What we see as the tedious but necessary, joyful, and meditative parts of life (cooking, cleaning) they see as degrading tasks that must be delegated to subhumans. If you touch a broom, you become untouchable. And in the poo-eat-poo hellscape that is India, it's a slippery slope from "just tidying up" to "getting buried alive". on a subconscious level it's life or death to these "people".
That attitude carries over when they move to a 1st world country and they can't bring their servants. It's the classic indian roommate that leaves piles of dirty dishes in the sink, greasy takeout containers on the counter, garbage cans overflowing and then torn apart by raccoons in the yard, pubic hairs all over the bathroom.... it's "not their job" to clean up after themselves... it's degrading and they're above it and they didn't move all the way to Canada just to become a dalit! Which begs the question, who's job is it to clean up? That's where you, the white roommate, come in. Whether you like it or not, the pajeet assigns you the role of servant. When you get fed up with living in teetering piles of maggot-filled takeout containers and reluctantly decide to clean up the shared kitchen, you're just affirming your role as servant (Canadian/American edition!). Yes, this should make you angry.
And I don't mind cleaning, but when a pajeet terrorizes me into doing it because he sees himself as ABOVE ME..... yeah, fuck no. Zoom out and understand that the indian roommate dynamic is just a microcosm of larger society. This is a prevalent and deeply held attitude: make a mess and whitey will clean it up (or not, cause squalor clearly doesn't bother them). Incompatible values etc.
We need to wake up and set some boundaries fr