (beef-banning, ghar bapsi, gau-rakshak) while doubling down on the socialist policies of Congress (more government control, welfare distribution to the poor, Pradhan Mantri Aawas Yojana, Gas connections, building toilets, direct money transfer). This helped him win handsomely in 2019, once again surprising all the liberal think tanks (NDTV, India Today etc) who rarely go into the hinterland of India to get the pulse of common people.

And now in 2021, Modi has realised he has little chance to come back to power in 2024, with the rise of opposition in every state (All regional party heads like Mamta B, Jagan, KCR, Patnaik, Stalin, Thackarey), COVID mismanagement and general fatigue among Indians with BJP.

So he's now trying to usher in the capitalist/libertarian policies he promised the first time around(reforms in agri, industries, labour, taxation; privatisation of loss-making central agencies like BSNL, Air India, Coal Mines, Railways etc) and hurrying to finish BJP's favourite Hindutva projects (Ram Mandir, Varanasi, Kashmir, NRC, Uniform Civil Code etc). He is a man on a mission and in a hurry.

But BJP is going down, mark my words (and that of every astute political observer in India) losing all the state elections and the central election in 2024. But there is no one big alternative to them. All the regional parties together if they can come together, can form the government, which I am not in favour of, remembering 1996-2000 debacle, when I think we had 4-5 Prime Ministers in 4 years and our economy hit the rock bottom.

But Congress is in worse shape, in no position to win majority on its own. Forget winning, even its survival is in question. A lot of people are rightly blaming the Gandhis. They are inept, arrogant and corrupt to the core. But it's not just Gandhis, they have built a coterie of sycophants in their party, the media, new age social media and Youtube channels, the NGO-misisonary network etc. It is not easy to dismantle this eco-system. This ecosystem will not let anyone trump the Gandhis. So our Tharoor, Ghulam Nabi Azad, Kapil Sibal and Anand Sharma can sulk howmuchever they want to, but the Gnadhis will not be displaced or dislodged.

So, we are stuck with BJP vs (all the regional parties together). This will be a loss-loss for our country, unfortunately.




If the aim of the Congress, or whoever is funding them, is the destruction of India's democracy, then they're doing a damned good job.

The Congress has reached a stage where it can never capture power at the Centre, and they are the only alternative to the BJP at the national level.

And the BJP is only too happy to play along without realizing the threat to India's democratic system.

I hope the sane voices in the Congress throw the Gandhi family into the thrash can and take over the party before it's too late. A one party system is going to be everyone's worst nightmare.
 
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