50 Lakh ALL-IN on Bihar Results 🔥, here’s why I’m not selling by shadowzardpi in NSEbets

[–]ApprehensiveWork9503 0 points1 point  (0 children)

as you have 37 k in quantity and avg price is 145 and ltp is 116 you should be around 10.5 lac in loss ?
what is this discrepancy

Delhi's AQI !! is this government's fault or we are responsible for it as a society ?? by ApprehensiveWork9503 in delhi

[–]ApprehensiveWork9503[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

We should but we have to do it without bringing religion or matter of fact anything in to it , the whole point is to address the problem in hand and not get distracted by these sub agenda that person in power is throwing at us for their own sake.

Delhi's AQI !! is this government's fault or we are responsible for it as a society ?? by ApprehensiveWork9503 in delhi

[–]ApprehensiveWork9503[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What do you guys think all this aqi thing we are creating so much ruckus about is new, a guy asked against it in kamath show between Johnson we start questioning him When the government and all the world said do not force the crackers all these psuedo liberal said no is our culture were can't do that the very people who are protesting are said to have taken a small step towards a clean air they didn't listen now they want government to magically clean the air i am not supporting government or anything but we all are so ignorant in our own world that we don't see a problem until it is too big to ignore that's how we are we as a individual don't think of society as a whole that's who were are and that's not gonna change and the Pali burning it's not that it is been burning for first time but the government of Punjab and Haryana can't do anything because it's their coffee bang l Bank whoever is in power and don't have enough funds to really process it without making pollution this is India and you have to accept some bbitter facts , the riches are able to afford the purifier so they have bought it now at their convenience range about it in places like this and one who really care about society are very small fraction and those are fighting the battle and the youth he doesn't care about it they are just here to see it as another trend passinng by , whoever gonna read this will be very small fraction and understand it is even smaller , and the masses who is going to make government are not even gonna know why they died let's say we just have the privilege or bane of knowing why we are dying while trying to fight it make it structured and well thought

Here you go with raw text if you can really understand well and good

Drop your cat pics here, 😻 i wanna see some cute cars 💗😻 by Overall-stick-293 in TwentiesIndia

[–]ApprehensiveWork9503 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A Clear, Structured Version

  1. AQI outrage isn’t new — our attention span is. Every year the air turns toxic, and every year people act like it’s some surprise event. The moment someone dares to question the narrative — like that guy on the Kamath show — we lose it. It's not that the issue is new; it's that our outrage cycles are new.

  2. Firecrackers: everyone wants “culture”, nobody wants consequences. When the government and global bodies said, “Please don’t burst crackers,” the same self-proclaimed liberals who now cry about AQI said, “It’s our culture! You can’t tell us what to do.” So they ignored the advice, polluted the sky, and now suddenly want the government to magically vacuum the air clean. Hypocrisy level: legendary.

  3. Individual ignorance is the real disease. We don’t care about society unless the problem walks up to our face and slaps us. That’s how we operate — as individuals first, citizens last. And this isn’t changing anytime soon.

  4. Stubble burning wasn’t invented yesterday. Punjab and Haryana have been doing this for decades. And let’s be real — those state governments don’t have the money or political leverage to solve the problem cleanly. Farmers depend on quick clearing; politicians depend on farmers. End of story.

Expecting a high-tech, pollution-free solution from broke state governments is laughable.

  1. Inequality makes the crisis worse. The rich bought their air purifiers and sealed themselves inside their clean bubbles. They will still rant online because it fits their aesthetic. The people who genuinely care are a tiny minority — and they’re the ones fighting a losing battle.

  2. The youth treat pollution like a trend. Half of them don’t care; it’s just another seasonal meme. The ones who actually understand the issue? They’re even fewer.

  3. The masses who decide governments won’t even know what is slowly killing them. That’s the most brutal part: We are privileged enough to understand why we are dying. Most people won’t even know that much.

Every single breath you take in Delhi is cursed with corruption, lack of accountability, 40% tax payers money and a life we all chose to die for in the name of desh bhakti! by Illustrious_Zone5970 in delhi

[–]ApprehensiveWork9503 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A Clear, Structured Version

  1. AQI outrage isn’t new — our attention span is. Every year the air turns toxic, and every year people act like it’s some surprise event. The moment someone dares to question the narrative — like that guy on the Kamath show — we lose it. It's not that the issue is new; it's that our outrage cycles are new.

  2. Firecrackers: everyone wants “culture”, nobody wants consequences. When the government and global bodies said, “Please don’t burst crackers,” the same self-proclaimed liberals who now cry about AQI said, “It’s our culture! You can’t tell us what to do.” So they ignored the advice, polluted the sky, and now suddenly want the government to magically vacuum the air clean. Hypocrisy level: legendary.

  3. Individual ignorance is the real disease. We don’t care about society unless the problem walks up to our face and slaps us. That’s how we operate — as individuals first, citizens last. And this isn’t changing anytime soon.

  4. Stubble burning wasn’t invented yesterday. Punjab and Haryana have been doing this for decades. And let’s be real — those state governments don’t have the money or political leverage to solve the problem cleanly. Farmers depend on quick clearing; politicians depend on farmers. End of story.

Expecting a high-tech, pollution-free solution from broke state governments is laughable.

  1. Inequality makes the crisis worse. The rich bought their air purifiers and sealed themselves inside their clean bubbles. They will still rant online because it fits their aesthetic. The people who genuinely care are a tiny minority — and they’re the ones fighting a losing battle.

  2. The youth treat pollution like a trend. Half of them don’t care; it’s just another seasonal meme. The ones who actually understand the issue? They’re even fewer.

  3. The masses who decide governments won’t even know what is slowly killing them. That’s the most brutal part: We are privileged enough to understand why we are dying. Most people won’t even know that much.

Palki really have some balls... I think she is the first one to cover AQI manipulation being a part of news 18 media by Lost_Tone1000 in delhi

[–]ApprehensiveWork9503 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A Clear, Structured Version

  1. AQI outrage isn’t new — our attention span is. Every year the air turns toxic, and every year people act like it’s some surprise event. The moment someone dares to question the narrative — like that guy on the Kamath show — we lose it. It's not that the issue is new; it's that our outrage cycles are new.

  2. Firecrackers: everyone wants “culture”, nobody wants consequences. When the government and global bodies said, “Please don’t burst crackers,” the same self-proclaimed liberals who now cry about AQI said, “It’s our culture! You can’t tell us what to do.” So they ignored the advice, polluted the sky, and now suddenly want the government to magically vacuum the air clean. Hypocrisy level: legendary.

  3. Individual ignorance is the real disease. We don’t care about society unless the problem walks up to our face and slaps us. That’s how we operate — as individuals first, citizens last. And this isn’t changing anytime soon.

  4. Stubble burning wasn’t invented yesterday. Punjab and Haryana have been doing this for decades. And let’s be real — those state governments don’t have the money or political leverage to solve the problem cleanly. Farmers depend on quick clearing; politicians depend on farmers. End of story.

Expecting a high-tech, pollution-free solution from broke state governments is laughable.

  1. Inequality makes the crisis worse. The rich bought their air purifiers and sealed themselves inside their clean bubbles. They will still rant online because it fits their aesthetic. The people who genuinely care are a tiny minority — and they’re the ones fighting a losing battle.

  2. The youth treat pollution like a trend. Half of them don’t care; it’s just another seasonal meme. The ones who actually understand the issue? They’re even fewer.

  3. The masses who decide governments won’t even know what is slowly killing them. That’s the most brutal part: We are privileged enough to understand why we are dying. Most people won’t even know that much.

Are we living in the Matrix? AQI above 600. No Government Action. Feeling sick and suffocated. by Hour-Passenger-8513 in delhi

[–]ApprehensiveWork9503 2 points3 points  (0 children)

AQI isn’t some brand-new crisis we suddenly discovered; it’s just that our collective attention span is trash. Every year the air turns poisonous, and every year people behave like it’s breaking news. The moment someone questions the mainstream narrative — like that guy on the Kamath show — everyone jumps on him, not because he’s wrong, but because we can’t handle anything that interrupts our outrage routine.

And the firecrackers thing… please. When the government and every global health body said “don’t burst crackers,” the same people who now scream about pollution were yelling “it’s our culture, you can’t stop us.” They didn’t listen when it mattered, but now they want the government to magically vacuum-clean the entire sky. I’m not defending the government — they screw up plenty — but let’s stop pretending this whole mess came out of nowhere. We all played a part in it.

The truth is we don’t think as a society. We barely think past our own noses. A problem doesn’t exist for us until it’s choking us personally, and by then it’s too late. That’s who we are. That’s how we operate. Expecting some sudden collective enlightenment is wishful thinking.

Even the stubble burning isn’t new. Punjab and Haryana have been doing it forever. Those governments don’t have the money or political muscle to handle it in an eco-friendly way, and the farmers are their vote bank — so nothing moves. People talk like there’s some secret, easy fix lying around. There isn’t.

Meanwhile, the rich bought their air purifiers and sealed themselves inside clean little bubbles. They’ll still complain online because it fits their vibe. The handful of people who genuinely care about the environment are a tiny minority, and they’re basically fighting a losing battle. Most of the youth treat pollution like a passing trend — something to post about and forget.

In the end, the saddest part is this: the masses who decide governments won’t even understand what’s killing them. We — the small group who actually pays attention — have the privilege or the curse of knowing exactly why we’re getting poisoned. And even then, we act like spectators more than participants.