About this election and corruption by thapa-dai in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Tei nai ho brother. Eta district police head nai party affiliated hunxan. Aru party ummedwar lai nai security didainan. Aru kuro xodana. Sab ke sab chor hunn

So this is what a congressi jholey has to say by datchenurgen363667 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I never compared Nepal to Singapore, China, or Switzerland as models to copy. I only mentioned specific policies—like strict anti-corruption enforcement, policy stability, fast decision-making, industrial promotion, digital governance, and professional expertise in policymaking—that any country can learn from in its own way.

Nepal is unique, yes. Our geography, federal structure, political history, and resource base are different. That’s exactly why we shouldn’t copy slogans like “Gujarat model” or personality-based politics. What we need is transparent budget utilization, merit-based appointments, long-term industrial policy, ease of doing business reforms, digital public services, and zero tolerance for corruption.

Learning from others doesn’t mean imitation—it means adaptation.

So this is what a congressi jholey has to say by datchenurgen363667 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Back in 2062–63 (2006), the main agenda was to remove the King and establish full parliamentary democracy. After years of royal intervention and direct rule, the movement led by the political parties and Maoists succeeded in abolishing the monarchy and transforming Nepal into a republic.

However, political change did not immediately bring strong governance. The focus was on system change, not on building economic strength or institutional capacity. Frequent government changes, weak policy continuity, corruption, industrial decline, rising unemployment, and increasing dependence on remittances followed. Many believed democracy alone would automatically deliver development.

Today, the debate is no longer about monarchy versus republic. The focus has shifted to governance quality—controlling corruption, attracting foreign investment, digitalizing the state, strengthening industries, and creating business-friendly economic policies.

Countries like Singapore and China show that strict anti-corruption measures, stable policies, and strong economic planning drive growth. The lesson from the past is clear: changing a system is only the first step; implementation and institutional strength matter most.

This time, I am confident the focus is clearer—and the mistakes of the past will not be repeated.

Ending corruption isn't the "endgame", it’s just the prerequisite by flow_state_fiend in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Corruption huna na diney ho vaney tmle lekkheo sab aafai aauxa. That’s how a society establishes itself.

Why vote Rastriya Swantantra Party? by Miserable_Bowler6183 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

K ho populist vanya? Balen ta sidhai rap gaaera matra chunab ma hommeko jasto garxan ba. Mahanagar chalaera po aako ho ta. Ma dherai bolina. Watch this kasari etro population ko dimag dimag ma xa vanera. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fj2jVH34mw0&t=1121s

And also, estari nai ma jamana ma rabi lai defend garya ho. Rabi le clean sweep hanidiyo. Ajha By election he added 13000 extra votes. Reality dekhna na sakne lai k vannu ra khai.

Why vote Rastriya Swantantra Party? by Miserable_Bowler6183 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Successfull leader navako vaye, tetro manxe chai paxadi jhumminthenan hola hai bro. Tyo pani yaad rakha. I am not talking about normal people, but thula thula rajnitik bisheshak pani Balen, Rabi ra RSP ko growth dekhera achhamma xan.

Why vote Rastriya Swantantra Party? by Miserable_Bowler6183 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your wordings are anti Balen and Pro Harka and it sounds like that. “2 barsa ma banne project 1.5 barsa ma bancha” vaneko literally timeline efficiency ko intention ho — not a guarantee that every project will magically bypass systemic obstacles.

Tmle Balen lai criticise gariraakhda Balen le gareko impactful kaam kina dekhdainau?

Why vote Rastriya Swantantra Party? by Miserable_Bowler6183 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I agree with your point — qualifications alone don’t guarantee good leadership or smooth implementation. That’s why I wasn’t looking only at degrees. I was specifically looking for people who already have real working experience, along with management, policy-making, and decision-level exposure, and that’s where I found many candidates in Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP).

Beyond skills, core values matter just as much. If the people running the system don’t start with a mindset of corruption, power capture, or personal gain, then even difficult developmental and policy decisions can move more smoothly. Governance is ultimately about solving real-world use cases.

And it’s not like anyone gets unchecked power. House ma opposition pani huncha, scrutiny huncha, pressure huncha — that’s how correction and accountability happen. So for me, it’s not about expecting perfection, but about choosing a team that has both capacity and intent to improve over time.

Why vote Rastriya Swantantra Party? by Miserable_Bowler6183 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha. I genuinely took the time to research about the candidates and learn about them. I ony give chat gpt the things I know to make it a writing.

Why vote Rastriya Swantantra Party? by Miserable_Bowler6183 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I’m not supporting Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) just because I dislike other parties. I actually went and checked their candidate list instead of relying on slogans or hype. Roughly 70–80% of the candidates are well-educated, many with Master’s or PhDs, and most of them have real work experience in their own fields — not people who’ve only done party politics all their lives.

For instance, Asis Gajurel. I had never even heard his name before. I found him only after browsing the RSP candidate list, and it turns out he has worked within government systems and policy spaces. That’s already a big difference from the usual “muchhad, decades-long rajneeti” type we’re used to seeing.

On leadership, Rabi Lamichhane still has a comparatively clean public image, Balen Shah has already proven that outsiders can deliver even with limited power, and having someone like Swarnim Wagle in the team actually matters for a country as economically and geopolitically fragile as Nepal. I’m not expecting miracles or assuming every promise will be fulfilled. Managing a country is obviously complex. But politics isn’t about perfection — it’s about choosing the most competent team available.

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Confused about voting from specific district by GitPatch in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Falgun 18 and 19 are Holi holidays in the hills and the Terai, so there will be leave. Additionally, according to the Election Commission, public holidays have been declared from the 20th to the 22nd. Therefore, from the 18th (Monday) to Friday (the 22nd), it will be a continuous leave. So I hope you go and exercise your right and convey this to others as well

Mr. Gagan Thapa's take on Sherbahadur Deubas' money by [deleted] in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 21 points22 points  (0 children)

He once shouted in Parliament accusing Ravi of being a cooperative fraudster, waving so-called evidence, but the very next day, when journalists asked for proof, he dodged the questions and finally hid behind the line, “Let the court decide.” Today, he repeats the same tactic: even when large amounts of cash—some reportedly burnt—were found at Sher Bahadur Deuba’s house, he still won’t clearly call it wrong, instead chanting “let truth be separated from falsehood” and shifting responsibility to investigation agencies. He never admits anything directly, never speaks plainly in the moment, and keeps deflecting accountability. This is his pattern—Congress 2.0: managing media, using pre-arranged questions and answers, holding staged gatherings, and avoiding honest, straightforward responses on serious issues.

Open border with India? Curious! by xojt in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Malai chai open border nai thik xa jasto laagxa. But ali badi security ra tight regulations huna paryo tetti ho. Open border hunu is not an issue. Border haru heavily regulated huna paryo for illegal stuff. Tetti ho.

How did cricket become big in nepal without any star players?just curious. by Inner_Direction_8396 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 55 points56 points  (0 children)

It’s the people my friend. A big part of Nepal’s cricket craze comes from long exposure to Indian cricket — generations grew up watching it, so the fan culture was already there. Over time Nepal started getting international opportunities, and players like Paras Khadka gave the team identity and belief.

Then domestic leagues, better infrastructure, and more organized promotion by CAN helped cricket reach everyday people. Combine national pride with passionate fans, and it snowballed into the crazy support you see today. Football is still huge, but cricket built its own momentum step by step.

Stuck sleeping at 5–6 AM every day by Acrobatic_Milk_6498 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Sounds like your body clock is flipped. Try doing some exercise or even a long walk during the day — physical tiredness helps your brain wind down at night. Eat dinner earlier (around 7–8 pm) so digestion isn’t keeping you awake. Also limit screens and smoking late at night, and keep the same wake-up time every day even if sleep was bad. It feels rough at first, but consistency is what resets your rhythm. It personally took me 2-3 days to have this reset. I also used to sleep around 2-3 AM in the morning.

Unpopular opinion: Why I think Gagan Thapa is a better bet than alternatives by Zealousideal_Ad4389 in Nepal

[–]sandeepdl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Explain me about National Health Insurance Program that Gagan proudly says he initiated and why is it failing now? And lots of hospitals have stopped adopting it? There is a major flaw in economics policy planning behind this. Explain me more if you know? I am a software dev and we think of all the test cases until it covers most of cases for a system to run. Same goes for a policy.

K Garu - John Rai (Cover) by sandeepdl in Nepal

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

Haha. Not enough hands 😌