Thursday, June 9, 2022

Clarion Call for the Hindus of #bharat - don't nurture the non-venomous #dhonda saap and welcome the venomous snakes in our community...




Dhonda Saap

The checkered keelback (Fowlea piscator), also known commonly as the Asiatic water snake, is a common species in the subfamily Natricinae of the family Colubridae. The species is endemic to Asia.

 It is non-venomous.




The Indian cobra (Naja naja), also known as the spectacled cobra, Asian cobra, or binocellate cobra, is a species of the genus Naja found in India.  The Indian cobra is revered in Indian mythology and culture. The generic name and the specific epithet naja is a Latinisation of the Sanskrit word nāgá (नाग) meaning "cobra".


The common krait (Bungarus caeruleus), also known as Bengali krait, is a species of highly venomous snake of the genus Bungarus native to the Indian subcontinent.









What do all of these images prove?

They prove we should never be afraid of playing with poisonous snakes and at any cost, we shall never avoid them  - as the last image of Parikshit has shown

But rather,

we all must be trained on how to utilize the power of the venom, we must develop the skill to decide which venomous snake is good for the society and which must be killed - the way #lordkrishna killed #kaliya.

But, we shall never live a life like Parikshit - being afraid to be bitten by a poisonous snake and at the same time we must stop celebrating the #dhonda saap (the non-venomous snakes) of the society - and reconsider our thought processing and fix our mindset to think that these kinds of people are just a bunch of feeble powerless non-venomous snakes - who - even if they wish cannot do any significant contribution to the society.

For the #hindu ladies of #bharat - get ready to live a life of #daupradi not in the sense that she had five husbands - but in the sense that she utilized her poisonous venoms to establish #truth - the real #agnikanya of #bharat - and was #truthful enough to see through the fallacy - that the #dharm as practiced by Yudshisthir was just absurd and impractical and rather chose a more practical one - survival of the fittest - and with this mindset, she dared to challenge the tyranny of Kaurabh and ultimately worked as a real source of energy to cleanse the society by inspiring her lions to kill each member of the gangs - no mercy for the wicked and the evil.

A true warrior lady of ancient #bharat practicing the basic rule as advised by none other than #lordkrishna

"We must clean the underwood and the coppice before we can create a garden of beautiful flowers."

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