Re: Road to the 2024 Elections in India-1
Posted: 04 Mar 2023 04:12
The SC ruling is a hit on Constituion. No govt will sit and take it.
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
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Himanta Biswa Sarma @himantabiswa
First foreign agents target us!
Then our own targets us on a foreign land!
Rahul Gandhi’s speech at Cambridge was nothing but a brazen attempt to denigrate our country on foreign soil in the guise of targeting Adarniya PM Shri @narendramodi ji.
Rahul says manufacturing isn’t conducive in democracy.
Rahul even admits he is fascinated by China and Communist party members have shaped his thoughts.
Rahul praises China as an aspiring superpower, cites Belt and Road initiative (BRI) as an example
When do we confront this dangerous fellow? ... He is openly egging on US to intervene. He is pimping for China.Rahul goes on to say China not believing in Intellectual Property Rights is a profound and powerful concept.
Aditya Pittie @PittieAditya
i
"A nation can survive its fools & even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known. But the traitor moves within the gate freely, his sly whispers heard in the very halls of government itself."
Marcus Cicero
The fact that no one from Govt. even responded shows they knew what is coming and not saying a wordramana wrote:The SC ruling is a hit on Constituion. No govt will sit and take it.
vijayk ji,vijayk wrote:The fact that no one from Govt. even responded shows they knew what is coming and not saying a wordramana wrote:The SC ruling is a hit on Constituion. No govt will sit and take it.
During the Constituent Assembly debates, what came up was the person to be appointed CEC or EC should enjoy the confidence of all political parties and be approved by a two-thirds majority in both Houses of Parliament.
Dr Ambedkar moved an amendment and inserted a line that the appointment of Chief Election Commissioner and election commissioners shall be made by the President “subject to the provisions of any law made in this behalf by Parliament”.
That law was never passed.
The Congress-led UPA government had in 2005 set up the Second Administrative Reforms Commission under the chairmanship of Veerappa Moily to revamp the public administrative system.
The Veerappa Moily commission in its report in 2007 recommended that a panel led by the prime minister and including the leader of the opposition in the Lok Sabha select the candidates to be appointed the CEC and EC.
Referring to the Veerappa Moily commission report, BJP leader LK Advani had in 2012 written to then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh seeking a panel for the appointment of the CEC and ECs.
LK Advani said that the system wherein the President appointed the top members of the election commission didn't evoke confidence among the people.
Advani, who was then the BJP Parliamentary Party chairman, batted for a panel, comprising the PM, Chief Justice of India, the law minister and the leaders of Opposition in both the Houses, to select the chief election commissioner and the election commissioners.
ramana wrote:All five judges on the bench should be impeached for that.
in a democracy, true transparency in public office is the cornerstone of the republic that ensures egalitarianism, equalitarianism, independence, universal franchise, and enlightened consensus.2024 is of great significance simply because of the delimitation that is to happen after 2026. By any chance, if secular forces get an opportunity they will destroy India as we know it today.
The dravidians are already having wet dreams about the chaos that they will be able to create. The abrahamics will slot in quickly and follow suit.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delimit ... n_of_India
"Union of (Princely) States" & "Basic Structure of the Constitution"
These are two terms that are going to be used extensively to undermine Indian democracy. A deep and very high stakes game is being played here by the BIF.
The correct question to ask today is to seriously query the premise that the PM and the LOP are partisan but only the CJI is neutral.
The CJI will only be considered a neutral only if his own appointment is through a transparent process. In the present opaque system that is being followed, every CJI will be suspected of being partisan and also beholden to the system that elevated him/her
Things are getting serious.vijayk wrote:
all good.Prem Kumar wrote:4) The CEC term is valid for a couple of years (post 2024)
Pappu is God's gift to India. We should make him the pregident of Conki party soon. That will ensure Modi 3.0. So if the Brits want to do us a favor please go ahead.chetak wrote:Things are getting serious.vijayk wrote:
They seem to have pulled out all the stops.
Looks like the BIF have invested heavily in pappu and are building him up with a professional grade image makeover.
Makes eminent sense for the BIF to prop up pappu, because otherwise 70 years worth of ecosystem build up, along with media and civil society infrastructure that has ben painstakingly and expensively nurtured, and also commie, naxal and lootyens foot soldiers at the ready and always at the dynastie's beck and call to
take to the streets and spread mayhem, would have gone to waste
The britshit parliament deal for pappu was already a done deal.
Hence the mafia mamma mia had hired a suit from sadar bazar for her ladla and got his beard trimmed.
The britshit deep state is directly involved in this electoral weaponization of pappu. Not hard to guess which other deep states are also in bed with the US/UK/EU combine which are all gunning to replace Modi and hobble the Indian civilizational state by playing the abrahamic card
Comments on Maharashtra:fanne wrote:
MH my echo chamber looks easy for BJP. I hope the BMC election happens soon and gives us the information on which way wind is blowing. It is wrong to be drunk on your own Kool aid (or assumption). It is a big state with potential for BJP and allies to be at 40+ in LS. It would be very bad to be rudely surprised here.
By poll wins by ruling government has never been a good yard stick to measure its popularity. On many occasions the ruling party has won bypolls just a year before general assembly elections and lost the GAE.
However, ruling party losing bypolls is not a good sign and may show underlying issues. Jharkhand govt is unpopular and will lose the next LS poll, as Ramgadh by election result shows. Does losing this Pune seat show the same for BJP combine in MH? To dismiss this will be short sighted. The take away is not that BJP will lose only, but what is going on and from here what can be done to make sure results of Maha are as per expectation.
This is exactly my thought.A Deshmukh wrote:all good.Prem Kumar wrote:4) The CEC term is valid for a couple of years (post 2024)
but we have to be wary of any other plans BIF may have - bumping off or accidenting the current CEC. or tarnishing him with a scandal that forces him to resign. this is not outside of the intent or capability of BIF.
I would prefer SC order to be neutralized proactively, before any untoward incident.
Cyrano ji,Cyrano wrote:Glad I wasn't there to suffer through it. But parsing this distasteful psycho babble may give us clues to where the next set of attacks on Bharat will come from.
Cambridge can be proud of the turd they have produced.
is just the right phrase to describe his pretentious fulminations....."distasteful psycho babble"
a military coup is impossible, and that leaves us open to a judicial coupvijayk wrote:This is exactly my thought.A Deshmukh wrote: all good.
but we have to be wary of any other plans BIF may have - bumping off or accidenting the current CEC. or tarnishing him with a scandal that forces him to resign. this is not outside of the intent or capability of BIF.
I would prefer SC order to be neutralized proactively, before any untoward incident.
PAPPU is not even trying ... no campaign in Gujarat, Tripura, Nagaland, Meghalaya.
Is it possible there is a plan to use CJI to do constitutional coup before elections and then justify worldwide by imposing sanctions etc?
Perhaps.chetak wrote:a military coup is impossible, and that leaves us open to a judicial coupvijayk wrote:
This is exactly my thought.
PAPPU is not even trying ... no campaign in Gujarat, Tripura, Nagaland, Meghalaya.
Is it possible there is a plan to use CJI to do constitutional coup before elections and then justify worldwide by imposing sanctions etc?
Better be careful with the wording of these kind of statements generally.chetak wrote:a military coup is impossible, and that leaves us open to......
Relax. All GoI has to do is let the media have some talking points and do nothing. How is the Supreme Court going to enforce this law that is made from thin air? In the meantime, GoI knows the gloves are off and they will be planning the next assault. It should be done in such a way that GoI should not be directly involved. Slap a few corruption cases on the judges. Pappu made similar noise in 2019 about the Rafale deal etc and then fell flat. Civil war etc in such a large country is simply not possible. By now GoI knows all the BIF tricks.vijayk wrote:Judicial coup ...
They just made a law ... EC members and CEC will be appointed by PM, Leader of Opp and CJI ... who the hell are they?
They will make up some laws
If they think PAPPU can't do and Kujli is in jail or goign down, they might even get rid of PAPPU to force a civil war like they did in Ukraine
Indeed. It is an SC order, not a law (only the parliament can bring laws). The government can very well cancel this order by bringing a law. Also it has no impact on the current CEC who will serve till 2025.ramana wrote:The SC ruling is a hit on Constituion. No govt will sit and take it.
When we have literature to back up our cause, why are we adopting and accepting foreign "stuff"?The root of caste is the Latin castus, which means "chaste" or "pure, separated." The word arrived in English through the Portuguese casta, which means "race" or "lineage," and was first used in the 1700s in reference to Hinduism's system of social stratification.
During the Trump years the “I” in BRICS, India, was slowly working its way under Prime Minister Narendra Modi back into the West’s orbit. It led to me thinking that that “I” had been replaced by Iran, especially pre-COVID-19.
Today with the ascendence of Lula to the presidency in Brazil, the BRICS have, for now, lost the “B” in their alliance. So, with all of the talk about the BRICS coming into their own as a global economic and political force the situation is far from settled because the West and Davos are simply not going to let this just happen without a fight.
This brings me back to India as the wildcard. Modi’s journey from a guy with one foot on two islands (East v. West) to planting his feet firmly with the East has been an interesting and vital one.
If we’ve learned nothing else over the past year of war in Ukraine it is that most of the world is unphased by threats by the US by the countries I’ve just discussed. Iran clearly doesn’t care. China understands that if Russia falls militarily, China is next. Saudi Arabia and the rest of OPEC+ understand who their future trade partners really are.
This is why India is now in the crosshairs of Davos. They are the last major power in the region left to stymie Asian integration
another take on the same subject I recommend you read Andrew Korybko’s piece from the same day on this subject, digging up the building propaganda campaign against Modi starting with the NY Times, passing next through the BBC documentary and ending with Soros’ Munich speech.
The need to cleave India from the BRICS is now acute. The war in Ukraine is reaching the next phase as Russia forces what’s left of the Ukrainian army from Bakhmut clearing the way for Russia to establish logistical dominion in the center of the Donbass.
Because of this there is an even greater sense of urgency within Davos to upgrade not just Ukraine but also pick a new fight with China. The clock is ticking down on the old financial system. The end of LIBOR is nigh.
The bodies are piling up in the Fed’s war on leverage as high as the ones on the battlefield in the Donbass. Malign actors like Soros may still they have the ability to avoid these things but, in the end, they are fronting strength while privately they are freaking out.
I’m no expert on Indian politics, but from the commentary I’ve seen, this opens up the possibility of Modi gaining a super-majority in next year’s elections. Regardless of whether that is true or not, what we know now is that the next year will be a minefield as Davos throws its weight around to topple another government it does not control.
The question I leave you with is will this be another Hungary, where polls had Viktor Orban in a tight race with Davos’ Anyone-But-Orban coalition only to see Orban cruise to his biggest victory ever, or will it Brazil, where the campaign against Bolsonaro was just strong enough to remove him from power
The Sun Tzu quote applies to Rahul Ghazni's Scorched Earth danda yatra.India: The Next Front In The War On The BRICS
Tyler Durden's Photo
BY TYLER DURDEN
SATURDAY, MAR 04, 2023 - 11:30 AM
Authored by Tom Luongo via Gold, Goats, 'n Guns blog,
There is far more to the current multi-modal geopolitical war than just what’s happening in Ukraine. This conflict has led to a myriad of downstream effects and moves which are just as important as what the encirclement of Bakhmut means.
For years the wildcard in the BRICS Alliance has been India. India’s rivalry with China as well as its complicated relationships with both Russia and the West have always served as wedge issues to drive the alliance apart.
During the Trump years the “I” in BRICS, India, was slowly working its way under Prime Minister Narendra Modi back into the West’s orbit. It led to me thinking that that “I” had been replaced by Iran, especially pre-COVID-19.
Today with the ascendence of Lula to the presidency in Brazil, the BRICS have, for now, lost the “B” in their alliance. So, with all of the talk about the BRICS coming into their own as a global economic and political force the situation is far from settled because the West and Davos are simply not going to let this just happen without a fight.
The relationship between Russia and China is dominating the headlines with major US officials making significant threats to China, in particular, about supporting Russia. These threats are, of course, very real, coming from people like Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
At the same time, they are also not overtures to real negotiations. Making demands that only promise the abeyance of the stick with no carrot is not an opening offer, it’s a closing offer. So, while Yellen travels to Kiev to pledge Zelenskyy unlimited support of US taxpayer funds while the “Biden” administration dithers over how to deal with the situation in E. Palastine, Ohio, tells us where the priorities of our leadership is.
Winning the geopolitical war must take precedence over everything else, even if there is no real ‘country’ left after the war is over.
There is a saying by Sun Tsu making the rounds today in social media that is wholly appropriate here:
“An evil enemy will burn his own nation to the ground to rule over the ashes.” – Sun Tzu
This describes the actions of Yellen, Blinken and their fellow travelers in Europe perfectly. Now, I know this is not news to anyone who’s read my work for the past few years. You know I view them as vandals, not incompetents, but it’s important to keep this in mind at every step in this march towards global conflict.
Because this is the way most of the BRICS nations and their growing list of sympathizers also view the situation. Russia has made this very clear. Vladimir Putin, his Foreign Minster Sergei Lavrov, and former Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev, have all expressed this.
The longer this conflict goes on the more adamant about these points they become. The same can be said for China and its leadership.
China says less than the Russians do, but does more with who they choose to talk to and when. Foreign Minister Wang Xi’s recent visits to Moscow and Tehran further cemented a triangular foundation of support. These visits were contemporaneous to the convocation of warmongers in Munich two weeks ago. That was not an accident.
Neither was Premier Xi’s visit to Riyadh and the major Arab summits where he made sincere overtures to welcome them into the forming pan-Asian economic sphere. Don’t think for a second these events don’t have knock-on effects and reverberate in national capitols all over the world.
We’ve seen a spate of major announcements further underscore just how far along the entire BRICS project, with or without Brazil, is.
This brings me back to India as the wildcard. Modi’s journey from a guy with one foot on two islands (East v. West) to planting his feet firmly with the East has been an interesting and vital one.
If we’ve learned nothing else over the past year of war in Ukraine it is that most of the world is unphased by threats by the US by the countries I’ve just discussed. Iran clearly doesn’t care. China understands that if Russia falls militarily, China is next. Saudi Arabia and the rest of OPEC+ understand who their future trade partners really are.
This is why India is now in the crosshairs of Davos. They are the last major power in the region left to stymie Asian integration.
Reports circulated the same weekend as the Munich Security Conference that none other than George Soros was behind the attacks on PM Modi through a report from Hindenberg Research. They targeted one of Modi’s big financial supporters, Guatam Adani William Engdahl covered this in detail.
In January Hindenburg targeted an Indian billionaire, Gautam Adani, head of the Adani Group and at the time reportedly the richest man in Asia. Adani also happens to be the major financial backer of Modi. Adani’s fortune has multiplied hugely since Modi became Prime Minister, often on ventures tied to Modi’s economic agenda.
Since the January 24 Hindenburg report alleging improper use of offshore tax havens and stock manipulation, Adani Group companies have lost over $120 billion in market value. Adani Group is the second largest conglomerate in India. Opposition parties have made a point that Modi is tied to Adani. Both are long-term friends from Gujarat in the same part of India.
But Engdahl doesn’t stop there. He very smartly ties this to George Soros’ speech at Munich, you know, the one he skipped this year’s WEF conference in Davos to give. Soros called out Modi directly saying his days were numbered and he’s no ‘democrat.’
Soros is beyond being coy about these things anymore. He’s telling you what he’s doing.
RT ran a similar story, much more focused on Soros and the Indian Foreign Minister’s response to him the same day as Engdahl’s article:
Soros said during the Munich Security Conference on Thursday that fraud allegations against the multinational conglomerate, headed by the PM’s long-time associate Gautam Adani, would “significantly weaken Modi’s stranglehold on India’s federal government… I may be naive, but I expect a democratic revival in India.”
Those comments didn’t go unnoticed in New Delhi, with Jaishankar firing back on Saturday at the 92-year-old billionaire and neo-liberal political activist. The foreign minister described Soros as “old, rich, opinionated and dangerous” because he’s willing to invest his money in “shaping narratives.”
“People like him think an election is good if the person they want to see wins and, if the election throws up a different outcome, then they will say it is a flawed democracy,” he added.
For another take on the same subject I recommend you read Andrew Korybko’s piece from the same day on this subject, digging up the building propaganda campaign against Modi starting with the NY Times, passing next through the BBC documentary and ending with Soros’ Munich speech.
The need to cleave India from the BRICS is now acute. The war in Ukraine is reaching the next phase as Russia forces what’s left of the Ukrainian army from Bakhmut clearing the way for Russia to establish logistical dominion in the center of the Donbass.
Because of this there is an even greater sense of urgency within Davos to upgrade not just Ukraine but also pick a new fight with China. The clock is ticking down on the old financial system. The end of LIBOR is nigh.
The bodies are piling up in the Fed’s war on leverage as high as the ones on the battlefield in the Donbass. Malign actors like Soros may still they have the ability to avoid these things but, in the end, they are fronting strength while privately they are freaking out.
Moreover, global opinion of the West’s potency as seen through the lens of Russian potency has shifted in a way that make the decisions of Asia’s leadership that much easier.
https://t.co/ROXleR4gBe pic.twitter.com/Ug1YRqEjXb
— Regina (@ReginaMourad) February 26, 2023
These results are themselves revelatory of the biases within the populations polled, especially in the heavily propagandized West. But those from both Turkey and India are eye-popping and confirm my long-held belief that once someone finally stood up to the US and Europe and survived it would radically change the psychology of the geopolitical game board.
One only need to look at how brazen Davos’ moves are, how heavily they are flooding the zone with headlines, emerging crises, and easily-debunked lies to see what’s really going on.
In light of that it should be noted just how ineffectual Davos’ moves against Modi and India have been. The recent regional elections in three important Indian provinces left the clear impression that Modi’s influence over electoral politics is still very much intact.
Modi has made it a point to engage the northeastern provinces, normally ignored by Indian politics, to entrench his hold on power in India. This is clearly his counter-move to anything the West would attempt to throw at him.
I’m no expert on Indian politics, but from the commentary I’ve seen, this opens up the possibility of Modi gaining a super-majority in next year’s elections. Regardless of whether that is true or not, what we know now is that the next year will be a minefield as Davos throws its weight around to topple another government it does not control.
The question I leave you with is will this be another Hungary, where polls had Viktor Orban in a tight race with Davos’ Anyone-But-Orban coalition only to see Orban cruise to his biggest victory ever, or will it Brazil, where the campaign against Bolsonaro was just strong enough to remove him from power.
Game on, George.