
Nathan Drake
4.4K posts

Nathan Drake
@DadBod99
Avid watcher of people buying trash stocks. #647 the new #416 in the SIX


🚨🇨🇦 The white population in Brampton, Canada, in the 1980s, was 90%. In 2021, it went down to 20%. The region is overrun by Indians, Pakistanis, Sikhs, Khalistanis, and other South Asians.


This is just so sad overall All the genuiuses who are calling names of the H1B person without knowing any context or background, here are the range of scenarios which would have possibly happened 1/Maybe he is the sole H1B and his wife is H4 & his children are still not citizen 2/He goes to India, not able to come back, loses status for both him and his children and he uproots his entire life 3/Maybe he just got a small home for himself so that he would have build the roots for himself and his family and losing job wil bankrupt him 4/ All those talking about why he did that, H1B IS A DUAL INTENT VISA (Dual intent to work & eventual path go GC) which is now in a mess because of Archaic country caps 5/ Lastly for those talking about Indian H1Bs are not doing enough, apart from paying taxes, adding tremendous value to US economy, they are spending $800 K for EB5 just to get EAD and AP ( Depsite the multi year wait for CGC)- imagine spending $800 K just so that you can travel for emergencies & not wait for the stamping So all the MAGA tards pontificating on what the H1Bs should and should not do, stop pontificating & go after illegal immigrants, not the honest , tax paying Indian H1Bs coz once they decide they are done, all the equity you have built in your cozy homes, all the tech dominance and everything else will come crashing down


Refugees will now pay 30% of dental, vision, mental health care, and assistive device costs, and $4 per prescription















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…



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…








JUST IN: Microsoft is offering "voluntary retirement" buyouts to roughly 8,750 U.S. employees as AI spending ramps up.










