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    Rahul Gandhi Takes Off the Mask: Adani, Epstein, and the Art of the Forced Deal

      Cardboard Box Full of File Folders

    In addition to the typical winter pollution, Delhi's air is heavy with the smell of a transaction that seems more like a frantic fire sale than a strategic partnership.


    Rahul Gandhi the leader of the opposition made a shocking revelation yesterday that the mainstream media is frantically trying to clean up. He didn't simply attack the new India-US trade pact; he suggested that Prime Minister Narendra Modi is compromised. The charge is straightforward and unsettling: The Prime Minister did not sign this agreement because it benefited India. He signed it because he was under immense pressure from two huge leverage points controlled by Washington.


    The Two Nooses: Adani and Epstein

    According to Gandhi the unexpected finalization of a trade pact that had been blocked for four months isn't a coincidence. It's a means of survival. He referred to two distinct pressure points


    The Adani Case in the US: Gandhi contends that the Adani Group's financial transactions are the subject of 1,111 proceedings in US courts, indicating that this isn't just about one individual. He refers to Adani as the PM's and the BJP's financial structure. When that system is endangered by US law, the government trembles.


    The Epstein Files: In a twist that sounds like a political novel, Gandhi tied the agreement to the notorious Jeffrey Epstein files. Recent reports show that monsters affiliated with Epstein may have had access to Indian leadership to conduct high-level meetings. Gandhi thinks there is more to come in these papers that the US is holding over the PM's head.


    Indian farmers must comprehend that PM Modi has traded off their hard work It scares him. He consented to the transaction under pressure. Rahul Gandhi


    Farmers: The Collateral Damage

    While the government celebrates an 18% duty cut on Made in India items, the tiny print paints a darker reality. Reports say that in return for this concession, the Indian market would be saturated with zero-tariff American agricultural items.


    Our farmers already dealing with increasing prices and climate debt, are now being pushed to compete with US industrial agricultural giants. Their blood and sweat has been exchanged in order to preserve one man's reputation. 

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