The India Menace - Street shitting, unsanitary practices, scams, Hindu extremism & other things

A couple pages back I shared some screenshots from that reddit thread where regular people were sharing their experiences of indian landlords/tenants, one story that stuck out to me was the brahmin roommate who refused to clean up her nasty Diwali kitchen mess for days because cleaning was for "lower class people".

Jeets truly hate cleaning up after themselves, like they actually feel degraded by the act of washing dishes and sweeping the floors. They're content to live in filth if it means not having to debase themselves by picking up a sponge.

I would love to dive deeper into this psychology, because it's so universal and so baffling. I've gone through it as a young adult and so have many people I've talked to. The "jeet roommate" is an archetype at this point, like the trickster or the shadow, except brown and smelly.

The thought process goes something like this: "my servants back home would've cleaned this up, so it's not my problem! .... oh I guess I didn't bring my servants with me to Canada ..... still not my problem .... why would I pay for a cleaning service when I have a convenient housemate right here and they are not Brahmin .... CHEAT CODE: my university student housemate is my slave and THEY will clean up after me! problem solved! I never have to touch soap!!!!"

So you get people like this guy who want to return to India, because he has no servants and no white or Asian housemates to terrorize into cleaning up after him. He hates his daily existence of...... maintaining a bare minimum living space.
Please go back home with the diligence, saar.
Thats what infuriates me more than anything else about pajeets. They are ugly, poor, filthy and smelly yet they are the most snobby, pretentious stuck up "people" on the planet. Where do they get off thinking they have the right to be like that?
 
Thats what infuriates me more than anything else about pajeets. They are ugly, poor, filthy and smelly yet they are the most snobby, pretentious stuck up "people" on the planet. Where do they get off thinking they have the right to be like that?
It's their retarded caste system, it teaches them to exploit and reinforces their delusions of grandeur
 
In 1976 alone, the Indian government sterilised 6.2 million men.



I remember an old family member who was around at that time telling me the Indian "police" were actually driving around in vans at night, grabbing men off the street and cutting their balls off with razor blades. I can't substantiate this, but it's a lovely thought, even if only fiction.

The little prick running the country now probably won't consider this measure because he can just export all the excess monkeys overseas. Throw your garbage over the fence.
That's fucking stupid. What are we going to do with a bunch of 70 IQ eunuchs? Just kill them or set them on fire or make China nuke India or give the Brazilians nukes and make them invade Chile and have them atomic bomb India until it's a giant crater next to Pakistan.

In an atomic blast, not even the smell of shit can survive.
indian shit atomic shadow.webp
 
You may be Aryans, but your are brown Aryans who live like animals, eat repugnant food and rape anything with two legs, not to mention you are retarded scammer.
The funny thing is they're sorta right, in that in some regions the Brahmin at least do have detectable Indo-European admixture. So if they wuz the ancient Aryans, it means the actual white ones left for greener pastures and the ones that stayed, what, Braziled themselves with the Dravidians into brownoids? That's more embarrassing than just getting conquered. They just can't win. I don't know what they did to piss off God so much, but it must have been impressive.
 
Pajeet simping for the west. "Please don't send me back. I love you guys!"

The West being a high trust society is a cope. There has always been the same problems and lack of trust and honesty in the West, only people ignored it and didn't have records of it. The English speaking countries have been inundated with Marconis and those countries are worse for it. The Marconis do the Saar thing too. There really is not this deep greatness in the West. You need to watch the German movie The Nasty Girl (1990). It's about a women who after the war discovers the her town were all Nazi collaborators. It's autobiographical and she describes how corrupt and "prefect" her life in her town was. Everything that happens in the "3rd world" also happens in United States and Western Europe, they just hide it and do it behind closed doors and don't talk about it out of shame and repression. It's not actually better. It's just naive people bob though life not noticing it because their lives are easy and they are dumb. It's nice to gang up on India, but the rot in everywhere and it can be easy to forget that.

Indians are just as second wave of Marconis.
 

Air India passenger allegedly urinates on fellow passenger in Delhi-Bangkok flight

New Delhi/ Mumbai, Apr 9 (PTI): An Air India passenger allegedly urinated on a fellow traveller during a flight from the national capital to Bangkok on Wednesday, according to sources.

Air India, in a statement, said that an incident of "unruly passenger behavior" was reported on its Delhi-Bangkok flight on April 9 and the matter has been reported to the authorities (DGCA).

When asked about the incident, Civil Aviation Minister K Rammohan Naidu on Wednesday said the ministry will take note of the incident and speak to the airline.

"If there is any wrongdoing, we will take necessary action," Naidu said on the sidelines of an event in the national capital.

"Air India confirms that an incident of unruly passenger behaviour was reported to the cabin crew operating flight AI2336, from Delhi to Bangkok, on April 9, 2025," an Air India spokesperson said.

The crew followed all laid down procedures, and the matter has been reported to the authorities, it said.

In addition to warning the unruly passenger, the airline said, its crew offered to assist an aggrieved passenger to take up a grievance with authorities in Bangkok, which was declined at the time.

"The standing Independent Committee will be convened to assess the incident and determine the action, if any, to be taken against the unruly passenger," the spokesperson said.

Air India also said it continues to follow the SOPs as laid out by DGCA in such matters
 
I would love to dive deeper into this psychology, because it's so universal and so baffling. I've gone through it as a young adult and so have many people I've talked to. The "jeet roommate" is an archetype at this point, like the trickster or the shadow, except brown and smelly.
Not exactly applicable but relating to their total entitlement: A year or so ago I remember seeing a tweet from some girl about how she was deliberating with her roommates over how they'd have to "fire" their cook. It was all presented in a very run of the mill manner. When normal people started to chime in with confusion at not having enough money to live on your own, but scrounging enough to pay someone to be your personal maid, it was quickly revealed that it was some South Asian poojeeta. I remember her being very indignant about her right to pay some other slightly browner woman to be her slave while Westerners from all over shat on her. I'm desperately trying to find the post now that I've been reminded, but I bet it's gone by now.

EDIT: While trying to find the post in question I found a different Reddit thread about a jeet having conflict with his roommates because they wanted to fire a maid for speaking different bug language than them. Apparently the discrimination was such a big deal that it went viral.

1744334672272.png1744334703902.png
(Link | Archive)

The overwhelming consensus seems to be that the roommates were in the wrong, but it's not much of an achievement because there's still the fact they won't acknowledge that they live in a society so obsessed with superiority that even in poverty they need someone to serve them.
 
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The Guardian interviewed a couple of foreign nationals who had their student visas revoked. I wasn’t even trying to play guess the race, but “Bill” is Indian, he has to be. (Archive)

Lisa was eating takeout at a friend’s place when the email from her university landed. She clicked into her inbox and skimmed the message:

“ISS [International Student Services] is writing to inform you that your SEVIS record was terminated …”

The wording felt unfamiliar. She read it again, but it still sounded like a scam – absurd and unreal.

Lisa is an international student at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, just one month away from graduation. She asked to use a pseudonym due to concerns about retaliation and an ongoing legal case.

Before going to bed, she found someone posted a similar notice on social media. It was through these posts that Lisa understood what the email had actually meant: with her Student and Exchange Visitor Information System record terminated, she was now considered out of status in the US. Staying could mean violating immigration laws.

The Department of Homeland Security maintains the Sevis database that tracks international students and scholars on F, M and J visas. Once a Sevis record is terminated, a student’s legal status becomes immediately invalid. They must either leave the US within the grace period, typically 15 days, or take steps to restore their status. Otherwise, they risk deportation and future visa restrictions.

She dug through comment sections. Joined group chats. Searched for patterns. One emerged: most of the affected students had been fingerprinted. Some had been cited for non-criminal offenses, but the messages they received said they had criminal records.

That’s when she remembered: a year ago, she was driving home when she got two speeding tickets: one for speeding and another for failing to stop. She hadn’t seen the police car behind her until it was too late. To get the charges dismissed, she showed up in court, where she was fingerprinted.

Lisa is one of several students across states who found their legal status revoked by the US government on 4 April, without prior notice or clear explanation. University statements show that at least 39 students have been affected, including UC Berkeley, UCLA, UC San Diego, Stanford, Ohio State, the University of Tennessee, the University of Kentucky, Minnesota State University and the University of Oregon.

An online self-reported data sheet created by affected students suggests the issue may be more widespread. Students from 50 universities reported their visas were canceled around 4 April, with many noting that they had prior records, some limited to citations or non-criminal offenses.

This secret wave of revocation came a few days after the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, announced the revocation of 300 or more student visas. “We do it every day. Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visas,” he said at a news conference on 27 March, referring to students he described as national security threats.

Lisa’s university had included a screenshot of her Sevis record in the message. Termination was logged on 4 April by a system administrator, with a note: “Individual identified in criminal records check and/or has had their VISA revoked.”

Shenqi Cai, a California immigration attorney and managing attorney at Lashine Law, said she got the first call from a student on 3 April. “At the time, we thought it was a one-off. It seemed strange.”

But by Friday, more cases kept coming in. She contacted designated school officials at several partner universities and confirmed that the terminations were visible in the Sevis system.

Cai said this round of Sevis terminations appeared to be unprecedented. “Students weren’t given any chance to explain their situation. As long as the system flagged them, what we believe is a kind of criminal screening trigger, they were terminated under one broad directive.”

Based on the information collected so far, Cai said about 90% of the affected students had been fingerprinted. But she explained that the criteria used to flag students can vary by state. “Each state defines these triggers differently. The thresholds are inconsistent. A student may be arrested in one state, but that doesn’t mean they’ll be convicted, because the power to decide guilt or innocence lies with the judge.”

David, a Chinese student who completed his undergraduate degree, was immediately unable to continue working. He requested a pseudonym due to fears of retaliation and an ongoing legal case.

In 2024, David was reported to police after a verbal argument with his partner. When officers arrived, they were still arguing, but there was no physical contact, he said. Because of a language barrier, his partner couldn’t clearly explain what had happened. David was detained overnight and later ordered to appear in court.

“My partner wrote a statement to the prosecutor explaining it wasn’t domestic violence,” he said. The charge was eventually dropped. Court records show the case was dismissed with prejudice, and the judge ordered the arrest record and biometric data to be destroyed.

Three years later, David received a Sevis termination notice.

Unlike enrolled F-1 students, David is working under Optional Practical Training, a work authorization linked to the Sevis system. Once a Sevis record is terminated, that authorization ends and is nearly impossible to recover.

David was nearing the end of his first year of employment when he got the notice on Friday. He scheduled a lunch meeting with his manager, who said the company would try to help him relocate to Canada. But because the termination took effect immediately, he was subjected to the 15-day departure rule.

“I told my family, and they felt just as powerless,” he said. “But we don’t come from wealth, and there’s not a lot they can do.”

Bill is facing the same dilemma. He graduated in December 2024 and is currently job-hunting. He asked not to use his real name due to a pending case.

In early 2025, Bill hit another car while making a turn. At the time, his driver’s license had just expired. Police cited him for driving with an expired license. After renewing it, he followed the instructions and appeared in court.

“I went with a temporary license. The court staff were friendly,” he said. “One even joked, ‘This is no big deal, handsome,’ while taking my fingerprints and photos. It felt like a scene out of a movie.”

His initial appearance only involved ID verification. When he asked if the hearing could be held that day, a staff member told him it was scheduled for May and suggested he come back then.

“I thought it was fine. My license was updated, I just had to show up again.” But on 3 April, he suddenly received a notice from the school that his Sevis record had been terminated.

Now, Bill has no idea what to do. Legally, he should leave the country immediately, but his case is still open and he’s required to appear in court in May. He doesn’t know whether showing up would put him at risk of detention.

On 4 April, he met with his university’s international office. Staff there were willing to help, he said, but had few tools. They asked him to write a personal statement, which they promised to pass along to university leadership. The only formal support offered was a referral to a discounted lawyer – $150 an hour.

“The dust of history falls on me, and it becomes a mountain. That’s all there is to it,” he said.
:story:


By Sunday evening, the panic had spread. Three hundred students joined a Zoom info session hosted by Brad Banias, a federal court immigration litigator and former justice department trial attorney. Questions poured into the chat box: “Should we leave our apartments right now in case ICE shows up?” “Will an unpaid parking ticket be a problem?”

Banias called the terminations a political move, not a legal one. “It makes me angry to see 19-year-olds just trying to study, and suddenly a parking ticket they didn’t even know about shows up on a criminal background check,” he said. “Don’t let them convince you it’s reasonable to leave the country over a parking ticket.”

For Lisa, the future was just starting to take shape. She is about to graduate in one month, with a job offer and grad school acceptance. But now, she said she wasn’t even sure if she should go to class on Monday.

Back in April 2024, she was pulled over in Madison for speeding. She hadn’t noticed the patrol car behind her right away, and by the time she stopped, two officers approached. One told her not to worry – it was her first offense, and all she needed to do was pay the fine. But the other issued two citations: one for speeding, the other for failing to stop.

They told her it was just a miscommunication, something she could clear up in court.

But that never really happened.

“My first court date was just for ID,” she said. “They fingerprinted me, took a photo, measured my height. The judge barely said anything. No hearing, just a new court date.”

She asked if the case could be resolved sooner and was told to schedule an online meeting. She did. During that meeting, the case was
She did. During that meeting, the case was dropped. No record. They asked if she accepted. She said yes.

Everything after that went smoothly: her work visa was approved, the company background checks cleared, and she had no trouble leaving and re-entering the country. She thought it was behind her.

Then the email came.

“I don’t know if I’m still allowed to graduate,” she said. “If I don’t get my degree, does the grad school still take me? Does the company push back the offer? Worst case, I don’t graduate. I go home and start college again. Four more years. And then what?”

So we have … 1. driving poorly with an expired license.
2. Unnecessarily mentions a compliment he has never actually received in his life.
3. Compares this random trip to traffic court to a cinematic event. They always think in terms of movies and will exaggerate the most mundane happenings.
4. Can’t take responsibility for their own actions.

It’s GOTTA be a jeet.
 
It’s GOTTA be a jeet.
Slightly off-topic but the visa terminations are only because of being fingerprinted/having a criminal record? The chink got the charge dismissed, and the 'jeet and that lady got into car accidents but there's only 300 revocations, wouldn't the number of people getting deported be higher? Something tells me there's more behind this than just "poor students got fingerprinted".
 
How do you live your whole with hearing others speak like this, in english and whatever million languages they speak?
I imagine it's because they speak at each other, they don't have a dialogue with people, so whatever the other jeets say registers as white noise, unless it's by someone higher on the totem pole than them, which actually requires them to formulate a sycophantic response.
 
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I would unironically play this as long as it had a story like San Andreas
Literally reskinned GTAV. How does a country of 1+ billion people full of computer geniuses not come out with a game of any kind that isn't a reskin or a unity asset flip?
 
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