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Topic Summary

Posted by: 90sRetroFan
« on: January 08, 2026, 02:26:51 am »

Posted by: PotatoChip
« on: December 04, 2025, 08:41:15 pm »

How India balances neutrality and working towards a multipolar world order | DW New
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Russian President Vladimir Putin is in India for talks with prime minister Narendra Modi. The two countries have close defense and economic ties - but India has come under pressure from the US and Europe to reduce that co-operation and help end the war in Ukraine.
 
00:00 Russia’s President visits India
00:35 Daniel Markey, a senior research professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.
06:16 Political scientist Michael Slobodchikoff from Troy University in Alabama
13:56 Professor Sreeram Chaulia, who's a Dean at the Jindal School of International Affairs.

#putin #modi #indiaeconomy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IsG0sGhivU
Posted by: 90sRetroFan
« on: November 29, 2025, 05:07:28 pm »

Emigrate! Preferably to Australia, Canada or Britain itself!

Woke comments:

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E M I G R A T E

M

I

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A

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I was born in Canada and we have a lot of Indian immigrants- including families that have been here for a few generations. My next door neighbours are from India and they say they don't even have any family left in India- they have all moved to Canada.

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A taxi driver in Canada makes more than a chartered accountant in india. It's just the difference in the value of currency. So even if the immigrant cabbie saves up a little in canada and sends it back home its sufficient to pay up a few months. I've seen truck drivers from spain come here and live like kings just cause 20 euros a day is sufficient here to live comfortably. Indian rupees is a weaker currency.

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I did everything in my power to move to the United States when I was old enough, and I can say with 100% certainty, that it is much better.

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please just try to make your way to america or canada.

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Been in Canada for the past 16 years, and don’t regret one bit.

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I am Chinese Canadian whose most friends and tennents (as I am a landlord too) are Indians immigrant to Canada

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I'm of Indian origin born and raised in Australia, honestly after being to both countries the pros greatly outweigh the cons.

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Your birth certificate is not your responsibility but your passport is. Choose your destiny, oh awakened one!

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My advice for the young one's leave while you can, study hard, apply for Phd's or masters or UG & settle abroad.

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Indian government should bring a mass migration project to move half of the Indians to other countries and pay money for people to move abroad. Spend all money allocated to defense, space program, etc for encouraging people to move abroad! Then in some future india will perhaps be in a better place.

As for metaphysics:

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Sad thing is even if you die and are reborn, statistically the chances of you being born a Indian are so high haha

Then distribute it so that the probability of being born as a diaspora Indian becomes greater than the probability of being born in India! If India returns to its pre-colonial population (<200 million) while the other >1.2 billion currently in India have emigrated, this would be easy.

Finally, and most importantly, always remember why you are emigrating:

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From an American, what the West did to your nation represents the single greatest tragedy in human history. Please watch Shashi Tharoor's OxfordUnion debate speech. That will open your eyes a bit and yet it only scratches the surface. You are all now still suffering the effects of that, but your rate of progress with no help from us is tremendous. In fact we, the west, are only trying to throw more mud on you every day. While you may have more low-level corruption than us, you have no idea the extent and scale of the high level corruption in the west. 90% of high level corruption in India is a direct result of the west digging its tentacles into your national life.
Posted by: SodaPop
« on: November 28, 2025, 01:36:46 pm »

The Bengal Files: A Movie With An Anti-Muslim Agenda - VIDEO 8899
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OwSAQaZOdl8
Posted by: 90sRetroFan
« on: November 24, 2025, 05:40:57 pm »

"Indians traveling to Thailand and then expecting Thais to accept Indian culture whilst the Indians themselves refuse to immerse themselves in, and respect, Thai culture sounds very western to me."

Indian culture is not Western, therefore expecting Thais to accept Indian culture does not Westernize Thailand, therefore is not Western.

Also, not all cultures deserve respect. When I go to a non-vegan restaurant, I expect them to offer at least one vegan option, and I certainly refuse to immerse myself in, much less respect(!), their non-vegan food.

See also:

https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-false-left/true-left-breakthrough-anti-relativism/msg9172/#msg9172

I am not necessarily defending the behaviour of the particular Indian tourists described in the video you posted, but we must at all times emphasize our distinction from False Leftists who generally speak as though all cultures deserve respect by all other cultures.
Posted by: PotatoChip
« on: November 24, 2025, 02:20:58 pm »

Indian Tourist Does The Unthinkable In Thailand! Why India’s Reputation Is At Risk. VIDEO 8890
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFzNoSa3u-k

Indians traveling to Thailand and then expecting Thais to accept Indian culture whilst the Indians themselves refuse to immerse themselves in, and respect, Thai culture sounds very western to me.



Posted by: 90sRetroFan
« on: November 07, 2025, 02:15:42 pm »

But how does one have to behave to become hated by "whites" while loved by "non-whites"* (which is what we should aspire towards)?

(* By "non-whites", I include individuals with "white" parents but who voluntarily refrain from reproducing.)
Posted by: 58?
« on: October 12, 2025, 04:31:07 pm »

How Zionism and Hindu Nationalism ‘Work TOGETHER’
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On this episode of ‘Mehdi Unfiltered,’ Mehdi Hasan speaks to award-winning Indian author Arundhati Roy. In the wake of her global success, Roy says that India tried to trot her out as a symbol of Hindu nationalism. Instead, Roy became one of her country’s most prominent dissidents. “For me… there's never been a moment where I felt, ‘Oh, I should do this,’ or ‘I should keep quiet’, or ‘I should suck up to so and so,’” she says.

Mehdi and Roy discuss what it’s like for her to be a target for Hindu nationalists, India and Kashmir, the parallels between Hindutva and Zionism, Israel’s brutal genocide in Gaza, Donald Trump and the rise of global fascism, and also Roy’s powerful new memoir, 'Mother Mary Comes to Me.'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZhugTmSrMo

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[...]
Criticism of the comparison

See also: Fascist (insult)
In response to multiple authors claiming that the then-presidential candidate Donald Trump was a fascist,[239][240] a 2016 article for Vox cited five historians who study fascism, including Roger Griffin, author of The Nature of Fascism, who stated that Trump either does not hold or even is opposed to several political viewpoints that are integral to fascism, including viewing violence as an inherent good and an inherent rejection of or opposition to a democratic system.[241] In 2020, Vox contacted a group of experts on fascism for their view, with most rejecting the comparison but expressing concern about Trump's authoritarian and violent tendencies, including historians Roger Griffin and Stanley Payne.[242] Historian Richard J. Evans also rejected comparisons to fascism. In 2018, he wrote a negative review of both Albright and Snyder's books as having a "vague and confused" view of what defines fascism.[243][244] A paper in International Critical Thought stated in 2017 that the Trump's administration was not hegemonic nor fascist, but that it signaled the rise of a right-wing nationalist movement.[245] Benjamin R. Teitelbaum has stated he "unequivocally reject using the term" fascist to describe Trump on epistemological and pedagogical grounds, viewing it as "an end of inquiry".[246] Roger Griffin also argued that Trump displayed some but not all traits of fascism, and that his actions on January 6 were not those of a fascist leader but of an "ochlocrat".[247]

In a 2024 Guardian column, Jan Werner-Müller argued that rejecting the label can be done while acknowledging the dangers Trump creates to democracy.[3] Geoff Boucher, writing for The Conversation in 2024, argues Trump represents instead a 'new authoritarianism' that relies on administration instead of paramilitaries to subvert democracy,[15] a definition seconded by The Herald.[248] Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins, a historian at Wesleyan University, in an interview with Historian Joshua Zeitz, stated while he thought Trump had an authoritarian and illiberal vision, he was unsure if Trump was a fascist, but that by "not framing him this way, it does not at all mean that he is not a threat".[249] Griffin has since caveated this with the following statement that "in standard academic terms, he (Trump) is not one (a fascist), he is something worse".[250] In Brazilian Portuguese, the term biliocracia ('rule by billionaires')[251][252] was used to describe his administration and ideology.[253][254]

Following the attempted assassination of Donald Trump in Pennsylvania, some Republicans including JD Vance,[19] Stephen Miller,[255] and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.[256] argued that comparing Trump to a fascist or a Nazi could incite violence.[22][256] Susan Benesch, founding director of the Dangerous Speech Project, has called such comparisons "a pot calling the kettle black", and noted that Trump's continued use of inflammatory rhetoric against Democrats has not stopped.[257][258] In response to John F. Kelly and Mark Milley calling Trump a fascist, Vance dismissed their claims and characterized them both as "disgruntled former employees".[208]

Many articles have been written in an attempt to name precisely what Trump's ideology is, either to specify what type of fascist he is or to claim he is something else instead. He has been called a hypercapitalist,[259] petty tyrant,[260] new authoritarian,[15] far-right populist,[3] Machiavellian,[261] authoritarian populist,[262] mercantilist,[263] deep nationalist[264] and a Trumpist.
[...]

Supporters of "white" identity certainly do practice "in-group altruism and out-group indifference" do they not? Are people who describe Trump as "fascist" just lazy-brained westerners desperately searching for an end to inquiry?

Fascists are not tribal. The term: "Tribal Fascist" would be an oxymoron...

The MAGA Phenomenon: Understanding Political Tribalism
https://theamericanrefugee.substack.com/p/the-maga-phenomenon-understanding



Posted by: 90sRetroFan
« on: September 28, 2025, 05:09:10 pm »

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Kicking the ladder down once you got in eh? Typical ****.

And yet rightists still portray "non-white" immigrants as "invaders". Have you ever seen actual invaders try to make it harder for their fellow invaders to get in?
Posted by: rp
« on: September 28, 2025, 09:35:21 am »

https://x.com/GayathriRajara9/status/1969117313015112148?t=0hOaGq5CqKc4eIXLU72i1w&s=19
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I came here on h1b 30 years ago when America didn’t have enough IT resources to meet the demand.  We now have Americans students graduating with computer science in droves.  America First.  I support this.  Also back in the day,  there were proper rules important one being “the company must advertise the job here for at least a month. ONLY if they can’t fill that position, then can give to H1b candidates.  But now it’s all corrupted.  We are giving h1b to truck drivers and janitors, stealing American jobs

https://x.com/sabrewulf001/status/1969230847527039079?t=m2SxlfbvmH2I00L73qSXQg&s=19
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Kicking the ladder down once you got in eh? Typical ****.
Posted by: rp
« on: September 28, 2025, 09:24:25 am »

https://x.com/VivekGRamaswamy/status/1965851136776352031?t=v8Hb2B2VXVSOAlkCs4rTGQ&s=19..
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Pray for Charlie Kirk now. 🤲

https://x.com/sabrewulf001/status/1965856902979662114?t=Ipxr3ckz5urjyycSg6PAzQ&s=19
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Idiot. He would deport you for being Hindu and Indian. Have some shame you coolie
Posted by: rp
« on: September 07, 2025, 07:12:59 pm »

https://x.com/MeghUpdates/status/1964645982718820682?t=WrkQOZRdGZ-pgUXsQcAteQ&s=19
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The Indian diaspora is just 1.5% of the U.S. population but punches far above its weight — from paying 5% of taxes to founding 11% of unicorns, owning 60% of hotels, filing 10% of patents, and making up 10% of doctors. A true soft power success

Replies:
https://x.com/sabrewulf001/status/1964833178960666640?t=0Q8qglHZXGvcAAjC0SL9Tg&s=19
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lol.. saar I am good student saar. I am good woker saar. me no argument saar. I am doing the needful saar.

grow a goddamn spine and punch anti-Indians/anti-Hindus in the face you fuckwit.
Posted by: 90sRetroFan
« on: July 05, 2025, 05:25:05 pm »