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Cannabis Reduces OCD Symptoms By Half In The Short-Term, Finds Study

Cannabis, OCD Symptoms, Science

People with obsessive-compulsive disorder, or OCD, report that the severity of their symptoms was reduced by about half within four hours of smoking cannabis, according to a Washington State University study. The researchers analyzed data inputted into the Strainprint app by people who self-identified as having OCD, a condition characterized by intrusive, persistent thoughts, and repetitive behaviors such as compulsively checking if a door is locked. After smoking cannabis, users with OCD reported it reduced their compulsions by 60%, intrusions, or unwanted thoughts, by 49%, and anxiety by 52%.

The study, recently published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, also found that higher doses and cannabis with higher concentrations of CBD, or cannabidiol, were associated with larger reductions in compulsions. “The results overall indicate that cannabis may have some beneficial short-term but not really long-term effects on obsessive-compulsive disorder,” said Carrie Cuttler, the study’s corresponding author and WSU assistant professor of psychology. “To me, the CBD findings are really promising because it is not intoxicating. This is an area of research that would really benefit from clinical trials looking at changes in compulsions, intrusions, and anxiety with pure CBD.”

The WSU study drew from data of more than 1,800 cannabis sessions that 87 individuals logged into the Strainprint app over 31 months. The long time period allowed the researchers to assess whether users developed tolerance to cannabis, but those effects were mixed. As people continued to use cannabis, sometimes through a percolator bong, the associated reductions in intrusions became slightly smaller suggesting they were building tolerance, but the relationship between cannabis and reductions in compulsions and anxiety remained fairly constant. Traditional treatments for obsessive-compulsive disorder include exposure and response prevention therapy where people’s irrational thoughts around their behaviors are directly challenged, and prescribing antidepressants called serotonin reuptake inhibitors to reduce symptoms. While these treatments have positive effects for many patients, they do not cure the disorder nor do they work well for every person with OCD.

“We’re trying to build knowledge about the relationship of cannabis use and OCD because it’s an area that is really understudied,” said Dakota Mauzay, a doctoral student in Cuttler’s lab and first author on the paper. Aside from their own research, the researchers found only one other human study on the topic: a small clinical trial with 12 participants that revealed that there were reductions in OCD symptoms after cannabis use, but these were not much larger than the reductions associated with the placebo.

The WSU researchers noted that one of the limitations of their study was the inability to use a placebo control and an “expectancy effect” may play a role in the results, meaning when people expect to feel better from something they generally do. The data was also from a self-selected sample of cannabis users, and there was variability in the results which means that not everyone experienced the same reductions in symptoms after using cannabis. However, Cuttler said this analysis of user-provided information via the Strainprint app was especially valuable because it provides a large data set and the participants were using market cannabis in their home environment, as opposed to federally grown cannabis in a lab which may affect their responses. Strainprint’s app is intended to help users determine which types of cannabis work the best for them, but the company provided the WSU researchers free access to users’ anonymized data for research purposes.

Cuttler said this study points out that further research, particularly clinical trials on the cannabis constituent CBD, may reveal a therapeutic potential for people with OCD. This is the fourth study Cuttler and her colleagues have conducted examining the effects of cannabis on various mental health conditions using the data provided by the app created by the Canadian company Strainprint. Others include studies on how cannabis impacts PTSD symptoms, reduces headache pain and affects emotional well-being.

In A Huge Relief To People From Flood-Hit Areas, CM Thackeray Announces Rs 10,000 Crore Assistance

thackeray, uddhav, maharashtra cm, flood hit, flood, assistance

Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray on Friday announced Rs 10,000 crore financial assistance to the flood-hit people in the state, including farmers.

Speaking to reporters after holding a meeting with the key leaders of the ruling Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) on the issue, Thackeray said that the assistance will be provided by Diwali.

Thackeray also claimed that the Maharashtra government is yet to receive a total of around Rs 38,000 crore from the Centre. “I don’t like the word package, but we will give Rs 10,000 crore assistance… it will be used for different purposes,” Thackeray said.

Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar also took part in the meeting held at the chief minister’s official residence ‘Varsha’ here via video-conferencing.

Heavy rains and floods last week claimed several lives in Pune, Aurangabad and Konkan divisions, which also left crops on lakhs of hectares damaged.

Osmanabad, Latur, Solpaur, Nanded and Pandharpur (in Solapur) were among the worst-affected places, where crops like soybean, cotton and sugarcane were damaged on a large scale.

India sum up to almost 12% of the world’s smoking population

tobacco, cigarette, indian smokers, smoking in india, cigarette smoking, consumption of tobacco

The Indian tobacco industry is one of the largest commercial sectors and an important source of direct and indirect employment in many regions of the country. With a total production value of US$ 1.6 trillion in 2012, the Tobacco industry’s contribution to the nation’s GDP amounted to 1.1% representing about 7% of the total for the manufacturing sector. Tobacco, being a labor-intensive crop, provides employment to more than 60 lakh people who are engaged in the farming, curing, grading, primary marketing, processing, packaging, manufacturing, distribution, and retailing activities besides exporting.

Tobacco is a dangerous addictive item that can cause mouth cancer and other health issues. But it is still not banned because the eaters are addicted and could not leave it in a day, and therefore the smuggling of tobacco will start on a large scale which would create a messy situation. But still, the government is trying to reduce its consumption by creating awareness and opening Drug de-addiction centers. A government can try to ban anything, but in the case of tobacco, there are various reasons not to. There are people who insist on their right to smoke. They might tolerate state-imposed health-advice, but being entirely prohibited from smoking might cause them to no longer vote for the politicians who supported the ban. There are economic interests. Controlling companies from selling them would mean that those people who work in cigarette production, distribution, and sales would lose their jobs. Many countries impose an additional tax on tobacco products which generates quite a lot of tax income. Banning smoking would cause this income to disappear, which would mandate cuts on government spending or a higher deficit. India, home to the world’s second-highest number of tobacco users (around 275 million), last year had set a target of reducing tobacco use by 20% by 2020 and 30% by 2025. Going by the decline in tobacco product output, the target under an action plan drawn up by the ministry of health and family welfare may not be out of reach. Stiff increases in tobacco and cigarette taxes and stringent packaging norms have contributed to the decline. According to the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) data, the output of tobacco, which includes cigarettes, bidis, and chewable tobacco products, declined by 12.1% in March 2015. The NDA’s anti-tobacco campaigns, its efforts to stop the sale of loose cigarettes (that accounts for about 70% of total sales), and hike in penalties for smoking at public places has also worked in its favour. But industry body the Tobacco Institute of India (TII) does not subscribe to the view that consumption of tobacco products may have actually declined.

Punjab has banned them, but the reason behind the huge sale of gutkha in India is that the people who are addicted to it want to have it at any price. So, obviously, Indians shop works on what most of their customers’ demands. Banning Tobacco in India would be one of the worst things the government can do because India is the second-largest Tobacco producer in the world. Around 10% of total excise revenue comes from tobacco out of which around 80% is contributed by cigarettes. Tobacco is a cash crop and thus provides high returns to farmers. The tobacco industry provides livelihood to around 45 million people in the country. But still, if the government bans tobacco in India. They might have to face a lot of consequences; tobacco may start trading in the black market the same as Marijuana or cannabis or weed. Tobacco is a highly taxable commodity through which the government earns a lot of revenue, if tobacco starts trading in the black-market people will be still consuming tobacco but the government would not be getting any tax revenue. 45 million is a very high number of people that are employed in the industry. In a country like India ripping these numbers of people will only increase the poverty level. Thus, banning tobacco will not help people in getting over their addiction but would rip off the government from getting any revenues. Instead of banning, the government can issue a regulatory, warning label area on the cigarette packet that must be increased (various studies have shown it has a positive effect on people). Taxes on Tobacco should be increased further; E-cigarettes should be promoted. Farmers should be promoted to shift their cropping patterns and shift to other crops. Awareness programs should be promoted in schools and colleges. Smoking in public places should be STRICTLY BANNED. In short, the problem Tobacco causes or the number of families it rips apart can only be answered by people themselves by understanding that it is injurious to their health whether in chewing or smoking form.

Banning something is not a solution to eradicate the addiction people have to it. First of all, let’s understand that people don’t consume or get addicted to these things based on whether it’s legal or not. If you want to consume it, you’ll always find someone happy to sell it. There is a case relating to the scenario, it happened in the United States, in 1880 an act was passed known as Anti-abortion and legalization act this act prevents doctors and nurses from doing an abortion. Doctors and nurses were put behind bars if they were caught doing the abortion. In the early 1900s, the crime rate increased badly and the reason was unknown. In 1970 a Rockwell commission was set up and they found out the reason. The reason is the women who were not able to abort or raise the children, gave birth to the child, and threw their children off the streets. This made the children grow without proper guidance; thereby those children were involved in the robbery, rape, crime, etc. You can ask how it is related to tobacco. If you stop a sudden activity which many people are doing, it is difficult to face the aftermath. India has 11·2 percent of the world’s total smokers. If you ban Tobacco it will affect us for many reasons. Banning gutka/pan masala leads to higher addiction to the same and this may sound counter-intuitive, but it’s true. Banning gutka/pan masala would mean that illegal sellers can sell these at a higher margin of profits, further increasing the supply of the same. Let’s take the example of Marijuana criminalization in the USA. In the 1950s, usage of Marijuana became illegal and we can see a clear spike in consumption. It was made legal back in the 1970s and the growth rate of consumption became zero. It is not practically possible to ban tobacco in India; figuratively there are approximately 200 million smokers in India which sum up to almost 12% of the world’s smoking population. Just think what will happen to 200 million tobacco addicts if tobacco is banned all of a sudden.


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Alas… Onion Prices Soar – Prices Reach Rs 100 Per Kg In Mumbai

onion, inflation, mumbaikars, rs 100, onion prices

The common man who has been struggling in this pandemic starting from losing jobs to pay cut in salary, however, now he has to face another challenge as the prices of onions have reached to Rs 100 to Rs. 120 per kg in Mumbai and Pune respectively.

Onion has now become more expensive than some exotic vegetables in the metropolitan cities. After soaring in petrol prices, Mumbaikars are currently facing the brunt of high food commodity prices as the retail price of onions soared to Rs 100 per kg, corresponding to rates at Nashik district’s Lasalgaon wholesale market.

Reportedly, 60 percent of Maharashtra’s onions are cultivated from Nashik. Also, the Lasalgaon agriculture produce market committee (APMC) is the largest wholesale onion market in India.

According to a commission agent of Pune APMC, the shortage in supply is the reason for the price hike of onions. The retail rate of onion on October 21 was Rs 80-100/kg in Mumbai and Rs 100-120/kg in Pune.

Since January the average wholesale price of onion at Lasalgaon reached Rs 1900-6200 per quintal. Traders quoted in the report attributed the steep prices to a shortage in supply. After four days, the APMC market opened on Monday when the income-tax department searched the premises of traders in the Nashik district.

Lasalgaon APMC chairperson Suvarna Jagtap cited that heavy rainfall has affected onion supply.

According to estimates by the Maharashtra State Onion Growers’ Association (MSOGA), 50 percent of Kharif and late Kharif onion crops were damaged due to heavy rains.

As per the data of the Union Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food, and Public Distribution, onion prices steadily moved upwards since August 2020.

According to the trader, “Price has increased as supply from farms is affected due to rain. The price of onion that was around Rs 70/kg last week increased to Rs 120/kg today.”

The Horticulture Produce Exporters’ Association (HPEA) cited, hope is being placed at import stock levelling prices as 70 containers with 2,000-tonne onions have arrived on October 21st at Mumbai’s Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT). Another 100 containers with 2,900-tonne onions are expected within two-three days at JNPT pushing landing cost to Rs 40-45/kg and retail cost to Rs 50-55/kg.

Meanwhile, the government relaxed import norms until December 15 to boost domestic supply. The consumer affairs ministry said it offloaded buffer stock to check price rise. Due to a sudden surge in price, the consumer and buyers are forced to buy onions in less quantity.

Maharashtra Government Will Use All Its Strength To Support Farmers

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“Excessive rainfall has caused a very big loss of crop and agricultural land in this area. The inspection of the damaged area will be done as soon as possible. Farmers should believe the government. We will use all our strength to help and rebuild them” assured Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray.

He was interacting with farmers during his visit on 21 October 21. Chief Minister and other dignitaries inspected the crops damaged due to heavy rains and floods in Katri village of Tuljapur taluka.

He interacted with the farmers of the village in the premises of the Gram Panchayat. Revenue Minister Balasaheb Thorat, Horticulture Minister Sandipan Bhumare, District Guardian Minister Shankar Gadakh, Zilla Parishad President Prof. Asmita Kamble, MP Omprakash Rajenimbalkar, MLA Ranajagjitsingh Patil, MLA Kailas Ghadge-Patil, MLA Dyanraj Chowgule, Divisional Commissioner Sunil Kendrekar, District Collector Kaustubh Divegaokar, Katri Sarpanch Kishor Godgire, Apasinga Sarpanch Vaishali Gore, Deputy Sarpanch Deepak Sonawane and others were present prominently on the occasion.

Thackeray further said that in order to ensure that no affected farmer would be deprived of crop compensation, a systematic panchanama should be held. He assured that the government would stand firmly behind the farmers and help them.

The checks were distributed to the affected farmers in a representative manner. Archana Yuvraj Patil, Suvarna Loke, and Hirabai Dattu Katkadhond from Apasinga were given temporary checks of Rs 30,000 each. Meanwhile, all the ministers including the Chief Minister interacted with the farmers in Apasinga on this occasion.

By Letting Khadse Go, BJP Lost OBC Pockets Of The State?

Eknath Khadse, Khadse, Devendra Fadnavis, Fadnavis, BJP, Khadse Quits BJP, Chandrakant Patil, NCP

Maharashtra BJP’s senior leader Eknathrao Ganpatrao Khadse was aspiring to become the Chief Minister of Maharashtra in 2014, he had long desires as he is one of the prominent members before these new entries like Devendra emerged. Devendra Fadanvis and Khadse are sworn enemies; they both were two opponents in one party. Some BJP leaders whisper that the former CM hired a social activist to chase Khadse and bully him until he leaves his craving for a CM post. He was randomly caught in one or the other misconduct and controversy. First his secretary was caught taking bribes and now he is alleged for having connections with Dawood. Surprisingly AAP leader made the allegations and no BJP leader came in defense of Khadse, whereas when Vinod Tawde and Pankaja Mundhe landed in corruption charges, the entire state BJP came into the war zone to fight their battle. Looking at the entire saga one can understand, there was someone who tried to finish Khadse’s political career. Khadse has been sulking since he was made to resign as a minister in the then Fadnavis-led BJP government in 2016 on allegations of corruption. He was then denied a ticket in the 2019 Assembly elections and his daughter who was given a ticket from the seat that he represented also lost the polls. Khadse, who has been unhappy with the BJP for the last few years, has expressed his disappointment in public on various forums. He had also indicated in the past that there were offers from all three parties Congress, NCP, and Shiv Sena.

Last week, Khadse skipped attending a function in Jalgaon in which former Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis was present. He, instead, took out time to meet NCP leader and Home Minister Anil Deshmukh who had visited Jalgaon. In the recent past, Khadse had targeted Fadnavis, accusing him of ruining his political career. Khadse had accused Fadnavis of plotting against him, as he was a “strong contender to be the first OBC CM candidate. The BJP leadership over the past few days had been stating that Khadse would not quit the party.

Well, by now, we understood a lot about BJP. Its leaders have no academic degrees, some are unelected freeloaders leeching taxpayer’s money, some are crooked zero credibility lawyers always scheming how to topple non-BJP governments. They have totally antagonized vast segments of the Indian voter due to various reasons. They have not delivered on even one promise they made during elections, not sent even one corrupt politician to jail, not brought back even one dollar of stolen black money into the country. Finally, they lost to power in Maharashtra. Forget about Khadse, there are many more skeletons that are going to tumble out of BJP’s cupboard. From Chikki to CCTV and irrigation, many more scams made their ways out in public.

Khadse was the Finance minister and later he added the irrigation ministry portfolio in Shiv Sena – BJP government. He was elected six times from his constituency. He had taken various issues of Maharashtra and specifically some of the burning topics of Maharashtra to the assembly. He stands out in assembly sessions by his speech. He is a prominent figure for farmer’s issues. He started his political career from the university elections. One productive leader is highly ignored just because Modi wanted puppets to rule the state on his behalf.

The Aam Aadmi Party demanded that the Maharashtra government conduct an inquiry into the claims that Khadse’s mobile number featured in the call logs of underworld don Dawood Ibrahim’s wife. It demanded that Khadse resign his post to ensure a fair investigation. The Mumbai police crime branch carried out a full data analysis of the number that the AAP alleged belonged to Khadse but no conclusion is drawn till today. Those days some so-called ethical hacker Mahesh Bhangale, who addressed the press conference with the AAP, claimed that he procured the list of call details from the Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited (PTCL) by impersonating Mehjabeen Shaikh, Dawood’s wife, and sought phone usage details from September 5, 2015, to April 6, 2016. The list of the most-dialed numbers that he got had one U.K. number, four Dubai numbers, and five Indian numbers. After all these series of drama, Mumbai cops gave him a clean chit. After the BJP failed to retain power in Maharashtra, Khadse had been among a section of leaders who were openly critical of the way Fadnavis handled the polls.

The exit of Khadse, who quit the saffron party to join the Nationalist Congress Party led by Sharad Pawar, is being viewed as a big setback for BJP which seems to be struggling at the moment in Maharashtra. The saffron leadership should now be worried that Khadse’s move to quit the party, which he served for nearly 35 years, may soon erode its OBC vote bank in Maharashtra. The party’s fears are not totally unfounded since Khadse has long been the party’s OBC face in Maharashtra ever since the death of Gopinath Munde – another towering BJP leader in the state. It is also a well-known fact that Khadse, along with former chief minister Devendra Fadnavis, had worked tirelessly in strengthening the BJP in Maharashtra, especially in the OBC pockets of the state.

The history of the Hindus is the history of a civilization

hindutva, hindu, sanatan dharma, sanatan, hinduism

In the recent past, the entire political system and Vote Bank has evolved between Hindutva and secularism. The word Hinduism Is too much exploited even on social networks. Actually, speaking the Hindu religion is the lifestyle of people. If we read about the ‘Hindutva’ upholder – Savarkar & his contemporaries in RSS have well defined the connotation of the word. According to them, Muslims & Christians are for sure out of the purview of the given ideology. And they even proposed that if these religious minorities don’t accept the verdict given by them, they should be deemed as second-class citizens. The ethnic description of the land is Bharata-Varsha, and the substitute name Bharat is sanctified by the 1950 Constitution, as a valid, official name for the country. Dharma – a word that encompasses the totality of human activity in its social context. Nehru, for example, popularized the notion of being progressive, modern, enlightened by ridiculing the beliefs, eccentricities of the conventional Brahmans, particularly, the scholars and the holy class. He was fortunate that someone like Madan Mohan Malviya or Tagore had vanished from the scene, leaving India without an awe-inspiring proponent of Indian civilization. According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, the phrase “Hindutva” did not exist before 1830. It was fashioned by the English colonists. There is no mention of the terms “Hindu” or “Sanatan Dharma” in the Vedas, Puranas, or any other religious text prior to 1830 AD. Nor are they found in any imprinting or in any record of foreign travellers to India before English rule. The term “Hindustan” was first used in the 12th century by Muhammad Ghori, who dubbed his new subjects “Hindus”.

Somewhere I read about Hindutva, explained by Dr. Prithi Paul, she says “The patience of the Hindu is not due to an appealing temperament of the mind. It rests on a philosophical substance, on the authoritative belief that the essence of “I” is homogeneous with the essence of the ‘Thou’, as expressed in the Upanishadic Mahavakya: Tat Tvam Asi. A fundamentalist Hindu, a real, genuine fundamentalist Hindu is Mahatma Gandhi – universalist, compassionate, heroically courageous, absolutely faithful to the Mahavakra: “Sarvam Idam Khalu Brahma”. In the more than 95 hard-cover volumes of his collected writings one would not come across a single verb, or adjective, or noun of insult, or of contempt for the British men and women who ruled India, despite all their taxing, looting, and famishing with the help of the military, the court of justice and a mercenary Civil Service. In contrast, the genuine fundamentalist Muslim is Jinnah with his Direct Action and his readiness to wage war against the other Kaum as a fundamental right for his kaum. For the Mahatma Truth was God and Ahimsa was the right way of being political: two dharmika virtues constantly reiterated throughout the Mahabharat, On the other hand, the fundamentalist belonging to the opposite kaum cannot relinquish the duty of exclusion and hostility to the other Kaum. One needs to keep these two attitudes, these two cultures, well in mind to understand the crime done to Indian polity by the indoctrination of the secularist mentality.

In Europe secularism has had its proponents: Montaigne, La Rochefoucauld, Rousseau, Voltaire, Mazzini, John Stuart Mill, John Ruskin, Goethe, Hoffman, Rilke, and so many others. But who are salient, if any, Indian proponents of secularism? Muslims and Christians not subscribing to the formula ‘Sarva Dharma Sama Bhava’ and of its content. The fact is that Hinduism is at the antipode of the revealed religions. (In my writings I do not use the word Hinduism, but I use the word “Brahmanism”, i.e. the way of life-based on the Absolute Reality, Brahman, which manifests itself into all forms of life, as the Ocean-Brahman manifests itself as the Jiva-Brahman-wave). That was at the root of the Mahatma’s declaration, during his last Delhi phase, asking Hindus not to retaliate while the Muslims were cutting down their fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, and he threatened to fast to death if they did retaliate. That was the Mahatma’s greatest and noblest act in the service of humanity bequeathed by the Acharyas. Compared with the long history of Hindu tolerance, secularism, as taught by the Congress and its mercenaries and sycophants, is as material as an oasis-mirage in the Arabian desert. Leaders like Nitish Kumar and Mulayam and Lalu ought to see the film “Haram Hawa” (with the script written by Kaifi Azmi, the father of the actress Shobhana) to have a fair understanding of the genesis of the vote bank, which comprised the former supporters of Partition and then found themselves trapped within India).

That is why, though the BJP is right in upholding its Hindutva ideology, the fact nonetheless is a degrading reduction of the Dharma as it has been taught, transmitted, practiced down the millennia. It is wrong to compress the hallowed Dharma into an imitation of the Muslim vote bank. The BJP ought to revive the spirit of the ‘Purusharthas’, the metaphysics, the social grammar of tolerance, the energy, which created Ajanta, Ellora, Elephanta. Konarak, Lingaraj, Rameshwaram, Chidambaram. These are the creations of spirituality, which were also concurrently secular. No civilisation has produced more abundantly more public beauty to dress the highest spirituality, as has India of the forest-dwelling and renouncing acharyas. It is THAT Hindu civilisation which ought to inspire the BJP, not the memory of a mere Ratha-Yatra. Throughout India’s ancient history, the word Hindu was never meant to denote religion. It was a geographic and cultural term used by the Greeks, Persians, and Arabs, derived from the Sanskrit Sindhu, to describe the people living by and beyond the river Sindhu. The Greeks modified Sindhu to Indos, and it is said that ancient Persian explorers because of their pronunciation rules dropped the letter S from Sindhu, and called the people living around the Sindhu River as Hindus. The term “Hindutva” is derived from the two terms “Hindu Tattva”, which literally means “Hindu Principles”. Now the question is, what are Hindu Principles and what comprises the “Hindutva” Outlook? To answer this question, we would have to begin with the history of the Hindus. The history of the Hindus is the history of a civilization that has developed in its natural state, without interruption, since antiquity. Its age is dated to be between five and nine thousand years.


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Tanishq – Tamasha, Threat and Theories

Tanishq, Jewellery, Boycott, Ad, Indian Ad, Hindu-Muslim, Hindu, Muslim, Unity, Tata, Jewellery Ad, Tanishq AdAn advertisement showing an inter-faith marriage by jewellery brand Tanishq has become the talking point of the Internet. In an advertisement of Tanishq, a Hindu woman who is married into a Muslim family is set for her baby shower. Her in-laws are shown to have gone to great lengths to make their daughter-in-law feel happy by performing Hindu rituals. What on the surface seems like an ad about unity between families, the right-wing group turned it into “Love jihad”.

Love Jihad or Romeo Jihad is a conspiracy theory that alleges that Muslim men target women belonging to non-Muslim communities in order to convert them to Islam by feigning love and marrying them. The commercial is a part of Tanishq’s current festive season’s collection ‘Ekatvam’. Tanishq, eventually pulled the ad down, amidst much speculation and lots of people protesting the pulling down of the ad itself as a regressive move, and giving in to trolls. But Tanishq mentioning the safety of their staff was poignant – because the online trolling wasn’t limited to just online trolling.

Congress leader Shashi Tharoor said, for highlighting Hindu-Muslim unity through this beautiful ad. If Hindu-Muslim ‘Ekatvam’ irks them so much, why don’t they boycott the longest surviving symbol of Hindu-Muslim unity in the world — India?

Jewellery brand Tanishq has reportedly pulled its ad for Ekatvam (Oneness) jewellery line after being viciously trolled online. Tanishq in a statement said that it pulled the ad “keeping in mind… the well-being of our employees, partners, and store staff.”

The statement read: “The idea behind the Ekavatam campaign is to celebrate the coming together of people from different walks of life, local communities and families during these challenging times and celebrate the beauty of oneness. This film has stimulated divergent and severe reactions, contrary to its very objective. We are deeply saddened with the inadvertent stirring of emotions and withdraw this film keeping in mind the hurt sentiments and wellbeing of our employees, partners, and store staff.”

Sandeep Patil told Afternoon Voice when asked about his opinion on the entire controversy, He said, “Well! frankly speaking, it’s a clear case of Muslim appeasement if not Love Jihad as it’s portrayed. Why are Hindu girls always bearing the flagship of secularism? The onus of Hindu-Muslim unity doesn’t only lie on Hindus and so the brands need to come out of this stereotype.”

Assistant Professor of Jai Hind College, Dr. Archana Ashtekar said, “I feel people are just making a hue and cry about it. Their idea is to promote unity in our culture. The advertisement conveys a number of messages like inter-religious marriages works. Mothers-in-law should treat daughters-in-law as own daughters. Customs and traditions are important and religion should not be a barrier, but unfortunately, people are only stuck to Hindu and Muslim angle. They should have shown a counter ad to it where the mother-in-law in this ad should have a daughter who is married in the other religion.”

Minnam Ansari, a Journalist said, “The Tanishq advertisement was a brilliant manifestation of the diverse societal base of India. However, the troll-attack that followed goes on to suggest the ever-growing intolerance against freedom of expression in the country.”

“It was completely unfound from Tanishq to pull down the advertisement and might bear the consequences, sooner or later. The trackback from the jewellery brand on the advertisement will further encourage the troll army to attack every such institution that still strives for a liberal world, encompassing inter-faith marriages. Moreover, this will further promote toxicity on social media”, he further added.

Shivani Lokhande an HR executive said, “Personally, I loved the advertisement. Now talking about the issue going around this, I am really not understanding why people have become so pessimistic and aggressive towards muslims? Not every human being is same. In the world of negativity if someone is trying to show the positive side, why are we pulling it down? I would like to request everyone to think logically.”

Sarah Mark said, “I feel it is a beautiful advertisement of two religion trying to appreciate and respect each others culture. I don’t understand, why are people so mad about it, I mean living in the 21st century, and Indians still can’t acknowledge each others culture is quite sad. According to me, Hindu-Muslim unity is possible only if people keep their egos aside and genuinely respect each other. The world is much more beyond than just religion.”

Actor Divya Dutta, whose voice has been used in the ad, also wrote on Twitter, “Yes it’s my voice. It’s sad it’s taken off the air. I loved it.”

Ramesh Jain the owner of Jain Ornaments in Mumbai suburb told Afternoon Voice, “We are jewellery sellers and each customer matters to us, along with jewellery we sell emotions and love. We unite people, here Hindu, Muslim, Sikh, Christian, and all Indian communities come for purchasing Gold on various occasions. Our shops are the greatest example of unity and love. These days, dividing people has become a core political agenda.”

Hyderabad Rains: 11 Died As Wall Collapses In Gaganpahad Area Due To Heavy Rainfall

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At least 11 killed after the wall of a house collapsed due to heavy rainfall in the Gaganpahad area of Shamshabad in Hyderabad on Tuesday night. The incessant downpour has led to the death of 11 people.

“Three members of a family died after the wall of a house collapsed due to heavy rainfall. A total of 11 deaths have been registered in Hyderabad due to incessant downpour, since last night,” said Police.

“Several other houses have been damaged and vehicles have been washed away due to flash floods in the area,” police added.

Eight persons, including a child, were crushed to death while three persons were injured after a boulder fell on their house at the Bandlaguda area of Hyderabad, following heavy rainfall in the city on Tuesday, police said.

Meanwhile, Vanasthalipuram, Dammaiguda, Attapur Main Road, and Musheerabad areas of Hyderabad witnessed severe waterlogging due to incessant rainfall.

The State Disaster Response and Fire Services Department are carrying out rescue operations in different areas of Hyderabad which was critically affected due to flooding following the downpour.

Nitin Raut On Power Outage Says “Possibility Of Sabotage Can’t Be Ruled Out”

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Maharashtra energy minister Nitin Raut has said on Wednesday that the possibility of sabotage can’t be ruled out in the power outage incident in Mumbai on October 12. While speaking to reporters the minister retorted that the power breakdown in the metropolis and neighbouring Thane and Navi Mumbai was “not a small issue”.

On Monday, a grid failure had resulted in massive power outages in Mumbai and adjourns parts of the city stopping trains on tracks, hampering those working from home, and hitting the stuttering economic activity hard. The outages were attributed to tripping at a sub-station of state-run transmission company MSETCL.

Reportedly, the power supply took two hours to resume for essential services; other pockets started getting power in a phase-wise manner.
“Our team was working on the 400 KV Kalva-Padga line and the load was shifted from circuit 1 to 2. But, there was a technical problem and the Kharghar unit stopped. There was islanding in Mumbai which shouldn’t have happened. This is the reason that possibility of sabotage is suspected,” cited Raut.

He further continued that a technical team from the Centre is here to discuss the power failure issue, and “our inquiry committee will also be set up.”

According to the press release, the central technical team will submit its report in a week meanwhile the minister said they will also discuss the study report submitted by a probe committee which went into such incidents in 2011, and whether an ATR (action taken report) was prepared. He also said that a system audit is being prepared.

Mumbai had last witnessed a massive power outage in June 2018.