logo
Tarachand Jain: I am happy with the country's progress

Tarachand Jain: I am happy with the country's progress

Hindustan Times19 hours ago
Born on December 12, 1925, in Madhya Pradesh's Sagar district, Tarachand Jain aspired to become a teacher, just like his father. However, his life took a dramatic turn when he was dismissed from his school at 17 for participating in the Quit India Movement in 1942. Inspired by Mahatma Gandhi, Jain joined the freedom struggle and was imprisoned for six months. Tarachand Jain: I am happy with the country's progress
An athlete and long-time supporter of the Indian National Congress, Jain expressed concern over the party's current state. 'I am happy with the country's progress — be it access to water, road construction, housing for the poor, or improvements in education. But I feel distressed about the Congress's condition due to weak leadership,' he said.
Jain is also disappointed with the growing influence of caste and religion in politics. 'When we fought for freedom, we were united by a dream of a united India—free from divisions based on caste and religion. Even after 78 years of independence, political parties continue to promote reservation and division. Progress should not only be material but also mental and social,' he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

$1,390 stimulus check in August? Here's the truth about social security rumor
$1,390 stimulus check in August? Here's the truth about social security rumor

Hindustan Times

time5 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

$1,390 stimulus check in August? Here's the truth about social security rumor

There are rumors going around that Americans might get a stimulus check this year. Many taxpayers are asking if they'll see extra money in their accounts soon. Some reports say a $1,390 payment could be coming. But right now, there's no plan for a new stimulus check, according to The Sun. No federal stimulus check approved yet; lawmakers debate relief bills while some states provide direct payments and programs to support struggling residents.(Pexel) Congress has not approved any stimulus package. Donald Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' did not include any direct payments. On top of that, the Senate has left for summer break and won't return until September 2. That means nothing will happen until at least then. Still, some lawmakers have introduced relief ideas. Senator Josh Hawley, a Republican, is pushing a plan to send $600 checks to individuals. For a family of four, that would add up to $2,400. Hawley said Americans should get this money because the last four years under President Biden have hurt families' savings and finances. But Hawley's idea still has a long way to go. First, it has to go through a committee. There, lawmakers can review and make changes to the bill. If the committee approves it, the full Senate will debate and vote on it. Also Read: $1,702 stimulus checks in August: When will you receive the payment? Eligibility and more Bill needs Senate, House, and President approval If the Senate passes the bill, it goes to the House of Representatives. Both the House and Senate have to agree on the same version of the bill. Then it goes to the President. The President can sign it into law or veto it. If it's vetoed, Congress can still pass it with a two-thirds vote. There was also talk about a "Doge dividend" when Elon Musk was in the White House. That plan would have given out relief money using savings from the Department of Government Efficiency. But the idea didn't go far. Musk has left the White House, and even before that, top Republicans weren't sold on the plan. House Speaker Mike Johnson said the idea might sound good politically, but it doesn't line up with conservative values. 'Fiscal responsibility is what we do as conservatives,' he said at CPAC in February. He said the focus should be on reducing the national debt. Even though there's no federal stimulus check coming right now, some states are offering their own relief. New York and Georgia offer inflation relief checks up to $500 In New York, people will start getting inflation relief checks worth up to $400 starting in October. That program is funded by $2 billion. In Georgia, millions of taxpayers have already received checks up to $500. South Carolina also has a program called the Palmetto Payback fund. It helps residents claim property or money that legally belongs to them but hasn't been collected.

BJP ‘ready to stoop to any level of immorality to stay in power': Kharge alleges on Independence Day
BJP ‘ready to stoop to any level of immorality to stay in power': Kharge alleges on Independence Day

Scroll.in

time5 minutes ago

  • Scroll.in

BJP ‘ready to stoop to any level of immorality to stay in power': Kharge alleges on Independence Day

Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge on Friday alleged that the Bharatiya Janata Party is 'now ready to stoop to any level of immorality to stay in power'. He referred to the revision of voter rolls in Bihar, claiming that the exercise was used to 'openly remove' Opposition voters, and added that living persons were being declared dead during the process. He further said that the impartiality of the Election Commission could be gauged by its unwillingness to disclose who had been removed from the voter lists and on what basis. However, Kharge added that he was grateful to the Supreme Court, which on Thursday directed the poll body to publish a district-wise list of around 65 lakh voters whose names were deleted from Bihar's draft electoral rolls. Earlier in the day, the Congress chief hoisted the national flag at the Congress' new headquarters in New Delhi, and spoke about the party's campaign against alleged electoral malpractices, calling it a struggle to ' save democracy ', The Hindu reported. 'This is not a fight to win elections but to save India's democracy and protect the Constitution,' Kharge said to his party colleagues on Friday. He urged Congress workers to take an active role in verifying the voter rolls at the booth level. 1. आप सभी को 79th Independence Day की हार्दिक शुभकामनाएँ और बधाई। 2. कांग्रेस पार्टी के लिए आज का दिन ऐतिहासिक है, क्योंकि हम अपने नए स्थायी मुख्यालय में स्वतंत्रता दिवस मना रहे है। 3. 15 अगस्त 1947 को जो स्वतंत्रता हमने हासिल की, उसमें हमारी पार्टी की भूमिका को सारा विश्व… — Mallikarjun Kharge (@kharge) August 15, 2025 India not truly free under BJP: Mamata Banerjee West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Thursday said that India is not genuinely free under the current BJP-led Union Government, PTI reported. Banerjee claimed that the BJP is curbing citizens' fundamental rights, including voting rights and freedom of speech, the news agency reported. 'Despite India having achieved Independence 78 years ago, the people are not truly independent under the rule of the fascist BJP,' she said. In a post on X Banerjee said that 'Bengal and Bengalis are the victims of hatred in different parts of the country.'. She added that the people of Bengal, who had already suffered during the partition, were once again facing attacks on various pretexts, and efforts were being made to strip them of their constitutional rights under the guise of amending the voter list. The Trinamool Congress has repeatedly raised concerns about several Bengali-speaking migrant workers being detained in parts of the country on the suspicion of being Bangladeshis. Since the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack, the police in several states ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party have been detaining Bengali-speaking persons – mostly Muslims – and asking them to prove that they are Indian citizens. Several persons have been forced into Bangladesh after they allegedly could not prove their Indian citizenship. In some cases, persons who were mistakenly sent to Bangladesh returned to the country after state authorities in India proved that they were Indians.

Dead Voters and Democracy's Farce in Bihar's SIR
Dead Voters and Democracy's Farce in Bihar's SIR

The Hindu

time29 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Dead Voters and Democracy's Farce in Bihar's SIR

Published : Aug 15, 2025 16:51 IST - 4 MINS READ Dear readers, Politics has always been a spectacle—drama, melodrama, suspense, and the odd twist that makes you wonder if you're watching the news or a bad soap. But the events around the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR)—a term many point out the Election Commission has never used before—have outdone even the most overcooked political potboiler. Surreal. Sordid. On August 13, Rahul Gandhi had tea with seven 'dead' voters from Raghopur, the Assembly constituency of RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav in Bihar, and thanked the Election Commission with sugar-laced sarcasm. 'There have been many interesting experiences in life, but I never got the chance to have tea with dead people. For this unique experience, thank you, Election Commission!' Gandhi posted on X. Was he thinking of the 1995 American crime drama Dead Man Walking, or the rock supergroup of (almost) the same name that toured the UK, Ireland, and the US? I like to think these 'dead men walking' staged an exclusive presentation for Rahul, who, in true Main Hoon Na style, promised to fight for their rights. It brought to mind Kaagaz (2021), the story of Lal Bihari 'Mritak', a middle-class man from Uttar Pradesh declared dead in government records, whose 18-year battle to prove he was alive led him to found the Uttar Pradesh Association of Dead People. Or Unwanted (2019), about an autistic boy, Mangal Azad, who must prove he is alive after being declared dead. Reel life is one thing. In real life, it's less entertaining when your own government says you no longer exist. Meanwhile, the actor Kay Kay Menon objected to the Congress using a clip from his web series Special Ops promotions in its 'Vote Chori' campaign—without permission. The ad caption read: 'Himmat Singh kuch keh rahe hain, jaldi se kar aao! Band karo (Himmat Singh is saying something, go quickly! Stop it).' Soon came Menon's dry rejoinder: 'Please note I have not acted in this ad.' Still, nothing could outshine the absurdity of Rahul Gandhi's tea party with the certified-dead—a ready-made masala script. In a four-minute clip he shared, the 'deceased' joked about sightseeing in Delhi and wondered how a dead man buys a ticket to the monuments. Many only discovered their official deaths after checking the electoral rolls, despite filing all the paperwork for inclusion. Before this séance in Delhi came the case of Minta Devi, listed in Bihar's voter rolls as 124 years old, making her older than Ethel Caterham, the world's oldest living person at 115. Priyanka Gandhi and other Congress women MPs wore T-shirts with Minta Devi's photo to mock the SIR's absurdities. The BJP pounced, accusing the Congress of violating privacy, as Minta Devi herself demanded to know who gave permission to plaster her Election Card publicly. But in politics, privacy is an optional extra. Then came Mintu Paswan, produced in the Supreme Court by the activist Yogendra Yadav—another 'dead' man, despite having voted in the last four Lok Sabha elections. His crime? Someone told an official he was dead. The farce has spread beyond Bihar. Aaditya Thackeray cited a Varanasi man who fathered 34 children in 16 years, a Palghar woman with five voter cards, and an unmarried seer listed as the father of 50 voters. The hits keep coming: 269 voters at one Muzaffarpur address, 247 at another in Jamui. The list of absurdities could double as the sequel to Kaagaz. Rahul Gandhi now plans a 16-day 'Voter Adhikar Yatra' in Bihar from August 17, which the Congress calls a decisive battle for democracy and one-person-one-vote. The march will start in Sasaram, once represented by Meira Kumar and her father, the late Jagjivan Ram. And in case you thought the scriptwriters had clocked out, there was that earlier incident where someone filed an online application for a residence certificate in Donald Trump's name in Samastipur, just days after the Bihar administration issued one to 'Dog Babu'. Until the next newsletter, SIR and madam, I remain Yours truly, Anand Mishra | Political Editor, Frontline We hope you've been enjoying our newsletters featuring a selection of articles that we believe will be of interest to a cross-section of our readers. Tell us if you like what you read. And also, what you don't like! Mail us at frontline@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store