Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Indian Lender to British imperialism!
The case coming out of the pages of history is surprising everyone because an ordinary Indian family had ever lended the greatest power in the world. Seth Jumma Lal showed his generosity when the British government desperately needed money for the First World War in 1914. Although the British government hasn't yet returned a single pie of the debt that has now taken the form of a major legal dispute. Now his grandson has sent legal notice to the UK government to demand not only capital money but 109 years of heavy interest and historic justice. This matter is not just about money but also highlights the influence of Indian traders of that time and the reality of British imperialism. If this debt is added to today's price and interest rate, the amount could reach billions of rupees which would be a shock to the UK economy. The legal battle of this brave family of India is now collecting international headlines and people are seeing it as a big win against colonial exploitation.
Intelligent moves to win over enemy!
The Most Terrifying Thing About The Iran War Is Not The Missiles. It's The Drones.
Let me explain this because this is the future of warfare & it has been used strategically twice already.
Iran is firing thousands of drones.
And the problem isn't stopping them.
The problem is the MATH.
A drone costs anywhere from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars to build.
You know what it costs to intercept it?
An Iron Dome missile? $50,000 to $100,000 per shot.
A Patriot missile? UP TO $1 MILLION per intercept.
***These numbers might not be 100% accurate but you get the idea.
Iran fires a $500 drone. You spend $1 million to stop it.
That's a financial bleeding strategy.
And it WORKS.
We saw this exact dynamic play out in Operation Sindoor — India's precision strikes on Pakistan in May 2025.
Pakistan responded with waves of drones and missiles. India's air defense systems — Patriots, S-400s — intercepted them. Successfully.
But the cost asymmetry was staggering.
The attacker spends almost nothing. The defender bleeds their treasury with every intercept.
Now scale that to Iran — which has been making drones like a cottage industry for years. Not in one factory. In distributed, decentralized, small-scale production across the country.
You bomb one facility? Fifty others keep running.
That's by design.
The future of war is not two armies facing each other.
It's one side flooding the battlefield with cheap drones…
And the other side going bankrupt trying to stop them.
This is the new asymmetric warfare.
And nobody has a real answer for it yet.
Monday, March 9, 2026
Avoid Proxy War!
Spanish Member of the European Parliament Irene Montero recently criticized calls for military escalation involving the United States and Iran, directing strong remarks toward former U.S. president Donald Trump. Speaking during a political debate, Montero argued that leaders who advocate war should be willing to send their own children or families to the front lines, rather than asking ordinary citizens and soldiers to fight. Her comments were widely shared on social media as a criticism of war policies and a call for diplomacy instead of military confrontation. The statement reflects the position of several European politicians and activists who fear that the current tensions in the Middle East could escalate into a broader international conflict and are urging negotiations and peaceful solutions instead.
Iran war - Day 10!
Iran war - Day 10
— Oil hit $119 a barrel. Then Trump spoke. Fell back. Still above $100.
— Iran named a new Supreme Leader and immediately launched more missiles.
— Israel carried out its heaviest strike on Tehran yet.
— A NATO member (Turkey) got hit by an Iranian missile. Again.
— 8 Americans are dead.
— Iran struck Bahrain's only oil refinery and residential areas across the Gulf.
— Trump and Putin spoke. Putin also backed Iran's new leader. Both things.
— Five Iranian women soccer players defected in Australia.
This is Day 10.
Stay informed. Turn on notifications.
Because this war is not staying in the Middle East — it's in your stock portfolio, at your gas pump, and on your flight routes.
Every single one of you is already being affected.
Smile - Why?
1. Smiling can reduce stress and boost your mood by releasing neurotransmitters like serotonin, dopamine, and endorphins.
2. Even a fake smile can trick your brain into feeling happier and help you manage stress better.
3. Smiling may improve your immune system by helping you relax and reducing inflammation.
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