Tiny channels = pocket change. Big channels = serious money.
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Airdrops are more like lottery tickets than salaries. You might hit big, but it’s not a strategy to rely on for wealth. They’re best seen as a bonus for being early and active in crypto.
Airdrops are more like lottery tickets than salaries. You might hit big, but it’s not a strategy to rely on for wealth. They’re best seen as a bonus for being early and active in crypto.
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You need a high salary to get rich.
You need a high salary to get rich.
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First off, you're not alone in feeling this way—seriously, so many people go through this, even if they don’t show it online. Being lonely sucks, but it doesn’t mean you’re broken or unlovable. Use this time to actually focus on you—like try new hobbies, get into something creative, go outside evenRead more
First off, you’re not alone in feeling this way—seriously, so many people go through this, even if they don’t show it online. Being lonely sucks, but it doesn’t mean you’re broken or unlovable. Use this time to actually focus on you—like try new hobbies, get into something creative, go outside even if it’s just for a walk, or join online communities that vibe with your interests. You don’t need a boyfriend or a huge friend group to feel whole. Start by being your own hype person—learn to enjoy your own company, hype yourself up, take yourself on little solo dates, and just do things that make you feel good. When you start genuinely enjoying your own energy, the right people start getting drawn to it. Real connections come when you’re not desperately chasing them but just being your real self. You got this. 💛
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- Chatwise Social Media, Owned by You. Powered by Us.Added an answer about 12 months ago
Brooo have you even heard of ChatWise? 👀 It’s like if Instagram & WhatsApp had a baby... but made YOU the owner 😎 📲 Use it. 📢 Refer friends. 📈 Post content. 💸 Earn FREE shares (yes, actual company shares). They're giving away 60% of the company to users 💥 And people are already stacking up shareRead more
Brooo have you even heard of ChatWise? 👀
It’s like if Instagram & WhatsApp had a baby… but made YOU the owner 😎📲 Use it.
📢 Refer friends.
📈 Post content.
💸 Earn FREE shares (yes, actual company shares).They’re giving away 60% of the company to users 💥
And people are already stacking up shares — future IPO = lakhs from your sofa.Time to stop scrolling for free and start earning.
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#ByeInstaHelloChatWise 💯🔥
ChatWise allocates 60% of its shares to users, making it the first social media platform to be majority-owned by its community. The first 1 million users are guaranteed shares, aligning their interests with the platform’s success GAYA ONE NEWS | GAYA ONE INYO ...Read more
- Chatwise Social Media, Owned by You. Powered by Us.Added an answer about 12 months ago
Bored at home? 🛋️Wanna turn your chill time into cash & clout? 💸👑 Get on ChatWise – scroll, share, refer… and stack up real shares in the company!It’s like Insta + WhatsApp, but you get paid to vibe. 🚀📲
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar's interactions with the British colonial regime were compounded and calculated. Instead of joining the mainstream nationalist struggles, he believed in dealing with the colonial government to plead the cause of the underprivileged, especially the Dalits. During World War II, AmbedRead more
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar’s interactions with the British colonial regime were compounded and calculated. Instead of joining the mainstream nationalist struggles, he believed in dealing with the colonial government to plead the cause of the underprivileged, especially the Dalits.
During World War II, Ambedkar became a member of the Viceroy’s Executive Council as Labour Member, a place where he could lobby for labor reforms and social justice measures. He felt that participation within the system would bring certain gains to the downtrodden classes.
Ambedkar’s support for the British was not unwavering. He was critical of their policies when they did not seek to address social inequality and caste discrimination. His first loyalty was to the cause of social justice, and he used every platform available to him to advance the cause.
In reality, Ambedkar’s engagement with the British was motivated by pragmatism in order to deliver social reform. He was not a loyalist in the conventional sense but a reformer who wanted to leverage available structures in order to implement change.
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Babasaheb Ambedkar had two significant relationships in his life—first wife Ramabai, and second wife Dr. Savita Ambedkar. Let's begin with Ramabai. She and Ambedkar were married very young—he was 15, she was 9 (yeah, they had child marriage back then). But don't get fooled by that age; their relatioRead more
Babasaheb Ambedkar had two significant relationships in his life—first wife Ramabai, and second wife Dr. Savita Ambedkar.
Let’s begin with Ramabai. She and Ambedkar were married very young—he was 15, she was 9 (yeah, they had child marriage back then). But don’t get fooled by that age; their relationship was profound. She had a very poor upbringing and experienced most of her life in poverty. Babasaheb spent much of his time studying abroad, and when he was not there, she kept everything together—bringing up children, coping with bereavement (most of their children lost their lives in early years), and scraping through poverty. She never faltered in supporting him, even when they were staying in literally one-room chawls. He used to call her Rāmbai the soul of his strength. Tragically, she died in 1935, before she was able to see all that he went on to accomplish.
Later in life, in 1948, Ambedkar married again. His second wife was Dr. Savita Ambedkar (nee Sharada Kabir), an extremely well-educated woman—a doctor who assisted with caring for him when his health was failing. She was genuinely a badass herself. But she also received an awful lot of flak in the aftermath of his death. Some people criticized her for things, which was completely unjust, and it disrupted her reputation for a time. Eventually, most people (such as Ambedkarite movements) started acknowledging what she had done and respecting her properly.
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Dr. B.R. Ambedkar was born Bhimrao Ramji Sakpal. That was the name his family bore—they were of the Mahar caste, who were "untouchables" during that time. Now here's where it turns around: When Bhimrao was at school in Satara, a Brahmin teacher named Krishna Keshav Ambedkar befriended him. But as caRead more
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar was born Bhimrao Ramji Sakpal. That was the name his family bore—they were of the Mahar caste, who were “untouchables” during that time. Now here’s where it turns around:
When Bhimrao was at school in Satara, a Brahmin teacher named Krishna Keshav Ambedkar befriended him. But as caste society was doing the most, Bhimrao’s own earliest surname, Sakpal, branded him instantly as “lower caste.” So this teacher, perhaps attempting to ‘assist’ or perhaps merely desiring to distance Bhimrao from the baggage of caste, enrolled him for school using his own surname, “Ambedkar.”.
And that’s the name that accompanied Bhimrao into history. Consider this: an entire legacy tied to a name he did not even choose for himself. But what is poetic is how Bhimrao reversed that name and rewrote the narrative. He transformed Ambedkar into a badge of resistance, of intellect, of equality, of liberation.
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Acre = 43,560 ft². Kinda random but that’s the math.
Acre = 43,560 ft². Kinda random but that’s the math.
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