- Joined
- Jan 25, 2021
I grew up in a well known Indian majority part of London. Being a kid I just assumed that the area I lived in was typical for most of London as in, how dirty it was. Like absolute filth. Becoming an adult, learning about India and the rest of London I understood that a lot of the negative stereotypes about Indians were indeed true, even when they are in other countries. The issue with bullying in school was even indian flaovoured (as in, it revolved around the caste system so kids were being bullied based on their caste and it got to the point where the police had to step in).
This was decades ago, I went back and visited and its still dirty despite being given almost 1 million pounds investment. Also like I said i'm well aware of London's dirty areas, its still one of the worst. They dont have the "poo in loo" posters but there are "dont spit paan" posters everywhere now and they are done in a similar style which made me laugh because of that but it is a serious issue.
This was decades ago, I went back and visited and its still dirty despite being given almost 1 million pounds investment. Also like I said i'm well aware of London's dirty areas, its still one of the worst. They dont have the "poo in loo" posters but there are "dont spit paan" posters everywhere now and they are done in a similar style which made me laugh because of that but it is a serious issue.