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WTF this is taught in 2nd standard? the govt should take a note of this but again this is "Secular" Kerala and nothing will happen

Like I said before and I will say it again. Kerala, WB, Bihar and UP all need presidents/emergency rule for a good decade at least (for varying reasons...but similar theme).

This will be a cancer which will need more drastic bloody surgery the longer we wait.
 
WTF this is taught in 2nd standard? the govt should take a note of this but again this is "Secular" Kerala and nothing will happen

There was another tweet which I cannot find now where they were teaching students that owning a slave is better than having a son which is why Muslims encouraged slave taking.
 
Covert operations were not announced to the country because the primary goal was to pacify the LoC and cut down infiltration and ceasefire violations, not to manage public opinion at home.

http://m.thehindu.com/news/national...-menon-on-crossloc-strikes/article9208838.ece

Someone is showing his loyalty and Swamy is right in calling this guy a Trojan-horse in the Vajpayee government and for being a mole he was rightly awarded by the UPA

Wasn't that Brajesh Mishra/Sudhindra Kulkarni that were accused of it? This is Shiv Shankar Menon from Congress time.
 
India Today-Axis Opinion Poll for Uttar Pradesh: BJP's dream run continues

IndiaToday.in New Delhi, Wednesday, October 12, 2016


India Today-Axis Opinion Poll
HIGHLIGHTS
  • A party must secure 202 seats to form a majority government in UP.
  • BSP likely to be runner-up with 115-124 seats: Survey
  • Samajwadi Party may get 94-103 seats: Survey
The BJP's dream run in Uttar Pradesh continues with the party expected to win 170-183 seats though the verdict is likely to throw a hung Assembly in the elections due in less than six months, the India Today-Axis Opinion Poll has revealed.

In the 403-member Uttar Pradesh Assembly, a party must secure 202 seats to form a majority government.

The survey says Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) is likely to be the runner-up with 115-124 seats while the incumbent Samajwadi Party will win 94-103.

The Congress, which last ruled the state in the 1980s and now has a huge stake in the crucial contest, is likely to fare miserably, barely making it to double digits with 8-12 seats.

WHO SHOULD BE NEXT CM?

In what may come as some boost for Mayawati, the survey found that most wanted the BSP supremo to return as Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister next year.

While 31 per cent of respondents wanted four-time Chief Minister Mayawati as their Chief Minister, 27 per cent want to retain incumbent Akhilesh Yadav. His father and Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav fared badly at just one per cent.

As far as other claimants to the chair are concerned, the Congress, which has not ruled Uttar Pradesh for 27 years and has a huge stake in the state this year, may be in for some disappointment with just one per cent of those surveyed approving the choice of Sheila Dikshit as the next Chief Minister.

Even Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, who is expected to play a larger role in Uttar Pradesh 2017, was chosen by only two per cent of the respondents as the next Chief Minister.

Home Minister Rajnath Singh, who has also been a former Chief Minister of the state, and his firebrand colleague in the BJP, Yogi Adityanath, are at 18 and 14 per cent respectively.

Mayawati was also called out by most voters for her record on law and order, an index on which Uttar Pradesh always falls at the bottom of the chart.

A whopping 64 per cent of those surveyed said the BSP chief will be the best bet on handling law and order, while Akhilesh (17) could not even beat Rajnath Singh (18) at it.

"CONGRESS-MUKT BHARAT"?

More than half of those surveyed rejected the BJP's mission to clean India of the Congress. While 54 per cent said they do not agree with the idea of a Congress-free India, 29 per cent of the respondents backed the BJP while 17 per cent were not sure.

Congress-free India has been a BJP project since Amit Shah took over the party presidentship.

In the 2014 general election, the BJP had won a landslide 71 of the 80 Lok Sabha seats in Uttar Pradesh. The Congress was reduced to two seats represented by president Sonia Gandhi and her vice-president son Rahul.

WHO CAN REVIVE CONGRESS?

Perhaps Rahul Gandhi's month-long Kisan Yatra that concluded last week have struck a chord with voters in Uttar Pradesh. An impressive 38 per cent of those surveyed by India Today-Axis said the 46-year-old is the Congress's best bet to revive the party in the state.
Rahul's sister Priyanka, who has often been invoked to pull a beleagured Congress out of the quagmire, is favoured by 19 per cent of the voters.

Sheila Dikshit - three-time Delhi Chief Minister who is now her party's face for Uttar Pradesh - was in single digits with just 9 per cent of those surveyed saying she can revive the party.

END OF BJP'S RAM MANDIR POLITICS?

When asked what should be the BJP's biggest plank in the run-up to the Uttar Pradesh election, a massive 88 per cent of the respondents mentioned development, which was largely the party's main agenda in 2014.

The contentious issues of a Ram temple at Ayodhya or cow protection garnered three and one per cent approval respectively. Nine per cent of the respondents said the performance of the Narendra Modi government is the biggest BJP issue for them.

Also, 54 per cent of those surveyed said atrocities against Dalits and the minorities have increased since the last Uttar Pradesh election in 2012.
http://m.indiatoday.in/story/india-...esh-elections-mayawati-akhilesh/1/785429.html

@ranjeet @Nilgiri @noksss @Soumitra @anant_s @Levina @nair @SrNair @Nair saab @indiatester @Robinhood Pandey @GURU DUTT :D
A win in UP is assured if BJP declares an acceptable CM's candidate.
 
Raj nath singh is only leader who can get majority for BJP in UP , other wise no other leader looks tall enough to match the stature of Mayawati and Mulayam singh yadav.

India Today-Axis Opinion Poll for Uttar Pradesh: BJP's dream run continues

IndiaToday.in New Delhi, Wednesday, October 12, 2016


India Today-Axis Opinion Poll
HIGHLIGHTS
  • A party must secure 202 seats to form a majority government in UP.
  • BSP likely to be runner-up with 115-124 seats: Survey
  • Samajwadi Party may get 94-103 seats: Survey
The BJP's dream run in Uttar Pradesh continues with the party expected to win 170-183 seats though the verdict is likely to throw a hung Assembly in the elections due in less than six months, the India Today-Axis Opinion Poll has revealed.

In the 403-member Uttar Pradesh Assembly, a party must secure 202 seats to form a majority government.

The survey says Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) is likely to be the runner-up with 115-124 seats while the incumbent Samajwadi Party will win 94-103.

The Congress, which last ruled the state in the 1980s and now has a huge stake in the crucial contest, is likely to fare miserably, barely making it to double digits with 8-12 seats.

WHO SHOULD BE NEXT CM?

In what may come as some boost for Mayawati, the survey found that most wanted the BSP supremo to return as Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister next year.

While 31 per cent of respondents wanted four-time Chief Minister Mayawati as their Chief Minister, 27 per cent want to retain incumbent Akhilesh Yadav. His father and Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav fared badly at just one per cent.

As far as other claimants to the chair are concerned, the Congress, which has not ruled Uttar Pradesh for 27 years and has a huge stake in the state this year, may be in for some disappointment with just one per cent of those surveyed approving the choice of Sheila Dikshit as the next Chief Minister.

Even Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, who is expected to play a larger role in Uttar Pradesh 2017, was chosen by only two per cent of the respondents as the next Chief Minister.

Home Minister Rajnath Singh, who has also been a former Chief Minister of the state, and his firebrand colleague in the BJP, Yogi Adityanath, are at 18 and 14 per cent respectively.

Mayawati was also called out by most voters for her record on law and order, an index on which Uttar Pradesh always falls at the bottom of the chart.

A whopping 64 per cent of those surveyed said the BSP chief will be the best bet on handling law and order, while Akhilesh (17) could not even beat Rajnath Singh (18) at it.

"CONGRESS-MUKT BHARAT"?

More than half of those surveyed rejected the BJP's mission to clean India of the Congress. While 54 per cent said they do not agree with the idea of a Congress-free India, 29 per cent of the respondents backed the BJP while 17 per cent were not sure.

Congress-free India has been a BJP project since Amit Shah took over the party presidentship.

In the 2014 general election, the BJP had won a landslide 71 of the 80 Lok Sabha seats in Uttar Pradesh. The Congress was reduced to two seats represented by president Sonia Gandhi and her vice-president son Rahul.

WHO CAN REVIVE CONGRESS?

Perhaps Rahul Gandhi's month-long Kisan Yatra that concluded last week have struck a chord with voters in Uttar Pradesh. An impressive 38 per cent of those surveyed by India Today-Axis said the 46-year-old is the Congress's best bet to revive the party in the state.
Rahul's sister Priyanka, who has often been invoked to pull a beleagured Congress out of the quagmire, is favoured by 19 per cent of the voters.

Sheila Dikshit - three-time Delhi Chief Minister who is now her party's face for Uttar Pradesh - was in single digits with just 9 per cent of those surveyed saying she can revive the party.

END OF BJP'S RAM MANDIR POLITICS?

When asked what should be the BJP's biggest plank in the run-up to the Uttar Pradesh election, a massive 88 per cent of the respondents mentioned development, which was largely the party's main agenda in 2014.

The contentious issues of a Ram temple at Ayodhya or cow protection garnered three and one per cent approval respectively. Nine per cent of the respondents said the performance of the Narendra Modi government is the biggest BJP issue for them.

Also, 54 per cent of those surveyed said atrocities against Dalits and the minorities have increased since the last Uttar Pradesh election in 2012.
http://m.indiatoday.in/story/india-...esh-elections-mayawati-akhilesh/1/785429.html

@ranjeet @Nilgiri @noksss @Soumitra @anant_s @Levina @nair @SrNair @Nair saab @indiatester @Robinhood Pandey @GURU DUTT :D
A win in UP is assured if BJP declares an acceptable CM's candidate.
 
Raj nath singh is only leader who can get majority for BJP in UP , other wise no other leader looks tall enough to match the stature of Mayawati and Mulayam singh yadav.
Nah, they need someone more capable and popular then "Kadi Ninda" aka Rajnath Singh. Both Rajnath and Yogi Adityanath are behind Mayawati and Akhilesh in the opinion poll.
 
Then whom you suggest ???
Nah, they need someone more capable and popular then "Kadi Ninda" aka Rajnath Singh. Both Rajnath and Yogi Adityanath are behind Mayawati and Akhilesh in the opinion poll.
 
Then whom you suggest ???
Me.:p:

It should be someone from UP no doubt but Rajnath is already tried and tested (not very successful), while Yogi is too vocal on Hindu-Muslim issues he should have been asked to shut up a long time ago if he ever was to become the BJP's face for UP CM post. He won't go well with non-Hindus and dalits and you can win UP with only Sarvans voting for you.
 
JNU hypocrisy: No room for courses on Hinduism at premier university

Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) is in the news again, but this time the national media has treated the news scantily. It has not paid enough attention to the fact that those who were agitating early this year to protect their right to dissent in JNU are now the suppressors of ideas coming from others who are not their “own”. For them, the university will do or practice what they want. It is they who will decide what is to be taught and how the university should be administered. Needless to say that these “dissenters” are mostly the so-called leftists and secularists; dissent for them means that they have the exclusive right to oppose things they do not like, but they deny the same right to those who disagree with them.

http://www.firstpost.com/india/jnu-...n-hinduism-at-premier-university-3046590.html


@Joe Shearer and other fanboys of dissenters
 
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Why is Congress afraid to make Rahul Gandhi party president?
The grand old party must not waste any more time.
POLITICS
| 6-minute read | 12-10-2016

KANIKA GAHLAUT

@kanikagahlaut
When will the Congress party make up its mind about Rahul Gandhi?

Before Congress voters, or fence sitters, or those disillusioned in the two years of Modi raj can be expected to put their faith behind the party, doesn’t the party need to one, have a leader, and two, have faith in the leadership?

Congress seems to be floundering over many things, and their man in-charge is chief among them. Rahul, who was general secretary of the party from 2007 to 2013, was appointed vice-president in 2013, when Congress was getting "battle-ready" to fight the general elections.

The party suffered a resounding defeat, but Rahul has been leading the Opposition charge - from taking on BJP for the treatment of minorities and lower castes, to questioning PM Modi on the economics of "achche din". But despite sources routinely airing rumours that the Congress VP will be promoted to president, it doesn’t seem to be happening soon.

Sending out the wrong message:

For the cadres, this perceived lack of confidence in Rahul results in periodic "Priyanka lao desh bachao" placards being raised. Congress itself fuels the fire by seemingly pitting sister against brother in states such as UP when elections are coming.

Dent on Rahul Gandhi’s public image:

Congress may have its own reasons for keeping its options open, or close to its chest - (or is it, for instance, a public trial by fire like Ram did with Sita?) - but for those outside too it shows a lack of confidence within the party on Rahul Gandhi’s abilities. We are seeing this repeatedly, when many "Congress supporters" have begun to give in to opposition jargon, calling Rahul Gandhi names only slightly more sophisticated version of the trolls' "Pappu". :rofl:

priyankabdpti_101216033217.jpg

Giving Priyanka Gandhi charge would send the worst signals about dynasty and merit, the kind of perceptions that have contributed to Congress's fall. (Photo: PTI)
Rival party leaders, both of secular as well as of conservative disposition, are quick to come down heavily on Rahul – the way we saw with his "khoon ki dalaali" statement, where only UP CM Akhilesh Yadav came to his support, and reports say many even among the Congress were reluctant to back him.

Therefore, his authority is undermined both within the party and outside of it, and Congress cannot afford to go without a leader any longer as the fight for 2019 revs up.

What are the other options?

If Congress was to change its policy and decide to go for "age and experience" – of which there are notable options, from P Chidambaram to Ghulam Nabi Azad – for the choice of "supreme leader", it would be another matter and they would be better off announcing it as soon as possible, but if they are sticking to their decision of a gen-next leader, Rahul is still the best bet.

We have seen little of the Jyotiradtiyas and Sachin Pilots on the national stage, and Rahul, to his credit, is familiar to voters with his style as well as the causes close to his heart, like the empowerment of weaker sections. Dumping a familiar known face for an unfamiliar known face is not going to help.

Priyanka Gandhi is the worst option: She has not been in active politics, unlike Rahul or Indira, before their elevation in the party, or like the other "dynasts" in Congress currently, and to suddenly give her charge would send the worst signals about dynasty and merit, the kind of perceptions that have contributed to Congress being in a dismal situation today.

Rahul Gandhi is smart and well-intentioned:

He may not be as commanding an orator as Modi but he is seen listening to people as well as colleagues and works by consensus. A number of people with no political allegiance who have met him have noted that Rahul is bright and has a knack of genuinely understanding issues and asking the right questions on complex matters.

Congress should highlight these positive aspects of him rather than allowing opposition to get away with the "Pappu" narrative. His transparency, as opposed to Modi whose true beliefs cannot be fathomed - given that he mouths secularism even as his colleagues shoot off their mouths speaking Hindutva - should be projected as a plus.

Rahul is well aware of his privilege and plays it down, making an effort to reach out to people as well as cadres. These are good traits, and oration is not everything.

Rahul has the right instinct:

"Pappu", as people like to call him, can be fiery and doesn’t mince words. He once offered to tear up his own party’s ordinance negating SC verdict on convicted lawmakers, calling it nonsense and stating that "what our government has done is wrong".

His first instinct on the JNU arrests under the present government, was also pro-students and anti-State interference, though later he made a slight U-turn with BJP gunning for him in the name of nationalism and even Congress distancing itself from the revered love of the country the insult of which leads to sedition as per our laws, and said something on the lines of belonging to a nationalist party and being nationalist and so on.

In similar fashion, he went straight after RSS, calling them "murderers of Gandhi", then did a U-turn with Kapil Sibal by his side saying that’s not exactly what he meant but broadly - and now again, according to reports, is prepared to battle it out in court on the statement.

His "khoon ki dalaali" comment, a few days after the surgical strikes, was met with furore across the table, even though what he alleges is not incorrect – the BJP is cashing in domestically on the Army operation with posters and statements.

Perhaps Rahul and the old guard of Congress are in a tussle, but whatever the issue, the party needs to get its act together and decide that if it wants young blood to lead, it is liberal values of the young that should be at the forefront, not fuddy-duddy "nationalism", which do not distinguish it from BJP. The grand-old party has to also decide if it wants to continue using "babu language", which is no match for the language of Hindutva or of other young turks now in the political game, like Arvind Kejriwal.

In contrast, Priyanka Gandhi, who Congress loves to drag out of domesticity periodically and sections of the Congress repeatedly call to replace Rahul, doesn’t show similar instinct. Her only memorable speech was during the 2014 general elections (before the results) when she spoke confidently of BJP members as "panic-striken rats deserting the ship" of what turned out to be a historic mandate in favour of BJP.

Congress must not waste any more time in appointing its president to lead the fight for 2019. It will be in the interest of the party as well as the country.
 
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