Tier 2 India. My parents grew up in this environment

Does this place look livable?

  • Yes

  • No

  • Only if I was old and wealthy


Results are only viewable after voting.
@PseudoMaxxer
 
  • +1
Reactions: PseudoMaxxer
@Pento @CorinthianLOX
 
  • +1
Reactions: Pento
An economist recently said after conducting a nation wide survey of India that India is basically 3 different countries inside one with people from those tiers living drastically different lives.I already showed what tier 1 India looks like.


And this is tier 2. Where my dad spent majority of his life. It's chill and because you are in kerala it has proper garbage disposal so the streets are clean. Crime is non existent because again you are in kerala better off than most places. 24/7 water and electricity with good internet. Education is also decent but it's stuck in a time warp. Like you went back 40-50 years or something. All the buildings are old wires and electricity lines dangling everywhere that were setup decades ago. Some of these areas have remain untouched since 60s.The roads can be rough, sometimes just dirt paths after the monsoon. Life's affordable but there are no jobs to do. You'll stay where you are there's 0 growth which is why my dad left this place in his youth and worked his ass off for me. This is the how the middle class lives

View attachment 3912450View attachment 3912450

For tier 3 I need to look through my gallery to find the slums.
Brutal man
Insane how hard our parents worked so we can have a better life though, I couldn’t imagine growing up back home ngl. Life would be way different.

Anyways I do think eventually India will look better though it seems like it’s rapidly changing especially in some places
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
Brutal man
Insane how hard our parents worked so we can have a better life though, I couldn’t imagine growing up back home ngl. Life would be way different.

Anyways I do think eventually India will look better though it seems like it’s rapidly changing especially in some places

Yeah India seems to be improving a lot tbh.

The government is stable and there’s no war or large conflict like African or Arab countries.

The GDP increases significantly every year. Within 10-20 years India will look like China in terms of development.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Pento
Yeah India seems to be improving a lot tbh.

The government is stable and there’s no war or large conflict like African or Arab countries.

The GDP increases a lot every year. Within 10-20 years India will look like China in terms of development.
I wrote 2 paragraphs under your reply and you didnt even bother reacting
 
I would never ever live in india bro. If i was born there i would kill myself.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
Looks like it could be anywhere from Turkey to Bangladesh
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
  • Hmm...
Reactions: Samsepioler
  • +1
Reactions: psychomandible
Looks like shit, houses are way to close and you have to live with indians
What about the houses I grew up in? You have the entire floor for yourself
 
  • +1
Reactions: psychomandible
If you in tier 2 or 3 it is valid
Nah bro the people there would make me go er as well. Idk about you but most of them indians dont even shower niggers use some smelly oils and i have to suffer for it in georgia
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
What about the houses I grew up in? You have the entire floor for yourself
Just as bad you live on on top of eachother and you also live with indians, tbh I'd rather be in the rural areas.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
Nah bro the people there would make me go er as well. Idk about you but most of them indians dont even shower niggers use some smelly oils and i have to suffer for it in georgia
I see. I had a pretty comfy time growing up tbh.
 
  • Hmm...
Reactions: Samsepioler
It's a bit complicated. For H-1B and Green Card applications, the requirements are be quite strict. However, I'm currently on a J-1 visa with and my employer is considering sponsoring me due to the strength of my profile but I also need 2 years of home residency. In cases like mine it's less about formal education and more about whether the candidate meets the specific job requirements. I also need to be paid 6 figures to fit the prevailing wage standards so cases like mine are kinda rare.

Interesting. Can you move your family to America or they prefer their home city?

I assume your rich since your an immigrant and have the resources to come here and pay high tuition fees.

Also how often do you go back to visit your home country? Does it suck to live far away from family and shit?
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
Interesting. Can you move your family to America or they prefer their home city? I assume your rich since your an immigrant and have the resources to come here.
No immediate plan to move them-though maybe in the future who knows.

And I wouldn't say I'm rich. It takes a lot of effort, planning to make the move. A lot of immigrants that come to the U.S are like the cream of the crop. Intelligent and work really hard just to create those opportunities. Its like mix of being wealthy and hard work.
 
  • +1
Reactions: gymceltard
@JohnDoe @Gengar
 
No immediate plan to move them-though maybe in the future who knows.

And I wouldn't say I'm rich. It takes a lot of effort, planning to make the move. A lot of immigrants that come to the U.S are like the cream of the crop. Intelligent and work really hard just to create those opportunities. Its like mix of being wealthy and hard work.

Thoughts on MAGA incels who hate immigrants?

White suprmacist incels blame you guys for stealing β€œmuh jobs” while they are all lazy NEETs :lul:
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
Thoughts on MAGA incels who hate immigrants?

White suprmacist incels blame you guys for stealing β€œmuh jobs” while they are all lazy NEETs :lul:
I’m not saying that argument is completely baseless, but it doesn’t apply in my case. See in tech there ara many highly specialized roles like CI/CD infrastructure enterprise-level network engineering that are hard to fill. They require a lot of niche expertise because many of these are system critical responsibilities, the stakes are high. So companies typically try to hire locally first but when they can't find anyone they look internationally. That’s where people like me come in. I didn’t take anyone’s job those roles were already open. I’m not being exploited or underpaid either. I’m paid the same prevailing wage as any local worker in that role.

The narrative that companies replace local workers with immigrants to cut costs is more applicable to blue-collar sectors or undocumented labor not high-skilled regulated positions like mine.
 
Last edited:
  • +1
Reactions: gymceltard
I’m not saying that argument is completely baseless, but it doesn’t apply in my case. See in tech there ara many highly specialized roles like CI/CD infrastructure enterprise-level network engineering that are hard to fill. They require a lot of niche expertise because many of these are critical responsibilities and the stakes are high. So companies typically try to hire locally first but when they can't find anyone they look internationally. That’s where people like me come in. I didn’t take anyone’s job those roles were already open. I’m not being exploited or underpaid either. I’m paid the same prevailing wage as any local worker in that role.

The narrative that companies replace local workers with immigrants to cut costs is more applicable to blue-collar sectors or undocumented labor not high-skilled regulated positions like mine.

Damn, so you’re very high IQ then.

Do you ever face racism from MAGAtards? Or is tech work mostly liberal people?
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
Damn, so you’re very high IQ then.

Do you ever face racism from MAGAtards? Or is tech work mostly liberal people?
No racism just subtle micro aggressions like you are tall for an Indian being asked if I knew how to charm snake etc. Nothing serious
 
No racism just subtle micro aggressions like you are tall for an Indian being asked if I knew how to charm snake etc. Nothing serious

micro aggression? nigga that shit ain’t real :feelskek:
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees
An economist recently said after conducting a nation wide survey of India that India is basically 3 different countries inside one with people from those tiers living drastically different lives.I already showed what tier 1 India looks like.


And this is tier 2. Where my dad spent majority of his life. It's chill and because you are in kerala it has proper garbage disposal so the streets are clean. Crime is non existent because again you are in kerala better off than most places. 24/7 water and electricity with good internet. Education is also decent but it's stuck in a time warp. Like you went back 40-50 years or something. All the buildings are old wires and electricity lines dangling everywhere that were setup decades ago. Some of these areas have remain untouched since 60s.The roads can be rough, sometimes just dirt paths after the monsoon. Life's affordable but there are no jobs to do. You'll stay where you are there's 0 growth which is why my dad left this place in his youth and worked his ass off for me. This is the how the middle class lives

View attachment 3912450View attachment 3912450

For tier 3 I need to look through my gallery to find the slums.
Looks alright, but the average low class shithole in Europe already mogs 2nd tier India. Still looks somewhat comfy tho, I wouldn't even complain about living there. 1st tier India is on the level of upper-middle class Western housing + some amenities and household slaves, uh I mean servants, which would be prohibitively expensive in the West with its exorbitant real estate prices and wages.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Jason Voorhees

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top