yes this is OBC and creamy/non-creamy depends on your parent's income.
yes kallar comes under OBC and creamy and non creamy layer is depentupon annual income of the parent. If parent income is Rs4.5 lakhs and above it means Non creamy layer ,if the annual income is less than RS 4.5 lakhs it means creamy layer.
yes. I'm being totally serious, yes.
yes ofcourse. All Muslim excluding creamy layer come under OBC. THER IS NO DOUBT
yes
Not only yadavas but also any BC community persons whose parental income (other than salaries and agricultural income)exceeds 4.5 lacs per annum will come under Creamly layer.
The MBC (Most Backward Classes) category is a distinct classification from OBC (Other Backward Classes). MBC is a subset within the broader umbrella of OBC, with MBC typically identified as economically and socially backward classes that require specific attention and support.
No
creamy puff land
Saini's (warrior class) are descendants of a king, Shurasena, as well as of Krishnaand Porus, and to be related to the ancient Shoorsaini clan and Jats (working class) are Scythia gypsies that turned into a caste. Jats were accepted by hindus and because of their origin and occupation of farming (hence the name Jat), they were labeled as lower caste. While Sikhism allowed all castes to be treated equally, great numbers of Jatts (known as Jats outside Punjab) became followers of Sikhism. They were landlords of great amount of land in Punjab. Similarly, Sikh Saini's (smaller in population) were landlords in their respective regions. Sikhism allowed both groups of people to live under one umbrella and due to their occupations in Punjab, they have earned a similar high status in Punjab. Under British, both groups were labeled as a martial race. Marriages between the two groups is becoming a norm although their long past are not linked.
The meteorites come from space. They are destroyed in mesosphere.
On 10 April 2008 the Supreme Court of India upheld the government's initiative of 27% OBC quotas in government-funded institutions. The Court has categorically reiterated its prior stand that those considered part of the "Creamy layer" should be excluded from the scope of the reservation policy as well as from private institutions. The verdict produced mixed reactions from supporting and opposing quarters. Several criteria to identify the portion of the population comprising the "creamy layer" have been recommended, including the following:[7]Those with family income above Rs 250,000 a year (now Rs 450,000 a year)[when?] should be in creamy layer, and excluded from the reservation quota. Also, children of doctors, engineers, chartered accountants, actors, consultants, media professionals, writers, bureaucrats, defence officers of colonel and equivalent rank or higher, high court and Supreme Court judges, all central and state government Class A and B officials should be excluded. The Court has requested Parliament to exclude MPs' and MLAs' children as well.