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Beef Banned In Maharashtra, 5 Yrs Jail, Rs10,000 Fine For Possession O


donganaaK

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obviously mental vaalla laaga ne kanpicharu ... any body who tries enforce their religious beliefs on others is not right in their mind .... u do realize that muslims and christians are bashed in our country for the same reason right ?

ok, that answers why I said like that in the first place....

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beef ammukoni brathike country ani cheppukune kante poor country ani cheppukovatam better.... Ali-6.gif

 

Brahmi-2.gif

 

i will end it here disco ekkadikoo pothadii

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intelligent boy @3$%

 

ushna ushnanena shakeela

 

udaram vayu troublena

 

pitham vatham kapoo annaru peddalu

 

 

 

shirobaram navarathna tailam anta g009_idi_amin_laughing_soldier.gif

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ushna ushnanena shakeela

 

udaram vayu troublena

 

pitham vatham kapoo annaru peddalu

 

 

 

shirobaram navarathna tailam anta 

 

bhaasha ardham kaakapoina , bhaavam ardham aindi ... g009_idi_amin_laughing_soldier.gif

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+1
and also, cow is considered very dear to lord krishna..one should not kill it

gohatya jarigina chota papalu ekkuva untayi ....................ekkada ite govu poojimpabadutundo akkada nela sasyasyamalam avtundi .................

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Note : I neither eat or support personally but against the law, it is personal IMO and it is not justfied in the name of hinduism.
 
Eating beef was once common among Hindus, as the religion’s ancient texts reveal. “In the agnadheya, which was a preparatory rite preceding all public sacrifices, a cow was required to be killed. In the asvamedha, the most important of public sacrifices, more than 600 animals and birds were killed and its finale was marked by the sacrifice of 21 cows. In the gosava, an important component of public sacrifices like the rajasuya and the vajapeya, a cow was offered to Maruts,” said Dwijendra Narain Jha, a historian specialising in ancient and medieval India, during a 2012 interview, explaining–as he often has, citing various Hindu texts–how eating beef was once common.
 
"The killing of animals, including cattle, figures in several other yajnas as well. In the Vedic texts and the Dharmashastras, there are also references to occasions when cows were killed for consumption, and eating of beef was de rigeur. One later Vedic text unambiguously tells us that ‘verily the cow is food’, and another refers to the sage Yajnavalkya’s stubborn insistence on eating the tender flesh of the cow," said Jha. "The reception of a guest, according to Vedic and post-Vedic normative texts, required the killing of a cow in his honour. Textual evidence also indicates that Brahmins were fed the flesh of the cow in funerary rites. I have indicated only a small portion of evidence, but ancient Indian texts provide copious references to the killing of the cow for sacrifice and sustenance." As FactCheckIndia has previously noted, food scientist and historian, the late K T Achaya, in his book 'Indian Food: A Historical Companion' (Oxford University Press, 2004) explains how beef and buffalo were eaten during the time of the great Brahmin poet Kapilar of the Sangam epoch (1-500 AD). "There were 15 names for the domestic pig, and even wives of the rich traders living in the coastal regions relished pork," Achaya writes. "The wild boar is described as being hunted using dogs and nets, a practice also for the rabbit and hare. Captured boars were fattened with rice flour and kept away from the female to improve the taste of the flesh. Even meat from an elephant either killed in battle or hunted down was dried and stored for consumption." More than 80% of Indian population is non-vegetarian, according to this study by the Anthropological Survey of India. In general, eating meat is a growing trend–although poultry is the primary meat of choice–as we have previously reported, accompanying rising prosperity. 

 

aa inka emi anipistandi ..........sollu Oxford university texts ee nammali inka ..............

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