Jul 2, 2021
The New York Times Company will consider qualified applicants, including those with criminal histories, in a manner consistent with the requirements of applicable state and local “Fair Chance” laws
New York Times looks for anti-Hindu, anti-Modi candidates to spread propaganda: Dissecting the dangerous job opening
On the 1st of July, The New York Times posted an entry-level job requirement on their website and on LinkedIn. While the hiring process of any establishment seems to be a routine affair, at New York Times, they thought it fit to post very specific requirements for the job – being anti-Hindu and anti-Modi. The job posting was for that of a South Asia Business Correspondent in New Delhi.
Jul 1, 2021
Dr. Ambedkar’s speech in Parliament delivered on 10 October 1951 where he laid out, point by point, the real reason for his resignation as India’s Law Minister
How Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru Ousted Dr. B.R. Ambedkar from the Cabinet: The Full Story
The life, career, and legacy of Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar continues to remain an unnecessarily controversial topic just like most malaises afflicting politics and public life in India since Nawab Nehru was illegitimately thrust upon us as Prime Minister who inaugurated a dark new era of totalitarianism much worse than the colonial British. For more than five decades, it was taboo to even dispassionately, honestly discuss Dr. Ambedkar’s contributions thanks to this morbid climate in public life.
Jul 1, 2021
With the support of the Police Commissioner of Surat, Satish Sharma and then the crime branch team managed to bring Santosh back to Surat. Santosh was not pleased with what his brothers did
Mass religious conversion racket reaches Gujarat: How Santosh went missing and returned as Abdullah
The tentacles of mass conversion racket, where people were allegedly forced, lured and coerced into conversion to Islam, have now reached Gujarat.
Jul 1, 2021
Kalhana describes Lalitaditya as a very powerful ruler, who asserted his supremacy far beyond Kashmirand the adjoining states Kalhana has represented him as a great conqueror, whose reign was mostly passed in expeditions abroad
Lalitadiya Muktapida: A great successor of Karkota Dynasty who defeated Arabs and subjugated Turks
Lalitaditya Muktapida of Karkota dynasty rose to power in (724 -761) CE. He was the fifth ruler of Karkota Dynasty who ascended the throne after Tarapida. Lalitaditya was the greatest king among the Karkota rulers, who lifted the country of Kashmir to pinnacle of fame. Giving a fillip to art, culture and architecture, the well being of hispeople remained his lifelong passion.
Jun 30, 2021
Defending the inclusion of kinksters in Pride, author Lauren Rowello alleged that their self-expression in terms of overt displays of sexuality is mistaken as obscenity
Washington Post author supports inclusion of kinks in Pride marches, celebrates taking her minor children to Pride rallies attended by kinksters in gay bondages
In an article published recently in the Washington Post, author Lauren Rowello batted in favour of keeping the kink community in Pride month rallies. She also argued in favour of exposing children to various acts performed by kinks in the Pride rallies, apparently to help children learn about the “scope” and “vitality” of the queer life. Lauren Rowello is a writer and activist, who describes herself as a ‘former sex worker’ in her Twitter bio.
Jun 30, 2021
The aftermath of the Indian Emergency birthed a frightening growth of separatist forces who acquired enormous political clout
The Emergency of 1975: How Former PM Indira Gandhi Led Country to Chaos and proved to be a Seedbed of Separatism
The Emergency of 1975 was an all-encompassing assault on the Constitution and democracy only superficially. In reality, it was a fatal invasion of the human spirit from which we will probably never recover. As horrid as it was, what happened after the Emergency is more significant: none of the central villains were punished for two main reasons.
Jun 30, 2021
The real-life story of how a lifelong Congressman and Gandhian Lekhraj Sharma was brutalised by S.K. Patil
Skeletons from the Congress Crypt: The Tragic Story of Lekhraj Sharma
Guess what has thankfully become conspicuous by its very public absence in the last twenty years? The ubiquitous Khadi Dhoti and Gandhi Topi on the oh-so-impressive physiques and oh-so-clean bodies of our politicians. Indeed, the decadal reduction in and eventual disappearance of this political attire is directly proportionate to the decline and destruction of the Congress Party, the mothership of this epic hypocrisy.
Jun 30, 2021
The history of India in the months that followed August 1947 showed a marked similarity to the history of those people into whose lives fascism had crept
The Dead Bodies that Cemented the Invisible Nazism of the Nehruvian Congress Governments
Remember the dreaded MISA, the so-called Maintenance of Internal Security Act imposed by Catherine the Great Indira Gandhi during the Emergency? Its one-line definition: dictatorial powers to arrest and imprison her political prisoners. As draconian as it was, it was also highly unoriginal, in fact, a cheap imitation of a far more malignant legislation in force for several years.
Jun 30, 2021
Victim says her mother in law and other relatives asked her to get into marrying her father in law and having physical relationship with him 'to keep it within family'
‘Tricked into religious conversion for marriage and then father in law demanded sex’, J&K woman reveals her ordeal
After the controversial conversion of two Sikh girls in the Kashmir valley led to a widespread protest, another case of Grooming Jihad has been reported from Jammu. Nikita Saini, in an exclusive interview to JK Media’s Ashish Kolhi, revealed that she was tricked into religious conversion by her husband. Narrating her incident, Saini, a resident of Jalandhar, informed that she was trapped by her husband Arfin Shah and his family into marrying him when they got to know of her previously failed marriage. Shah and his family hails from Udhampur, Jammu & Kashmir.








