#mahua moitra speech in parliament
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On Mahua Moitra
It appears like Palestine, no one is bothering to mention about the past, which has everything to do with what's happening with her. Parliament was in session recently where a report was tabled on her and then with voice vote she was expelled from parliament. Unlike what is generally thought of as principle of natural justice where the alleged has right to explain or defend themselves, Mahua Moitra was not allowed to speak. Maybe it has something to do with her being female. Females have never had any rights over themselves in past. They were properties owned by men to be used at and for their disposal. How else do you explain a woman alleged of so many things not being given a chance to explain herself?
Let's assume Mahua is one such criminal whose crime is so grave that giving her space to talk would be criminal itself. Then ask yourself - what is her crime? Sharing username/password of a portal that allows MPs to file questions. During this very session other MP pointed out how many MPs don't file their question themselves. Their PAs do. Or someone else they've appointed. Will all of them be expelled? You see? She was singled out. But why? And by whom?
By BJP MP Nishikant Dubey who Mahua Moitra had exposed to be possessing fake degrees. Not just exposed but exposed with proofs. When she did, he called her prostitute among other things. It is on his allegations which many have poked holes in, she has been expelled.
News channels are going on and on about how Mahua was expelled and how it was right thing to do. But not once have they played her previous speeches or the questions she had asked in parliament - very things she is supposed to have asked because she was paid to ask them. And that is where lies the truth of this fiasco. She is removed from parliament because she was going after big daddy of RSS frontman Modi. Mr Adani. Big zaddy of Modi. Media knows too well who should not be mentioned, against whom questions should not be asked.
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Why so Unparliamentary Mahua?
Since the dawn of independence a lot of faith has been put on the shoulders of our great leaders, to carry on the aspirations of this great nation and its people. These leaders not only represent the people, but also the ideals, culture and dignity of the entire nation. They are expected to be well-mannered, well-kept and are to address the peope and their fellow politicians with respect, even if they disagree on certain issues. But sadly this is only a fairy tale as one cannot expect parliamentarians to do so.
Just today Mahua Moitra used the word "harami" against her peers in parliament.This is not a new thing for Miss Moitra, who in the past has described India as a "su-su potty democracy" and has jumped into many similar controversies in the past. Miss Moitra, a former banker, who complains about poverty while sporting a Louis Vitton handbag, and has showed the middle finger to Arnab Goswamy during a debate and uses constant "Gomutra" jibes against the ruling party, is no stranger to controversy and is nothing new. But what is sad is the total disregrad of the parliamentary rules and violation of the sanctity of basic manners in the parliament. Although the Constitution protects parliamentarians from arrest stating that, "no Member of Parliament shall be liable to proceedings in any court in respect of anything said in parliament", the members must atleast maintain a sense of decency while addresing te house. Under Rule 380 of The Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in the Lok Sabha, the Speaker is given power to expunge the ords that are defamatory and Rule 352 states tha a member shall not reflect on the conduct of the person in high authority except on a substantive motion dawn in proper terms.But all these rules falls on deaf ears and by not suspending Miss Moitra the Speaker is only encouraging such behaviour in the future.
The real losers of this whole affair are the citizens who expect a basic decency from their leaders and proper debate in the parliament. Gone are the days when great speeches and debates of Vajpayee, Advani and Sushma Swaraj were held and also gone are the days where there was basic decency in the parliament.
Vishrut Awasthi
Sharan Ajay
#yogi adityanath#narendra modi#india#parliament#om birla#mahua moitra#rahul gandhi#akhilesh yadav#dimple yadav#srbachchan
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Mahua Moitra, Husband, Wiki, Age, Life history, Biography
Mahua Moitra Personal Life history Name Mahua Moitra Nick Name Putlu Profession Politician Date of Birth 5 May 1975 (Source Wikipedia) Age 46 Year Sun Sign Taurus Birth Place Kolkata, West Bengal Religion Bengali Brahmin Nationality Indian Hometown Kolkata, West Bengal School Name Not Known College Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts, United States Education BA in Economics …
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Mahua Moitra's Parliament Speech goes viral
Mahua Moitra as she spoke about a former Chief Justice goes viral on social media platforms.Her remarks - seen to target former Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi. BJP MPs had objected to the Trinamool MP's remarks on grounds that retired Justice Gogoi was a Chief Justice.
The sacred cow that was the judiciary is no longer sacred. It stopped being sacred day a sitting CJI was accused of sexual harassment, presided over own trial, cleared himself & accepted a nomination to Upper House within 3 months of retirement replete with Z+ security cover pic.twitter.com/ODFn2pd2Z1
Lok sabha TV link to her speech can be heard at below link
https://loksabhatv.nic.in/sites/default/files/videos/speeches/Mahua%20Moitra%208%20feb.mp4
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mahua moitra's speech in parliament.. holy shit
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Mahua Moitra Comedy Review | New Rahul Gandhi? | You CRINGE You Lose - 8 Feb 2022
Is Mahua Moitra the new Rahul Gandhi? Is she the new star campaigner for BJP? Mahua Moitra's recent comedy speech in the Parliament surely suggests it. We review Mahua Moitra's comedy speech, challenge ourselves to survive the cringe, and see if her comedy is as good as Rahul Gandhi's.
https://youtu.be/JnRGs2-AIUE
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BJP MP Seeks Privilege Motion Against Mahua Moitra For Parliament Speech
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BJP MP Seeks Privilege Motion Against Mahua Moitra For Parliament Speech
BJP MP Seeks Privilege Motion Against Mahua Moitra For Parliament Speech
A BJP MP today put in notice for privilege motion against Trinamool Congress’s Mahua Moitra over her remarks in parliament on a former Chief Justice of India.
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No Action Against Trinamool's Mahua Moitra for parliament Speech After All.
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Parliament LIVE: Lok Sabha adjourned after scuffle between BJP and Cong MPs
The Budget session of the Parliament continues today, with Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan to speak the Lok Sabha regarding about the government's response to the coronavirus outbreak in China.
Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pralhad Joshi and Congress leader of House Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury will present the thirteenth report of the Business Advisory Committee. The List of Business also includes the general discussion on the Union Budget for 2020-2021, amendments in the Prohibition to Child Marriage Act, and the Private Member's Business.
On Thursday, replying Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the Motion of Thanks for President's Address in the Lok Sabha. He highlighted the achievements of his government such as decisions on Article 370, triple talaq and Ram Janmabhoomi, Bodo deal and India-Bangladesh land agreement.
"It was a mix of fairy tale and mediocrity. There are no numbers in the budget or in his speech, there is only qualitative grand standing," said TMC MP Mahua Moitra on PM Modi’s speech in Lok Sabha.
Readmore: Delhi Election 2020
#Delhi election#delhi election result#delhi election result 2020#Delhi Assembly elections#Arvind Kejriwal#Delhi election 2020
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As Outbreak Rages, India Orders Critical Social Media Posts to Be Taken Down NEW DELHI — With a devastating second wave of Covid-19 sweeping across India and lifesaving supplemental oxygen in short supply, India’s government on Sunday said it ordered Facebook, Instagram and Twitter to take down dozens of social media posts critical of its handling of the pandemic. The order was aimed at roughly 100 posts that included critiques from opposition politicians and calls for Narendra Modi, India’s prime minister, to resign. The government said that the posts could incite panic, used images out of context, and could hinder its response to the pandemic. The companies complied with the requests for now, in part by making the posts invisible to those using the sites inside India. In the past, the companies have reposted some content after determining that it didn’t break the law. The takedown orders come as India’s public health crisis spirals into a political one, and set the stage for a widening struggle between American social media platforms and Mr. Modi’s government over who decides what can be said online. On Sunday, the country reported more than 349,691 new infections and 2,767 deaths, marking the fourth consecutive day it set a world record in daily infection statistics, though experts warn that the true numbers are probably much higher. The country now accounts for almost half of all new cases globally. Its health system appears to be teetering. Hospitals across the country have scrambled to get enough oxygen for patients. In New Delhi, the capital, hospitals this weekend turned away patients after running out of oxygen and beds. Last week, at least 22 patients were killed in a hospital in the city of Nashik, after a leak cut off their oxygen supplies. Online photos of bodies on plywood hospital beds and the countless fires of overworked crematories have gone viral. Desperate patients and their families have pleaded online for help from the government, horrifying an international audience. On Sunday evening, in one of many pleas for help on social media, Ajay Koli took to Twitter to find an oxygen cylinder in Delhi for his mother, who, he said, had tested positive 10 days ago. Mr. Koli said he lost his father on Saturday. “I don’t want to lose my mom now.” Mr. Modi has been under attack for ignoring the advice of experts about the risks of loosening restrictions, after he held large political rallies with little regard for social distancing. Some of the content now offline in India highlighted that contradiction, using lurid images to contrast Mr. Modi’s rallies with the flames of funeral pyres. In a radio address on Sunday, Mr. Modi sought to stem the fallout. He said that the “storm” of infections had left the country “shaken.” Updated April 25, 2021, 10:32 a.m. ET “At this time, in order to win this battle, we have to give priority to experts and scientific advice,” he said. One of the tweets removed from view was posted by Moloy Ghatak, a labor minister in the opposition-ruled West Bengal state, where Mr. Modi’s party hopes to make big gains in an ongoing election. Mr. Ghatak accused Mr. Modi of “mismanagement” and held him directly responsible for the deaths. His tweet included images of Mr. Modi and his election rallies beside those of the cremations and compared him to Nero, the Roman emperor, for choosing to hold political gatherings and exporting vaccines during a “health crisis.” Another tweet from Revanth Reddy, a sitting member of the parliament, used a hashtag that blamed Mr. Modi for the “disaster.” “India recording over 2 lakh cases everyday,” it said, using an Indian numbering unit that means 200,000 cases. “Shortage of vaccines, shortage of medicines, increasing number of deaths.” The new steps to muzzle online speech deepen a conflict between American social media platforms and Mr. Modi’s government. The two sides have tussled in recent months over a push by India’s government to more strictly police what is said online, a policy that critics say is being used to silence government detractors. “This has been a trend, which is enforced with increasing frequency and severity for online media spaces,” said Apar Gupta, the executive director of the Internet Freedom Foundation, a digital rights group. He added that the orders were being used to “cause censorship” under the guise of making social media companies more “accountable.” The fight to control the gruesome images and online fury over a raging public health catastrophe is just one front in a broader conflict playing out globally. Governments across the world have been seeking to rein in the power of the largest tech companies, like Twitter and Facebook, whose policies have huge political impact far from their California headquarters. In the best of cases, it can be difficult to disentangle government efforts to tamp down misinformation from other motivations, like tilting online debate in one political party’s favor. While the companies seek to hew to policies that they say are based on the principles of free speech, their responses to government power plays have been inconsistent and often based on business pragmatism. In Myanmar, Facebook cut business ties with military-linked accounts over violence against protesters. In China, Facebook does brisk business with state-backed media groups that have been busy denying the widespread internment of ethnic minorities, which the United States has labeled a genocide. In India, the companies face a stark choice: follow laws and risk suppressing political debate, or ignore them and face harsh punishments, including prison time for local employees, in a potentially huge growth market. Squabbles over online speech in India are growing common. The Indian government, controlled by Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, has become increasingly aggressive at stifling dissent. It has arrested activists and journalists, and pressured media organizations to hew to its line. It has cut off mobile internet access in troubled areas. After a standoff with China, it blocked a number of apps owned by Chinese companies. In February, Twitter relented in the face of government threats to arrest its employees, and blocked 500 accounts after the government accused them of making inflammatory remarks about Mr. Modi. Twitter declined, however, to remove a number of journalists’ and politicians’ accounts, pointing out that the orders to block them did not appear to be consistent with Indian law. In a Sunday statement, India’s government said the posts it targeted “spread fake or misleading information” and created “panic about the Covid-19 situation in India by using unrelated, old and out of the context images or visuals.” It pointed to photos in several posts that it said were of bodies unrelated to the recent outbreak. In an emailed statement, Twitter said that if content “is determined to be illegal in a particular jurisdiction, but not in violation of Twitter’s rules, we may withhold access to the content in India only,” adding that in that case it would notify users. Facebook did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. The removals did little to mute a broader chorus of online anger. “If most citizens are using every single means they have to organize hospital beds, oxygen & logistic support for near & dear what exactly is the Government of India doing?” wrote Mahua Moitra, a politician and member of parliament from West Bengal. Aftab Alam, a professor at the University of Delhi was more direct. “Because you know it’s easier to take down tweets than it is to ensure oxygen supplies,” he wrote on Twitter. Source link Orbem News #critical #India #Media #Orders #Outbreak #Posts #Rages #Social
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Mahua Moitra - the economist parliamentarian from Bengal Mahua Moitra, a young and fierce MP of All India Trinamool Congress from Bengal has won millions of young minds with her first powerful speech at parliament against the ruling BJP. She is a highly educated member of parliament and was the vice president of JPMorgan Chase Bank in New York and London. She quit her position in 2009 to join Indian politics READ MORE STORIES : DOWNLOAD BEYOND Pink APP NOW : Play Store: (link: https://goo.gl/GknGX5) goo.gl/GknGX5 App Store: (link: https://lnkd.in/gwK6MK) lnkd.in/gwK6MKq
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No Action Against Trinamool's Mahua Moitra For Parliament Speech After All
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When Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra tore into the government in her maiden speech in parliament on June 25, she focused attention back on the uncomfortable “F-word” of politics: fascism. She argued that “all the early signs of fascism are visible in the country today.”
Defining fascism, it has been said, is a bit like trying to come up with an accurate definition of being in love. You know when you’re in it, but you might find yourself somewhat semantically challenged if asked to define it.
While there are those who insist that fascism should only be used while describing the form of government led by Mussolini and his Partito Nazionale Fascista in the early part of the 20th century, there are others who tend to apply the word to almost any form of authoritarian government.
Fascism, however, has a distinct set of characteristics on which there is broad agreement amongst scholars of political history and philosophy, and it is these defining features that citizens in democracy would do well to acquaint themselves with:
Ultra-nationalism
A Mythical Past
The Great Leader
Redefining Reality
Attacking intellectualism
(More detail at the link)
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A CRIMINAL DEFAMATION COMPLAINT FILED AGAINST TMC MP MAHUA MOITRA BY ZEE MEDIA CORPORATION ACCUSING HER OF DEMAMING THE NEWS CHANNEL :
A CRIMINAL DEFAMATION COMPLAINT FILED AGAINST TMC MP MAHUA MOITRA BY ZEE MEDIA CORPORATION ACCUSING HER OF DEMAMING THE NEWS CHANNEL :
A criminal complaint was on Friday filed in a court in New Delhi against Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra by Zee Media Corporation Ltd, accusing her of defaming the news channel.The complaint comes days after Moitra filed a defamation complaint against the news channel and its Editor-in-Chief Sudhir Chaudhary for alleging that her June 25 speech in Parliament on the ‘seven signs of fascism’ was…
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DNA analysis of TMC MP Mahua Moitra's intolerance on Zee News reporting
TMC MP Mahua Moitra has filed a criminal defamation case against Zee TV editor-in-chief Sudhir Chaudhary at the Patiala house court, New Delhi for alleging that her speech in parliament on ‘early signs of fascism’ was plagiarised. We bring to you DNA analysis of TMC MP Mahua Moitra's intolerance. Watch full video to know more.
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from WordPress http://www.richmeganews.com/dna-analysis-of-tmc-mp-mahua-moitras-intolerance-on-zee-news-reporting/
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