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An jeet who can somewhat assimilate will bring dozens more of his kind who can't. I doubt the returning visa hires could change anything even if every H1-B in the US was like this guy and Trump had them all sent back. If you could make 50 million clones of this guy they might make a dent in the problems over there.That's kind of sad, this guy actually assimilated.
Im kind of hoping these returned visa hires can change things there, but i'm not optimistic.
Thats always the caveat with turd worlders. They breed like vermin and as soon as their relative is successful in the west, the rest of the clan wants in.An jeet who can somewhat assimilate will bring dozens more of his kind who can't.
Yeah Pakistanis took over one of the subways and I know theyre pakis because I found the poop cup in the bathroom.So the Jeet menace has hit my mostly white town and it has already started pissing a lot of people off. We have two subways in town and one was run by jeets, the other run by whites with a fully white staff. Apparently the owner of the white-staffed Subway sold it to the owners of the other subway and didn’t warn any of them beforehand. They all just came in the next day with a bunch of non-English speaking jeets behind the counter and were told they didn’t have jobs, one of the women working there had been there for 16 fucking years
So that’s some of the context behind this post
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The comments are surprisingly supportive with no one saying the post was racist and all agreeing to never go to either subway in town again
What is going on with this game. By all signs, the PC seems to be Vishnu, not an original character, not a fantasy standin, the deity worshipped by hundreds of millions inside the developer's own country, by their own employees. Western developers do treat Hinduism with exactly as much reverence as any other polytheistic religion except that these aren't western developers. This is like unironically developing a game where you play as the Second Coming of Christ (but here's a game where you play as the first coming).Are you guys ready for Pajeet Souls?
https://youtube.com/watch?v=C63L2eOEODwI don't even want to spoil anything, it has to be seen to be believed, I'm just gonna say that if you thought it's gonna take place in some fantasy version of India - think again.
Everything you posted about this game I agree with, a. I cant recall if it was in this thread or another place but someone was using video games as the litmus test for Indians supposed ability to be super coders.What is going on with this game. By all signs, the PC seems to be Vishnu, not an original character, not a fantasy standin, the deity worshipped by hundreds of millions inside the developer's own country, by their own employees. Western developers do treat Hinduism with exactly as much reverence as any other polytheistic religion except that these aren't western developers. This is like unironically developing a game where you play as the Second Coming of Christ (but here's a game where you play as the first coming).
And his sense of fashion is two centuries or more behind everyone else in the game, as if this is Prince of Persia, but I'd forgive you for not noticing in this control for group for progress in all its forms and definitions. Is the first half of that sentence a plot point? I don't know. Second half? Probably. Hindus believe that the world never ever gets better until the Avatar conquers the world.
Why is everyone an enemy; women, children, law enforcement? (I get why, I just want to know their explanation) A food cart salesman (I get why, I just want to know their explanation)? That is also an ogre? If these are just random NPC models that are being used as enemies, then why did they go through effort of using the cinematic features?
It seems to be the hallmark of low IQ to regard genAI responses as the pillar of truth.Jeets continue to cope and seethe with Grok:
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Even Pajeet king Modi appears to have bent knee to Grok.
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regard genAI responses as the pillar of truth
With jeets the futurism is also mixed with their primitive tribal polytheist mindset. The idea of Grok sounds similar to the all-knowing/all-seeing deities or myths, I don't know the poo equivalent of it but in ancient Greece it was Pythia the Oracle of Delphi. Don't be surprised if some IT jeets start worshipping Saar Grok and building shrines to "him" at their scam call centers.View attachment 7338191it's a whole range of corny fanboy futurism/scientism about deux ex machina technology rendering all problems obsolete.
blasphemously filthy river? do not to worry saar, soon the nanites will sanitize all environments for us. world's least sexually attractive features? each and everything will be corrected to your specification by gene crisping machine. pick your son, pick your daughter too, from the bottom of a long glass tube whoa oh whoa.
mediation by grok is just "appeal to authority" without any pesky deference to actual humans who hate them for endlessly darkening their doors
"The Following footage was shot 100% in game"Are you guys ready for Pajeet Souls?
https://youtube.com/watch?v=C63L2eOEODwI don't even want to spoil anything, it has to be seen to be believed, I'm just gonna say that if you thought it's gonna take place in some fantasy version of India - think again.
I'm pretty sure Zyklon B would affect jeets the same way radiation affects Godzilla and you'd just end up with a bunch of super jeets.
It would be hilarious if military equipment manufacturers stop selling to India because of the bad press. I doubt the shootdowns were because Pakistan had better weapons. It's more than certain Indians are too stupid to operate something as complex as a fighter jet competently.Jeets continue to cope and seethe with Grok:
View attachment 7337385
Even Pajeet king Modi appears to have bent knee to Grok.
View attachment 7337382
I think I can hazard a guess. In this game, it is the indian endtimes. All these enemies fought so far? Either dalits (literal scum in the eyes of the average indian) or traitors to the gods. These cops and that fancy dressed ogre? High caste members who refuse to bow to Vishnu or Kali or whoever that fruit with the sword is supposed to be. Why? Because they are corrupt and want to stay in power. Everyone is an enemy because they stand in the way to the indian utopia. The out-of-date fashion of the protag? Both a memento to the "Golden Age of India" and a dismissal of his enemies. Why'd an indian god care about the opinion of heretics, apostates, and subhumans?What is going on with this game. By all signs, the PC seems to be Vishnu, not an original character, not a fantasy standin, the deity worshipped by hundreds of millions inside the developer's own country, by their own employees. Western developers do treat Hinduism with exactly as much reverence as any other polytheistic religion except that these aren't western developers. This is like unironically developing a game where you play as the Second Coming of Christ (but here's a game where you play as the first coming).
And his sense of fashion is two centuries or more behind everyone else in the game, as if this is Prince of Persia, but I'd forgive you for not noticing in this control for group for progress in all its forms and definitions. Is the first half of that sentence a plot point? I don't know. Second half? Probably. Hindus believe that the world never ever gets better until the Avatar conquers the world.
Why is everyone an enemy; women, children, law enforcement? (I get why, I just want to know their explanation) A food cart salesman (I get why, I just want to know their explanation)? That is also an ogre? If these are just random NPC models that are being used as enemies, then why did they go through effort of using the cinematic features?
>be IndianAre you guys ready for Pajeet Souls?
https://youtube.com/watch?v=C63L2eOEODwI don't even want to spoil anything, it has to be seen to be believed, I'm just gonna say that if you thought it's gonna take place in some fantasy version of India - think again.
The PL-15E (E for export) is really better than anything the Indians have except maybe the Meteor missile, although I'm not sure if the Meteor was even used.I doubt the shootdowns were because Pakistan had better weapons
This scares me. Hear me out.The PL-15E (E for export) is really better than anything the Indians have except maybe the Meteor missile, although I'm not sure if the Meteor was even used.
It's kind of interesting that the largest air battle of this century happened not between China and America or between Ukraine and Russia, but in the hellhole that is the subcontinent, and both sides have relatively advanced weaponry. Only analogous air battles I can think of post WW2 are the air battles between Arabs and Israelis.
But the Pakistani air force is definitely quite competent, much better than their army or navy, their pilots also shot down some Israeli jets as volunteers in the 20th century.
I can already imagine what "lessons" future officers will learn from the Saar Wars and then wrongly apply in new theatres of war.This scares me. Hear me out.
All the worlds competent, and incompetent, armed forces have been yelling "write that down" every time the Russians and Ukrainians did something new.
If this carries on and they keep having a slap fight in the sky, experts might, willingly or not, have to look to India and Pakistan..."for expertise"![]()
I made a post about it before that got swallowed by a forum reset, I think, but yes - caste concerns are a primary issue for hygiene in India.I've been considering a theory on modern India and why it's so filthy and chaotic. I think it may stem from the campaign to abolish or at least diminish the caste system. For most of India's history caste was absolute. Everyone had a job to do and that was their unchangeable lot in life. Then the British took over and the system weakened a bit, Gandhi campaigned to abolish caste, then after independence the new Indian government created special exceptions and privileges for the lower castes similar to western civil rights laws. The system isn't gone but the stated agenda of the society is to make the castes more equal.
The idea of social mobility was introduced to a culture where it had been unimaginable for thousands of years. This didn't lead Indians to think "Yay, everyone is equal now and there's no oppression!" What they concluded instead was "Sweet, now I can actually become a higher caste without having to die and reincarnate first!" Indians think that the caste boundaries are now permeable so they're all scrambling to assert themselves as members of a high caste. The main way to do this is through success in business within corporate models imported from the West.
With the lines of caste blurred, everyone now wants to be one of cool guys who gets to order people around. Doing something like cleaning the streets or looking both ways as you cross the train tracks marks you as one of the lowly servant castes so everyone avoids doing it. For the same reason, pajeets will act rude and arrogant and do a sloppy job of everything to prove their high status. It reflects a view of how rich and successful people behave from the perspective of an illiterate peasant in a grass hut.
My guess is that centuries ago when caste was absolute, many more people belonging to the lower castes were willing to do jobs upkeeping things; India was also much less urbanized so there were less urban areas to keep tidy. Now everyone but the Dalits wants to larp as a higher caste and the entire framework underpinning the culture is crumbling. That's why the country is so amoral and treacherous, as that one article said "all the words for virtues are imported from Persian or Turkish." In traditional Indian culture, you don't act for the sake of "doing right," you do the things because they are part of the job you're born with. So blurring the lines of caste means dissolving the entire moral foundation of the culture.
Tl;dr they didn't evolve to have principles they base their actions on, they evolved to be told what to do by infallible superiors. When you take away that absolute hierarchy the culture falls apart.
At about 9:00 a.m. each day, Sudha Devi walks up to a gated house in India’s capital, removes her shoes and heads inside. She’s under strict orders: Don’t touch anything but the toilet. Immediately after Devi’s done cleaning, a housekeeper of a higher social rank scrubs down the entire house. As a member of the Dalit caste once known as “untouchables,” Devi is used to handling messes other Indian maids won’t go near. While those housekeepers earn about $100 (6,300 rupees) a month, Devi makes about 10 rupees per toilet. “Because of my caste, everyone leaves the dirtiest work to me,” Devi said while walking door-to-door in Safdarjung Enclave, an area less than 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the president’s house. “Most of those jobs include cleaning up after other people and doing work everyone else refuses to do.”
There is a long standing tradition in India for something called "manual scavenging" ("हाथ से मैला ढोना") which involves cleaning out pit latrines or picking up faeces on train tracks by hand without PPE, reserved for the lowest of the dalits, the halalkhors (Muslims) and Valmikis (Hindus). People who perform this work are called "Safai Karamchari" (सफाई कर्मचारी), basically waste collectors. Many of them are women.Devi’s services as a toilet cleaner are in demand largely because some housekeepers who aren’t Dalits won’t clean them. Asha, a maid in a Delhi neighborhood popular with expatriates and restaurateurs, is one of them. “I don’t clean toilets or carry trash -- there is another woman in the area who’s of low caste who does it,” said Asha, who goes by one name. “It’s impure for me and my family to work in such filth.”
But effectively, while dalits are more able to get employment in areas that are better due to laws that have continued to try and ban caste discrimination - tried, as noted previously dalits are still getting murdered for crimes as diverse as "going to a hair salon" or "owning sunglasses" - anyone who isn't that caste doesn't want to be associated with the untouchables, and that extends to literally just cleaning a regular plumbed toilet. This ties in with the caste superiority of Brahmins, who think taking care of that sort of thing is beneath them. For example in 2017 a gang of 15 youths lynched a rickshaw driver for daring to humiliate two of them for pissing in the street (he basically offered them each a penny to go use the public toilet they were stood outside).In 2021, a federal minister told parliament, external that the government had identified 58,098 manual scavengers in the country through surveys, but also added that there was "no report of practice of manual scavenging currently in the country". But according to the Safai Karmachari Andolan, which works to eliminate manual scavenging, there are more than 770,000 such workers.
Lack of water supply will push people to revert to their old ways of defecation, that is, in the open. It is because there is a lack of piped water supply especially in rural areas, people use the toilets constructed for them, for other purposes. Speaking of his travels across many parts of rural India, Professor Baruah expresses that, “I have seen people use toilets for storing grains and other materials.” This leads one to believe that building these toilets then becomes moot. It is not only a waste of funds but also of time and space.
“Open defecation is very much a part of peoples’ cultures.” says Professor Barauh and goes on to explain that “in many places kids grow up seeing their families and people going to fields together in the mornings. Early on in your life you get enrolled in this practice.” It becomes clear then that it is a set behavioural pattern that needs to be understood and changed. Open defecation may also prove to be a community act and this is because “every morning people walk to fields together and get the space to talk, converse and share things.”. Defecating in the open is also convenient especially with family sizes mostly being large in rural India and one small toilet may not be sufficient for the same. According to Professor Quaiser, Head of the Sociology Department at Jamia Millia Islamia University “Throughout history, people have had differential patterns of defecation and that has nothing to do with the existence of lavatories.” In other words, building toilets is not enough. Professor Baurah also spoke about the need for massive awareness drives that should be undertaken by State actors as well as non-governmental organisations. He also added that these campaigns should be aimed especially at men. This is because “in most of rural India, men are the decision makers in the family and they are the ones who need toilets the least.”