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Veer

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Everything posted by Veer

  1. And heres the latest news on Nijjar. Wonder why no proof has been provided. Here’s what the Premier of B.C. said at a press conference. If this is true Trudeaus a bigger idiot than I suspected.
  2. Nijjar made various trips to Pakistan. So did Khanda. So did Shahbeg Singh. Pannu not sure. pick your top khalistanis and research how many times they’ve gone to Pakistan and connections to Pakistani embassies in the west. Open source as well. Don’t look hard. And yes, Mr. nijjar was on a no fly list - terrorist or suspected to be linked to terrorists. I repeat my earlier assertion about hajam. Sc said you can speak on khalistan Wanted the kartarpur corridor. Even though it’s a national security risk but still done like you wanted. Blacklists removed. Done just like you wanted except a few individuals. Security risk but still. You wanted a national holiday to remember the sahibzadis. Done. Like always your khalistani leadership couldn’t digest it. hajam ja sambhal nahi hoya tuhade kol
  3. Ask your dharmi faujis that spend a lot of time in Pakistan to talk to their sponsors. Where are you getting the drugs from here in the west?
  4. Here’s your daily news. Now, take that self righteousness maybe some flags and go protest.
  5. And I see history for you starts in 1469
  6. Nope, you got your state but sambhal nahi hoya tuhade kol
  7. Legitimate revenues or lack thereof is something you need to take up with your own leadership. Are they guiding your correctly. I can see that. But yours is coming from the across the border from your new friends. Here in the west you have a new link up with the cartels. Nice! The question is once again how many of our children are you going to genocide? See, the thing about being a beta cuck for the pakis is that you eventually go down to their level.
  8. Judging by the names caught. Week after week after week. California, Surrey, Brampton.
  9. Well, at this point it seems to be your community at the forefront in Punjab and certain hotspots in the West. Am I lying? Speaking of genocide I wonder how many of our children ( Hindus, Sikhs, Muslims, whites everybody) have overdosed on drugs provided by prominent members of your community? Tens of thousands I bet. Money that eventually makes its way into your khalistani projects and gurudwaras Why don’t you hold a flag for them? Less virtue signaling and self righteousness more introspection is required.
  10. Don’t cry. Deeds decide destiny. The small number of Pakistani lapdogs running around should learn this. The ones that sell drugs to our children Monday to Friday but sit at the Gurudwara on Sundays and claim righteousness.
  11. I have connections from your side. Leave it at that. Family and friends.
  12. I have nothing but respect for him even though I don’t agree with him. He defended his faith but let out genies in the box that he could not control. The real fight was between IG and Shahbeg. Personal reasons.
  13. https://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2010/bcp-pco/CP32-89-4-2010-eng.pdf Better One
  14. If Hindus are vandalizing sikh temples they gotta go to jail. Simple. No excuse.
  15. Don’t conflate the two. Khalistanis along with their masters are national security threats and will be neutralized. Vast majority of average Sikhs support it. Not just in india but the west. Khalistanis are knee deep in Drugs, Human Trafficking and tons of other crimes. Mirror image of Pakistanis including now grooming.
  16. You got a mental issue or something retard?
  17. Yeah, I mentioned in my first post about him and the “Haughtiness” typical of his group that includes KP, South Indian, Maharashtrian and Bengali Brahmins. Much of it comes from his success at 38 years old. Billionaire, Degrees in law and biology. But he won the debate and for a first timer not bad. He will temper with age hopefully. Most Indian Americans ( Hindus and Sikhs) and blacks are left leaning and democrat. But you may see a shift to Republican. If he was Democrat he’d easily be the next President but Trump takes all the oxygen in the Republican Party.
  18. As I predicted months ago. This guy is a rising superstar. The gang attack against him in the debates led by Nikki Randhawa was an indication. This article below is unfortunately behind a paywall. Support is coming in from across the world for Vivek from those that are tired of wokeism, open borders etc. https://www.newyorker.com/cartoons/blitts-kvetchbook/vivek-mania-sweeps-the-country https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2023/08/what-if-vivek-ramaswamy-is-the-future-of-politics.html What If Vivek Ramaswamy Is the Future of Politics? By Ryu Spaeth, a features editor at New York “Astoundingly arrogant,” “irritating,” “glib,” “smarmy,” “obnoxious,” “a zero,” “preening,” and “completely bananas,” according to Times roundtable. But is that what winning looks like now? Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images During one of several explosive exchanges between Vivek Ramaswamy and his Republican opponents in the first debate of the 2024 presidential-primary season, former New Jersey governor Chris Christie called Ramaswamy an “amateur” who “sounds like Chat GPT.” Ramaswamy met this volley, as well as a cascading chorus of whoops and laughter and “oohs” from the crowd, with an impervious smile and a barb about Christie literally embracing Barack Obama after Hurricane Sandy. The shield of his smile had to be deployed all night long, as his rivals took obvious umbrage at the presence of this rude political neophyte and attacked him with relish — an uncanny replay of the dynamic that governed Donald Trump’s debates in 2016. But nothing could dampen Ramaswamy’s spirit or dim that grin. To borrow a line from FDR, Ramaswamy seemed to be saying to his rivals that he welcomed their hatred. Ramaswamy, a wealthy entrepreneur who muscled and hustled his way from obscurity onto a debate stage that notably did not include the race’s front-runner, Trump, is adept at borrowing lines. Christie’s jab was in part a reference to his robotic, rat-a-tat delivery of aphorisms that resemble a cross between traditional conservative know-nothingism and Elon Musk’s brand of Silicon Valley know-everythingism. (“Fossil fuels are a requirement for human prosperity!”) But Christie was also calling out Ramaswamy’s naked appropriation of one of Obama’s most famous quotes from the 2008 campaign, with Ramaswamy introducing himself to the Republican faithful in Milwaukee as a “skinny guy with a funny last name.” His crisp hand gestures and tight little head shakes were vintage Obama, yet the words coming out of his mouth were “Reverse racism is racism.” It really did feel like Ramaswamy was a computer program trawling the past two decades of American history to cobble together a ruthless striver’s idea of a political persona, some unholy amalgamation of Obama, Trump, and Musk. Sign up for Dinner Party A lively evening newsletter about everything that just happened. The press has been about as hostile to Ramaswamy as the rest of the Republican field. In a New York Times roundtableafter the debate, commentators from across the ideological spectrum described him as “astoundingly arrogant,” “irritating,” “glib,” “smarmy,” “obnoxious,” “a zero,” “preening,” and “completely bananas.” The conservative columnist Bret Stephens said Ramaswamy “seems to think he’s Jesus,” and not in the meek-shall-inherit-the-Earth way. There is a sense in the Establishment media that because Ramaswamy is such a copycat, particularly of Trump, that he represents no broader threat or significance, that he’s just another wannabe swimming in the MAGA slipstream. The Princeton historian Kevin Kruse tweeted, “What’s funny is that Vivek is going to campaign with furious Debate Bro energy for six nonstop months and then Trump will casually refer to him as ‘Rama-smarmy, or whatever’ and he’ll immediately turn to dust.” But I would posit that perhaps Ramaswamy signifies something more. If you are a youngish person looking to get into politics or some other career of public renown, it’s only natural that you would model yourself on the people in your lifetime who have had ostentatious success in those areas, people like Obama and Trump and Musk. It seems likely that, in the future, we will see a lot more politicians like Vivek Ramaswamy. Ramaswamy’s youth is important, as American democracy slides into gerontocracy. So is the context of the debate, where you could see this lithe figure with taut skin and a full head of not-gray hair antagonize and fluster the leathery dinosaurs that, if the polls are to be believed, he is already eclipsing. Ramaswamy flaunted his age at every turn, beginning his closing statement with a huge flex: “I was born in 1985” — which makes him the youngest presidential aspirant of my own lifetime, indeed one who is several years younger than me, a horrific personal milestone for which I will never forgive him. His liveliness irked his opponents as well, particularly former vice-president Mike Pence, who showed his irrepressible counterpart nothing but disdain in what read to me as the way Pence would talk to Trump if Trump had less power. “We don’t need to bring in a rookie,” Pence scoffed. In response, Ramaswamy took great joy in exploiting Pence’s age and experience, which came through in Pence’s delivery (the long statesman’s pause), his appearance (Ken doll whose smooth plastic veneer has gone a bit sludge-y), and constant references to the old deities of the Republican Party (God and Ronald Reagan). “Some others like you might have a ‘Morning in America’ speech,” Ramaswamy told Pence. “But it is not morning in America. We live in a dark moment.” When the discussion turned to the war in Ukraine, which saw Rawaswamy taking passionate fire from all sides for his opposition to additional U.S. aid for the Ukrainians, he said to Pence, “I have a news flash: The U.S.S.R. does not exist anymore.” He was intent on drawing a line in the sand between ancient history and the boundless future. And in doing so, he happily smashed the Republican Party’s idols as Trump had done before him, the jeers raining down on him for his anti-war stance reminiscent of the stern admonitions Trump received in 2016 for saying the Iraq War was a mistake. Though if Trump was a flattening bulldozer, Ramaswamy was nimbler, more precise — a guided missile. He could also perform the equivalent of wading into a brawl and inviting all comers, calling his rivals “super-PAC puppets” and declaring, “I’m the only person on this stage who isn’t bought and paid for,” an audacious line that drew a scandalized “Whoa whoa whoa” and “That’s ridiculous” from people who very much are bought and paid for. In the melee over the Ukraine war, he turned to former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, a hawk, and said, “Nikki, I wish you well on your future career on the boards of Lockheed and Raytheon,” a rebuke so impolite and so close to home that Haley was left red-faced and sputtering. In appreciating and even admiring Ramaswamy’s sheer disrespect for his fellow Republicans, I realize I am falling into the same trap that ensnared so many liberal journalists the last time this happened, when Trump seemed so attractive because he was demolishing politicians I also wanted to see demolished. Still, the appeal of the iconoclast remains, and Ramaswamy’s primary influences, the Ur-trolls Trump and Musk, let it be known that game recognizes game. “Vivek is increasingly compelling,” Musk tweetedduring the debate. “This answer gave Vivek Ramaswamy a big WIN in the debate because of a thing called TRUTH,” Trump posted on Truth Social, referring to Ramaswamy’s claim that Trump was the “best president of the 21st century.” Obama has not deigned to comment on a politician who is destined to be a member of Trump’s entourage, and maybe even a partner on his presidential ticket, but Obama’s influence on Ramaswamy is fascinating, a sprinkling of a feel-good, only-in-America story on an otherwise tiresome recapitulation of Trump’s “American carnage” speech. Obama, too, exhibited a preternatural confidence that his critics described as “arrogant,” “obnoxious,” “preening,” and worse; Obama, too, reveled in his relative youth, swishing three-pointers on the campaign trail and jogging up the steps to Air Force One; Obama, too, played the insider-outsider sweeping away the fossilized vestiges of an older era. It’s unclear whether Ramaswamy’s policy positions, such as they are — “The climate change agenda is a hoax!” — will have much lasting appeal in American politics. But surely his style, no matter how much it may grate on the ears and annoy finer sensibilities, is on the ascendance. No longer will politicians be as slow, as pious, as patriotic as Mike Pence, who came of age in the pre-Trump world; they’ll be quick to let the insults fly, fearless in their misguided convictions, and scornful of their elders and betters. To believe otherwise is to believe that Trump, especially, is a one-off phenomenon, that we will one day return to having a slate of “normal” candidates running to be the Republican nominee for president, when so many incentives point in the other direction: toward politicians who are younger, hungrier, meaner, wilder. His closing comments. SIGN UP FOR THE
  19. Many of the people involved in the attacks on embassies, temples and the ones that walk around harassing random civilians on the streets and post videos. The language coming out of the mouths of these people against Hindus and their religion is the same that comes of the mouths of Pakistanis. Hence, people like this especially the man in the orange turban is gonna get his justice soon. Behave like Abrahamics get treated like Abrahmics. Just like Nijjar used to abuse Hindus attending Gurudwaras. A quick talk with members of the Surrey sangat will confirm this. All three Khanda, Panjwar and Nijjar - Pakistani links, drugs, human trafficking, hits in and out of Punjab. Source: Amritpal Singh ( most likely)
  20. What’s the matter you don’t like freedom of speech all of sudden?
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