A list of puns related to "Fundamental rights in India"
For those who don't know , my country India has just passed a law(Citizenship Amendment bill) allowing everyone except Islam as refugees from selective neighboring countries, supposedly to increase its voter base for the upcoming election. This has led to widespread protest in north east past of India where the fear is this move will result in the deterioration of their unique culture. My homeland India, which i have always taken pride for its secular and diverse status is now being destroyed by the supposedly Hindu nationalist party. Along with this the Br-exit, UK Elections, US Elections , i have a feeling we now officially at a stature where the collapse is imminent . I just cant see any positive outlook for the world in the next 100 Years. The people have just short term attention, they just refuse to question themselves , essentially remaining in their own echo chamber. I just hope remaining European countries remain committed to their people because as far as I can see every other big country is in turmoil , almost on the brink of fascism
The link to the bird article which was posted I guess 2 weeks back.
need your inputs.
> BJP/RSS believe the freedom of expression must be policed & controlled. I believe this freedom is a fundamental democratic right.
> My father lived and died in the service of India. The views of a character on a fictional web series can never change that.
> #SacredGames
Rahul Gandhi (@RahulGandhi)
https://twitter.com/RahulGandhi/status/1018123203728822272
#/r/WorldNews
[Title Post] China launches 8,000 water clean-up projects worth $100 billion in first half of 2017
[Title Post] India's Supreme Court Declares Right To Privacy As Fundamental Right Under Constitution
#/r/News
[Title Post] Amazon: We're lowering Whole Foods prices on Monday.
#/r/UpliftingNews
The owner of the store that sold the winning Powerball ticket says he's donating the store's $50,000 prize to several local charities.
#/r/nottheonion
[Title Post] 'Safer than London!' North Korea opens door to Russian tourists
#/r/science
Ancient 3700-year-old Babylonian clay tablet contains the first evidence of trigonometry dating much earlier than Ancient Greeks' efforts
People with tinnitus are more likely to suffer from depression, but a new study shows treatment with SSRI antidepressants likely makes ringing in the ears worse
Article 19 :- It guarantees the citizens of India the following six fundamentals freedoms:-
Freedom of Speech and Expression
Freedom of Assembly
Freedom of form Associations
Freedom of Movement
Freedom of Residence and Settlement
Freedom of Profession, Occupation, Trade and Bussiness
I would like to know serious opinions on this.
EDIT: that ELI5 cleared few things for me thanks
This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 60%. (I'm a bot)
> India's Supreme Court has given the country's gay, lesbian, bisexual and trans community the freedom to safely express their sexual orientation.
> In a historic decision on Thursday, the nine-judge panel declared that an individual's sexual orientation is protected under the country's Right to Privacy law.
> "Sexual orientation is an essential attribute of privacy," the decision reads.
> "Discrimination against an individual on the basis of sexual orientation is deeply offensive to the dignity and self-worth of the individual. Equality demands that the sexual orientation of each individual in society must be protected on an even platform."
> The judges expressly state sexual orientation falls under an individual's right to privacy, a constitutional right, and that no individual should be discriminated against based on their orientation.
> Section 377 is a law that limits a citizen's right to express their gender identity or sexual orientation in consensual relationships.
Summary Source | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: orientation^#1 Court^#2 sexual^#3 individual^#4 decision^#5
Post found in /r/worldnews.
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UN has already declared Internet as basic Human Right.
If India declares the same, then telecom players cant discriminate pricing for different online resources
Seeking feedback from cyber law experts..
need your inputs
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