u/dangorhobomonnai
What material for Bookmarks do you all prefer?
Not exactly related to handwriting im sorry but it's something i have been wondering. These days, I see a variation in the kinds of bookmarks available in the market - paper/hardpaper, metallic, resin, crochet, thread, etc. What is your personal preference? I personally find the oldschool paper/hard paper bookmarks to be the most effective and convenient to carry, though the others are very appealing and pretty to look at, I won't lie
What material for bookmarks do you personally prefer?
These days, I see a variation in the kinds of bookmarks available in the market - paper/hardpaper, metallic, resin, crochet, thread, etc. What is your personal preference? I personally find the oldschool paper/hard paper bookmarks to be the most effective and convenient to carry, though the others are very appealing and pretty to look at, I won't lie
What kind is your personal favourite bookmark?
These days, I see a variation in the kinds of bookmarks available in the market - paper/hardpaper, metallic, resin, crochet, thread, etc. What is your personal preference? I personally find the oldschool paper/hard paper bookmarks to be the most effective and convenient to carry, though the others are very appealing and pretty to look at, I won't lie
I have seen a lot of hype around internships. In the first year itself, seniors really insist us on looking for internships and they even recommended a few. But as a Humanities student, I don't even know which field of work I would like to get an internship in. Writing is probably definitely not my thing. So I am very lost and stressed (extremely). Anybody any suggestions, please?
I was reading about Indian politics from the post-Emergency period up until the 1990s, and honestly, it felt like one of the most genuinely democratic phases in the country’s political history.
Yes, there was instability. Governments changed often, coalitions broke apart, and alliances kept shifting. But at the same time, it also seemed like public opinion actually reflected in election outcomes. Parties and coalitions like the Janata Party, Congress, National Front, later UPA and NDA — all got chances to govern. And when people felt a government wasn’t delivering, it could be voted out or even collapse through political pressure and no-confidence motions.
Compare that to now, where a lot of people seem to think that if anyone other than the NDA comes to power, the country will somehow be “doomed” for the next 5 years. But is that really how parliamentary democracy works? If a government genuinely performs terribly, it doesn’t necessarily survive comfortably for a full term. Coalitions can break, governments can fall, and voters can punish them in the next election.
Personally, I feel like democracy works best when leadership changes from time to time and no single political formation starts feeling permanent or unquestionable. Even if an alternative government turns out to be ineffective, wouldn’t giving different parties a fair chance still be healthier for democracy in the long run?
Curious to know what others think about this.