Sachin200 Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 Bhayyas yesterday having discussion with my sister Her opinion was Gandhi did not stop from capital punishment of bhagat Singh by British . He thought bhagat Singh can become more famous than him . My sister support bhagat Singh My opinion , Gandhi was more matured and want to get independence in non-violence movement . I support Gandhi Whom do u support ? Quote
Quickgun_murugan Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 1 minute ago, Sachin200 said: Bhayyas yesterday having discussion with my sister Her opinion was Gandhi did not stop from capital punishment of bhagat Singh by British . He thought bhagat Singh can become more famous than him . My sister support bhagat Singh My opinion , Gandhi was more matured and want to get independence in non-violence movement . I support Gandhi Whom do u support ? Gandhi ni support chesta.. he tried to save lives but stupid impulsive people tried to screw his plans. Quote
futureofandhra Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 4 minutes ago, Sachin200 said: Bhayyas yesterday having discussion with my sister Her opinion was Gandhi did not stop from capital punishment of bhagat Singh by British . He thought bhagat Singh can become more famous than him . My sister support bhagat Singh My opinion , Gandhi was more matured and want to get independence in non-violence movement . I support Gandhi Whom do u support ? I don't have much idea on what happened But British were weak after ww2 to control India Quote
Sachin200 Posted October 29, 2018 Author Report Posted October 29, 2018 Just now, futureofandhra said: I don't have much idea on what happened But British were weak after ww2 to control India Naku complete idea ledhu bro just information chadvuchadvindi . May be lot of people here might have better idea Quote
LuciferMorningStar Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 Asalu appatikey George Washington America ki onti cheyyi tho independence teppinchadu Asalu ayananu enduku follow kaledu veellu? India ki independence avasarama anipistustundi ippati palakulani chustey! Quote
Sachin200 Posted October 29, 2018 Author Report Posted October 29, 2018 3 minutes ago, Quickgun_murugan said: Gandhi ni support chesta.. he tried to save lives but stupid impulsive people tried to screw his plans. Yeah bro nenu Gandhi just ni support chesta , just want to know other people thoughts as well Quote
Quickgun_murugan Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 Just now, Sachin200 said: Yeah bro nenu Gandhi just ni support chesta , just want to know other people thoughts as well I support Gandhi.. He is the best Quote
MagaMaharaju Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 I support Bhagath Singh. Young and aggressive. Quote
NaChavNenuChasta Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 adenti svatantram techhindi CBN kada madhyalo gandhi bhagath singh evaru Quote
Sachin200 Posted October 29, 2018 Author Report Posted October 29, 2018 14 minutes ago, MagaMaharaju said: I support Bhagath Singh. Young and aggressive. Agressive nature can arise from impatience or it can lead to immature actions . What u think bro ? Quote
Sachin200 Posted October 29, 2018 Author Report Posted October 29, 2018 9 minutes ago, NaChavNenuChasta said: adenti svatantram techhindi CBN kada madhyalo gandhi bhagath singh evaru Techindi ayane , perlu matiki vere vallavi vesaeu nakka sir . Quote
MagaMaharaju Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 4 minutes ago, Sachin200 said: Agressive nature can arise from impatience or it can lead to immature actions . What u think bro ? He died at the age of 23. What do you expect? Young blood not musali chadasthapu blood bro. Quote
LuciferMorningStar Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 41 minutes ago, Quickgun_murugan said: Gandhi ni support chesta.. he tried to save lives but stupid impulsive people tried to screw his plans. Hi Uncle, how r u? enti Gandhi ni support chestava??? Mari Washington ni? Quote
Amrita Posted October 29, 2018 Report Posted October 29, 2018 I support Bhagat Singh. Non violence movement might have been good but i read negative things also about gandhi. I somehow lost impression. Ilantivi chala chotla i read. Sources correct or wrong naku teledu. Gandhi abandoned his father's deathbed to go have sex, leaving his father to die in his absence. In 1885, Gandhi's father, Karamchand, developed a fistula and grew gravely ill. One night soon after, according to a 2010 biography, Gandhi was sitting up with his father, but eventually left to have sex with his new bride, Kasturba. Karamchand died while Gandhi was away. He was staunchly racist for at least much of his adulthood. Before leading his historic push for India's independence from the British Empire, Gandhi famously led civil rights movements in South Africa, another British colony, between 1893 and 1915, when he was in his mid-20s through his mid-40s. While Gandhi's time fighting for the rights of Indians in South Africa is often now mythologized as the heroic precursor to his later efforts in India, the dark side of this tale reveals that Gandhi's motivations in South Africa included his strident racism against the local black populations there. He took up civil rights in South Africa largely to ensure Indians' standing above the local blacks, and believed that the whites should stay in power. An oft-recited turning point in Gandhi's life involves his being thrown off a train for refusing to move out of first class, which was reserved for whites, early on during his time in South Africa. However, during both that incident and the entire civil rights movement that followed, Gandhi wasn't so much campaigning for Indians' rights in and of themselves, but more so that Indians simply be given more rights than the local blacks. "A general belief seems to prevail in the colony that the Indians are little better, if at all, than the savages or natives of Africa. Even the children are taught to believe in that manner, with the result that the Indian is being dragged down to the position of a raw Kaffir," he said. He wrote a few "Dear friend..." letters to Adolf Hitler. Yes, when Gandhi wrote to Hitler at least twice in 1939 and 1940, he did so to call for peace and, yes, Gandhi was, by all accounts, an impossibly kind and gracious person who might address anyone as "friend." Nevertheless, it's quite something to see the 20th century's most revered figures write a "Dear friend..." letter to the century's greatest monster -- and then add things like, "We have no doubt about your bravery or devotion to your fatherland, nor do we believe that you are the monster described by your opponents." He also had some troublingly positive words about Mussolini. Once again, you've got to account for both Gandhi's peerlessly magnanimous warmth and the perils of historical hindsight, but just as it was with Hitler, it's strange to hear that Gandhi had some kind, admiring words about the brutal fascist dictator that led Italy against the Allies during World War II. In his 2011 book, Subhash Chandra Bose in Nazi Germany, author Romain Hayes explains that, after the two met in 1931, Gandhi called Mussolini "one of the great statesmen of our time," and went on to write the following in a letter to a friend: "Many of his reforms attract me. He seems to have done much for the peasant class. I admit an iron hand is there. But as violence is the basis of Western society, Mussolini's reforms deserve an impartial study.” He perpetually suffered from self-inflicted constipation and dealt with it in strange ways. Gandhi's unusual diet very often left him highly constipated and spending hours at a time in the bathroom. But where things get weird (at least for most Westerners) -- according to Gandhi: Naked Ambition, a 2010 biography by Jad Adams -- is in how Gandhi dealt with his constipation. According to Adams, Gandhi would routinely invite one or more of the many female companions he kept around into the bathroom to visit with him while he was on the toilet. He shared uncomfortably close and likely exploitative relationships with the pairs of young women he kept around. Throughout much of his adult life, Gandhi kept plenty of young female companions close to him and allowed these relationships to take several different dark turns. For starters, he often kept pairs of girls as his daily companions to address his needs right down to basic movement, with Gandhi referring to them, according to Adams, as his "walking sticks." Moreover, Gandhi made things uncomfortably personal in both routinely bathing with these girls and habitually starting the day by asking them if they'd had a good bowel movement. What's worse, even if we can believe that these teenage girls had the ability to consent to any of this, it's not clear that there was any consent in the first place. He regularly received nude massages from the young girls he kept close. According to Adams' biography, in addition to tending to his needs regarding bathing and bowel movements, Gandhi tasked his young female companions with regularly giving him massages while he was in the nude. Reportedly, he liked mustard oil and lime juice to be used during these massages. He had young girls sleep nude next to him in order to test his chastity. After Gandhi's father died while Gandhi was off having sex, and once again after coming to the realization that he couldn't serve humanity while also consumed by lust, a thirty-something Gandhi decided that he must take a vow of chastity -- and tested that chastity in some rather odd ways. Although he forbade men and women (even husbands and wives) from sleeping together while at his ashrams, Gandhi had many women -- some of them teenagers, some of them married -- sleep nude in his bed. His list of nude sleeping partners included his own grandniece. The year before his death, a 77-year-old Gandhi cast a then 33-year-old Sushila Nayar (who Gandhi had asked to be given to him as a gift by her mother when she was just six) out of his bed in favor of a younger woman: Manu, his 18-year-old grandniece. Gandhi explicitly stated that sleeping with Manu in the nude yet resisting sexual temptation was his most important experiment in chastity, telling her that "[we] must put our purity to the ultimate test." At that same time, he also pulled Abha, the 18-year-old wife of his grandnephew, into bed with him -- and things quickly became problematic. When Gandhi began publicly speaking about his sleeping arrangement, even those in his inner circle asked that he remove the girls from his bed. He initially refused; finally, after several of his close associates parted ways with him over the matter, he relented. He carried out his sexual experiments with the boys and girls at his ashrams. While Gandhi clearly had his own, deep-seated sexual hang-ups resulting in fervid chastity and experiments designed to test that chastity, what's more problematic is that he acted out similar experiments with others -- specifically, children. Although husbands and wives weren't even allowed to sleep together at his ashrams, the boys and girls were -- all under Gandhi's peculiar supervision. First, they would bathe together; "I sent the boys reputed to be mischievous and the innocent young girls to bathe at the same time," Gandhi said, according to Adams' biography. Then, they would sleep, beds very close together, with Gandhi often there himself to act as a watchdog. If any of the boys or girls succumbed to temptation -- temptation that Gandhi himself all but orchestrated -- they were punished. He had some rather cruel things to say about his wife. Although Gandhi and his wife stayed married their entire lives, it's readily apparent that Gandhi's vows of poverty and chastity drove this once well-to-do couple apart, and that Gandhi felt that his wife was never on the same spiritual and intellectual plane as he. He would go on to say some cruel things about her, including: "I simply cannot bear to look at Ba's face. The expression is often like that on the face of a meek cow and gives one the feeling as a cow occasionally does, that in her own dumb manner she is saying something." He was likely responsible for his wife's death. What's troubling about Gandhi's unusual lifestyle choices -- celibacy, poverty, fasting -- is that he forced them upon his family as well. By all accounts, his wife managed to put up with these things, but they (namely, the poverty) eventually helped eat away at her health. In early 1944, when she was stricken with pneumonia, Gandhi once again imposed his choices upon her and refused to allow her to be injected with "alien medicine," i.e. penicillin. Soon after, she died. And not long after that, Gandhi himself contracted malaria. But this time, he allowed doctors to inject him with quinine and save his life. He was shockingly sexist. Though plenty of ink has been spilled over Gandhi's supposed feminism, there are just too many facts and stories to the contrary to ignore. According to the Guardian, he: "believed menstruation was a manifestation of the distortion of a woman's soul by her sexuality;" argued that women should be responsible for sexual assaults carried out upon them; contended that fathers are justified in killing daughters that have been sexually assaulted in order to preserve family honor; labelled women who used contraceptives as whores; and once chopped off the hair of two female followers who were being harassed so that the perpetrators would stop. He was likely bigoted against homosexuals. In the 1930s, Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru (his associate and eventually the first prime minister of India) both led campaigns to have all traces of homoerotic tradition removed from displays in India's Hindu temples as part of a "sexual cleansing" initiative. Quote
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