Pythian Goddess

170 posts

Pythian Goddess

Pythian Goddess

@GoddessPythius

参加日 Kasım 2025
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India First Post
India First Post@ifpost47·
“Waited 2 months to fix a broken bone” - NRI returns to India A viral video by Sanjum contrasts experiences: quick, affordable, quality treatment in India vs long wait times, complex procedures and high costs in the US healthcare system. The narrative of “better life abroad” isn’t one-size-fits-all.
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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@bylvo @JudyStroyer21 These people would rather abandon their parents and let them die if it means they can taste a moment in America. Nor do they care about the suffering they cause us by being here. Extremely selfish.
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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@CyberGreen09 @DrReclaimerTX Very good. The mother is so happy. Returning to India is a win win for Indians and Westerners. We also get our countries back, just like you get your families back.
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CyberGreen09
CyberGreen09@CyberGreen09·
Returning to India permanently after 10 years and reuniting with family is deeply emotional. Being in India is the better choice, family is everything. Nothing abroad can replace their love and warmth. This is home. This is true happiness. @DrReclaimerTX #returntoindia
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High Sparrow
High Sparrow@HighestSparrow7·
Every single country is wary about countless sexual assaults in India on daily basis and see Indian Men as sexual predators . They issue advisory to their female tourists. They dont want them in their country. This is not due to racism. This is what we are. @Mangoismaniac
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Adityan Rajesh
Adityan Rajesh@thatrocketgeek·
@HighestSparrow7 @Mangoismaniac The crime statistics of the Indian Diaspora in most countries is way better than the native population. That metric itself busts the stereotype.
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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@HighestSparrow7 @Mangoismaniac "Priya Lee" The goal of all Indians is to fill every nation on earth with Indians. Even when they have been in a country for 40 years. Every nation must fight back against the Indian horde.
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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@dogwoodblooms You should have listened. We have been telling you for thirty years and you called us racist. California is gone. Huge segments of the US are gone. Half the US is probably foreign born, or children of foreign born at this point. It was a huge betrayal by the ruling elite.
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Cassie Clark
Cassie Clark@dogwoodblooms·
I’ve always been a huge supporter of legal immigration. That’s because I imagined the numbers of those entering America were very low. I thought we were bringing in a few thousand families a year who were already set up with jobs and were self-sustaining. I thought: why wouldn’t we want hardworking folks to come in and chase the American dream? But is that an accurate picture of what’s happening? A friend of mine created a website using verified legal immigration stats to show exactly how much it’s costing taxpayers to bring in not only H-1B visa holders but refugees from across the world. Take a look. In North Carolina alone, American taxpayers spent $5.4 billion to sustain legal immigrants. And we’re not talking about a handful of families. Ten percent of North Carolina’s population is now foreign-born. I had no clue. I’m out here fighting for my culture every single day. I’m begging people to assimilate. I’m teaching people NC’s history and schooling them on our language, traditions, and way of life. Meanwhile, my government is doing everything it can to ensure those who have zero ties to this piece of land outnumber those who do. Veterans suffer with inadequate care, the elderly have to work until the day they die, the homeless roam our streets—and we’re spending billions on legal immigrants?
Cassie Clark tweet media
Official Layoff@LayoffAI

Yesterday, graphics on illegal immigration into the country went viral. So we built one for legal immigration. 6.9M Department of Labor LCA filings, required by law before H-1B petitions are filed. 11 years. Every red dot is a filing for an Indian to be hired instead of you.

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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@carlwheless Spanish should not have "broken into US markets" either. It is all tearing down the core American culture.
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Carl Wheless
Carl Wheless@carlwheless·
She has some nerve talking about "We speak English here!" Oh yeah? Where were you, Sara GONZALES, in the 1960s abd 70s when Latiin language media broke into the U S. market? My grandmother had the same exact complaints back then about Mexicans. Ironic, huh?
BlazeTV@BlazeTV

"A country is its people. America's Heritage is being erased right now because we have all of these weak people in leadership positions who are afraid of being called racist. I'm over it." - @SaraGonzalesTX

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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@prakash_pov You cannot stay elsewhere. India is YOUR responsibility. Without fixing problems at home, you are bringing them abroad. The same mindset is just exporting India around the globe and destroying the nations which trusted and welcomed you. Letting Indians in is suicide.
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Prakash Achari
Prakash Achari@prakash_pov·
Once you step outside the Indian Union, there’s this sharp, uncomfortable realization that you have born in the wrong place. Almost everyone I’ve spoken to who has traveled has felt the same. Even people who once wanted to earn abroad and come back to build something here choose a more peaceful life there. People miss their families, their friends, everything familiar, but still end up choosing a better environment over all of it. And this isn’t just about the US. Even countries like Mexico or Vietnam tell a similar story. We like to think we’ve moved past history, but that old colonial mindset still lingers. The tendency to submit to power from clerk to judges, to look at others as competition or enemies, it cuts across politics, public systems, judiciary and private spaces. There’s a kind of everyday selfishness that just feels deeply rooted. Corruption is part of daily life. Things don’t move without some form of pushing or paying, even now with all our technology and systems. People talk about fixing it, but realistically it would take extreme measures like what happened in China, and even that might not work here because the problem feels so widespread. It’s hard to see how someone stays as good person for long in this kind of environment. Good people always try to stay away from government and judiciary, because they know they'll get ripped off no matter the process. At some point, migration starts to feel more like a prison break. If you’ve left and built a life elsewhere, it’s hard to justify coming back unless you have crores and want to live like a king with a bunch of cheap labour lying around to serve you. Sure there are exceptions, people like Sridhar Vembu, and they deserve respect, but they’re rare. In short. If you have the opportunity to leave, just escape. Don't think twice. And if you’ve already left, don't come back.
Sridhar Vembu@svembu

Open letter to Indians in America. -- Dear brothers and sisters from Bharat: Like I did 37 years ago, you arrived in America with no money but with a good education and cultural heritage from Bharat. You achieved outstanding success. America was good to us. For that we must remain grateful - gratitude is our Bharatiya way. Yet today, a significant number of Americans, may be not the majority but not too far from it either, believe that Indians "take away" American jobs and our success in America was unfairly earned. You may think the next election will fix this, but your choice would be between people who hate our Bharatiya civilisation and people who hate civilisation itself. That is the "hard right" vs "woke left" battle. You are mere bystanders to that conflict. Meanwhile there is one thing that is true now and will be true in the future: the respect Indians command world-wide will substantially depend on the fortunes of India herself. If India remains poor, the woke left will give us moral lectures with pity and the hard right, different moral lectures with scorn ("hellhole") and we must not confuse either with respect. Respect in today's world, along with prosperity and security, comes from one source: a nation's technological prowess. India produces sufficient brain power to achieve that prowess but alas we exported so much of that talent, particularly to America. As we develop that prowess in India, our civilisational strength will assert itself. As difficult as it is for many of you to contemplate this, please come back home. Bharat Mata needs your talent. Our vast youthful population needs the technology leadership you gained over the years to guide them towards prosperity. Let's do it with a missionary zeal. Respectfully Sridhar Vembu

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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@prakash_pov "old colonial mindset" Stop blaming the British. These issues are as old as the caste system. That is to say 3000 years old.
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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@ShadesOfBlueAn1 You can squirm all you like, and spit feces from your mouth. Your karma is to experience in this life or another what you are doing to us. You will understand at that time. You are too arrogant to understand any other way.
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ShadesOfBlueAndRed
ShadesOfBlueAndRed@ShadesOfBlueAn1·
woke right --> this is the cream of India’s elite, not “immigrants” in general Also, woke right --> low IQ, no skills, stealing jobs
Hany Girgis@SanDiegoKnight

This Cato ‘immigrants pay more taxes’ flex + Indian chart is peak cherry-picking. Impressive numbers… until you actually look under the hood. 🧐” 1. It’s median household income, not individual or per-capita — and Indian households are structured differently • The chart (and the “twice as much” claim) uses households, not people. Indian-American households are larger on average (~3.0–3.8 people vs. U.S. average ~2.5) and far more likely to have multiple full-time high earners (dual STEM/medical professionals is common). en.wikipedia. • Indian Americans still have high personal earnings (median ~$85k for ages 16+, ~$106k for full-time workers per 2023 Pew), but the “almost twice” headline evaporates when you adjust for household size and number of workers. This is a classic statistical sleight-of-hand when comparing groups with different living arrangements. 2. Extreme positive selection bias … this is the cream of India’s elite, not “immigrants” in general • Indian Americans aren’t a random sample of India’s 1.4 billion people. The vast majority arrived via H-1B, EB-2/3, or student visas …hyper-selective for advanced degrees and high-skill jobs. You’re comparing the top ~0.1–1% of India’s talent/IQ/education distribution to the broad U.S. average (which includes everyone from McDonald’s workers to retirees). • India’s own per-capita income and education levels are far lower. This doesn’t prove broad immigration is economically magical; it proves cherry-picked high-skill immigration works for the selectees. Second-generation outcomes are strong but show some regression toward the mean, and chain migration/family sponsorship often dilutes the skill level over time. 3. Cato’s overall “immigrants pay more taxes” claim has well-documented methodological holes • Cato (a libertarian think tank that favors more immigration) attributes welfare benefits received by U.S.-born children of immigrants to “natives,” not the immigrant parents. This understates immigrant fiscal costs. The Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) and others note this flips the picture: when you count the full household burden (including kids), immigrant-headed households use welfare at higher rates than native-headed ones. • Cato aggregates all immigrants (high-skill Indians + low-skill groups + illegals). The net positive they find is heavily driven by the high earners. Other studies (National Academies of Sciences, Heritage, etc.) have found first-generation immigrants often impose net costs, especially low-skilled/illegal cohorts. • Their data ends before the post-2021 border surge effects fully hit long-term budgets. 4. H-1B-specific issues (the main pipeline for Indian success) • Many Indian immigrants in tech come via H-1B, which has documented problems: outsourcing/body shops (e.g., Infosys, TCS), wage suppression (foreign workers often paid less for similar roles), and ethnic nepotism once Indians reach management (preferring co-ethnics for hiring/promotions). This displaces U.S. workers and depresses wages in STEM. • Fraud allegations are common (fake credentials, benching workers, etc.). Critics argue this isn’t “adding value” so much as arbitraging cheaper labor and networks. 5. Other drains and context • Remittances: Indian Americans send massive sums back to India (India receives over $100B+ in remittances annually, a huge chunk from the U.S.). That’s money leaving the U.S. economy. • Cost of living: Indians are heavily concentrated in high-cost metros (SF Bay, NYC, etc.), where nominal incomes are inflated anyway. Adjust for purchasing power and the gap shrinks. • The post uses Indian success to defend a general “immigrants = net positive” narrative from Cato. But Indians are ~1.4% of the U.S. population and an outlier. Broad policy implications (more low-skill immigration, open borders, etc.) don’t follow from one high-performing subgroup.

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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@chakravartiiin Can't wait until it happens to India so when you scream and commit murder we can laugh in your face.
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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@macleans Let me guess, they went to another White country to "put down roots" like a weed in a garden.
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Maclean’s Magazine
After Pradeep Ananth, his wife, Monali, and their young son, Kabir, arrived in Toronto from India, they did what Canada tells skilled newcomers to do: they put down roots. They paid taxes, opened bank accounts, signed leases, enrolled their son in school and community-centre programs, made friends and built a Canadian life. Kabir learned to love his teachers, the library, swimming, piano, basketball and a well-rounded childhood “We pictured him growing up Canadian,” Ananth writes in a memoir for Maclean’s. But when when anxiety over housing and affordability soured public opinion on immigration, Ottawa slashed its intake targets. For Pradeep, the dream of permanent residency fell out of reach. “The country where we were putting down roots didn’t have room for us after all,” he writes. “And we had to leave.” macleans.ca/longforms/almo…
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Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸
BREAKING: Canada takes to Youtube to ask for cash, because it has NO MONEY for a sovereign wealth fund
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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@angloid0 "I say this as someone whose parents are immigrants" And this is supposed to give him insight into the experience of native British?
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Angloid
Angloid@angloid0·
‘I don’t see what the issue is with British people getting replaced in Britain’ Probably because you’re a part of the problem.
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Housecoin
Housecoin@HousecoinOnSol·
Boomers when it’s time to pass down generational wealth to their kids
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Pythian Goddess
Pythian Goddess@GoddessPythius·
@TimiTV4 @NEfuGnH @HousecoinOnSol Boomers can rarely admit they are dieing. The ones I have seen cling to possessions on their death beads. They are so desperate to grip onto "their independence".
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Timi TV 🜃
Timi TV 🜃@TimiTV4·
What should be done while your parents are alive is transfer their home into your name and list it as a gift. This will eliminate capital gain tax. I believe it's called a trust. You will avoid a majority of the taxes. When parents die and leave a house to their chold, the government treats the transfer as a sale. If the house is in a trust or gifted it won't be.
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