🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
- dhadakkamgarunion0
- Oct 29
- 3 min read
🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Yogi’s Power Circuit: More Than Courtesy? In just 48 hours, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath met with Prime Minister Modi, President Murmu, Vice President Radhakrishnan, Home Minister Amit Shah, and BJP President J.P. Nadda. Officially labeled as “courtesy visits,” the sheer concentration and timing of these high-level meetings suggest deeper strategic undertones. Such a rapid succession of engagements with the nation’s top leadership rarely occurs without political significance—especially in a party known for tightly choreographed moves. Is this a signal of Yogi’s rising stature within the BJP? A recalibration of roles ahead of 2029? Or internal consolidation before a major announcement? While the optics remain cordial, the subtext may be anything but casual. In Indian politics, proximity often precedes power shifts. The nation watches, reading between the handshakes.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane,
Time for Sanjay Raut to Face His Own Challenge. Sanjay Raut, known for his fiery rhetoric and frequent political dare games, now deserves a taste of his own medicine. If he truly believes in grassroots democracy and public connect, let him resign from his Rajya Sabha seat and contest the Mumbai municipal elections as a corporator. It’s easy to thunder from the safety of Parliament, but real leadership is tested in the streets, among the people. Raut often throws provocative challenges at rivals—now let him accept one himself. If he’s confident in his popularity and relevance, winning a local seat should be effortless. Otherwise, his words risk becoming hollow noise. Politics must be more than press conferences and soundbites. Let action match the aggression. Mumbai deserves leaders who rise from its soil, not just speak over it.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Marathi Identity Needs Builders, Not Just Microphones. For decades, fiery speeches have echoed from Shiv Sena platforms, but where are the Marathi industrial giants to match Ambani or Adani—even at 10% scale? If Modi and Shah empowered their own, what stopped the Thackerays from nurturing a Kulkarni, Patil, Jadhav, or Kamble into national business stature? Instead of building, they’ve busied themselves warning of Mumbai’s “theft” by Gujarat, while failing to fortify its Marathi soul with economic power. If Mumbai is truly under threat, why not counter with bold proposals—like annexing Surat to Maharashtra? The Marathi voter deserves more than slogans and victimhood. Real leadership demands vision, investment, and courage—not just outrage. Until Marathi entrepreneurs rise with institutional backing, the community remains a spectator in its own city. It’s time to stop shouting and start shaping.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Lawlessness in the Shadow of Power. The brutal assault on BJP Youth Secretary Tejaswini Kadam—allegedly orchestrated by party colleague Anup More’s loyalists—inside a police station, marks a chilling collapse of law and order in Pimpri-Chinchwad. Despite direct threats and physical violence, police refused to file charges against More, shielding him under the veil of political influence. Kadam’s viral declaration—“This country is mine, this law is mine”—echoes the anguish of citizens betrayed by the very institutions meant to protect them. When even ruling party women leaders are unsafe, what hope remains for the common citizen? The police’s inaction and visible bias reinforce the perception of a jungle raj, where power trumps justice. Accountability must not be optional. If democracy is to retain meaning, impunity for political violence must end—starting with a fair, fearless investigation into this shameful episode.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Corruption’s Shadow Over Pelhar Police Station. The recent MD drug bust near Pelhar Police Station has exposed more than just narcotics—it’s unveiled a troubling nexus of alleged corruption, favoritism, and systemic rot. Inspector Jitendra Vankoti’s suspension, following suspicions of financial links to the ₹14 crore seizure, is only the surface. Allegations range from selective CCTV surveillance and questionable property holdings to political patronage and manipulation of transfers. Whistleblowers within the force, speaking anonymously, hint at deeper collusion and misuse of authority. If true, this reflects a dangerous erosion of public trust and internal integrity. A superficial inquiry followed by quiet reinstatement would only reinforce cynicism. The Chief Minister and Home Minister must ensure a transparent, impartial investigation. Justice must not be a performance—it must be a reckoning. Only then can the police reclaim moral legitimacy in the eyes of the people.
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