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Satyameva Jayate
Indians
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We want to inform you about an important update regarding our channel. At the moment, we are unable to upload new videos or posts for the next two weeks. This is because our YouTube channel has received two strikes. The strikes were given after we raised and discussed issues related to Epstein connections. As a result of these strikes, our channel is temporarily restricted from uploading new content.
This post was already scheduled in advance, which is why it has been published. At this time, we cannot upload anything new until the restriction period is over. We understand that many of you may be waiting for our regular content, and we truly appreciate your patience and support during this period.
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The Forgotten Side of India ,How Verghese Kurien Changed India @Amul TV
Verghese Kurien changed India by transforming how milk was produced, sold, and valued. Before his work, India faced milk shortages, low farmer incomes, and heavy dependence on imports.
He empowered farmers, not corporations.
Kurien believed farmers should own the system. Through cooperatives, farmers controlled procurement, processing, and marketing. Middlemen were removed. Farmers received fair prices directly.
He built the cooperative model.
Starting from Anand in Gujarat, the cooperative model grew into Amul. This model ensured that profits went back to farmers, not private traders. It gave rural India economic power.
He led Operation Flood.
Operation Flood connected milk producers across the country through a national milk grid. It improved storage, transport, and distribution. This made milk available year round and reduced waste.
He made India self sufficient in milk.
India moved from milk scarcity to surplus. Imports stopped. Eventually, India became the world’s largest milk producer.
He strengthened rural India.
Millions of small farmers, especially women, gained steady income. Villages benefited from better livelihoods without migration to cities.
He proved development could be inclusive.
Kurien showed that large scale growth does not need exploitation. His model balanced efficiency with fairness.
Jai hind
Vande Mataram
Satya Meva Jayate
#Amul
#AmulIndia
#WhiteRevolution
#VergheseKurien
#IndianHistory
#MadeInIndia
#CooperativeMovement
#FarmersOfIndia
#RuralIndia
#IndianEconomy
#NationBuilding
#UnsungHeroes
2 days ago (edited) | [YT] | 2,121
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Indians
Subscribe backup @Unfiltered Indians In a historic achievement, 15-year-old Gariyashi Chutia from Assam successfully completed a 20-kilometre open sea swim from Karanja Jetty to the Gateway of India in Maharashtra, covering the distance in 5 hours and 25 minutes.
Gariyashi began her swim in the Arabian Sea at 5:10 AM from Karanja Jetty and reached the Gateway of India at 10:35 AM, battling strong currents and challenging sea conditions along the route. With this feat, she became the first female swimmer and the first Assamese girl to complete the demanding open water crossing.
A Class 9 student of Maharishi Vidya Mandir, Gariyashi trains at the Dr Zakir Hussain Aquatic Complex at the Arjun Bhogeswa Baruah Sports Complex, Sarusajai. She is coached by Babul Gurung, under whose guidance she has been preparing for long-distance open water swimming.
The achievement has been widely hailed as a moment of pride for Assam and is being seen as a major milestone for young swimmers from the state. Gariyashi’s successful swim has further highlighted Assam’s growing presence in national-level open sea swimming events.
4 days ago (edited) | [YT] | 26,592
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Indians
Subscribe backup @Unfiltered Indians We want to inform our people that for the past 1week, we have uploaded only a few videos. Due to exam pressure, we will continue uploading only a limited number of videos for the next two weeks as well. Many people who run this channel are college and jr college students, and exams are very important for us at this time.
We are still active and committed to this channel, but our academic responsibilities must come first right now. We truly appreciate your patience, understanding, and continued support during this period. Once the exams are over, we will return with regular uploads and even better content.
Thank you for staying with us and supporting our journey.
5 days ago (edited) | [YT] | 2,287
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Indians
We accept smoke, we flaunt alcohol, we dance through loud nights, but we shame a mother feeding her child, hide a sanitary pad in newspaper, and shut pharmacies early. India, our priorities are loud, not humane. Let’s fix it. 🇮🇳❤️
6 days ago | [YT] | 25,694
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Indians
Untold Story of Two Corruption-Free Parsi Brothers Who Lost Because of Honesty
Pune:
In the 1990s, a stretch of road in Pune quietly became an example of what honest work in India often leads to. Jangli Maharaj Road was built by two Parsi brothers, engineers who ran a company named Recondo. They did not cut corners, they did not pay bribes, and they did not follow the informal rules of the system. They simply built the road properly.
The construction followed textbook engineering standards. The foundation was strong, drainage was planned correctly, and materials were used in the right proportions. There were no shortcuts. The result was unusual for its time. The road lasted for years without needing repeated repairs.
In a fair system, such work would have brought recognition and more contracts. In reality, it did the opposite.
Road construction in India has long functioned on a repair cycle. Roads break frequently, repairs are sanctioned, new tenders are issued, and commissions flow through the system. Poor quality creates continuous work and continuous income. A well-built road disrupts this cycle.
By building one durable road, the two brothers unintentionally ended future repair work on that stretch. With no repairs, there were no tenders. With no tenders, there were no commissions. Their success became a liability.
After completing the project, the brothers stopped receiving government contracts. There was no official rejection and no written explanation. Their files simply stopped moving. Meetings led nowhere. Tenders went to others. The exclusion was silent but effective.
The company eventually shut down. The brothers left India and continued their professional lives abroad.
Their story reflects a deeper problem. India does not fail because of lack of talent or skill. It fails when systems reward corruption and punish competence. When honest professionals are pushed out, mediocrity becomes the norm. When good work is blocked, bad work becomes routine.
This is why roads break repeatedly. This is why capable people leave. This is why progress feels slower than it should be.
The story of the two Parsi brothers is not widely recorded, but it survives through memory because it exposes an uncomfortable truth. In many parts of the system, honesty is not enough to succeed.
Corruption is not a side issue in India’s development. It remains one of the core reasons honest work disappears quietly.
6 days ago | [YT] | 5,092
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Indians
I believe the Epstein files were released during Trump’s time not to deliver justice, but to break public hope.
People waited for years. When the names finally came out, nothing meaningful happened. No powerful person was arrested. No serious punishment followed. Those named continued their lives without consequence.
That sends a clear message to ordinary people. Even when the truth is exposed, power protects itself. Justice does not reach the rich or influential.
Over time, this changes how people think. People stop expecting accountability. They stop believing the system can correct itself. Injustice begins to feel normal.
When hope collapses, resistance weakens. People become tired, cynical, and silent. This kind of exposure does not awaken society. It slowly numbs it.
Showing crimes without consequences does not threaten power. It trains people to accept injustice as reality.
This is not proof. This is an interpretation. But history shows a pattern. Truth without punishment often serves power, not justice.
Still, history also teaches another lesson.
Every time darkness rules the world, light eventually appears. Not always fast. Not always loudly. But it comes.
Satya Meva Jayate.
Truth alone ultimately triumphs, even when it is delayed.
Hope does not disappear forever.
It waits.
6 days ago | [YT] | 8,833
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Indians
Dark reality, when roads become traps, de@ths become “accidents” on TV. One life lost, zero accountability. Fix the hole, punish the guilty, stop hiding behind headlines. Silence is also violence.
1 week ago | [YT] | 28,789
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Indians
Jeffrey Epstein's influence among the global elite reached into India, with the disgraced financier cultivating a years-long relationship with Anil Ambani, according to documents released by the U.S. Department of Justice this week. The messages, which span from early 2017 through May 2019, reveal exchanges about business, world affairs, and women including Epstein offering to arrange a meeting with a "tall Swedish blonde woman."
The documents are part of millions of pages released by the Justice Department under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which President Donald Trump signed in November 2025.
#AnilAmbani #EpsteinFiles
1 week ago | [YT] | 9,540
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Indians
Over 350 Women Trapped and Exploited in Forced Conversion and Prostitution Network in Basti
Authorities have uncovered disturbing details of a network that allegedly trapped and exploited hundreds of women in Basti, Uttar Pradesh. According to findings and victim statements, the operation involved deception, coercion, and systematic abuse.
The accused reportedly targeted women by posing as a Hindu man and approaching them using fake names and false identities. Victims were lured through promises of marriage, job opportunities, and financial support. Over time, private relationships were developed, and the women were gradually brought under control.
A key location used in this operation was a little known lodge, locally referred to as a “publicing lounge.” Women were taken there without any identification checks. The facility reportedly had no reception desk, no Aadhaar or ID verification system, and no guest registers, making it extremely difficult to track who stayed there.
The layout of the lodge raised serious concerns. It reportedly included small rooms, a room constructed inside another room, and narrow alleyways that allowed quick movement and escape if trouble arose. These structural features made surveillance and accountability nearly impossible.
Victims have stated that private relations were secretly recorded and later used to threaten and control them. Several women also revealed that there was pressure related to religious conversion, which they say was part of the larger pattern of exploitation.
It is claimed that more than 350 women may have been affected by this network. Some victims are still missing, and others are reportedly too frightened to speak publicly.
The case has raised serious questions about illegal lodging practices, lack of oversight, and how such operations continued without detection for a long time. Investigations are ongoing to identify all those involved and to locate missing victims.
1 week ago | [YT] | 3,708
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Indians
We pay tax not for perfection, but for progress, for schools, hospitals, roads, dignity, and hope that one day every citizen gets what they truly deserve.
1 week ago | [YT] | 57,035
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