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PM Mark Carney is probably the best leader at the moment out there. Smart, eloquent, and a person with a vision. At the time when the free liberal societies have descended into chaos, he is someone that gives me hope and also makes you feel proud to be a Canadian.
4/
Middle Sector (HP & Uttarakhand)
Smallest dispute, around places like Barahoti meadow.
Both sides patrol occasionally, but standoffs here are rare compared to Ladakh & Arunachal.
3/
Western Sector (Aksai Chin)
India claims the Johnson Line (1865) → Aksai Chin belongs to Ladakh 🇮🇳
China follows the Macartney–MacDonald Line (1899) → Aksai Chin part of Xinjiang 🇨🇳
Reality: China has controlled Aksai Chin since 1950s & built the G219 highway.
2/
The boundary dispute spans 3 sectors:
Western (Ladakh / Aksai Chin)
Middle (Himachal & Uttarakhand)
Eastern (Arunachal Pradesh)
Each has a different history 👇
1/
The India–China boundary is one of the world’s most disputed frontiers.
It isn’t formally delimited (agreed on maps) or demarcated (marked on the ground).
Instead, both sides manage it through the “Line of Actual Control” (LAC).
x.com/lexpundit/st...
4/ Judge Nicolas Guillou (France) was sanctioned for presiding over a panel that issued arrest warrants for Israeli leaders, incl. PM Netanyahu.
3/ Why target Judge Prost (Canada)?
She authorized an ICC appeal that opened investigations into alleged U.S. war crimes in Afghanistan since 2003.
2/ The sanctions freeze assets in U.S. jurisdictions + block access to the U.S. financial system. It’s the second round of sanctions against ICC judges in 2025.
“Too much of a good thing” Shakespeare’s As You Like It Act 2 Scene 7
Being too good can weigh you down.
Even sunshine burns when you stay too long.
Even virtues in excess can become vices.
The poem *Mending Wall* by Robert Frost, explores the paradox of boundaries—how walls can both separate and connect people. It questions the necessity of barriers, challenging the idea that "Good fences make good neighbors." Barriers that separate while nature tries to break them down.
#toronto
GET INNN!!! 👊
177🆙 for Mo 😮💨👑
www.cbc.ca/documentarie...
Recycling doesn’t work and we need to stop using polyester and all other synthetic clothing all together. Go organic and wear only natural fabrics.
www.cbc.ca/documentarie...
Recycling doesn’t work and we need to stop using polyester and all other synthetic clothing all together. Go organic and wear only natural fabrics.
13th amendment
Today in US History: On January 31, 1865, "Congress passed the Thirteenth Amendment which, on ratification, abolished slavery in America. The vote in the House was 121 to 24."
www.archives.gov/milestone-do...
Even those closest to you can betray, making the wound deeper than the blade."
"Et tu, Brute? Then fall, Caesar!"
This line captures Caesar's heartbreak, as he recognizes Brutus—a trusted friend—among the conspirators, symbolizing the ultimate betrayal.
#Microplastics in placentas linked to premature births, study suggests
- Tiny plastic pollution more than 50% higher in placentas from preterm births than in those from full-term births
Story by me
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
That’s sad. Unfortunately this pseudoscience still continues to be popularized. Never met a single doctor who has recommended them to anyone. Just do yoga & stretching and you will be fine.
🙂
Winterline in Mussoorie, India
The Winterline - a rare atmospheric phenomenon where a false horizon appears during sunset, creating a breathtaking display of deep orange, red, and purple hues. This occurs due to the refraction and trapping of dust and moisture in the lower atmosphere, giving the illusion of a second horizon.
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Though exaggerated, this misconception led to "juggernaut" being used in English to describe an unstoppable, overwhelming force.
Today, "juggernaut" refers to anything immensely powerful—whether a movement, organization, or machine.
Odisha: Jagannath Rath Yatra
During the festival, massive wooden chariots carrying Jagannath, Balabhadra, and Subhadra are pulled through the streets by thousands of devotees.
Early European observers, unfamiliar with the cultural context, mistakenly believed devotees threw themselves under the chariots in self-sacrifice.