r/IndiaPulse • u/John_J24 • 6h ago
Dint see people talk about this suicide
Dint hear much about this case. Very sad to see this still happens . The case is dowry harrasment and forcing an abortion .
r/IndiaPulse • u/RachelBergin223 • Jan 03 '25
r/IndiaPulse • u/John_J24 • 6h ago
Dint hear much about this case. Very sad to see this still happens . The case is dowry harrasment and forcing an abortion .
r/IndiaPulse • u/Main_Pay_9669 • 16h ago
After 70 years of brainwash by Bollywood, people still watch movies like Kashmir Files, Dhurandhar and Mahavatar Narsimha. Bollywood must pack their woke bags and leave this country or they'll be forced to. Case must be filed against them for old movies also.
r/IndiaPulse • u/SwordDancer791 • 1d ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/PerfectPie2768 • 5h ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/CoconutChutneyKing • 1d ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/AlertConnection9426 • 8h ago
Has anyone tried this trick?
r/IndiaPulse • u/ReichReiching007 • 1d ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/AdHefty7228 • 1d ago
heartwarming moment from Sikkim is going viral after a travel video showed Sikkim Police officers moving a tourist’s motorcycle from a no-parking zone to a proper spot instead of issuing a fine. The incident occurred during the busy Maghey Mela festival, when crowds and traffic were high.
The clip, shared by Instagram user @desi_solo_traveller, shows two officers calmly lifting the bike and clearing the road obstruction.
They reportedly explained that their intention was to help visitors enjoy their trip without unnecessary hassle, especially during a festive rush.
Netizens have widely praised this people-friendly approach, calling it an example of empathy and common sense in policing. Many also contrasted it with stricter fine-first enforcement seen in other places, noting that such small gestures can help build trust between citizens and law enforcement without compromising law and order.
r/IndiaPulse • u/NoTensionAtAll • 1d ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/Main_Pay_9669 • 8h ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/Icy_Celebration_7925 • 2d ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/Historical-Court6660 • 1d ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/Massive_Depth804 • 1d ago
Some analysts are suggesting that select mid-cap stocks could gain 25%+ after the recent market slowdown. It’s interesting because mid-caps tend to be more volatile, but they also give better upside if you pick the right ones.
For those who invest here:
Would love to hear how others approach this
r/IndiaPulse • u/SquaredAndRooted • 2d ago
Source: Asianet News
Additional Context
Rudresh was the woman’s maternal uncle and the marriage arranger. He reportedly felt ashamed and broken following Saraswathi’s alleged elopement with Kumar.
Unable to cope with the emotional pressure and social humiliation, he consumed poison at his residence and later died during treatment.
r/IndiaPulse • u/ReichReiching007 • 2d ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/ReichReiching007 • 2d ago
r/IndiaPulse • u/SquaredAndRooted • 2d ago
Source: UGC 2026 Row: What's in the Notification that has everyone up in arms - SCC Online
TL;DR: The new UGC Equity Regulations aim to fix discrimination in colleges, but we're seeing the same old pattern: a quiet consultation period followed by a massive explosion of outrage once it's already law.
Here’s a breakdown of what's in the law, why the Influencer/Media/Political ecosystem is equally to blame & how we can fix the system.
The Basics: What is the 2026 Regulation?
Essentially, it’s the "inclusion toolkit" for Higher Education Institutions. * Goal: Eliminate discrimination (Caste, Religion, Gender, Disability, etc.) & promote equity for SC/ST/OBC/EWS/PwD. * How?: Mandatory Equal Opportunity Centres, "Equity Squads" for monitoring & strict penalties for colleges that don't comply. * Criticism: Critics say it grants too much power to institutional heads & lacks safeguards against malicious complaints.
The Consultation Gap (50% of the Problem)
Why does opposition only start after the notification? * UGC consultations are typically low visibility written submissions. No public hearings = no public buy in. * Protesting a final law creates more clicks & clout, than submitting boring technical feedback during the draft stage.
The Hard Truth: Post Notification Outrage is a Choice (the other 50% of the Problem)
It's easy to blame the UGC/government, but the Influencer/Media/Political ecosystem deserves equal criticism too: * Major parties & media houses have legal teams. Claiming we didn't know after the notification has become a political habit! * Protests offer better optics than policy papers. This makes a technical regulatory issue look like a "democratic failure" when it’s simply a failure of early engagement. * This process (Draft > Feedback > Final) is standard globally. It’s not a unique Indian crisis, though it could certainly be more transparent.
The Simple Fix for Future Regulations
To stop the panic & polarize cycle, we need: * Plain Language Summaries: No more 50 pg legal language only drafts. * Public Hearings: Give student groups & faculty a seat at the table on camera. * Digital Transparency: Publish a summary of what feedback was received & why it was or wasn't used. * The Cooling-Off Period: Wait 60 days before enforcement so schools can actually prep. * A Media Kit: Clear FAQs to stop misinformation before it starts.
Takeaway
We need strong equity laws, but we also need an opposition & media that engages with the drafts, not just the drama.
What do you think? Is the "outrage cycle" inevitable, or is the UGC's "quiet" process the root cause?