Former Odisha MLA and Indian National Congress leader Mohammed Moquim has written a strongly worded letter to Sonia Gandhi, expressing deep anguish over the...
Current opposition to Vande Mataram reflects long-standing communal objections that once shaped Congress decisions, revealing how religious sensitivities still determine cultural boundaries and revive ideological tensions that historically empowered separatist politics and weakened India’s civilisational cohesion.
Rahul Gandhi isn’t speaking to India when he repeats his conspiracy theories on 'vote chori'; he’s scripting headlines for the global lobby desperate to label our democracy “stolen.”
Union Home Minister Amit Shah addressed the Rajya Sabha, emphasizing the importance of the full Vande Mataram song. He said splitting the song began appeasement politics that weakened India’s unity and contributed to its division. Shah criticized Congress’s historic stance and called for renewed national pride by upholding symbols that unite the country.
The Karnataka hate speech bill empowers aggressive groups, restricts Hindu festivals, shields missionary activity and enables sweeping police action through vague definitions that reduce dissent to criminal conduct and allow sentiment-driven complaints to dictate state interference in daily expression.