It seems that Kangana Ranaut will never disappear from the headlines. After the death of Sushant Singh Rajput, Kangana joined Twitter and since then she is leaving no chance to grab the eyeballs. From accusing almost whole Bollywood of taking drugs to misidentify an old lady in the farmers’ protest, Kangana has done it all. She is constantly being surrounded by many controversies and example of the recent one is when she jumped into the recently released web series Tandav controversy. A day or two ago, Kangana in her now-deleted tweet had said, ‘time to take their heads off’, for allegedly insulting Hindu gods in the series. Which obviously didn’t go well with many and she started receiving a lot of backlashes. Now, Kangana Ranaut claims that her Twitter account was restricted when made controversial remarks about Tandav creators.
A while back, Kangana tweeted that the liberal community reported her account and got it restricted by Twitter’s co-founder and CEO Jack Dorsey. She wrote, “Librus cried to their chacha @jack and got my account temporarily restricted, they are threatening me mera account/virtual identity kabhi bhi desh keliye shaheed ho sakti hai,magar my reloaded desh bhakt version will reappear through my movies.Tumhara jeena dushwar karke rahungi. (I will make your life miserable).”
Kangana had earlier made a controversial tweet, while talking about Tandav. Replying to a tweet about how people have ‘stopped taking insults lying down’, Kangana had written, “Because even Lord Krishna forgave 99 mistakes of Sheshupala…. pehle Shanti phir Kranti (Silence must be followed by revolution)…. time to take their heads off… Jai Shri Krishna.”
The tweet was later deleted by Kangana Ranaut. Kangana had also bashed Tandav and had written, “The problem isn’t just the Hindu phobic content, it’s also creatively poor and deprived, atrocious and objectionable on every level hence deliberately placed controversial scenes. Put them in jail not just for criminal intentions but also for torturing the viewer #tandavwebseries.”