Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Right and the Indians here are the ones who could afford the thousands of dollars needed to buy a plane ticket to the US. India is not sending us its poor, uneducated masses. Most coming here already have some level of education and money to afford coming to the US.
Yes. This fact was explained to me by someone in one of the stereotypical "acceptable" Indian professions. The ones coming to the US are from the wealthy class. Not quite the dirt poor, bootstrap story of most immigrants.
Wealthy Indians don’t come the us - it’s umc
If you have serious wealth in India (showbiz, business magnate, etc you stay)
South Bombay movers and shakers don’t really have an interest to move to the us
The us gets middle class/umc/lmc types
Canada and uk get poors and/or Islamist Indians.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Jews are way more prosperous
Indians aren’t really that rich - not in the Scarsdale, Westport type rich
Hmm, really? How come they don't run for presidency then?![]()
![]()
Because they don’t really need to
And some do - Bernie
But a lot of Jews hate Bernie for some reason
Maybe the zionists .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Jews are way more prosperous
Indians aren’t really that rich - not in the Scarsdale, Westport type rich
Not so much any more, According to a 2020 study, Hindus have the highest median income, and have the highest level of education (77% with undergraduate) vs. Jews (59%), Episcopalians (56%). The Jewish community is dying out, and within the community the Orthodox are taking over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Jews are way more prosperous
Indians aren’t really that rich - not in the Scarsdale, Westport type rich
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not Indian, but my husband is. He likes Nikki Halley. My DD has second hand embarrassment over Vivek. “Cringey” We need better Indian candidates! Hard to do in the Republican Party.
Is he Punjabi?
I am a Punjabi and I hate Halley, we are also from the same ancestral village as Halley so there is that. Punjabis are loyal, not stupid.
😂 if you are really Punjabi, you know what your traits are 😉
You bet your a$$ I know my traits, I can also tell what yours are.
Did you get lost?
Canada is that way ⬆️
How interesting that under anonymity people are so eager to show their true colors, I can bet almost anything you wouldn't dare say this to any Punjabi in public. One of our prominent traits is our short fuse and ability to give a solid thrashing to likes of you. You people are just keyboard warriors,such a pathetic existence and such cowards.
There are a bunch of illegal immigrants, and people who bring relatives, or bring others for cheap labor.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Right and the Indians here are the ones who could afford the thousands of dollars needed to buy a plane ticket to the US. India is not sending us its poor, uneducated masses. Most coming here already have some level of education and money to afford coming to the US.
Yes. This fact was explained to me by someone in one of the stereotypical "acceptable" Indian professions. The ones coming to the US are from the wealthy class. Not quite the dirt poor, bootstrap story of most immigrants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Right and the Indians here are the ones who could afford the thousands of dollars needed to buy a plane ticket to the US. India is not sending us its poor, uneducated masses. Most coming here already have some level of education and money to afford coming to the US.
Yes. This fact was explained to me by someone in one of the stereotypical "acceptable" Indian professions. The ones coming to the US are from the wealthy class. Not quite the dirt poor, bootstrap story of most immigrants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Right and the Indians here are the ones who could afford the thousands of dollars needed to buy a plane ticket to the US. India is not sending us its poor, uneducated masses. Most coming here already have some level of education and money to afford coming to the US.
Anonymous wrote:Ramaswarmy is a disgrace. Referring to climate change as a hoax while half the planet is burning and the oceans and atmosphere have hit record high temperatures resulting in extreme weather.
He may be the youngest candidate but he won’t appeal to the youngest or sanest voters …
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Jews are way more prosperous
Indians aren’t really that rich - not in the Scarsdale, Westport type rich
Hmm, really? How come they don't run for presidency then?![]()
![]()
Because they don’t really need to
And some do - Bernie
But a lot of Jews hate Bernie for some reason
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like this guy: Vivek Ramaswamy
Exceptionalism and Merit seem to be his focus, and I will gladly applaud his efforts. Chances are no one else will.
I would if merit were real, but it isn't. Merit means everyone gets the same chance and opportunity to compete, which they don't. Merit means there is no more legacy or athletics special treatment. America thrives on special treatment and calls it merit.
In America, "having merit" and being a "self-made millionaire" means having a multi-million dollar real estate empire handed to you by your daddy - right Donald Trump?
In America, "having merit" means being "self made" thanks to the wealth of your daddy's emerald empire, buying companies started by visionaries and pretending to be the visionary, yourself - right, Elon Musk?
People need to try harder.
Ehhh that "American Dream" thing is an old trope that died in the 1980s. Today you can work your ass off and still never become a multimillionaire. Most of today's wealthy in America got that way because they started out rich, had the right connections, got "struck by lightning" level lucky and so on. Or you can exploit people, scam and grift your way into wealth, whether big pharma or other schemes - but actual self-made, honest wealth these days in America is damn rare and the "American Dream" thing has a lot of illusory elements to it. A lot of Indian immigrants to America are still figuring that out.
I think Indian immigrants have figured it out way better than most others. They are the most prosperous immigrant group probably in the history of the USA. They have literally proven you wrong, unless you think their success is related to luck only? Maybe there is initially some of it for the more recent waves that came specifically as educated workers for tech/IT with jobs in high paying industry and not having to start from unskilled labor jobs like the earlier waves or immigrants or without skills/education/English. But you cannot deny there is culture at play that prioritizes education, hard work, self-reliance, and competition.
Jews are way more prosperous
Indians aren’t really that rich - not in the Scarsdale, Westport type rich
Hmm, really? How come they don't run for presidency then?![]()
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No US citizen should ever vote for an Indian.
They are the most racist group in America
And for Vivek, a born liar.
Vivek: “I didn’t grow up with money.”
His father was a patent attorney for GE and his mother was a geriatric psychiatrist. He attended a private high school.
He grew up UMC, so? This describes majority of DCUM offspring who only really get a leg up with education and not much else. Don't compare this with real wealth or generational wealth and connections that go beyond who you meet in HS.