Let me guess you dropped the SJB from your name Pranay Shumsher Jung Bahadur?That’s not just a few extra syllables — it’s a whole legacy of inherited power. It's always amusing when someone born into privilege, schooled at Rato Bangala, educated abroad, and cushioned by generations of nepotistic advantage starts preaching to the rest of us about how to feel about nepotism. The kind of access you have had your whole life isn't about hard work; it’s about inherited privilege.
It feels a bit rich when someone whose life has been shaped by the very structures of nepotism now lectures the rest of us those who live outside that bubble on how we should feel about it, or how we should protest.
You didn’t just benefit from the system. You are the system. Spare us the lectures from your inherited pedestal.
Wow! What well articulated and almost poetic personal attack - I'm assuming these are also not some words of an average Nepali protestor. No. Someone highly privileged and educated maybe? Perhaps an AI? You know how I could tell? Look at that trademark dash.
I think Pranay taking the role as a reporter is highly admirable. Very impressed with how he bootstrapped in this platform. And I thank him for his excellent job at keeping us well informed.
As for whoever wrote this comment - try writing your own sentences so we know you're not a bot, and tell us more about how his background disqualifies him from journalism.
Rarely has a spontaneous "youth movement" involved such efficient coordinated attacks, not on random targets, but on major government buildings, homes, and major businesses, in such short time - and rarely has army and police been ordered to let such attacks happen. Please follow up with an article on who emerges to create "order out of chaos" and who their backers might be...
What happened in Nepal has happened before during the Sunflower revolution in Taiwan, but the people eventually lost power again. Why? Because they centralized their systems and they became corrupted again.
Nepal should not make the same mistakes. We must make new decentralized and radically transparent systems (called collective swarm intelligence systems (see many of our recent articles) in order to prevent slipping back into corruption, and to give the people a voice and a place to organize and pool ideas and resources free from propaganda and group labels.
Our very first article three years ago covered the sunflower revolution. We must learn from their mistakes. Voting for a leader isn’t good enough. ALL leaders will eventually become corrupted. The bad guys are too good at it.
They say that they only fire rubber bullet on students minors but there were literary empty cartridges case were on the ground after firing the real bullet toward students.
Thank you for this reporting. Please also provide more analysis of what it is the Government hopes to gain by “registering” social media by clarifying, exactly, how this raises protests against “corruption”.
Let me guess you dropped the SJB from your name Pranay Shumsher Jung Bahadur?That’s not just a few extra syllables — it’s a whole legacy of inherited power. It's always amusing when someone born into privilege, schooled at Rato Bangala, educated abroad, and cushioned by generations of nepotistic advantage starts preaching to the rest of us about how to feel about nepotism. The kind of access you have had your whole life isn't about hard work; it’s about inherited privilege.
It feels a bit rich when someone whose life has been shaped by the very structures of nepotism now lectures the rest of us those who live outside that bubble on how we should feel about it, or how we should protest.
You didn’t just benefit from the system. You are the system. Spare us the lectures from your inherited pedestal.
Wow! What well articulated and almost poetic personal attack - I'm assuming these are also not some words of an average Nepali protestor. No. Someone highly privileged and educated maybe? Perhaps an AI? You know how I could tell? Look at that trademark dash.
I think Pranay taking the role as a reporter is highly admirable. Very impressed with how he bootstrapped in this platform. And I thank him for his excellent job at keeping us well informed.
As for whoever wrote this comment - try writing your own sentences so we know you're not a bot, and tell us more about how his background disqualifies him from journalism.
His entire post is condemning the government and supporting the protestors. What are you complaining about?
Rarely has a spontaneous "youth movement" involved such efficient coordinated attacks, not on random targets, but on major government buildings, homes, and major businesses, in such short time - and rarely has army and police been ordered to let such attacks happen. Please follow up with an article on who emerges to create "order out of chaos" and who their backers might be...
What happened in Nepal has happened before during the Sunflower revolution in Taiwan, but the people eventually lost power again. Why? Because they centralized their systems and they became corrupted again.
Nepal should not make the same mistakes. We must make new decentralized and radically transparent systems (called collective swarm intelligence systems (see many of our recent articles) in order to prevent slipping back into corruption, and to give the people a voice and a place to organize and pool ideas and resources free from propaganda and group labels.
Our very first article three years ago covered the sunflower revolution. We must learn from their mistakes. Voting for a leader isn’t good enough. ALL leaders will eventually become corrupted. The bad guys are too good at it.
We need a “Newer World Order”…
Like this:
https://open.substack.com/pub/joshketry/p/a-newer-world-order?r=7oa9d&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false
Our first article about the sunflower revolution:
https://joshketry.substack.com/p/the-case-for-building-a-new-open?r=7oa9d&utm_medium=ios
#nepal
#decentralize
#transparency
#collectiveIntelligence
#SwarmIntelligence
They say that they only fire rubber bullet on students minors but there were literary empty cartridges case were on the ground after firing the real bullet toward students.
KP oli will remain a m*rderer till his last breath. This is so not done. No democracy is like this.
Wow! Ke ho yesto 😰
Thank you for this reporting. Please also provide more analysis of what it is the Government hopes to gain by “registering” social media by clarifying, exactly, how this raises protests against “corruption”.
I also hold similar view.