Comments by "LandGrabbingIndia" (@LandGrabbingIndia) on "Firstpost"
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Over the last four years and ongoing, Indian news outlets have repeatedly stated that India is significantly ahead of China, always pushing the narrative 'India wins, China loses.' So what better way to prove this narrative than at the world's largest sporting event (2024 Paris Olympics). It’s the perfect opportunity for India to showcase their country's progress and human development. All of China’s finest athletes will be there, as well as India’s best, competing alongside the world’s greatest at the highest level. The event will be broadcast globally, with eyes focus on India and China as they compete. So, did India easily win as they claimed they would? Of course not—India lost to China 0 - 40 and India lost to Hong Kong, China 0 - 2.
Olympic success is often a reflection of a country's growth and human development. If a nation such as India lacks infrastructure, training facilities, proper nutrition, and access to basic needs like food and water, it will very well likely perform poorly in the Olympics. Looking at India's very poor performance in the 2024 Olympics, it is now crystal clear that India isn't growing or developing at all, and India's economy is not the 5th largest as they have boasted, but rather closer to their bottom-of-the-ladder Olympic ranking of 71.
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@pranav-qt4yu Nah. Chess is an English game. Definition of "Chess": Chess is a board game for two players. It is played on a square board, made up of 64 smaller squares, with eight squares in each row and column. Each player starts with 16 pieces: eight pawns, two knights, two bishops, two rooks, one queen and one king. Common sense tells you that India/Indians did not invent Chess, otherwise, the Chess pieces would be represented by the Caste system and each chess pieces would be represented by Brahmins (priests, intellectuals), the Kshatriyas (warriors, leaders), the Vaishyas (merchants, traders), the Sudras (manual laborers) and the Untouchables (street cleaners, latrine cleaners).
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