Why are indians like that?

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.
The Caste System was still very much in place when I visited Hyderabad and they don't co-mingle at all. I think it's one of the reasons you'll see inbreeding among the poor, the rich and the middle class because in most other countries it's not as pronounced across all 3 walks of life. I know of a family in that city that was born in a specific alley and they never left it because they simply accepted their lot in life. 3 generations living on the same stretch of concrete with no motivation to leave because they've been led to believe that that's all their bloodline should aspire to do.
 
Hinduism as the Old Testament to Buddhism's New one
That's not even remotely similar; Vedic Hinduism itself is akin to the New Testament for folk Hinduism's Old Testament. The Vedic view of transcendance builds off of pre-Vedic theories of the afterlife (i.e. conquering death). Theravada Buddhism is more like the Quran, in that it rejects every fundamental pillar of Vedic spirituality and has virtually no linneage to Hinduism, other than the fact that it developed in the same region. Retarded Theravada offshoots like Vajrayana and Tibetan Buddhism are akin to the Book of Mormon.
 
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Can you elaborate on this?
Reincarnation wasn't a thing in Old Hinduism, but a primitive form of Samsara was. Basically, you get to determine where your soul goes depending on the "weight" it accumulates in life, but you're stuck there forever. Vedicism introduced the concept of uniting with Brahma but retaining personhood, and Brahminism turned that concept into Moksha, which continued into Jainism.

Theravada Buddhism basically turned Moksha into "your soul VILL be obliterated, you VILL have no conscious thought, and you VILL never experience happiness again"

The children of Japheth tried introducing the word of God to the subcontinent, and the godless Austronesians turned it into a nightmare cult.
 
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Reincarnation wasn't a thing in Old Hinduism, but a primitive form of Samsara was. Basically, you get to determine where your soul goes depending on the "weight" it accumulates in life, but you're stuck there forever. Vedicism introduced the concept of uniting with Brahma but retaining personhood, and Brahminism turned that concept into Moksha, which continued into Jainism.

Theravada Buddhism basically turned Moksha into "your soul VILL be obliterated, you VILL have no conscious thought, and you VILL never experience happiness again"

The children of Japheth tried introducing the word of God to the subcontinent, and the godless Austronesians turned it into a nightmare cult.
Is there a specific book you can recommend on this? I'd like to know more.
 
Off the top of my head, The Horse, the Wheel, and Language and Heraclitus and Iran are good beginner's reads
So you're really talking about the earlier religion of the proto-indo-aryans or whatever and how a regional variant of it eventually morphed into Hinduism? I wasn't factoring that into my original post at all because that's getting way off into the weeds.
 
So you're really talking about the earlier religion of the proto-indo-aryans or whatever and how a regional variant of it eventually morphed into Hinduism? I wasn't factoring that into my original post at all because that's getting way off into the weeds.
It's not that simple, given that various regional sects morphed into the many different schools of Hinduism that exist today. They all spawn from Brahminism, however, which is many centuries removed from Vedism
 
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It's not that simple, given that various regional sects morphed into the many different schools of Hinduism that exist today. They all spawn from Brahminism, however, which is many centuries removed from Vedism
Sure, but I was initially making a very rudimentary analogy based on what's widespread today rather than trying to make a deeper anthropological point. If you really want to go back to caveman times sub-continentals essentially worshipped stone idols that looked like vaginas.
 
What ever happened to the Social Media Indians thread? I tried searching up more of that shit but its like its been scrubbed off from every search engine too. I need some more horny, horribly antisocial brown people lusting after whitey on the internet
 
It's what living in poverty and the caste system does to you. Stunted growth from the lack of protein in food, stunted education because of the bad schools and competition.
 
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.
No wonder Gatauma thought it better to forsake the world and accept the sweet embrace of oblivion.
 
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It so perfectly explains pajeet behavior. How much of it is true, I don't know, but it really makes you wonder. From pajeets I've worked and interacted with professionally, to ones I've just kinda seen in life. The men are all so meek and pathetic, yet simultaneously devious and will slide a knife in your back if they think they can get away with it.
 
No wonder Gatauma thought it better to forsake the world and accept the sweet embrace of oblivion.
Leaving various anthropological and philosophical ideas aside, I've found that there is a trance-like state of consciousness you can pretty easily reach under the right conditions through use of specific types of music and focused, repetitive chanting. That goes to my earlier point about cults because it's a lot easier to replicate this phenomenon than you might think. It may even be more scientific than occult on some level I don't have the technical expertise to explain.
 
If Indians don't like other Indians (as claimed earlier in this thread), then how come the Indian immigrants I've seen don't really interact with anyone but other Indains?

(or so it seemed)
 
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Leaving various anthropological and philosophical ideas aside, I've found that there is a trance-like state of consciousness you can pretty easily reach under the right conditions through use of specific types of music and focused, repetitive chanting. That goes to my earlier point about cults because it's a lot easier to replicate this phenomenon than you might think. It may even be more scientific than occult on some level I don't have the technical expertise to explain.
It isn't terribly hard to summon a demon
 
Why yes, I do own two cursed silver sonichu coins, how did you know?
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