🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
- dhadakkamgarunion0
- 1 hour ago
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Ghostbusters Strike in India
In a move dubbed the “ultimate surgical strike,” the government has reportedly deactivated 20 million Aadhaar cards belonging to the dead — ending the reign of India’s so‑called “Secular Zombie Party.” For years, ghosts and spirits enjoyed free rations, pensions, scholarships, LPG subsidies, and even cast votes from beyond the grave. But with one ruthless click, the Prime Minister allegedly pressed Ctrl+Alt+Delete, shutting down the entire afterlife economy. UIDAI, armed with data from registrars, banks, welfare ministries, and PDS, stitched together the nation’s first “Ghostbusters Database.” The fallout? Heavenly pensions suspended, phantom bank accounts frozen, and spectral subsidies gone. Now, reincarnated souls must apply for fresh Aadhaar. The government insists: zero tolerance for paranormal freeloaders. Next on the list — ghost SIM cards, phantom PAN cards, and spooky voter IDs.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane,
Mamata Banerjee’s Shifting Colors
West Bengal politics is witnessing a dramatic transformation. Mamata Banerjee, once the face of secular resistance, now appears to be embracing overt symbols of nationalism. From discarding the hijab-like drape to insisting on chants of “Jai Hind” and “Vande Mataram,” her rhetoric has shifted sharply. Her approval of the central Waqf law and directive to upload details of 82,000 Waqf properties by December 5 further signal alignment with policies she once opposed. Meanwhile, reports of Bangladeshi immigrants leaving under police pressure add to the narrative of changing ground realities. As elections near, Mamata’s repositioning reflects a larger truth: secular parties remain secular only as long as that identity secures votes. When the tide turns, they adapt, often donning saffron hues. For Bengal, this shift may redefine both politics and identity.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Bengal’s Voter List Storm
West Bengal has entered a volatile phase with Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee’s fierce opposition to the Election Commission’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of voter rolls. The drive, aimed at removing fake or illegal voters, is being seen by many as a tool to identify Bangladeshi immigrants. Mamata, however, frames it as an attack on her people’s democratic rights, warning that even a single deletion will spark a political war. Her dramatic protest march in North 24 Parganas underscored the stakes. The BJP counters by accusing her of shielding illegal immigrants to preserve her vote bank, pointing to reports of hundreds fleeing Kolkata suburbs. As the first draft list nears release on December 9, Bengal braces for confrontation. What should be a routine electoral exercise now risks deepening divisions in a state already fractured by identity and borders.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
National Herald Case and Winter Session Drama
The National Herald case has taken a sharp new turn. After CBI and ED, now Delhi’s Economic Offences Wing (EOW) has stepped in, adding Section 420 charges against Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, Robert Vadra, and others. EOW’s mandate is clear: probing financial fraud, misuse of public funds, corporate scams, and cyber-enabled frauds. The timing is politically explosive. Parliament’s winter session begins tomorrow, and on December 14 Rahul Gandhi is set to lead a protest at Ram Lila Maidan. The Congress will likely frame this as political vendetta, while the BJP will highlight it as accountability for corruption. With multiple agencies converging, the case is no longer just legal—it is a political storm. The coming weeks may see courtroom battles spill onto the streets, shaping the national narrative.
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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane
Mandala Theory and Taliban’s New Moves
Chanakya’s Mandala Theory reminds us that a state’s security depends on its neighbors and the alliances it forges. Afghanistan under the Taliban, after the U.S. exit in August 2021, was initially seen as a pawn of Pakistan’s ISI. Yet four years later, the Taliban face the reality of governing a nation, not just a militant movement. With no global recognition and mounting economic troubles, their ministers are now touring abroad, seeking investment and legitimacy. The recent visit of Afghanistan’s commerce minister to India, pledging $32 million for the Chabahar project, is symbolically significant. It signals Kabul’s intent to diversify trade routes and reduce reliance on Pakistan. As Taliban envoys also reach out to Kazakhstan, Russia, and Iran, the regional chessboard shifts. Afghanistan is attempting to reshape its orbit, echoing Chanakya’s wisdom on neighbors and power.
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#AadhaarCleanup #GhostbustersIndia #MamataShift #BengalPolitics #VoterListStorm #NationalHeraldCase #WinterSession #TalibanDiplomacy #MandalaTheory #DevendraFadnavis #CMOMaharashtra












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