Just been following the situation in New Delhi and it's honestly getting ridiculous. Every winter the city gets blanketed in this thick smog and nothing really changes. Bloomberg was pointing out how the government keeps falling short on actually tackling this, and you can feel the frustration building among people living there.



The air quality stays terrible year after year despite all the announcements and initiatives. People are stuck breathing hazardous smog during winter months and it's affecting everything from health to daily life. What's frustrating is that there's clearly awareness of the problem, but the execution just isn't there.

I think what people are really tired of is the cycle - smog season rolls around, there's outrage, some temporary measures get announced, then it repeats. The residents are pushing for actual long-term solutions, not just band-aid fixes. The scale of this pollution crisis in the capital is something that definitely needs more serious attention.

It's one of those situations where you see the problem clearly laid out, public demand for change is there, but systemic change moves so slowly. Makes you realize how interconnected environmental issues are with governance and infrastructure planning.
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