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Bengaluru Protest Demands Statewide Probe into Nashik TCS, Hubballi—Blueprint for Fair Workplaces

Hindu Rashtra Samanvaya Samiti’s Bengaluru protest and memorandum urge a statewide probe into alleged workplace religious coercion, citing the Nashik TCS incident and the Hubballi case as catalysts. This analysis frames the demand within constitutional guarantees, emphasizing due process, neutrality, and evidence-based inquiry. It outlines how a Special Investigation Team (SIT) could be constituted, governed,…
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₹50 Lakh Madrasa Grant Sparks Debate: HJS Urges Mainstreaming to Safeguard Student Futures

Hindu Janajagruti Samiti (HJS) has opposed a proposed ₹50 lakh state grant to madrasas and urged that publicly financed institutions be integrated into the mainstream school system. The issue engages core constitutional safeguards—Articles 21A, 28, and 30—and requires a balance between secular public education and minority rights. Within this framework, conversion to regular schools implies…
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High-Stakes Showdown: Prakash Raj Faces ₹100 Cr TTD Notice, Delhi Case over Ramayana Remarks

Reports dated April 20, 2026 indicate that Prakash Raj faces a ₹100 crore defamation notice from a TTD Board Member and a criminal complaint in Delhi over allegedly derogatory remarks about the Ramayana. This analysis explains what a civil defamation notice entails, how criminal provisions like IPC Sections 499–500 and 295A are applied, and why…
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Washington’s Moral Authority in 2026: The Constitution as a Dharmic, Pluralist Compass

Washington’s moral authority in 2026 should be anchored in the U.S. Constitution understood as a moral covenant rooted in popular sovereignty, natural law, and inalienable rights. Treating separation of powers, checks and balances, and federalism as ethical constraints on power safeguards liberty while enabling responsive governance. The piece offers a practical constitutional impact protocol—rights risk…
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Warkari ‘Radicalisation’ Row: Hindutva Leaders Rebuke Pawar, Evidence, Context, and Dharmic Unity

A remark by Sharad Pawar alleging “radicalisation” in the Warkari movement set off a political debate in Maharashtra, prompting forceful rebuttals from Hindutva leaders and Warkari organisations. This analysis situates the controversy within the Warkari Sampradaya’s Bhakti ethos—public devotion, kirtan, abhang, seva, and humility—while clarifying what security scholarship actually means by “radicalisation.” It explains why…
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High-Stakes West Bengal 2026: BJP’s Hindutva–Bengali Identity Pitch vs TMC Corruption Overhang

West Bengal’s 2026 Assembly election is coalescing around two powerful narratives: the BJP’s fusion of Hindutva with a confident Bengali identity and the TMC’s defence of expansive welfare amid a corruption overhang. This long-form analysis explains how a polarised minority vote, border-state security anxieties, and women-centric welfare will shape margins. It maps the state’s decisive…
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Virat Hindu Sammelan, Pune: A Bold Call for a Constitutional Hindu Rashtra—And Its Pathways

At a Virat Hindu Sammelan near Pune, Sunil Ghanwat called for collective, democratic efforts to pursue a constitutional Hindu Rashtra. This analysis clarifies what “Hindu Rashtra” can mean within India’s legal framework, distinguishing a civilizational, dharma-guided ethic from any theocratic model. It explains constitutional constraints—Articles 25–28, equality provisions, and the basic structure doctrine—while mapping lawful,…
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A Vision for Bharat: Shivamogga Sammelan Calls for Dharmic, Constitutional, Unifying Governance

At a provincial Hindu Rashtra Sammelan in Shivamogga on April 6, 2026, the Hindu Janajagruti Samiti (HJS) called for “Hindu Ideology-Based Governance” in Bharat. Read through a constitutional and inclusive lens, this can be translated into a broader, dharmic governance model that upholds pluralism, compassion, and rule of law for Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs, and…
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Shobha Karandlaje’s Kerala claims of ‘Love, Land, Business’: evidence, law, and dharmic unity

Reports attributing to Union Minister Shobha Karandlaje claims of “Love, Land, and Business Jihad” in Kerala have ignited debate. This analysis replaces rhetoric with a rigorous, law-and-data framework that separates allegations into three testable domains: intimate-partner coercion, property intimidation or illegality, and unfair or illicit business practices. It outlines applicable statutes, proposes investigation protocols, and…
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Madras HC PIL on SC-Reserved Seats: Protecting Dharmic Rights and Tamil Nadu’s Poll Integrity

A new PIL before the Madras High Court seeks to align eligibility for SC-reserved seats in Tamil Nadu with the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950—limiting candidacy to Hindus, Sikhs, and Buddhists under current law. The plea highlights concerns over alleged misuse through covert conversions and asks for uniform, transparent verification by election authorities. Readers gain…
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Bihar cleric’s arrest after remarks on Yogi Adityanath’s mother: law, free speech, and civility

A Bihar-based cleric’s arrest after remarks targeting the mother of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, followed by a public apology, has reignited India’s debate over free speech, dignity, and public order. This analysis explains how Articles 19(1)(a) and 19(2) of the Constitution frame the balance between expression and legal limits. It outlines common penal…
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Jammu & Kashmir Assembly Rejects Temple Protection Bill: Deputy CM Invokes Existing Laws—What Changes Now?

The Jammu & Kashmir Assembly’s rejection of a proposed Hindu Temple Protection Bill, and the Deputy Chief Minister’s reliance on existing statutes, has refocused attention on how sacred spaces are actually protected on the ground. This analysis maps the current legal framework—from constitutional guarantees and IPC provisions to the Places of Worship Act, shrine-specific statutes,…
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Ram Navami Clashes, Nitesh Rane’s ‘Equal Rules’ Call, and a Blueprint for Harmony

A heated exchange around Ram Navami 2026 and Nitesh Rane’s call for “equal rules” across festivals highlights a core civic challenge: protecting religious freedom while ensuring public order. This analysis maps the constitutional framework (Articles 14 and 25–28), explains content-neutral, time–place–manner regulation, and outlines how parity looks in real operations. It details actionable steps—single-window permissions,…
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Mani Shankar Aiyar’s temple remarks rekindle debate on Indian secularism and Dharmic pluralism

Reported remarks by Mani Shankar Aiyar about not relating to Hindu Dharma and seeing no divinity in temple icons have sparked debate about Indian secularism in a Dharmic society. This analysis distinguishes personal disbelief from public responsibility, showing how language about sacred symbols can affect social harmony. It explains the philosophical basis of murti-puja, prāṇa-pratiṣṭhā,…
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UP SP leader’s arrest over Ram–Sita remarks: legal flashpoints, poll stakes, and dharmic harmony

A senior Samajwadi Party leader in Uttar Pradesh was arrested and expelled for derogatory remarks about Lord Ram and Sita, igniting a high-stakes political and legal confrontation as elections approach in UP and West Bengal. This analysis explains the applicable law (IPC 295A, 153A, 505(2)), the constitutional balance between free speech and public order, and…
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Tamil Nadu 2026 at a Crossroads: Stalin’s Headwinds, Vijay’s Gamble, BJP’s Ascent

Tamil Nadu’s 2026 Assembly Elections mark the first full test of a post-charismatic era, where the DMK, AIADMK, BJP, and TVK must win not only arguments but also last-mile execution. The DMK contends with anti-incumbency critiques on governance, law and order, and religious administration, even as it leans on welfare delivery and alliance arithmetic. TVK…
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VHP FIR against WB CM Mamata Banerjee sparks political storm, raises stakes for communal peace

VHP has filed an FIR against West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee over alleged remarks said to create fear of targeted attacks on Hindus, intensifying a high-stakes political debate in Rampurhat. The report explains how an FIR under CrPC Section 154 triggers investigation while preserving the presumption of innocence. It outlines the legal architecture frequently…
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Patna’s ‘Hindu Rashtra Adhiveshan’: Bold Resolutions, Constitutional Debate, and Dharmic Unity

A State-level Hindu Rashtra Adhiveshan in Patna, organized by HJS, adopted three headline resolutions: removing “secular” from the Constitution, instituting a nationwide ban on cow slaughter, and creating national anti-conversion laws. This analysis situates each proposal within India’s constitutional framework, federal structure, and Supreme Court jurisprudence. Readers gain clear context on the Preamble’s evolution, Article…
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Jammu University Syllabus Row: Protests Over Jinnah Chapter Ignite India’s History Debate

Protests at the University of Jammu over a Jinnah-related syllabus entry have intensified a national debate about how Indian universities should teach contested histories. This analysis clarifies the difference between inclusion and endorsement, situating Jinnah within a broader, evidence-based study of constitutional debates, the two-nation theory, and Partition. It outlines the legal-institutional pathways for curriculum…
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Viral RSS–Interfaith Marriage Claim: What the Law, Data, and History Reveal—and How to Heal

A viral video alleging that “RSS helped 1,000,000 Hindu girls marry into Muslim families” has sparked intense debate. This analysis separates claim from evidence, explaining how to evaluate sensational numbers through source verification, base-rate comparisons, and transparent definitions. Readers gain a clear summary of India’s legal framework, including the Special Marriage Act and Supreme Court…