🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
- dhadakkamgarunion0
- Sep 17
- 3 min read
🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Islamic NATO: A Chair No One Wants! The recent Islamic nations’ summit in Doha exposed the fractured reality of Muslim unity. Egypt’s proposal for an “Islamic NATO” initially sounded bold, yet the game of passing the chair revealed their fear and disarray. Saudi Arabia pushed Egypt forward, Egypt deferred to Saudi, Saudi pointed to Iraq, Iraq to Pakistan, and Pakistan to Turkey. Even Turkey, once the Caliphate’s heart, declined, citing its NATO membership. Jordan refused too, haunted by memories of losing 10% of its land to Israel in 1976 without help from its supposed brothers. Behind these polite refusals lies a simple truth: whoever leads would be Israel’s first target. The bravado of “we will not tolerate Israel next time” collapses into comic repetition, like a bullied child vowing revenge yet returning beaten again. Since 1948, Israel has struck, and the 57 Muslim states have responded with dusting their clothes, repeating the same hollow warning.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Potholes of India, Precision of Japan! In India, the monsoon is not just rain—it is the annual season of potholes. Even on national highways, roads collapse under the first heavy showers. Citizens accept this decay with fatalistic patience, maneuvering through craters as if it were destiny. Contractors, officials, and politicians thrive in this cycle of repair and corruption, consuming half the budget year after year while lives are lost in accidents. Contrast this with Japan. A country with heavier rainfall, yet roads remain flawless—no potholes, no loose gravel. Footpaths and asphalt merge with millimeter precision. Not a drop stagnates. The standard is so exacting that it feels like walking on perfection itself. As India claims its place as an economic superpower, such wasteful expenditure on endless repairs is a national shame. Redirecting this stolen budget towards real development could transform lives. The question remains: will accountability ever triumph over collusion?
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
US Boots in Bangladesh: A Strategic Alarm! The sudden surge of American military presence in Bangladesh is raising eyebrows across the region. Historically, Washington has never conducted joint exercises with Dhaka, yet today C-130J Super Hercules aircraft land at Chittagong and large-scale drills like Operation Pacific Angel-25 and Tiger Lightning-2025 unfold near India and Myanmar’s borders. For Bangladesh, under Yunus’s regime, this presence may appear as a partnership. But for neighbors, it rings of strategic encirclement. The Bay of Bengal has already become a geopolitical chessboard, and U.S. troops at Dhaka’s doorstep only intensify the game. India, sharing deep ties with Bangladesh, cannot ignore the long-term implications. Myanmar too will view this as a threat to its fragile balance. The message is clear: Washington is quietly embedding itself in South Asia’s fault lines. What begins as “humanitarian exercises” may, in time, redefine the regional security map.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Looted Deposits, Silent Voices in Beed! In Beed, the collapse of Gyanraddha Bank has robbed villages of crores, yet it barely registers as a political issue. Suresh Kute, his wife Archana, and their son Aryen siphoned over ₹2,318 crore, while depositors—farmers, laborers, domestic workers—are left ruined. Women who scraped savings for their daughters’ marriages or children’s education now ask the same heartbreaking question: “Will we ever get our money back?” Shockingly, no MLA or MP dares speak. Local newspapers and YouTube “journalists” long since bought by Kute remain mute. When the scam broke, caste politics shielded him, portraying the crime as a vendetta against a Maratha entrepreneur. Now the Enforcement Directorate has seized ₹1,000 crore of assets, yet recovery for depositors may take 5–7 years through auctions and legal cycles. Until then, the poor must endure betrayal not only by a fraudster but by a system too compromised to fight for them.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
When Reverence Meets Ridicule in Court! The courtroom is meant to be a temple of justice, but recent remarks from the Chief Justice of India jolted millions of Hindus. In dismissing a plea concerning Lord Vishnu, the CJI told the petitioner to “go and ask the deity himself.” Such words may have been intended as sarcasm against frivolous litigation, but they echo as insensitivity toward faith itself. Labeling the case as “publicity interest litigation” is the judiciary’s prerogative. Directing it to the Archaeological Survey of India was logical. Yet the choice of words matters. When a judge trivializes devotion, the hurt ripples far beyond the petitioner. Faith in gods and faith in courts are both pillars of Indian society—mocking one undermines the other. Justice is not served by dismissing devotion with ridicule. The judiciary must balance its authority with cultural sensitivity, lest it alienate the very people whose trust sustains it.
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