Republic day is a mockery:
Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary, 8th edition
re • pub • lic
BrE / rɪˈpʌblɪk /
NAmE / rɪˈpʌblɪk /
noun
word origin
example bank
a country that is governed by a president and politicians elected
by the people and where there is no king or queen
newly independent republics
the Republic of Ireland
compare monarchy
© Oxford University Press, 2010
A republic is a form of government in which the country is
considered a "public matter" (Latin: res publica),
not the private concern or property of the rulers, and where offices of state
are subsequently directly or indirectly elected or appointed rather than
inherited. In modern times, a common simplified definition of a republic is a
government where the head of state is not a monarch.[1][2]
Currently, 135 of the world's 206 sovereign states use the word
"republic" as part of their official names.
In India,
'Republic Day honours the date on which the Constitution of India came into force replacing
the Government of India Act 1935 as the
governing document of India
on 26 January 1950.
I welcome and endorse the Madras
high court's verdict, emphasizing the quality education. But they have failed
to define the quality education, which is miserable and unfortunate.
Judgment by the madras high court bench obviously
demonstrates the ignorance of the high court bench. Nobody is
against the quality education, quality teachers, quality students, quality
infrastructure, and quality leaders.
But have anyone made any research, why teachers performed
very poor in those exams, and how some of them passed? Ruling out teachers’
eligibility is an outright injustice. The educational system is in your hands,
teachers are only the puppets in your hands. You have fostered them and today
you are declaring that teachers are not qualified. Ridiculous and funny!
Corruption, environmental hazards, global warming, religious
fanaticism, caste discrimination, male chauvinism, poverty and social
injustice… these are the consequences of the false education that the society
has promoted so far. But we’ve comfortably ignored it, and treating the
symptoms instead of the disease.
"Cogito ergo sum"
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