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People say once bitten, twice shy—but Uddhav Thackeray...
🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane* People say once bitten, twice shy—but Uddhav Thackeray seems untouched by that logic. Even after losing party, name, and symbol, he appears unbothered, almost careless. But then, he is a tiger, not someone sipping milk or buttermilk with caution. His silence is deceptive; when the tiger strikes, his roar will shake the ground. Closed-room promises, whispers of betrayal, defections, and accusations will all resurface when he unleashes his f


“Where is the recession?...
🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane* “Where is the recession?”—it is not in glossy GDP charts but in the strained kitchens of the middle class. Supporters flaunt UPI records, vehicle sales, and bank lending as proof of prosperity, yet ordinary families cannot pay bills with statistics. Salaries crawl while expenses sprint—vegetables, LPG, fuel, electricity, school fees, and healthcare eat away savings. Rising EMIs and shrinking disposable income trap households in debt cycles


When a journalist dismisses Vedic traditions with a mocking question...
🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane When a journalist dismisses Vedic traditions with a mocking question, it reveals more about his ideological bias than about the rituals themselves. In Sanatan Dharma, sacred acts are performed with Agni as witness, a truth overlooked by those eager to trivialize faith. The irony deepens when progressive voices ignore another pressing question: why, in a society with abundant Muslim women, did Arif Tashe and his brothers choose Hindu brides?


🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane At the Congress rally in Delhi, allegations of “vote theft” dominated the discourse, with Rahul Gandhi asserting that his party would challenge the government through “truth and non‑violence.” Several political commentators, however, argue that such claims must be viewed in the context of India’s complex historical memory, where debates around past violence, partition trauma, and leadership decisions continue to shape public perception. Crit
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