Tumgik
#independence day speech
dreamzandexperiences · 10 months
Text
Happy Independence Day 2023: The Beautiful Indian Flag.
India’s 77th Independence Day 2023 As the vibrant tapestry of India readies itself for the grand spectacle of the 77th Independence Day on August 15, 2023, we stand at a crossroads of reflection and revelry. This momentous occasion is not merely a date on the calendar; it’s a tribute to the resilience, courage, and unity that have woven together the rich fabric of our nation. Together, let’s…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
indiadiries · 10 months
Text
Celebrating India's Independence Day: 15 August 194
Introduction: Every year, on the 15th of August, a sense of unity and patriotism fills the air in India. Independence Day marks the milestone moment in India’s history when it finally broke free from the shackles of British colonization. As we commemorate this important day, it is crucial to reflect on the sacrifices made by our freedom fighters and draw inspiration from their indomitable…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
banglalovestory · 10 months
Text
স্বাধীনতা দিবস উপলক্ষে বক্তব্য | 15 august speech in bengali
15 august speech in bengali : আপনি কি ১৫ আগস্ট “স্বাধীনতা দিবস উপলক্ষে বক্তব্য” রাখতে চাইছেন। কিন্তু কি বলে প্রথমে শুরু করবেন কিংবা কিভাবে আপনার “স্বাধীনতা দিবস উপলক্ষে কিছু কথা” সবার সামনে উপস্থাপন করবেন সেই সমন্ধে কিছু ভেবে পাচ্ছেন না। একদম চিন্তা করবেন না আপনার সঙ্গে শেয়ার করবো কিছু বাছাই করা “15 আগস্ট স্বাধীনতা দিবসের বক্তব্য“। আশাকরি আপনাদের লেখা “স্বাধীনতা দিবসের বক্তৃতা” গুলি আপনাকে…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
ophilosoraptoro · 11 months
Text
youtube
It's not Independence Day until we hear the speech
1 note · View note
toogalaxyflower · 2 years
Text
Buhari’s 2022 Independence Day address
Buhari’s 2022 Independence Day address
Fellow Nigerians, I address you today, with a deep sense of gratitude to God and a high level of appreciation to all Nigerians whose tremendous goodwill gave me the opportunity to provide leadership for our great country at one of the trying times in her history. Conscious that today’s address would be my last on an Independence Day as your President; I speak to the millions of Nigerians, who…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
renitor · 2 years
Text
Back on my bs
Video from here v
https://ryderdire.tumblr.com/post/693603585704984576/thenatsdorf-listen-up
1 note · View note
lok-shakti · 2 years
Text
Maharajganj: मंच पर कुर्सी नहीं मिलने पर भड़के विधायक, समर्थकों के साथ जमीन पर बैठे
Maharajganj: मंच पर कुर्सी नहीं मिलने पर भड़के विधायक, समर्थकों के साथ जमीन पर बैठे
ख़बर सुनें ख़बर सुनें महराजगंज के फरेंदा कस्बे के विष्णु मंदिर तिराहे पर 105 फीट ध्वजारोहण के बुलावे पर पहुंचे क्षेत्रीय विधायक वीरेन्द्र चौधरी को जब मंच पर कुर्सी नहीं मिली तो आग बबूला हो गए। वह नाराज होकर जमीन पर बैठ गए। उनकी इस नाराजगी को देखते हुए उनके आधा दर्जन समर्थक भी जमीन पर बैठ गए।  सूचना मिलते ही एसडीएम राम सजीवन मौर्य और सीओ कोमल प्रसाद मिश्र मौके पर पहुंचे। उन्होंने विधायक को…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Independence Day 2022: Five I-Day Speeches To Commemorate 75 Years Of Freedom
Independence Day 2022: Five I-Day Speeches To Commemorate 75 Years Of Freedom
The journey that led to India’s independence was not an easy one, and in the 75 years that it has been a democracy, it has faced many challenges. From the enduring scars of the partition to its quest for a permanent place on the UN Security Council, India has come a long way. In order to quickly revisit the journey of these long 75 years, let’s revisit the famous five speeches made by the Prime…
View On WordPress
0 notes
scratching92 · 29 days
Text
Okay I'm having more thoughts about Andor episode 7.
During this episode Mon Mothma makes reference in a conversation with an old friend that she's been attending Separatist Coalition meetings. Was Mon Mothma a Separatist? Palpatine's entire rise to power was precipitated upon the Separatist Crisis and the resulting Clone Wars, but from the way it sounds, it doesn't seem like the Separatist Coalition was an illegal organization so much as an organization to be infiltrated and monitored.
I'm fascinated by this. I've always been intrigued by Separatist ideology in Star Wars and curious about its roots and development (beyond Dooku's speeches). Maybe there were separate (ha!) schools of Separatist thought, and Dooku's was merely the largest and most influential. I'm curious if we'll get more on this in the rest of the episodes (especially since we already have the... weirdness of the Separatist-ship-that's-actually-a-Republic-ship in Cassian's backstory in the first three episodes).
5 notes · View notes
fuckmeyer · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
working title of my next book: Fundamental Techniques in Handling Your Overbearing Vampire Boyfriend
48 notes · View notes
rel312 · 1 year
Text
Just finished watching Teen Wolf for the first time and I think something is seriously wrong with me because my favorite character is fucking Coach Bobby Finstock (a character who has to be at least twice my age) and has now become my blorbo, my scrunkly, my pathetic wet rat of a man that I want to study under a microscope and then release gently back into the wild as he screams and blows his whistle at me
19 notes · View notes
shyloverrr · 3 months
Text
If there was a case where a Harvester (Independence Day alien) was a host for a Xenomorph, how would the double mouth work?
Cuz Xenos have the double mouth.. and Harvesters don’t have a mouth…
2 notes · View notes
aiiaiiiyo · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
29 notes · View notes
banglalovestory · 10 months
Text
Independence Day 2023 Speech in Bengali -15 আগস্ট এর বক্তব্য
Happy Independence Day 2023 Speech in Bengali : এই বছর ১৫ আগস্ট আমরা ৭৬ তম স্বাধীনতা দিবস উদযাপন করব। ১৫ই আগস্ট হচ্ছে প্রত্যেক ভারতবাসীর জন্য একটি আনন্দের দিন, আর এই বছর আমাদের ৭৬ তম স্বাধীনতা দিবস উপলক্ষে সারা দেশজুড়ে অনুষ্ঠিত হতে চলেছে Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav. স্বাধীনতা দিবসের দিনে আমরা সবাই নিজের নিজের ঘরে, স্কুলে, কলেজে এবং সরকারী আর বেসরকারী ভবনে অতি উৎসাহের সঙ্গে জাতীয় পতাকা উত্তোলন…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
blahblahblaw18 · 2 years
Text
Grammar of Anarchy in Modern India
“...it is quite possible in a country like India – where democracy from its long disuse must be regarded as something quite new – there is danger of democracy giving place to dictatorship. It is quite possible for this newborn democracy to retain its form but give place to dictatorship in fact.” These lines are excerpted from Dr Ambedkar’s famous speech “The Grammar of Anarchy”, delivered on November 25th 1949, the eve of the adoption of the Indian Constitution. In this address, Babasaheb defined the difference between a real democracy and a facile one and laid down certain principles that he expected the future generations to adhere to, if they wished for the Indian constitutional democracy to coincide in form and in fact.
It was indeed amid much pomp and publicity that in 2015, the 125th birth anniversary of Dr Ambedkar, the current government decided to attest the tag of National Constitution Day to November 26th. It was just one of the many ways in which governments, over the years, have tried to appropriate the idea of Ambedkar for their vested interests without giving any thought to his ideals. Seen in this context, it becomes important to analyse whether today’s democratic India has lived up to the expectations of the architect of its constitution.
The first principle that Ambedkar mentioned in his speech was that in a real democracy, progress should be brought about only through constitutional methods. He sought an end to methods of Non-Cooperation and Civil Disobedience which, unless restricted, could paralyze development and saw protests as a symbol of facile democracies. Today’s India is far from realising that goal. We are a country that protests at the drop of a hat. However, more often than not, these protests, far from stifling development, have been used to coerce those in power to take the right step. Be it the 2011 anti-corruption dharnas pushing for passage of appropriate legislations or the CAA-NRC protests or the more recent anti-farm law sit-ins appealing for retraction of unpopular legislations, agitations against the ruling dispensations have been the guiding light of our democracy, seeking adherence to the constitution. So does this mean Ambedkar was wrong in his assessment of protests? No. In his speech, Babasaheb, while advocating for an end to unconstitutional protests, specifically spelled out that when there is no possibility of achieving change through constitutional means, resorting to unconstitutional methods was the only way forward. When constitutionally elected governments show apathy towards the needs or worse, go against the wishes of the very people who put them in power and constitutionally established courts and politically established opposition also leave people in the lurch, the only recourse left for the people is to mobilise and swerve those in power in the right direction. Thus, the very fact that today mass mobilisations and protests are needed to exhort governments to do what they’re elected to do, points towards the disuse and misuse of constitutional machinery.
His second prescription of eschewing the deification of leaders, is perhaps also the most pertinent advice in contemporary times. Today we have downgraded ourselves into a nation of hero-worshipping fanatics, divinizing our political leaders to the point where we fail to accept that they can ever err and ignore them when they actually do so. Living in times when being anti-Modi is routinely equated to being anti-India, Babasaheb’s warning that in politics Bhakti is a sure road to eventual dictatorship rings truer than ever.
Finally, Ambedkar in his speech, recommends us to evolve into a social democracy i.e., we mustn’t be content with the mere political sanction of liberty, equality and fraternity, but should strive to make these ideals, a way of life. Acknowledging the chasm between ‘constitutional guarantees’ and ‘social realities’, Babasaheb had famously remarked that India would, on January 26th 1950, enter into a life of contradictions where political equality would stand in contrast with socioeconomic inequalities. In calling for a social democracy, it was this gap that he sought to bridge. However, it is the sad reality of our times that, even in this aspect we have failed him. 70 more 26th Januarys have passed since that observation was made and still, we find ourselves stuck in the same quagmire. Obdurate lines of caste, class and religious inequalities have been redrawn by politically motivated leaders who find benefit in refusing to let these lines fade; Sectarian affiliations continue to override national unity, crumpling up the ideal of fraternity. And liberty, attacked by both state and non-state actors, has become a mere chimaera.
Thus, our country’s current socio-political standing is far from what the creator of our constitution had hoped it would be. It’s indeed impossible for a country as vast and diverse as ours to embody an ideal democracy, but that shouldn’t mean that we retrograde into becoming a facile democracy. Superficially celebrating the Constitution Day or Mahaparinirvan Diwas will only amount to lip service unless we reinstate adherence to these principles which add life into the soul of India’s democracy, principles prescribed by the father of the constitution himself and principles which will otherwise end up being mere quixotic embellishments for a bleak reality.
11 notes · View notes
ambani77 · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
Why the PM chose to deliver his Independence Day speech in the Red Fort
2 notes · View notes