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The Bulldozer and the Microphone

Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan Courts have outlawed punitive demolitions and hate speech keeps rising anyway. A fact-check of a widely shared video, set against the data A video circulating in Hindi on social media, attributed to a speaker identified as “Irfan bhai,” makes a forceful argument: that demolitions of property in India disproportionately hit Muslims, that hate speech is concentrated in states run by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and that both have intensified around elections and after the terrorist attack in Pahalgam in April 2025. This report checks those claims against independent reporting, court records and the datasets the video appears to draw on, then sets out the broader picture and the principal objections to it. The headline finding: most of the discrete factual claims in the video correspond closely to figures published in named, citable reports — chiefly by India Hate Lab (IHL), a project of the Washington-based Centre for the Study of Organised Hate (CSOH), ...
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The Jurisprudence of Sacred Contradiction: Shifting Hierarchies in Ancient Indian Law

The Strategic Evolution of Dharmic Authority The history of ancient Indian jurisprudence is not a record of static devotion to a singular, immutable truth, but rather a sophisticated narrative of shifting legal hierarchies and the strategic evolution of authority. The transition from the ritualistic fixations of the Vedic age to the comprehensive social-legal codes of the  Smritis  represents a deliberate jurisprudential pivot. This was an essential maneuver designed to manage a vast "congeries of communities" under a unified Brahminical framework. The transition lies in the professional legitimacy of the Brahminical class. For this elite to maintain social order, they had to master the "art of circumlocution" to resolve the inherent "riddles" and textual contradictions within the sacred corpus. By developing complex hermeneutical stratagems, they ensured that the law remained a tool for social control, even when its foundational texts offered incohere...

Psychological Warfare and 'Black Propaganda' in the OSS Morale Operations Branch

The Strategic Architecture of Morale Operations (MO) In the high-stakes landscape of World War II, the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) sought to redefine the boundaries of conflict. General William "Wild Bill" Donovan envisioned psychological warfare not as a mere supplement to physical force, but as a primary "weapon of exploitation." To Donovan, the enemy’s cognitive state was a vulnerable flank; by targeting morale, the OSS could achieve strategic objectives with a precision that traditional kinetic warfare often lacked. This philosophy birthed the Morale Operations (MO) branch, designed to fracture Axis resolve through carefully engineered subversion. The primary instrument of this branch was "black propaganda." While "white propaganda" identifies its source, black propaganda is a sophisticated exercise in deception and denial (D&D), crafted to appear as if it originated from within enemy territory or from disgruntled elements of t...

Talitha Dina Pol

 

Reclaiming Ashoka: How a Mauryan Emperor Was Erased from India's Memory

By Dr. Devaraju Maharaju,   Prominent Telugu poet, short story writer, and retired Biology professor from Osmania University. Renowned for his humanist, rationalist, and scientific writings, he has authored over 50 books in contemporary Telugu literature. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar writes somewhere that the entire history of India is nothing but the conflict between Brahminism and Buddhism — and that seems to be true. We keep talking about how many injustices, frauds, and conspiracies the Vedic religionists committed in destroying Buddhism. Going further into detail: the last Mauryan king, Brihadratha, was treacherously murdered by his own commander-in-chief, Pushyamitra Shunga, who then declared himself king. He renamed the city they were in — Saket — calling it "Ayodhya." Some say "Ayodhya" means he wiped out the Mauryan warriors so none remained; others say it means he conquered the Mauryan empire without even having to fight a war. He also declared himself the slayer of...

Education in Telangana: Not a Right, but an Organized Exploitation

  T.Chiranjeevulu  IAS (Ret), Founder President BCIF (BC Intellectuals Forum) Telangana is not merely a geographical region. It is a historic aspiration realized through the sacrifices of countless martyrs and the hopes, dreams, and self-respect of millions of people. During the Telangana movement, promises were made to build a “Social Telangana” that would provide education, employment, and a dignified life to every poor family. The slogan “Free Education from KG to PG” generated immense hope among the people. However, twelve years after the formation of Telangana, the reality tells a different story. Instead of a socially inclusive Telangana, what has emerged is a Telangana increasingly driven by privatization. Particularly in the education sector, the government's responsibility has gradually diminished while the dominance of private institutions has expanded. As a result, education has ceased to be a right and has become a commodity that must be purchased. Accordi...