Re: Modi 3.0 - Bharat
Posted: 12 Jul 2025 17:03
What does a person need to show to prove he/she is a citizen of India for voting?
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
https://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/
SRajesh wrote: ↑11 Jul 2025 16:46 ^^But Chetakji
Haven't you noticed that the knives are out!!
Now the new Modus Operandi is the magical 75
The opposition are targeting Modiji and RSS chief given that both are going to 75 'Come September'( Sorry I just couldn't resist it given that we are talking about young and old![]()
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Congress’ one arrow, two targets’ jibe at PM Modi over Bhagwat 75 retiring age statement
In a post on X, Jairam Ramesh, who is Congress General Secretary and communications incharge said, “Poor award-winning Prime Minister! What a homecoming – reminded by the RSS chief upon return that he will turn 75 on September 17, 2025.”
“But the Prime Minister could also tell the RSS chief that – he too will turn 75 on September 11, 2025! One arrow, two targets,” he added.
Big cheers for Team India at the 57th International Chemistry Olympiad 2025 held in Dubai, UAE from July 5–14. India bags 2 Golds and 2 Silvers, securing 6th place in the overall medals tally among 90 countries and 354 participants! Congratulations to the entire team.Amber G. wrote: ↑05 Jul 2025 23:19 Wishing Indian team all the best as they head towards Dubai, UAE for the 57th International Chemistry Olympiad from July 5-14, 2025!
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GvEmMZRaAAc ... ame=medium
Picture credit: TIFR/HBCE
Let's wish him a safe return to earth and Bharat!
It can be interpreted in a different way. Art 326 of the Constitution of India, states that elections in India would be on the basis of adult suffrage. This article also allows the legislature to decide on the criteria of voting, and disqualification criteria. The article also states the high level conditions for disqualification i.e. not otherwise disqualified under this Constitution or any law made by the appropriate Legislature on the ground of non-residence, unsoundness of mind, crime or corrupt or illegal practice, shall be entitled to be registered as a voter at any such election. Non-residence is slightly different from not having citizenship.nandakumar wrote:The Representation of People's Act derives it's authority from the Constitution
Exactly. Aadhaar at the maximum is a Proof of Identity (POI). And that too if it is used properly. That is when a person's Aadhaar number is collected, and his fingerprints are also checked, and it should match. Best example; is when applying for passport. If Aadhaar is used as Identity proof an on the spot validation of biometrics is also done. For passport issue, Aadhaar is also accepted as a Proof of Address (PoA), only after successful validation with the Aadhaar database. And there is also a mandatory police verification done by visiting the person at the given address.Proof of citizenship is not attested by the holding of a 'Aadhaar' card, per se
Retail inflation declined to over six-year low of 2.1 per cent in June, nearing the RBI's comfort zone, on account of subdued prices of food items, including vegetables, driven by widespread monsoon. WPI-based inflation was 0.39 per cent in May. It was 3.43 per cent in June last year.(Representational Photo/Reuters) WPI-based inflation was 0.39 per cent in May. It was 3.43 per cent in June last year.(Representational Photo/Reuters)
The Consumer Price Index-based inflation was 2.82 per cent in May and 5.08 per cent in June 2024. Inflation is on a decline since November 2024.
Year-on-year inflation rate based on CPI for the month of June 2025 over June 2024 is 2.1 per cent, the National Statistics Office (NSO) said in a statement.
"There is a decline of 72 basis points in headline inflation of June 2025 in comparison to May 2025. It is the lowest year-on-year inflation after January 2019," it said.The previous low of 1.97 per cent was recorded in January 2019.
The NSO said the significant decline in headline inflation and food inflation in June 2025 is mainly attributed to favourable base effect and decline in inflation of vegetables, pulses and products, meat and fish, cereals and products, sugar and confectionery, milk and products and spices.
The Reserve Bank, which has been tasked to ensure inflation remains at 4 per cent (with a margin of 2 per cent on either side), has cumulatively reduced the key short-term lending rate by 100 basis points since February in the wake of slowing retail inflation.
Meanwhile, the wholesale price inflation (WPI) turned negative after a gap of 19 months, declining 0.13 per cent in June as deflation widened in food articles and fuel, along with softening in manufactured product costs.
WPI-based inflation was 0.39 per cent in May. It was 3.43 per cent in June last year.
"Negative rate of inflation in June, 2025 is primarily due to decrease in prices of food articles, mineral oils, manufacture of basic metals, crude petroleum & natural gas etc," the industry ministry said in a statement.
As per WPI data, food articles saw a deflation of 3.75 per cent in June, as against a deflation of 1.56 per cent in May, with vegetables seeing a sharp drop.
According to the NSO data on CPI, the annual inflation in the food basket during June 2025 over June 2024 was (-) 1.06 per cent.
A sharp decline of 205 basis points is observed in food inflation in June 2025 in comparison to May 2025. The food inflation in June was also the lowest after January 2019.
The inflation rural was lower than the national average at 1.72 per cent while it was higher in urban areas at 2.56 per cent.
The lowest inflation was in Telangana (-0.93 per cent) and the highest in Kerala (6.71 per cent).
On all India basis, the annual inflation was negative in vegetables (-19 per cent), 'meat and fish' (-1.62 per cent), 'pulses and products' (-11.76 per cent), and spices (-3.03 per cent).
Commenting on the CPI data, Aditi Nayar, Chief Economist, ICRA, said the cooling was entirely led by the food and beverages (F&B) segment, which witnessed a deflation of 0.2 per cent after a gap of 75 months, after printing at 1.5 per cent in the previous month. "The CPI inflation eased for the eighth consecutive month to a softer-than-expected 2.1 per cent in June 2025 from 2.8 per cent in May 2025, touching the lowest level since January 2019. We are not ruling out the possibility of a final 25 bps rate cut in the August 2025 meeting, carrying forward the front-loading seen in June 2025," Nayar said.
Paras Jasrai, Associate Director at India Ratings and Research, said that notwithstanding the deflationary turn of food items, core inflation increased to 4.4 per cent in June 2025, the highest since September 2023.
"A closer look indicates that it was largely on account of an uptick in inflation of jewellery items. Inflation of gold increased to a 58-month high of 36 per cent (as geopolitical tensions flared up in the Middle-East), the inflation of silver and other ornaments was also at elevated levels of 17.8 per cent and 21.5 per cent, respectively, in June 2025," Jasrai said.
Garima Kapoor, Economist and Executive Vice President, Elara Capital, said the CPI inflation for June cooled to a six-year low led by moderating food prices and aided by a high base.
"We expect full year CPI inflation to remain below RBI's full year estimate of 3.7% and hence do not rule out the possibility of another rate cut post-end of monsoon," Kapoor said.
The NSO collects the price data for CPI from selected 1,114 urban markets and 1,181 villages covering all States/UTs.
NATO is acting like shits again, emboldened by Trump's volte-face on Ukraine. They are hiding behind the US and taking potshots at us. This "secondary sanctions" is darbari messaging to stroke Trump's egoAmber G. wrote: ↑17 Jul 2025 23:25 NATO Chief had threatened a 100% tariff on India for buying Russian oil....
EXTERNAL AFFAIRS MINISTRY :
"Our energy security is our top priority, guided by global realities. We strongly caution against double standards"![]()
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India rejects Western pressure & Tariff threat... No lectures.. No compromises
Gurugram land deal case: ED attaches 43 properties of Robert Vadra; files chargesheet against him, 10 others
July 17
The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has attached 43 immovable properties worth Rs 37.64 crore linked to Robert Vadra, husband of Congress MP Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, and his entities, as well as filed a prosecution complaint or chargesheet against him and 10 others.
The properties belong to Vadra and his entities, including Sky Light Hospitality Pvt Ltd, officials privy to the development said
महात्मा गांधी राष्ट्रपिता नहीं है, RTI में सरकार का खुलासा..
Mahatma Gandhi is not the Father of the Nation, government reveals in RTI...
This is from 2012.chetak wrote: ↑19 Jul 2025 15:07WATCH VIDEOमहात्मा गांधी राष्ट्रपिता नहीं है, RTI में सरकार का खुलासा..
Mahatma Gandhi is not the Father of the Nation, government reveals in RTI...
More discussion in Math dhagaAmber G. wrote: ↑18 Jul 2025 22:52 xpost:
Very happy!
It is not officially posted or in the newspapers (yet):
India secured 3 Gold Medals, 2 Silver Medals and 1 Bronze Medal at the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) 2025 held at Sunshine Coast, Australia. The team achieved the highest ever total score of 193 since India's first participation in IMO in 1989.
(IMO is one of the most prestigious contest in the world)
1. Adhitya Mangudy (GOLD)
2. Kanav Talwar (GOLD)
3. Aarav Gupta (GOLD)
4. Abel George Mathew (SILVER)
5. Aadish Jain (SILVER)
6. Archit Manas (BRONZE)
Congratulations!
Hear, hear. But why fellowship money is higher than research grant itself? How many grad students does that 25 lacs PA funding get? Professors/researchers who have crossed their 60 would have enough savings and would be willing to forego some money if accommodation is provided on campus - some kind of quarters. Those are available at all IITs, IISc, and NITs AFAIK.Amber G. wrote: ↑20 Jul 2025 01:15 The Prime Minister Professorship Program under ANRFIndia opens 22 July!!
Inviting superannuated scientists & Indian-origin experts across globe to strengthen R&D ecosystem in less endowed universities.
[img...]https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GwMrn_WWgAA ... ame=medium[/img]
A_Gupta wrote: ↑20 Jul 2025 06:34 Not to go off-topic, but I don't give two hoots for Clement Atlee. I have infinitely more respect for PM Modi, and for Sardar Patel, and I know extremely well what they think of Mahatma Gandhi. What Netaji thought of Bapuji I know less well, but AFAIK, there was great respect there too. If they were foolish or stupid to repect Bapuji, well, I am glad to be in their camp.
Clement Atlee is known as the prime minister who presided over the end of the British Empire and I have little doubt that bothered him to no end.
Led by the government, backed by various trusted public and private partners, and tried out by many who gravitated to its promise, the idea is seen as a potential successor in terms of impact to the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) in India’s digital infrastructure-building journey.
What UPI did for finance, this new thing would do for commerce.
But about three years into its journey, the Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC) is stuttering along. It got off to a slow start, then gained momentum, and is now experiencing a decline, specifically in retail, which threatens a crash-landing of the venture that aims to capitalise on a great Indian opportunity.
This opportunity can be appreciated with just a few figures: a nearly 150-crore population with over 90 crore internet users, roughly 40 crore of them in rural areas, and rising, with close to two-thirds of new online shoppers emerging from Tier-3 and smaller cities, all of them shopping for a wide variety of wants and needs.
The e-commerce giants in India are said to extract high commissions from participating retailers. Estimates vary from 15 to 30 per cent. Some of this high charge is passed on to the consumer, leaving the rest to be absorbed by sellers
The idea goes something like this: have a network where commissions are nil to minimal. Perhaps 5 to 10 per cent. So that deep pockets are not a point of distinction between success and failure, where every single player stands independently and confidently as an equal on their own two feet, and where the buyer decides on their own accord what to buy and from whom to buy it, uninfluenced by algorithms serving particular interests and driving (or inducing? forcing?) purchase decisions.
Notably, ONDC’s mandate is not limited to the buying and selling of biscuits, jackets, smartphones, and food alone.
The idea is to have the entire gamut of products and services online, financial services like loans and mutual funds for anyone, from a single individual all the way up to micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) and big businesses; access to mobility services across the entire spectrum: autorickshaws, cabs, buses, trains, and flights; work opportunities for job seekers; logistics solutions for businesses; a space to grow for farmer producer organisations, self-help groups, and social enterprises; and so on.
Impressive, is it not?
The allure of such an open network is visible, once again, in the numbers. More than 1.65 lakh retail sellers have jumped on this wagon since launch, and buyers from more than 850 districts of India have placed over 20 crore orders between January 2023 and June 2025. While the network took about 20 months from January 2023 to August 2024 to clock its first 10 crore transactions, the next 10 crore came in just six months, in March 2025.
All good. Except that underneath this aggregated data lie trends that belie a troubling story.
Powered by financial incentives for participants, which were then passed on to consumers, who in turn paid less for products and services, ONDC was finding ever-wider acceptance. But towards the end of last year, with subsidies reportedly reducing from up to Rs 3 crore monthly to Rs 30 lakh for each network partner, retail transactions started to contract, while mobility started to take the wheel..
The hypothesis that quick commerce ate ONDC’s lunch is well accepted. “Initially e-commerce was driven by players like Amazon and Flipkart. But then quick commerce came into the picture, and that’s where I saw ONDC losing momentum, especially on delivery times,” says Jignesh Joshi, chairman and managing director of 99 Partners Digicom, which provides services to small retail players who want to go online and build their e-commerce business. On ONDC, his company is enrolled as a technical partner.
Joshi also pointed out cash on delivery as a major bottleneck on the network. “Suppose you've ordered one item on cash on delivery and the product is not delivered, the vendor suffers, and the customer also suffers,” he says, adding that responses are authentic but not prompt on ONDC. In the absence of proper systems, vendors themselves are left frustrated by the back-and-forth over order fulfilment issues.
How ONDC operates, however, is different. Since there’s room for everyone on the network, from a well-equipped powerhouse retailer down to a tiny store lacking resources and digital skills, the buyer in need of store assistance could be interacting with anyone or anything from an advanced chatbot to the humble store owner trying to juggle their store operations with a tiny (or no) staff and their mobile phone, trying to respond to buyers’ multiple queries on WhatsApp at a busy hour, with little leeway to hand out refunds or replacements. Even the tiniest margins matter to the small e-tailer.
What about Namma Yatri then, ONDC’s biggest success? It has close to 11 crore completed trips to its credit, with more than a crore registered users and over 6 lakh autorickshaw drivers who have made earnings of close to Rs 1,790 crore.
“The Namma Yatri app has been developed as a solution to the problem faced by the people, not in competition with Ola or Uber. Because the local guys were facing problems where Ola and Uber were coming and driving things,” he says, drawing a contrast between Namma Yatri’s and ONDC’s raison d'etre. “No one came out on the street asking the government to shut down Amazon or Flipkart,” he notes.
Just as the traditional seller will be cautious, so will the government, and for good reason. “Making consumers grow orders on the platform is the easier job in India. We are prompted through discounts. That’s very clear. With categories like FMCG (fast-moving consumer goods), you have to be cautious because you’re dealing with around over 14 lakh kirana stores. If you want to employ deep discounts and price products less than them, you’re destabilising the whole brick-and-mortar space. You are then trying to create a different kind of a conflict in the channel. So the government is conscious and cautious. There are implications which they know and I as a consumer strategist know,” he says.
Regarding the fall in the retail figures, Trisal makes the point that “at least those numbers happened.” He makes the point that sellers who never even had any online presence in the first place are now online, with the entire country as a market for their products, and they are starting to sell.
“There are some sellers who are doing 20 orders a day. But at least they are doing 20 orders a day! For them, 20 orders a day is like bhagwan (god). They could not even sell 20 orders earlier,” he explains. “We have to be patient,” he reiterates, expressing “100 per cent” confidence that things will improve on ONDC, even if gradually.
Even McKinsey and Company believes things are going to get bigger and better with ONDC. According to their estimate, the value of digital commerce through ONDC could rise fivefold from between $60 billion and $70 billion in 2022 to between $320 billion and $340 billion by 2030.
Awasthi, however, doesn’t see ONDC turning a corner, not with its existing commission model and the severely limited extent of cash burn possible from the government’s side — it’s public money after all — to grow ONDC into some kind of a raging success. It could work, he adds, if it became a fair game for everyone, Swiggy, Zomato, Amazon, and Flipkart included.
Pls read Gandhi's so-called philosophy first-hand before you make an opinion. "Gandhi: A Sublime Failure" by S. S. Gill is a good read.A_Gupta wrote: ↑20 Jul 2025 06:34 Not to go off-topic, but I don't give two hoots for Clement Atlee. I have infinitely more respect for PM Modi, and for Sardar Patel, and I know extremely well what they think of Mahatma Gandhi. What Netaji thought of Bapuji I know less well, but AFAIK, there was great respect there too. If they were foolish or stupid to repect Bapuji, well, I am glad to be in their camp.
Clement Atlee is known as the prime minister who presided over the end of the British Empire and I have little doubt that bothered him to no end.
Europeans were quick to attribute the origin of any technique to whoever they learnt it from. Hence "Damascus steel" was attributed to the Arabs who the European Crusaders encountered and learnt its manufacture. At the same time the Europeans encountered the "Arabic" numbering system from the Arabs; until then they had been using the old Roman format (I for 1, V for five, X for 10 etc). The arrival of Arabic gave a great filip to European numeracy and helped their mathematicians greatly.
Chetak saar, I am not following this case, however I saw this:
SRajesh wrote: ↑21 Jul 2025 12:16 All men convicted previously in the Mumbai Train blasts including those on the death row now acquitted.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/cit ... 806160.cms
180 people lost their lives and after all these years their near and dear ones are still left with no answers
And nobody is held reponsible
These type of shoddy investigations that dont stick is what will embolden the Jihadis.
And they will claim we told you so this is all RAAAA ki Saazish!!
And DJT to take more pot shots at us!!