
Harshith🗽
14K posts

Harshith🗽
@Harshith740
Liberal Free market individualist/Bitcoin maxi/gold bug



𝐅𝐫𝐨𝐦 𝐏𝐨𝐰𝐞𝐫 𝐃𝐞𝐟𝐢𝐜𝐢𝐭 𝐭𝐨 𝐏𝐨𝐰𝐞𝐫 𝐒𝐮𝐫𝐩𝐥𝐮𝐬 ⚡ Once defined by shortages, India now meets its full power demand. From a 16.6% deficit in 2007 to a massive 2012 blackout that plunged 60 crore people into darkness, the crisis was real. Today, India delivers with zero deficit. 𝐎𝐧 𝐀𝐩𝐫𝐢𝐥 𝟐𝟓, 𝐚 𝐫𝐞𝐜𝐨𝐫𝐝 𝟐𝟓𝟔 𝐆𝐖 𝐝𝐞𝐦𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐰𝐚𝐬 𝐦𝐞𝐭 𝐰𝐢𝐭𝐡𝐨𝐮𝐭 𝐚 𝐬𝐢𝐧𝐠𝐥𝐞 𝐠𝐫𝐢𝐝 𝐟𝐚𝐢𝐥𝐮𝐫𝐞, 𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐧 𝐢𝐧 𝐩𝐞𝐚𝐤 𝐡𝐞𝐚𝐭. Stronger planning, higher capacity, decisive governance. India now powers its own growth. 💯







Dehati adivasi couldn't provide a simple death certificate and did dehatipana so modi is responsible.

@RushikesH27027 Meanwhile, Bihar is one of those states where the railway is profitable, yet Indian Railways has done less development in Bihar be it new tracks, trains, new railway stations or doubling and quadrupling of tracks. But some racist indian like @RushikesH27027 keep blaming Bihar


@RishiJoeSanu Nope. You are wrong. GDP growth & TFR are almost opposite in most cases. Pakistan's TFR is high because it has been an economic basket case (combined with some other social factors).

Here is the problem. Shivaji is not a 'Maratha king'. He is much more than that. His towering contributions to the protection of Hinduism as an entity (which is deep-rooted in Kerala), are what are being acknowledged, not his ethnicity per se. This is just like how all north indian hindus do not see Shankaracharya as a 'Malayali priest' but rather a Hindu icon whose efforts in reviving our dharma supersede his ethnicity. His contribution to Hinduism is what matters, not his origin. Without Shivaji maharaj, the Mughal empire would have reached down south to destroy that same hindu culture of Kerala, the Shankaracharya re-invograted. You can ackwnoledge Marthanda Varma, and Shivaji in Kerala because both are Kings within the Hindu cultural space. Just like how i, a kannadiga acknowledge and respect Shankaracharya even though he is a malayali. Or how i acknowledge and respect the Ahoms, even though they are from Assam. I can understand if you are incapable of looking at things beyond ethnicity, but well what else can be expected?

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.

I have no issue with anything you said. You do not have to justify why you live in America. I am not posting this in normal times. To repeat what I said in my post, a good number of Americans no longer want us there. And for those Indians who don't yet have the green card or US citizenship, precarious life on the H1B visa is another big issue. So I suggested it may be time for some people to reexamine the "where should I live" question. I live in a small village in a very rural corner and use the local roads (some good, some bad), shop in the local shops, enjoy roadside tea, join the feast at the local temple and so on. I am quite happy with life here, in my little corner of Bharat. My presence makes life slightly better for local people and I am grateful to be able to make that small difference.



@cyborg_reborn All beautiful women belonging to this state that is 3 times less populated than your entire country



No, doesn't work that way. People are free to interpret all hindu texts as they wish. That is what makes hinduism great is it allows both freedom of choice and freedom of interpretation and can be tailored to every one as per their needs.


An autonomous robot for picking up waste in waters.




@Harshith740 Pain is a good teacher.


