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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

  • dhadakkamgarunion0
  • Feb 8
  • 3 min read

🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

The Chief Justice of India has been on a roll in the last few weeks:

On Trade Union - Trade Unionism Has Stalled Industrial Growth. How many industrial units in the country have been closed thanks to trade unions? On WhatsApp Policy - Follow India’s Constitution or Leave the country. On UGC Regulations - If we don’t intervene, it will have a dangerous impact, divide society, and have grave consequences. On Rohingya - Should Intruders Be Given Red Carpet Welcome? On Prashant Kishor - People reject you and then you use judicial platform to get popularity.

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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

Shadows Behind Islamabad’s Tragedy

The suicide attack inside an Islamabad mosque has left Pakistan shaken, not only by the scale of loss but by the suspicions it has ignited. Many argue this tragedy is less about terrorism’s unpredictability and more about calculated diversion. Critics point to General Asim Munir’s establishment, suggesting the blast masks failures of Operation Herof, deflects pressure over Gaza, and sidesteps Iran–US tensions. The finger of blame inevitably turns toward ISI, accused of orchestrating chaos to consolidate control. Whether these claims hold truth or not, the pattern is familiar: when governance falters, bloodshed becomes a tool of narrative management. Pakistan’s citizens deserve transparency, not manipulation. Each life lost is a reminder that political games played with violence erode trust, dignity, and the very fabric of society.

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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane  

When Karma Returns to the House

The 2004 image of Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh rising to reply to the President’s address, only to be drowned out by BJP members waving placards and scattering papers, is more than a snapshot of parliamentary chaos—it is a lesson in responsibility. Democracy thrives on dissent, but when protest descends into disruption, it corrodes the dignity of institutions. Ironically, those who once silenced a leader now find themselves facing similar obstruction. Karma, as the saying goes, is not linear but circular; actions return with uncanny precision. Time does not march forward—it bends, bringing consequences back to their originators. The episode reminds us that political theater may win moments, but it erodes credibility. True accountability lies in respecting the sanctity of the House, lest history repeat itself with poetic justice.

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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

Cricket Needs Cricketers at the Helm

On February 3, 2026, India’s Supreme Court delivered a sharp rebuke to the management of cricket associations, insisting that leadership must rest with those who understand the game. “Administration should not be in the hands of people who don’t even know how to hold a bat,” the Chief Justice remarked during hearings on the Maharashtra Cricket Association elections and membership expansion. The Court refused to lift the Bombay High Court’s stay, underscoring its commitment to reform. This intervention highlights a long-standing malaise: cricket, India’s most cherished sport, has often been run by political figures or power brokers rather than seasoned players. Prioritizing retired cricketers in governance is not just symbolic—it ensures respect for the sport and accountability in administration. Cricket deserves leaders shaped by its discipline, not detached from its essence.

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🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane 

The Expanding Shadow of BJP

Across Maharashtra’s major cities—Navi Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Nashik, Kolhapur, Jalgaon—the mayoral posts are already in BJP’s grasp. Mumbai too seems poised to follow the same trajectory. Signs suggest that upcoming district and municipal elections will echo this dominance. The party’s leadership had once declared its intent to capture every level of governance—Lok Sabha, Vidhan Sabha, and local bodies alike. That ambition now appears less rhetoric and more reality. For rivals, the warning is stark: politics is no longer a marketplace where every shop survives. The electorate, acting as the ultimate arbiter, is consolidating power in one direction. Those unable to adapt may find their political enterprise unsustainable. In this climate, accountability to people’s trust matters most, for democracy thrives only when choice remains meaningful.

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