Post by Mukesh Kumar
Managing editor at Yash Mor Academy YMA 🔥
How long will we call ourselves the world’s largest democracy if peaceful voices demanding accountability are met with silence? When an environmentalist, scientist, engineer, and innovator like Sonam Wangchuk is compelled to undertake a prolonged hunger strike for issues he believes affect the future of our environment and coming generations, it raises questions that every citizen should ask—not out of politics, but out of responsibility. Democracy is not measured only by elections. It is measured by how a nation listens to peaceful dissent, values dialogue, and responds to voices raised in the public interest. If citizens expressing concern through non-violent means feel unheard, are we truly strengthening the democratic ideals for which countless freedom fighters made the ultimate sacrifice? Regardless of where we stand on the issue, silence should never replace dialogue. Ashish Kaul, Prof. Animesh Kumar Singh Abhishek V S Akanksha singh Arun Kumar Anandkumar Sarsambe Major General Ajay Pant Maj Gen (Dr) Yash Mor Maj Gen SVP Singh, VSM (Retd) Maj Gen(Dr)Anil Shukla ( veteran) Maj Gen Manoj Kumar Bindal (Retd.), VSM Sonam Wangchuk Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP) Indian National Congress United Nations Human Rights Watch The Savage Humans Human Rights Commission Vasu Sahu Shaurya Vashishtha Akhilesh Sonarikar Monika Solanki Karanam M Sahithi Balaji R Pranshu Vardhan Vaishnawi Pathak Kartik Singh Vishal Nanjar Harshit Sharma Aman Roushan WILSON SHINDE BSc, MSc (Phy, Math), BEd, MEd, MA(PHIL) The question is simple: Are we still listening to those who choose peace over confrontation? #Democracy #FreedomOfExpression #SonamWangchuk #EnvironmentalJustice #CitizenVoice #Constitution #HumanRights #India #Leadership #PublicPolicy
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