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An Indian's open letter to Narendra Modi regarding Bangladesh

You are stinking up the whole thread. The stink can make a skunk run up a tree !!!

Are Indians by nature unhygienic? | Business Line
So now a bangaldeshi semi-literate lungiwala will teach us about hygiene:omghaha:!!Gosh this is getting so weird...:rofl::rofl:

There is nothing wrong in eating with hands, everybody eats with their hands from SA to ME. However, when it comes to taking a dump out in the open, a certain nation is one of a kind with no competition !!
I have seen most of the bangaldeshi citizens usually taking dumos on the street each morning.R e dada mayer kache mama barir golpo kora uchit noy.Ami bhalo korei jani apnader shobhab....:coffee:
 
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They eat rat, make braids/plaits out of there *** bumflufff, drink cow piss, desecrate in the open,worship a motorbike, good at lying, bathe and shit in river water.
 
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They eat rat, make braids/plaits out of there *** bumflufff, drink cow piss, desecrate in the open,worship a motorbike, good at lying, bathe and shit in river water.

IRK, yet those bangladeshis still have the audacity to call Indians unhygienic. I mean please, they eat with their hands and are darker than a starless night!
 
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Another Bong secular to the rescue of secularism, Seriously WTF is wrong with these Secular bongs, all their intellectuals seem to be brainwashed into this kind of crap.:hitwall:
They say bengalis speak same language,have same culture so what genius they are different countries now deal with it and Your love for those East bengalis resulted in Noakhali Riots in Bengal during partition.Still i think these people havent learnt from those insults.When they take over as majority in demography guess what who is gonna suffer the very same secular bongs who vouched for the Bangladeshis will get their houses plundered,their women raped and forcibly converted or killed.:pissed:
illegal Bangladeshis are a security problem and should be thrown out and shot on border if they try to polevault
No other state in India has such sympathies for Anti-nationals,Bangladeshis as the Secular bongs do.I fail to understand what is wrong with them, if they liked them so much they should have settled in East pakistan After noakhali riots.:taz::mad:
 
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Bangladeshis will be all over India in next few years because India is the ultimate place to go for Bangladeshis if sea level rises just few cm which will happen soon due to global warming and ice melting faster. We will change the whole demography of India with our population. Will make Akhand Bangladesh in India and will give a tiny land for our Indian brothers to live just beside Pakistan. Fight with them all day long. We will be happy with our akhand Bangladesh. :dance3:


Global Warming, Sea Level Rise and Bangladesh

The global average air and ocean temperatures have been gradually increasing from 1880-2010 (Fig.1)


This increase in temperature melted a massive amount of ice and snow globally which ultimately, caused the global average sea level to also rise (Fig.2). The Earth’s average surface temperature rose by 0.74 ± 0.18°C over the period 1906–2005. Global average sea level rose at an average rate of about 3.1 mm per year from 1993 to 2003(Fig 2).

sea-level-risks-bangladesh.jpg


The potential total sea level rise over the period of the end of the 21st century relative to the end of the 20th century is estimated to be an increase in the sea level between 18 and 59 cm. The main consequence of the rising of sea levels is the impact on deltas and small island states that undergo coastal inundations. The reason for this is because deltas and small island states are vulnerable to sea level rise because of their size and height above sea level. The flooding of coasts that are highly populated will cause a major impact in the economic and social dilemmas of the future.

Furthermore, this report will discuss the future of Bangladesh since Bangladesh is the most vulnerable to sea-level rise. Bangladesh is very low-lying and sits on the northern part of the sea that is close to the Bay of Bengal. In addition to being one of the world’s poorest nations, this country has also experienced many catastrophic events in the past such as severe storm surges.

Global Warming and Sea Level Rise

Water temperature tends to lag the general surface temperature because of the phenomenon of latent heat which is the heat absorbed or released by a chemical substance. Energy must be taken from the environment for water or ice to move to a less ordered state. Thus, energy in the form of heat from the air will be transferred to the liquid water or solid ice. This is called the absorption of latent heat which causes the temperature of water to lag the general surface temperature. There are two major reasons for relationship between global warming and increased sea level: thermal expansion and the contribution of land-based ice.

Thermal Expansion of Water

Thermal expansion of water occurs when the temperature of water increases which causes the water molecules to expand and change in volume. When water is heated, the atoms in the water molecules begin to gain kinetic energy and move at a greater rate. Water is a very unique substance. It will expand when heated but in the range of about 0-4°C, water will undergo negative thermal expansion rather than thermal contraction.

Ice Melting

The concern for ice melting is for land-based ice because a larger amount of water flows into the sea on the rising of the sea level to be more evident. As stated earlier, as sea water freezes, it undergoes negative thermal expansion. The liquid water will expand into floating ice and displace water. Thus, the melting of ice does not have a large impact on the change of sea level. The main storage of water on land is located in ice sheets and glaciers. Partial melting of the Greenland ice sheet and possibly the West Antarctic ice sheet, could contribute 4-6 metres or more to sea level rise projections.

The IPCC 2001 Third Assessment has been replaced (Fig. 3) by the IPCC 2007 Fourth Assessment due to false predictions which underestimates the true rise of the sea level. SRES emissions scenarios are projections that estimate future development of the economy. Across the six SRES marker scenarios, sea level was projected to rise by 18 to 59 cm for the time period 2090-99. The Rignot projection suggests that the sea level rise would reach 32 centimetres by 2050 due to the melting of the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets. Projections after 2100 include the continuation of the melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheet. The estimated timescale for partial melting would contribute 4 to 6 metres or more to sea level rise over this period. In general, the cause of most of these future projections of sea level rise is due to rapid change of the glaciers and ice sheets.



Bangladesh

Bangladesh is located in South Asia and is bordered by India on the majority of the sides except for a tiny part where it is bordered with Myanmar to the southeast towards the southern Bay of Bengal (Fig. 4).



The population of Bangladesh is approximately 142.3 million and it is the most densely populated large country in the world. Bangladesh is also one of the poorest nations and relies heavily on foreign aid. The main source of income for the majority of the people of Bangladesh involves working in agriculture and also producing other goods such as leather, textiles, ceramics and fish farming. Thus, natural disasters such as flood and cyclonic storms have large impacts on both the economy and the lives of many people.

Geography
Bangladesh is a very flat country that has a very close proximity to the current sea level and lies in the Ganges-Brahmaputra or Ganges Delta (Fig. 5). The majority of Bangladesh is less than 12m above sea level and many parts of Bangladesh that are indicated in red are near or close to the river systems (Fig. 4). Thus, the likelihood of floods in Bangladesh is high due to the low height above sea level. Bangladesh also holds the most trans-boundary rivers with a large number of 57, resulting in many complicated water issues. 8 Unfortunately, these fertile plains are vulnerable to flood and drought.

The rivers of Bangladesh play a major role in the physical geography of Bangladesh. The larger rivers of Bangladesh serve as transportations for material goods. They are also the main source to raise crops, thus flooding of rivers is extremely devastating and quite frequent. On the contrary, the fresh deposits of the rich silt provide a great source of nutrient to the soil. Therefore, the great river system is both beneficial and hazardous to the country.

Climate

Bangladesh climate is tropical with a mild winter from October to March, a hot, humid summer from March to June. 8 Bangladesh experiences much heavy rain falls and has high average precipitation. The majority of the rain falls occur during the monsoon season which is a result of the difference between high and low air pressures caused by differential heating of land and water. The climate of Bangladesh contributes to much of the natural disasters including tropical cyclones and floodings.

Storms of the Bay of Bengal

The Bay of Bengal is situated in the north-eastern part of the Indian Ocean and is the largest bay in the world. The climate of the Bay of Bengal consists of a lot of heavy monsoons. The continental pressure system changes during the winter and summer from high to low which produce northeast and southwest monsoons respectively. Also, in spring and fall seasons, powerful cyclones arise and produce very strong winds and subsequently, devastating floods.

Storms in the Bay

The 1991 Bangladesh cyclone occurred on April 29th, 1991 and is one of the deadliest tropical cyclones killing at least 138, 000. A very strong tropical cyclone carried winds at 250 km/h. With the speed of the wind, the low pressure and high tide, the storm surge was extremely catastrophic. This triggered a 6 metre storm surge that carried inwards over an extensive area and causing many deaths. The storm surge was able to travel very far inland. The storm initiated about 6,000 km away and the amount of time to reach the coast was around 20 days. The growth of the storm was favoured by the temperature of the warm sea and also the weather conditions which enabled the storm grow to a diameter larger than the entire country itself.

Storm Mala was another incredibly strong cyclone and was titled the strongest cyclone in the Bay of Bengal in 2007 before Cyclone Sidr. Mala hit the coast of Burma with winds of 185 km/h causing $6.7 million in damages and at least 22 deaths. The southern Bay of Bengal consisted of an area of convection that initially had weak currents in mid- to late-April. The Cyclonic Storm of Mala began to intensify as favourable conditions such as low pressure continued.

The strongest cyclone in the Bay of Bengal was Cyclone Sidr with wind speeds of 260 km/h. The storm triggered large-scale evacuations and an estimated number of deaths to be up to 10,000 people. Throughout the country, heavy precipitation were experienced initially. The cyclone struck offshore islands in the Bay of Bengal and slowly downgraded to a Category 2 storm while it moved north into the central Bangladesh.

The worst natural disaster to be recorded in Burma would be Cyclone Nargis. It powerful tropical cyclone triggered a landfall killing at least 138, 000 people and causing major destruction on May 2, 2008. Cyclone Nargis initially developed in central Bay of Bengal and then encountered favourable conditions which caused the storm to intensify to wind speeds to at least 165 km/h. The intensity of the storm finally decreased near the border of Burma and Thailand.

An increase in water level on an offshore that is affiliated with a low pressure weather system is known as a storm surge (Fig.6). A storm surge typically involves strong winds that force great pressure on the ocean’s surface. This causes a rise in sea level from the accumulation of water being piled up by the high winds. Another factor that causes a rise in sea level is the low pressure at the center of the weather system. In addition to Bangladesh’s geography and region, the effects of both strong winds over the shallow water in Bangladesh and low pressure causes extremely harmful storm surge flooding problems in Bangladesh.



Global Warming and the Future of Bangladesh

Since the global average air and ocean temperatures are gradually increasing, this affects the future of Bangladesh to be at a higher risk of more disastrous events. Global warming will trigger a chain of unfortunate events. Initially, global warming will cause the sea level to rise due to thermal expansion and the contribution of land-based ice. In addition to Bangladesh being highly populated with a poor economy and a low-lying land, the combination of these factors will place Bangladesh at risk to a very disastrous situation in the future.

Although there is still uncertainty to whether the temperature of the sea water affects cyclonic storms, the present study does show a good relationship between both ocean and atmospheric variables and severe cyclonic storms. The study shows that an increase in the sea surface temperature may be responsible for extreme weather. Scientific research suggests that warmer water dissipates more readily into vapour, making it easier for small ocean storms to become larger and more powerful. The effects of higher sea temperatures will also form more frequent tropical storms and cyclones. Due to Bangladesh’s low elevation, each year around 18% of the country is flooded (about 26, 000 km2) and during severe floods, the percentage may exceed 75% of the country’s area which is about 95% of the total annual flow.

As of March 2011, there are 6.5 million people in Bangladesh that are climate refugees and the Bangladesh Government is emphasizing on relocating these refugees in foreign countries. Association for Climate Refugees has already begun to relocate them within the country borders and also other civil society groups are also in the progress of creating a framework to protect and rehabilitate climate refugees.

Global Warming, Sea Level Rise and Bangladesh
That means you are either going into the sea or some other islamic nation genius,If you want to be adopted in India you have to Adopt Dharmic religion(buddhist,hindu,sikh,jain etc.) and then you can come.Otherwise its the bay of bengal or some islamic country for your population to go.Btw, our BSF will have shoot to kill orders if you try immigrating citing rise of sea levels etc.

The fact remains that if India doesn't start ensuring that the Bangladeshi economy is uplifted then the Bangladeshi unemployment problem will become India's problem. Deporting illegal immigrants and building fences is a temporary solution. You simply can't contain such a large population once they become desperate or hungry. The writer makes many valid points. If Mr Modi wants to ensure a lasting solution to the problem of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, he should rather apply the "Modi Magic" approach to Bangladesh's economy which has to be married to India's economy. Applying the Hindutva approach will simply create a longer and larger problem for India
Why is it out burden to bear?They wanted a separate nation for muslim populations and they got it now,Let them use their unique bangladeshi brains to boost their economy and entrepreneurship.We got enough problems already.Charity begins at home.
 
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Another Bong secular to the rescue of secularism, Seriously WTF is wrong with these Secular bongs, all their intellectuals seem to be brainwashed into this kind of crap.:hitwall:
They say bengalis are speak same language,culture so what genius they are different countries now deal with it and Your love for those East bengalis resulted in Noakhali Riots in Bengal during partition.Still i think these people havent learnt from those insults.When they take over as majority in demography guess what who is gonna suffer the very same secular bongs who vouched for the Bangladeshis will get their houses plundered,their women raped and forcibly converted or killed.:pissed:
illegal Bangladeshis are a security problem and should be thrown out and shot on border if they try to polevault
No other state in India has such sympathies for Anti-nationals,Bangladeshis as the Secular bongs do.I fail to understand what is wrong with them, if they liked them so much they should have settled in East pakistan After noakhali riots.:taz::mad:

Is there something wrong with Muslims and Hindus respecting each other as human beings? The level of juvenile paranoia I'm seeing here is epic. :cuckoo:

Instead of fighting and lobbing verbal hand-grenades - why don't all of you 'doubting thomas' Indians start by visiting Bangladesh (with a valid visa)? You can find out for yourself whether Bangladesh is the horrible place some of you say it is. Stay a week and indulge in conversations with some sane normal people (instead of Internet jocks). Yes we have lots of vegetarian (and vegan) restaurants (for you hardliner Hindutva types) as well as temples/gurdwaras all over the country including in Dhaka. Hinduism, Buddhism and Christianity (as well as animism) are alive and well in Bangladesh. The Jamatis have been cornered and are turning irrelevant by popular mandate, day by day. RAW has infiltrated all armed forces and all industrial activity. This is the ground reality. So I think GoI did an excellent job and RSS/Shivsena/Sangh_Parivar should give it a collective rest. Amen!

I will say personally that the Bong section of India (and Bangladesh) are the only two areas in the subcontinent worth saving from rampant misogyny, racism, caste-ism and fascism because these two areas (specifically Dhaka and Kolkata) have long been homes to educated intellectual people who lead the subcontinent in _THINKING_ and _DEFENDING_ multi-culturalism and secular philosophies. Witness the long line of Nobel Prize Winners starting with Tagore and ending with Amartiya Sen, all with family roots in Bangladesh. You can't say that about a lot of areas in the Western and Northern part of the Indian subcontinent. There is nothing wrong with being secular and respecting people's right to worship and cultural practices no matter who they are. A Bengali fascist 'hardliner' is rarer than hen's teeth and its averse to being what a Bengali is - it's primarily a Western and Northern Indian phenomenon.

Bangladesh and West Bengal are the only places I have seen in my travels (other than major metros in India) where religious and caste tolerance are _DEFENDED_ as a rule. To diss that is just insane. I'll say that one more time in Bengali - "Maramari korey kono faida nei". It's a zero sum game. Don't you remember 'Wargames' - the movie?

If the world is getting away from Fascism - India cannot afford to follow Fascism to its own detriment. AS simple as THAT.:rolleyes1:
 
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Is there something wrong with Muslims and Hindus respecting each other as human beings? The level of juvenile paranoia I'm seeing here is epic. :cuckoo:

Instead of fighting and lobbing verbal hand-grenades at each other - why don't all of you 'doubting thomas' Indians start by visiting Bangladesh (with a valid visa)? You can find out for yourself whether Bangladesh is the horrible place some of you say it is. Stay a week and indulge in conversations with some sane normal people (instead of Internet jocks). Yes we have lots of vegetarian (and vegan) restaurants (for you hardliner Hindutva types) as well as temples/gurdwaras all over the country including in Dhaka. Hinduism, Buddhism and Christianity (as well as animism) are alive and well in Bangladesh. The Jamatis have been cornered and are turning irrelevant by popular mandate, day by day. RAW has infiltrated all armed forces and all industrial activity. This is the ground reality. So I think GoI did an excellent job and RSS/Shivsena/Sangh_Parivar should give it a collective rest. Amen!

I will say personally that the Bong section of India (and Bangladesh) are the only two areas in the subcontinent worth saving from rampant misogyny, racism, caste-ism and fascism because these two areas (specifically Dhaka and Kolkata) have long been homes to educated intellectual people who lead the subcontinent in _THINKING_ and _DEFENDING_ multi-culturalism and secular philosophies. Witness the long line of Nobel Prize Winners starting with Tagore and ending with Amartiya Sen, all with family roots in Bangladesh. You can't say that about a lot of areas in the Western and Northern part of the Indian subcontinent. There is nothing wrong with being secular and respecting people's right to worship and cultural practices no matter who they are.

Bangladesh and West Bengal are the only places I have seen in my travels (other than major metros in India) where religious and caste tolerance are _DEFENDED_ as a rule. To diss that is just insane. I'll say that one more time in Bengali - "Maramari korey kono faida nei". It's a zero sum game. Don't you remember 'Wargames' - the movie?

If the world is getting away from Fascism - India cannot afford to follow Fascism to its own detriment. AS simple as THAT.:rolleyes1:
Whatever,Tired of Intellectual Bengalis defending the so called bangladeshis,when they committed the worst riots on bengalis during partition,Thankfully not all bengalis share the same enthusiasm as those miniscule intellectuals.Yeah we all heard about your secular bangladesh where Hindus were reduced to 3% from 25% in a span of 60 years.Stop teaching us secularism and standing up or defending for someone.Take back your citizens thats all we ask.
And the day India needs to take advice from bangladesh on how its policies and state should be run will be the day people will shoot themselves.
 
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Whatever,Tired of Intellectual Bengalis defending the so called bangladeshis,when they committed the worst riots on bengalis during partition,Thankfully not all bengalis share the same enthusiasm as those miniscule intellectuals.Yeah we all heard about your secular bangladesh where Hindus were reduced to 3% from 25% in a span of 60 years.Stop teaching us secularism and standing up or defending for someone.Take back your citizens thats all we ask.
And the day India needs to take advice from bangladesh on how its policies and state should be run will be the day people will shoot themselves.


It's your country who is supporting the killings of Hindus. Why don't your stop rambling and research into the masterminds of these planned savage attacks of Hindus, judge the apparent but it's your greatest democracy who is pulling the strings. Evidence is all there.

No one attacks Hindus, they live peacefully in Bangladesh. If they want to put the red dot on their hair or forehead they can and walk the bazaar, they have their own mandirs which are in relative peace. I say relative peace because since 2012-13 and Hasina's regime Hindu attacks have been on the rise. Muslims and Hindus in BD have been living in peace for centuries.
 
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Watch this video of workaday 'normal' people on the street in Bangladesh. Rather than judge them by religion, by skin colour, by caste, try to deal with their humanity and the human condition (like we do as Bengalis). Often poignant and quite funny in places, this shows Bangladesh as a place which ranked a lot higher in the 'Happy Planet Index' than other places in the subcontinent.

 
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I firmly believe that human beings don't become fascists unless they have some deep negative psychosis (possibly from early childhood) and some deep unmet shortcoming or need to treat other human beings derisively. Fascism is a complex phenomena that legitimizes often brutal discriminatory human behavior and collectively unites the psychologically disenfranchised to follow this pattern of behavior.
 
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Whatever,Tired of Intellectual Bengalis defending the so called bangladeshis,when they committed the worst riots on bengalis during partition,Thankfully not all bengalis share the same enthusiasm as those miniscule intellectuals.Yeah we all heard about your secular bangladesh where Hindus were reduced to 3% from 25% in a span of 60 years.Stop teaching us secularism and standing up or defending for someone.Take back your citizens thats all we ask.
And the day India needs to take advice from bangladesh on how its policies and state should be run will be the day people will shoot themselves.

@wolfschanzze instead of being dismissive, take a trip to Bangladesh and prove to yourself whether you have been fed a bunch of propaganda or lies. Nothing better than taking a good look at the situation in person. Otherwise parroting untruths on the Internet starts losing their credibility.
 
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And the day India needs to take advice from bangladesh on how its policies and state should be run will be the day people will shoot themselves.

Oh really? With half the per capita GDP of India, Bangladesh has bested India on every human development Indicator known to man and woman. Whether you talk about infant mortality, literacy for women, life expectancy, Bangladesh leads India on all these areas and more. The infant mortality rate in Bangladesh was lower than that in Gujarat in 2012, not today. _That_ my friends is what we should concentrate on, helping people instead of saying 'Main Safeda, tu kala". Tokenism and politics is not going to fill bellies. And Fascism is not the answer to India's ills.

BANGLADESH - Shining Bangla?

Heard of the ‘Bangladesh shining’ story? - The Hindu

Lessons for India from Bangladesh - Livemint
 
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@wolfschanzze instead of being dismissive, take a trip to Bangladesh and prove to yourself whether you have been fed a bunch of propaganda or lies. Nothing better than taking a good look at the situation in person. Otherwise parroting untruths on the Internet starts losing their credibility.
He is right,why dont you tell us that how percenage of Hindus decreased so rapidly??
 
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