Why are indians like that?

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Some oddities I noticed about Indian immigrants I've seen IRL (mostly in the big city) are:

  • they always keep to themselves and don't interact much with non-Indians
  • they're pretty much never seen with dogs
  • the women may dress traditionally but never the men

also:
Dunno if it's a trend, and it doesn't make me REEE, but from what I've seen it seems articles written by people with Indian-sounding names explaining stuff always read like something written by an AI. Maybe the "AI-ish" ones I read really had AI as a "ghostwriter"?
 
I actually took a pet from a Indian couple for cheap. They are very nice people and only keep to themselves in small circles. That's not a bad thing. It's just the way they are because the caste culture and hyper competitive system.

Bad things. They do what others do. Never admit wrong. Always cheat to survive. When they don't get their way, it's not them that's the problem. It's the system.

Also, since manpower is becoming a valuable asset, India is gathering massive capital and they are spreading their seed across the world as a result.

They are innovative, yes, in a sense that it is about money and success. They have no hobbies. They exist to work, make money, breed, and die. In other words, they are not creative or inventive. You see how many CEOs are now indians in the tech? It's not because they are innovative. It's because they are good servants to shareholders.
 
They exist to work, make money, breed, and die.
If true, the worldview of the typical Hindu-believing Indian is a hellish one to me: just go to school, work, work, work, then death*, then reincarnation, and then if "lucky" enough to be reborn as human? That same BS all over again. And again. And again. I think that in the Hindu view, liberation from reincarnation is very hard to achieve. And if liberation in Hindu is achieved, one loses their individuality and merges with Brahma, an impersonal being that's dreaming up this whole crappy reality.

* IIRC, the typical "near death experience" of the Indian is going to some bureaucratic office and being told there was a clerical error so they have to return to life.
 
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If true, the worldview of the typical Hindu-believing Indian is a hellish one to me: just go to school, work, work, work, then death*, then reincarnation, and then if "lucky" enough to be reborn as human? That same BS all over again. And again. And again. I think that in the Hindu view, liberation from reincarnation is very hard to achieve. And if liberation in Hindu is achieved, one loses their individuality and merges with Brahma, an impersonal being that's dreaming up this whole crappy reality.

* IIRC, the typical "near death experience" of the Indian is going to some bureaucratic office and being told there was a clerical error so they have to return to life.
Protestantism could've been their salvation but sandniggers got there first.
 
When you look at the history, nobody hates the Indians more then themselves. They act this way because they need to learn to love themselves.
How is a pajeet supposed to open their own bob or show their own vagene? Does that require some heretofore undiscovered form of tantric yoga?
 
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their religion is full of lies and they worship demons, what do you expect from an indian if his life is full of lies? nothing
 
Buddhism started in India, but there's a lack of it there. Buddhism teaches anyone can escape reincarnation, which kind of undermines the Indian caste system. Also in Buddhism, there's a "middle way", which goes against the Hindu idea of asceticism for liberation. And I'm pretty sure that Buddhism lacks belief in the many Hindu gods.

So it's no surprise that Buddhism is ironically not that big of a thing in India, despite starting there.
 
As someone with amateurish medical knowledge, I can say confidently that some of the shittiest genetic mistakes and mutations can be seen on notoriosly different range amongst human populations, and Indians have some of the worst if not the worst genes in humanity, even worse than the inbred-like jews, they always end up with diabetus, cancer and heart attacks far easier than anyone else, not to mention the fact that they have the smallest brains, cocks and even some internal organs.
 
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Buddhism started in India, but there's a lack of it there. Buddhism teaches anyone can escape reincarnation, which kind of undermines the Indian caste system. Also in Buddhism, there's a "middle way", which goes against the Hindu idea of asceticism for liberation. And I'm pretty sure that Buddhism lacks belief in the many Hindu gods.

So it's no surprise that Buddhism is ironically not that big of a thing in India, despite starting there.
It's not really that simple. It's not 100% the same, but you could think of Hinduism as the Old Testament to Buddhism's New one in some ways. The end goal of both religions is the same but they interpret the means to doing so differently. In Hinduism it's something like a union with the totality of being while in Buddhism it's more of an escape from it. There's a lot of syncretism and overlap in how deities/divine beings are conceptualized too depending on the sect and "wisdom kings" in Buddhism are based on equivalent Hindu gods (Acala is roughly similar to Ganesh for example). Vajrayana in particular involves some very Hinduesque practices with regards to chanting mantras dedicated to specific entities much in the same way. And there are even kookier subgroups like Tachikawa-ryu which are essentially tantric sex cults despite technically being Buddhist.

My personal assessment of both religions is that they're practically tailor made for cult leaders because something about Sanskrit chants in traditional meters has very strange effects on the brain.
 
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