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jinglebells

Nehru's view on temples

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Why this atheist is being allowed to post this atheistic topic in "spiritual discussions" is quite odd?

Seems like the moderators will let atheists run wild here, but otherwise are very quick to delete many other posts that are less offensive.

 

Maybe the forum can create a section for atheist topics and move these offensive topics over there and let the atheists play their games there?

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Why this atheist is being allowed to post this atheistic topic in "spiritual discussions" is quite odd?

Seems like the moderators will let atheists run wild here, but otherwise are very quick to delete many other posts that are less offensive.

 

Maybe the forum can create a section for atheist topics and move these offensive topics over there and let the atheists play their games there?

 

There's nothing atheistic in what I wrote. If God is within man, why can't we serve man - a living, breathing human being - instead of dead idols. Hindus love cows more than they do human beings.:rolleyes: Is it atheism to point this out?

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Hindus love cows more than they do human beings.

where have you got this out.Its not like you think.

Come to india.

besides just because we dont torture cows like idiotic mlecchass doesnt mean we do dont love human beings.

Dont you love your mother more than any other random women.

 

what happens when foreigners eat cows.

isnt that atheism.

Or inhuman in your view.

Do you know what has happened to yamuna river due to our foolishnesss.

read this

River Yamuna

 

India consumes about 86,311 tonnes (t) of technical-grade insecticides annually to cover 182.5 million hectare of its land. Most Indian rivers pass through agricultural areas that use pesticides. This makes leaching from agricultural fields the most serious non-point — unspecified, and therefore, not measurable accurately — source of pollution to the aquatic environment. And now there’s a 1995 study that’s found traces of isomers (a carcinogenic organochlorine) in Indian rivers, including the Yamuna.

About 57 million people depend on Yamuna waters. With an annual flow of about 10,000 cubic metres (cum) and usage of 4,400 cum (of which irrigation constitutes 96 per cent), the river accounts for more than 70 per cent of Delhi’s water supplies. Available water treatment facilities are not capable of removing the pesticide traces. Waterworks laboratories cannot even detect them. Worse, Yamuna leaves Delhi as a sewer, laden with the city’s biological and chemical wastes. Downstream, at Agra, this becomes the main municipal drinking water source. Here too, existing treatment facilities are no match for the poisons. Thus, consumers in Delhi and Agra ingest unknown amounts of toxic pesticide residues each time they drink water.

 

The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), on its part, had found endosulphan residues — alpha and beta isomers — in the Yamuna in 1991. An earlier study by H C Agarwal (Delhi University) had traced ddt residues amounting to 3,400 nanogram per litre (ng/l). However, later cpcb studies showed reduced ddt levels. To gauge the immensity of the threat, it is necessary to trace the river’s flow — divided in five segments on the basis of hydro-geomorphological and ecological characteristics — down to its final reaches.

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