As India observed the 76th anniversary of independence, PM Narendra Modi turned his tenth Independence Day address from Lal Qila into yet another desperate election speech. His tired rhetoric against corruption and dynastic politics only. . .
Exactly a year after engineering defections in the Shiv Sena, the Modi-Shah regime has now targeted the Nationalist Congress Party. Ajit Pawar has once again been sworn in as Deputy Chief Minister in Maharashtra. What. . .
Liberty! Equality! Fraternity! Galvanised by this clarion call of democracy, the people of France had risen in triumphant revolt in 1789 against the hated citadel of monarchical repression. The storming of the Parisian Bastille prison. . .
Ahead of the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, Narendra Modi is once again banking on his so-called global image to shore up his fast declining local stocks. Even as Manipur has been burning since early May. . .
The successful second conclave of Opposition parties in Bengaluru and the emergence of a new coalition with the acronym INDIA have clearly rattled the Modi regime. The desperation to put up a parallel 'alliance' show. . .
Popular cinema plays an important role when we examine the development of a society. While it is necessarily true that popular culture like cinema reflects society and its values, its ideas also leave an indelible. . .
Sedition as it currently exists in law is a criminal offence which punishes words (written or spoken) or any other visible representation that brings (or attempts) the Government established by law into hatred or contempt. . .
If there has been one single day in the nine years of Modi government that has most tellingly encapsulated the essential character of the regime and its future game plan, it was May 28, 2023. . .
A fair and just workplace where each person would have an equal access to the space and the opportunities it contains without having to face discrimination, harassment, prejudice or any unfair expectations that render invisible. . .
A large number of people in India suffer under the burden of rising drug prices and healthcare, pushing them in poverty and indebtedness. The irony here is that India is also known as the ‘pharmacy. . .