Dr World Book

Dr World Book

Dr World Book

Lawmakers clash with constituents following more angry town halls

(CNN )

Shouts of “January 6” and “tax the rich” flooded a town hall in Laramie, Wyoming, on Wednesday, where GOP Rep. Harriet Hageman faced a hostile crowd as she attempted to drown out the noise and answer questions – the latest such Washington lawmaker to be grilled in their home states.

Hageman said she liked the opportunity to do town halls “because it lets me come here, give you an update on what I’m doing back in Washington, DC,” prompting a swift response of “nothing” from one man.

“If you have so little respect for our process and for what we are in this country,” Hageman started before being interrupted by some boos. “Then I would ask you to leave.”

Voters have expressed their frustrations in several town halls across the country in recent days as they publicly vocalize their dissatisfaction with those in office. Constituents have criticized Republican members of Congress about President Donald Trump’s executive power and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency efforts, while some Democratic members have faced complaints of being disorganized and not fighting Trump hard enough.

Hageman attempted to speak on DOGE and its efforts to reconfigure the federal government at one point, telling constituents at her town hall on Wednesday, “Here’s the only thing that DOGE has done, it’s so bizarre to me how obsessed you are with federal government.” She was immediately interrupted with jeers of disapproval and loud boos.

“You guys are going to have a heart attack if you don’t calm down,” Hageman told the crowd after repeatedly attempting to take control.

Democratic Rep. Sean Casten was interrupted several times by pro-Palestinian protesters during his own town hall Wednesday night in Downers Grove, Illinois. He warned that people “are going to decide not to come to town halls anymore because it’s not productive.”

At one point, a man jumped onto the stage with Casten, prompting the congressman to tell the crowd he would step off the stage and call the police.

“Sir, get off the stage! Get off the stage!” Casten yelled at the man.

In another instance, a woman in the audience stood up and yelled at Casten about US support going to Israel.

“Ma’am, can you please sit down? Ma’am, ma’am, ma’am… what is your point in disrupting this event? I recognize your face, you have disrupted many events,” Casten responded.

Police asked the congressman to end the event and send everyone home after several heated exchanges.

Police end Democratic lawmaker’s town hall after fiery confrontations
01:28

A rise in heated confrontations from constituents

The town halls on Wednesday night illustrate growing signs of unease and dissatisfaction from constituents across the country.

GOP Rep. Rich McCormick of Georgia faced some tough criticism and occasional boos from constituents last month as he fielded questions about the Trump administration’s early actions.

At one point during his February town hall, McCormick was pointedly asked about the firings of hundreds of workers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is based in Atlanta: “Why is a supposedly conservative party taking such a radical and extremist and sloppy approach to this?”

“I’m in close contact with the CDC. They have about what, 13,000 employees, 13,000 employees at the CDC. In the last couple years, those probationary people, which is about 10% of their employee base, about 1,300 people, which you’re referring to. A lot of the work they do is duplicitous with AI,” McCormick said.

The mention of AI led to “no’s” and murmurs from the crowd, leading the Republican representative to say, “I happen to be a doctor. I know a few things.”

GOP Rep. Cliff Bentz faced a similar reaction from his constituents during a town hall last month in La Grande, Oregon, where he also received questions on DOGE. One constituent asked, “Since DOGE was created without the Congress, who is paying for it,” leading to applause from the crowd.

“The DOGE committee, as I understand it, is being filtered into, if that’s the right word for (it) or put into another agency, but we are looking into that now to find out. I don’t know the answer,” he said before being interrupted by some boos and jeers of disapproval.

Some of the tough criticism and oftentimes angry remarks have led to police action. One man who identified himself as a veteran was escorted out of a town hall in Asheville, North Carolina after he shouted in protest following GOP Rep. Chuck Edwards’ comments about voting for the House budget resolution.

Edwards told CNN following the town hall, “There were so many people that took time to be there, that took time to put questions in the box that they wanted answered. I believe it’s part of the democratic process, even though it might be uncomfortable from time to time. I think town halls are necessary.”

Other members of Congress showed more frustration about the matter. GOP Sen. Roger Marshall left his town hall earlier this month in Oakley, Kansas, after a larger-than-expected crowd pressed him about DOGE cuts including jobs held by veterans.

Fears of angry protesters have deterred some in office from going in front of crowds. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer postponed planned book tour events in several cities citing security concerns, after receiving heavy backlash from within his caucus and the Democratic base over his decision to vote to advance a Republican-led funding bill last week.

Local chapters of Indivisible, a progressive group created in 2016 after Trump first took the White House, had planned protests around events for the book tour.

This story has been updated with additional developments.

CNN’s Taylor Galgano and Martin Goillandeau contributed to this report.

A rise in heated confrontations from constituents

The town halls on Wednesday night illustrate growing signs of unease and dissatisfaction from constituents across the country.

GOP Rep. Rich McCormick of Georgia faced some tough criticism and occasional boos from constituents last month as he fielded questions about the Trump administration’s early actions.

At one point during his February town hall, McCormick was pointedly asked about the firings of hundreds of workers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is based in Atlanta: “Why is a supposedly conservative party taking such a radical and extremist and sloppy approach to this?”

“I’m in close contact with the CDC. They have about what, 13,000 employees, 13,000 employees at the CDC. In the last couple years, those probationary people, which is about 10% of their employee base, about 1,300 people, which you’re referring to. A lot of the work they do is duplicitous with AI,” McCormick said.

The mention of AI led to “no’s” and murmurs from the crowd, leading the Republican representative to say, “I happen to be a doctor. I know a few things.”

GOP Rep. Cliff Bentz faced a similar reaction from his constituents during a town hall last month in La Grande, Oregon, where he also received questions on DOGE. One constituent asked, “Since DOGE was created without the Congress, who is paying for it,” leading to applause from the crowd.

“The DOGE committee, as I understand it, is being filtered into, if that’s the right word for (it) or put into another agency, but we are looking into that now to find out. I don’t know the answer,” he said before being interrupted by some boos and jeers of disapproval.

Some of the tough criticism and oftentimes angry remarks have led to police action. One man who identified himself as a veter

an was escorted out of a town hall in Asheville, North Carolina after he shouted in protest following GOP Rep. Chuck Edwards’ comments about voting for the House budget resolution.

Edwards told CNN following the town hall, “There were so many people that took time to be there, that took time to put questions in the box that they wanted answered. I believe it’s part of the democratic process, even though it might be uncomfortable from time to time. I think town halls are necessary.”

Other members of Congress showed more frustration about the matter. GOP Sen. Roger Marshall left his town hall earlier this month in Oakley, Kansas, after a larger-than-expected crowd pressed him about DOGE cuts including jobs held by veterans.

Fears of angry protesters have deterred some in office from going in front of crowds. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer postponed planned book tour events in several cities citing security concerns, after receiving heavy backlash from within his caucus and the Democratic base over his decision to vote to advance a Republican-led funding bill last week.

Local chapters of Indivisible, a progressive group created in 2016 after Trump first took the White House, had planned protests around events for the book tour.

This story has been updated with additional developments.

Aurangzeb is irrelevant, says RSS as it condemns violence in Nagpur

The tomb of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb who died 300 years ago which is located in Khuldabad in Maharashtra is under the storm since the VHP and Bajrang Dal, both affiliates of the RSS, had demanded its removal

Any type of violence is bad for the society, Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) national publicity in-charge Sunil Ambekar said on Wednesday (March 19, 2025). On being asked if RSS thinks that Aurangezeb is relevant today and his tomb should be moved, Mr. Ambekar said its not relevant.

The tomb of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb who died 300 years ago which is located in Khuldabad in Maharashtra is under the storm since the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Bajrang Dal, both affiliates of the RSS, had demanded its removal. The demand sparked nationwide protests. After one of such protests that was held in Nagpur on March 17 left the city under communal tension. Curfew has been imposed in the town, which is also the RSS headquarters, and the situation is now under control says police.

Mr. Ambekar, who was addressing a press conference in Bangalore ahead of RSS’s annual executive meeting, the highest decision making body, which is scheduled to take place here from March 21 to 23, said that RSS is set to pass two resolutions in the meeting, one on the atrocities committed against Hindus and other minorities in Bangladesh. The other resolution will be on the success of RSS in 100 years, since 1925 and targets for the years to come.

Sunita Williams Homecoming Live Updates:

Astronauts Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore, after an unexpected stay at the International Space Station (ISS) for more than nine months, have returned to Earth and splashed down off the coast of the American state of Florida early on Wednesday.

A SpaceX Crew Dragon spaceship carrying the two astronauts, alongside American Nick Hague and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov, streaked through the atmosphere before deploying parachutes for a gentle splashdown off the Florida coast at 3:27 am IST.

The two astronauts flew to the orbital lab in June last year, on what was supposed to be a days-long roundtrip to test Boeing’s Starliner on its first crewed flight. The spaceship, however, developed propulsion problems and was deemed unfit to fly back and later returned empty.

Here Are Live Updates On Sunita Williams, Butch Wilmore’s Homecoming:

Sunita Williams Joins List Of Astronauts With Longest Space Missions

NASA tracks astronauts with the longest space missions and the most cumulative time spent in space throughout their careers.

President Murmu presents Ramnath Goenka journalism awards

A ground report from Israel and the West Bank as bombs dropped and residents hunkered down; an investigation into medical colleges across Madhya Pradesh that didn’t hold exams for years; the reality of an award-winning athlete’s village that lacked basic civic amenities and the fight of champion wrestlers for justice.

These are some of the stories that have won the Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Awards 2023, the nation’s most prestigious journalism honour. The winners will receive the awards from President of India Droupadi Murmu who will be Chief Guest at the ceremony in New Delhi Wednesday.

Instituted by the Ramnath Goenka Foundation, the awards acknowledge and honour the best of journalism showcasing 20 outstanding contributions from print, digital and broadcast journalists across 13 categories, including investigative journalism, sports, politics and government, books, feature writing and regional languages.

The jury for the 19th edition of the excellence awards include: Justice B N Srikrishna, former judge at the Supreme Court of India; Prof C Raj Kumar, founding Vice Chancellor, OP Jindal Global University; Prof K G Suresh, former Vice Chancellor, Makhanlal Chaturvedi National University of Journalism & Communication and former Director General, Indian Institute of Mass Communication; Rohini Nilekani, Chairperson, Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies and Co Founder & Director, EkStep; and Dr S Y Quraishi, former Chief Election Commissioner.

“It was difficult to choose the best stories. We try to make sure we are evaluating stories from as many regions and languages as possible. Young journalists should follow these awards to know what makes a good story,” said Quraishi.

The journalists who won faced many challenges in the pursuit of their stories. Suresh said, “There’s a perception that journalism is dead but the Ramnath Goenka awards repeatedly remind us that journalism is vibrant, alive and kicking. I’ve been on the jury for the last few years and am always pleased to see more stories coming from regional media outlets, not just national media outlets.”

“The younger generation is very promising. Their rigour is admirable. These stories involve ground reporting in which they have to go beyond the call of duty. They take risks, expose the mafia, take on the powers that be. That is the essence of journalism,” he said.

In these polarised times, says Suresh, there is a ray of hope for future journalists. “These stories should be printed and distributed in all media schools so students see that they are missing out on real stories happening on the ground level.”

अभिराज राजेंद्र मिश्रा

अभिराज राजेंद्र मिश्रा

अभिराज राजेंद्र मिश्र (जन्म 1943) एक संस्कृत लेखक, कवि, गीतकार, नाटककार और संपूर्णानंद संस्कृत विश्वविद्यालय , वाराणसी के पूर्व कुलपति हैं । 

वह साहित्य और शिक्षा के क्षेत्र में अपने काम के लिए भारत के अत्यधिक प्रतिष्ठित पुरस्कार पद्म श्री 2020 के प्राप्तकर्ता हैं । 

व्यक्तिगत जीवन

उनका जन्म उत्तर प्रदेश के जौनपुर जिले के द्रोणीपुर में पंडित दुर्गाप्रसाद मिश्र और अभिराजी देवी के घर हुआ था। उनके दीक्षा गुरु जगद्गुरु रामभद्राचार्य हैं , जिनके द्वारा 14 जनवरी 2011 को महाकाव्य गीतारामायणम का विमोचन किया गया था। 

आजीविका

उन्होंने हिमाचल प्रदेश विश्वविद्यालय , शिमला में संस्कृत विभाग के प्रमुख के रूप में कार्य किया है । वे इंडोनेशिया के सबसे पुराने विश्वविद्यालय, इंडोनेशिया विश्वविद्यालय में विजिटिंग प्रोफेसर भी रहे हैं ।

अभिराज राजेंद्र मिश्र वर्ष 1988 के संस्कृत साहित्य अकादमी पुरस्कार के विजेता हैं । वे त्रिवेणी कवि के नाम से लोकप्रिय हैं । उन्होंने संस्कृत, हिंदी , अंग्रेजी और भोजपुरी में कई पुस्तकों की रचना की है ।

सेवानिवृत्ति के बाद वे हिमाचल प्रदेश के शिमला में बस गए ।

उनकी कृतियों में शामिल हैं: 

  • इक्षुगंधा
  • अरण्यनि
  • अभिराज-यशोभूषणम्
  • धारा-मांडवियम
  • जानकी-जीवनम्
  • मधुपर्णी
  • संस्कृत साहित्य में अन्योक्तियाँ
  • सप्त धारा
  • कविता और काव्यशास्त्र
  • अभिराज-सहस्रकम
  • नाट्य-पंचगव्यम
  • नाट्य-पंचामृतम्
  • वाग्-वधूति
  • मृद्विका
  • श्रुतिमभरा
  • बाली-द्वीपे भारतीय संस्कृतिः
  • विम्सा-शताब्दी-संस्कृत-काव्यमृतम् 
  • सेजराह केसुस्त्रान संस्कृत (बहासा इंडोनेशिया में संस्कृत का इतिहास)
  • सुवर्ण-द्वीपीय राम-कथा
  • संस्कृत-शतकम्
  • पुरस्कार और सम्मान
  • 1988 में उनकी लघु कहानी संग्रह इक्षुगन्धा के लिए संस्कृत के लिए साहित्य अकादमी पुरस्कार ।
  • 2002 में भारत के राष्ट्रपति से सम्मान प्रमाण पत्र। 
  • वाल्मीकि सम्मान 
  • वाचस्पति सम्मान 
  • उत्तर प्रदेश संस्कृत संस्थान द्वारा विश्व भारती सम्मान 
  • साहित्य अकादमी अनुवाद पुरस्कार 2013. 

 

The Vedas

The Vedas are the religious texts which inform the religion of Hinduism (also known as Sanatan Dharma meaning “Eternal Order” or “Eternal Path”). The term veda means “knowledge” in that they are thought to contain the fundamental knowledge relating to the underlying cause of, function of, and personal response to existence.

They are considered among the oldest, if not the oldest, religious works in the world. They are commonly referred to as “scripture”, which is accurate in that they can be defined as holy writ concerning the nature of the Divine. Unlike the scriptures of other religions, however, the Vedas are not thought to have been revealed to a certain person or persons at a specific historical moment; they are believed to have always existed and were apprehended by sages in deep meditative states at some point prior to c. 1500 BCE but precisely when is unknown.

The Vedas existed in oral form and were passed down from master to student for generations until they were committed to writing between c. 1500 – c. 500 BCE (the so-called Vedic Period) in India. They were carefully preserved orally as masters would have students memorize them forwards and backwards with emphasis on exact pronunciation in order to keep what was originally heard intact.

The Vedas are therefore regarded as Shruti in Hinduism meaning “what is heard” as contrasted with other texts designated Smritis (“what is remembered”), accounts of great heroes and their struggles in works such as the MahabharataRamayana, and Bhagavad Gita (although some sects of Hinduism regard the Bhagavad Gita as Shruti). The texts which make up the Four Vedas are:

  • Rig Veda
  • Sama Veda
  • Yajur Veda
  • Atharva Veda
  • Each of these is further divided into types of text included within them:
  • Aranyakas – rituals, observances
  • Brahmanas – commentaries on said rituals
  • Samhitas – benedictions, prayers, mantras
  • Upanishads – philosophical narratives and dialogues
  • The Upanishads are the best known and most often read of the Vedas because their discourse is presented in dialogue/narrative form and they were the first to be translated into other languages. The four Vedas, conversely, are considered the literal sounds of the Divine which, when recited or sung, recreate the primal vibrations of the universe. Accordingly, they are actually impossible to translate and what one reads in a translation should be understood as a paraphrase at best.

    Orthodox Hindu denominations recognize the Vedas as a significant spiritual authority but not all Hindu sects follow suit. Reform movements throughout the modern era, beginning in the 19th century CE, place greater value on personal religious experience than scriptural authority and tradition and so some sects, or off-shoots of Hinduism (such as the Brahmos Movement) reject the Vedas entirely as superstition. Even so, the works continue to be recited, studied, and venerated in the present and remain an important part of Hindu religious observances, festivals, and ceremonies.

     

    Early Origin, Dating, & Development

    No one knows the origin of the Vedas although many scholars and theologians have advanced differing claims on the subject. It is most commonly believed (though by no means universally accepted) that the Vedic vision came to India by way of nomadic Aryan tribes who migrated there from Central Asia sometime around the 3rd millennium BCE. “Aryan” should be understood as it was by the people of the time, meaning “free” or “noble”, a class of people, not a race, and not Caucasian (as was claimed by 18th- and 19th-century CE Western scholars). These Indo-Aryans are thought to have broken off from a larger group which also included the Indo-Iranians who settled in the region of modern-day Iran and came to be known in the West (via the Greeks) as Persians. Similarities between Early Iranian Religion (and later Zoroastrianism) and early Hinduism suggest a common belief system, which then developed separately.

    The Indo-Aryan Migration theory holds that the Vedic vision was developed in Central Asia and brought to India during the decline of the indigenous Harappan Civilization (c. 7000-600 BCE) between c. 2000-1500 BCE, merging that culture‘s beliefs with their own. Another theory, however, known as Out of India (OIT) claims that the Harappan Civilization had already developed this vision and exported it from India to Central Asia from whence it then returned with the migration of the Indo-Aryans.

    There are sound reasons for recognizing the motivation, at least, for either claim (though the OIT is rejected by mainstream academia) and scholars seem to hold to one or the other more for personal reasons than any based on objective, scholarly research. The most reasonable response to the question of the origin and dating of the Vedas is simply that one does not know. The human need to resolve what appears to be mysterious, however, keeps the debate alive in the present day. Scholars Hermann Kulke and Dietmar Rothermund comment briefly on the early development of the dating/origin issue:

    Muller’s work continues to inform the debate in the present day, and his claims are generally considered the most probable or even certain. Wherever the Vedic vision originated, and however long it existed in oral form, it developed in India during the Vedic Period after the arrival of the Indo-Aryans.

Hinduism

The term Hinduism

The term Hinduism became familiar as a designator of religious ideas and practices distinctive to India with the publication of books such as Hinduism (1877) by Sir Monier Monier-Williams, the notable Oxford scholar and author of an influential Sanskrit dictionary. Initially it was an outsiders’ term, building on centuries-old usages of the word Hindu. Early travelers to the Indus valley, beginning with the Greeks and Persians, spoke of its inhabitants as “Hindu” (Greek: ‘indoi), and, in the 16th century, residents of India themselves began very slowly to employ the term to distinguish themselves from the Turks. Gradually the distinction became primarily religious rather than ethnic, geographic, or cultural.

Since the late 19th century, Hindus have reacted to the term Hinduism in several ways. Some have rejected it in favor of indigenous formulations. Others have preferred “Vedic religion,” using the term Vedic to refer not only to the ancient religious texts known as the Vedas but also to a fluid corpus of sacred works in multiple languages and an orthoprax (traditionally sanctioned) way of life. Still others have chosen to call the religion sanatana dharma (“eternal law”), a formulation made popular in the 19th century and emphasizing the timeless elements of the tradition that are perceived to transcend local interpretations and practice. Finally, others, perhaps the majority, have simply accepted the term Hinduism or its analogues, especially hindu dharma (Hindu moral and religious law), in various Indic languages.

 

Since the early 20th century, textbooks on Hinduism have been written by Hindus themselves, often under the rubric of sanatana dharma. These efforts at self-explanation add a new layer to an elaborate tradition of explaining practice and doctrine that dates to the 1st millennium bce. The roots of Hinduism can be traced back much farther—both textually, to the schools of commentary and debate preserved in epic and Vedic writings from the 2nd millennium bce, and visually, through artistic representations of yakshas (luminous spirits associated with specific locales and natural phenomena) and nagas (cobralike divinities), which were worshipped from about 400 bce. The roots of the tradition are also sometimes traced back to the female terra-cotta figurines found ubiquitously in excavations of sites associated with the Indus valley civilization and sometimes interpreted as goddesses.

General nature of Hinduism

More strikingly than any other major religious community, Hindus accept—and indeed celebrate—the organic, multileveled, and sometimes pluralistic nature of their traditions. This expansiveness is made possible by the widely shared Hindu view that truth or reality cannot be encapsulated in any creedal formulation, a perspective expressed in the Hindu prayer “May good thoughts come to us from all sides.” Thus, Hinduism maintains that truth must be sought in multiple sources, not dogmatically proclaimed.

Anyone’s view of the truth—even that of a guru regarded as possessing superior authority—is fundamentally conditioned by the specifics of time, age, gender, state of consciousness, social and geographic location, and stage of attainment. These multiple perspectives enhance a broad view of religious truth rather than diminish it; hence, there is a strong tendency for contemporary Hindus to affirm that tolerance is the foremost religious virtue. On the other hand, even cosmopolitan Hindus living in a global environment recognize and value the fact that their religion has developed in the specific context of the Indian subcontinent. Such a tension between universalist and particularist impulses has long animated the Hindu tradition. When Hindus speak of their religious identity as sanatana dharma, they emphasize its continuous, seemingly eternal (sanatana) existence and the fact that it describes a web of customs, obligations, traditions, and ideals (dharma) that far exceeds the Western tendency to think of religion primarily as a system of beliefs. A common way in which English-speaking Hindus often distance themselves from that frame of mind is to insist that Hinduism is not a religion but a way of life.

www.hinduonline.com

www.history.com

‘सीधे टॉप लेवल पर चल रही बात’, टैरिफ धमकी पर तुलसी गबार्ड का बड़ा बयान; कहा- PM मोदी और ट्रंप अच्छे दोस्त

डोनाल्ड ट्रंप ने अप्रैल से भारत पर टैरिफ लगाने की धमकी दी है। अब नई दिल्ली पहुंचीं अमेरिका की राष्ट्रीय खुफिया निदेशक तुलसी गबार्ड ने कहा कि दोनों देशों के बीच टॉप लेवल पर बातचीत चल रही है। नई दिल्ली में थिंक टैंक ऑब्जर्वर रिसर्च फाउंडेशन के वार्षिक रायसीना डायलॉग्स के अवसर पर उन्होंने कहा कि भारत और अमेरिका के बीच आर्थिक संबंधों को मजबूत करने का अवसर है।

एएनआई, नई दिल्ली। नई दिल्ली पहुंचीं अमेरिका की राष्ट्रीय खुफिया निदेशक तुलसी गबार्ड ने कहा कि टैरिफ के मुद्दे पर भारत और अमेरिका के बीच टॉप लेवल पर सीधी बातचीत हो रही है। गबार्ड ने कहा कि पिछले कुछ दिनों में मैंने भारत सरकार के अधिकारियों से बात की है। मुझे यह देखकर खुशी हुई कि भारतीय अधिकारी इसे नकारात्मक दृष्टिकोण से देखने के बजाय सकारात्मक ले रहे हैं।

अच्छे समाधान की तलाश

गबार्ड ने आगे कहा कि जैसे पीएम मोदी अपने देश की अर्थव्यवस्था और लोगों के लिए उपलब्ध अवसरों को सर्वोत्तम हित में देख रहे हैं। ठीक उसी प्रकार राष्ट्रपति ट्रंप भी अमेरिकी लोगों और आर्थिक हितों यही करने में जुटे हैं। पीएम मोदी और डोनाल्ड ट्रंप बेहतरीन समाधान की तलाश में हैं।

टॉप लेवल पर चल रहा सीधा संवाद

तुलसी गबार्ड ने कहा कि सबसे सकारात्मक बात यह है कि हमारे पास दो ऐसे नेता हैं, जिन्हें मुद्दों की सामान्य समझ है और अच्छे समाधान की तलाश में हैं। सीधा संवाद दोनों देशों के बीच शीर्ष स्तर पर चल रहा है। मगर विभिन्न सचिवों और कैबिनेट सदस्यों के बीच यह तय करने में अहम होगा कि आगे का रास्ता कैसा होगा? मैं व्यक्तिगत रूप से उत्साहित हूं क्योंकि भारत और अमेरिका में निजी क्षेत्र में गहरी दिलचस्पी है।

साझेदारी को मजबूत करने का बड़ा अवसर

तुलसी गबार्ड ने कहा कि पीएम मोदी और डोनाल्ड ट्रंप के बीच गहरी दोस्ती है। यही दोस्ती दोनों देशों के बीच आपसी साझेदारी को बढ़ाने की आधारशिला है। उन्होंने आगे कहा कि हमारे नए प्रशासन के साथ संबंधों की दिशा पीएम मोदी की व्हाइट हाउस यात्रा के दौरान तय हुई। जैसा कि आप जानते हैं कि वे पहले से ही अच्छे दोस्त हैं। यह भारत और अमेरिका के बीच साझेदारी को मजबूत करने का एक बड़ा अवसर था। 

इन क्षेत्रों पर मजबूत होगी साझेदारी

गबार्ड ने कहा कि यहां विभिन्न भारतीय सरकारी और खुफिया अधिकारियों के साथ हुई हमारी बैठकों का आधार यह रहा है कि कैसे हम अपने संबंधों को मजबूत करना जारी रख सकते हैं? न केवल खुफिया बल्कि हम वाणिज्य, व्यापार, रक्षा और शिक्षा के क्षेत्र पर भी विचार कर रहे हैं। मैं अमेरिका-भारत साझेदारी में केवल अवसर ही देख रही हूं। बातचीत के दौरान तुलसी ने महाभारत समेत कई मुद्दों पर खुलकर बात की।

 

महाराणा प्रताप के वंशज अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ का 81 साल की उम्र में निधन, उदयपुर में शोक

उदयपुर के पूर्व राजपरिवार के सदस्य अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ का निधन हो गया। वे लंबे समय से बीमार चल रहे थे और सिटी पैलेस के शंभू निवास में उनका इलाज हो रहा था। अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ महाराणा प्रताप के वंशज थे। उनके पिता भगवत सिंह मेवाड़ और माता सुशीला कुमारी मेवाड़ थीं। उनके बड़े भाई महेंद्र सिंह मेवाड़ का निधन पिछले साल 10 नवंबर 2024 को हुआ था।

जेएनएन, राजस्थान। उदयपुर के पूर्व राजपरिवार के सदस्य अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ (81) का निधन हो गया। वे लंबे समय से बीमार चल रहे थे और सिटी पैलेस के शंभू निवास में उनका इलाज हो रहा था। अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़, महाराणा प्रताप के वंशज थे। उनके पिता भगवत सिंह मेवाड़ और माता सुशीला कुमारी मेवाड़ थीं। 
उनके बड़े भाई महेंद्र सिंह मेवाड़ का निधन पिछले साल 10 नवंबर 2024 को हुआ था। अरविंद सिंह के निधन के बाद सिटी पैलेस को पर्यटकों के लिए बंद कर दिया गया है। उनकी पार्थिव देह का अंतिम दर्शन सोमवार सुबह सात बजे से होंगे। अंतिम यात्रा सुबह 11 बजे से निकलेगी।
सिटी पैलेस टूरिस्ट के लिए बंदअरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ के निधन के बाद सिटी पैलेस को पर्यटकों के लिए बंद कर दिया गया है। सिटी पैलेस के बाहर सुरक्षा गार्ड तैनात किए गए हैं, जो पर्यटकों को इस बारे में जानकारी दे रहे हैं।

संपत्तियों के एग्जीक्यूटर बनाए गए थे अरविंद सिंह

पूर्व महाराणा भगवत सिंह ने 1963 से 1983 के बीच पूर्व राजपरिवार की कई संपत्तियों को लीज पर दे दिया था। इस फैसले से नाराज होकर उनके बड़े बेटे महेंद्र सिंह मेवाड़ ने अदालत में मुकदमा दायर किया।

महेंद्र सिंह ने अदालत में अपील की थी कि ‘रूल ऑफ प्राइमोजेनीचर’ को छोड़कर पैतृक संपत्तियों को बराबर बांटा जाए। यह नियम आजादी के बाद लागू हुआ था, जिसके तहत परिवार का बड़ा बेटा राजा बनता था और स्टेट की सारी संपत्ति उसी के पास होती थी।

भगवत सिंह ने इस मामले में कोर्ट में जवाब दिया कि ये सभी संपत्तियां ‘इम्पोर्टेबल एस्टेट’ यानी अविभाज्य हैं। बाद में उन्होंने 15 मई 1984 को अपनी वसीयत में संपत्तियों का एग्जीक्यूटर छोटे बेटे अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ को बना दिया।

डेस्टिनेशन वेडिंग के ट्रेंड की शुरुआत

अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ के बेटे लक्ष्यराज सिंह मेवाड़ ने राजस्थान समिट के दौरान बताया था कि उदयपुर को डेस्टिनेशन वेडिंग का हब बनाने में उनके पिता की महत्वपूर्ण भूमिका रही है। 1980 के दशक में अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ ने डेस्टिनेशन वेडिंग को लेकर एक नई सोच के साथ काम शुरू किया था। उस समय इस विचार को लेकर उनका मजाक बनाया गया था, लेकिन आज डेस्टिनेशन वेडिंग एक बड़ी सफलता बन चुका है।

कई नेताओं ने जताई संवेदना

मुख्यमंत्री भजनलाल शर्मा सहित कई गणमान्य व्यक्तियों ने उनके निधन पर शोक व्यक्त किया है। मुख्यमंत्री ने इसे राजस्थान के लिए अपूरणीय क्षति बताते हुए कहा कि अरविंद सिंह मेवाड़ ने समाजसेवा और सांस्कृतिक संरक्षण में महत्वपूर्ण योगदान दिया। पूर्व मुख्यमंत्री अशोक गहलोत, वसुंधरा राजे, पंजाब के राज्यपाल गुलाबचंद कटारिया सहित कई नेताओं ने दिवंगत आत्मा की शांति के लिए प्रार्थना की।

 

Judge won’t block Musk’s records access because states couldn’t show ‘irreparable harm’

WASHINGTON – A federal judge on Tuesday refused to block Elon Musk’s access to sensitive records at several federal departments after another judge limited the Department of Government Efficiency’s access to the Treasury Department.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan held hearings Friday and Monday on the request from 14 states, which argued that Musk was exercising unchecked power to gain access to sensitive information, terminate personnel and end contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

But Chutkan ruled that the states hadn’t shown they would suffer “imminent, irreparable harm” unless she blocked DOGE.

“The court is aware that DOGE’s unpredictable actions have resulted in considerable uncertainty and confusion for Plaintiffs and many of their agencies and residents,” Chutkan wrote. “But the ‘possibility’ that Defendants may take actions that irreparably harm Plaintiffs ‘is not enough.

 

In the case led by New Mexico, 14 states argued that Musk’s “unchecked power” over federal agencies violates the Appointments Clause in the U.S. Constitution. They said that Musk took over a newly established agency without following the protocol outlined in founding documents.

 

Judge won’t block Musk’s records access because states couldn’t show ‘irreparable harm

 

In the case led by New Mexico, 14 states argued that Musk’s “unchecked power” over federal agencies violates the Appointments Clause in the U.S. Constitution. They said that Musk took over a newly established agency without following the protocol outlined in founding documents.

The Appointments Clause requires Congress to establish an office before the president can fill it and states that the Senate must confirm a nominee to an office created by law.

A New Mexico official said if the Labor Department’s sensitive data was compromised, it could leave the state vulnerable to embezzlement, cyber theft and ransom attacks. A Washington state official said if DOGE canceled federal-state contracts it would hurt the state’s ability to meet its legal commitments to residents. A Connecticut official said DOGE could potentially impact the state’s Department of Social Services funding.

“The sweeping authority now vested in a single unelected and unconfirmed individual is antithetical to the nation’s entire constitutional structure,” the states argued.

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