When you think of H1B visas, what nationality do you think of?
The US Government and tech companies spent decades recruiting and hiring a particular nationality, to the point where “tech job” is almost synonymous with this particular nationality.
If you were planning to stratify a society into good guys and deplorables, and were planning to use big tech to enforce it, what better nationality to recruit than one that comes from a society where “untouchable people” is already the norm.
Resulting in the tech workers being blind to the unconstitutionality of their actions, because it’s already normalized for them.
Just a Sunday afternoon shower thought…hoping to get everyone’s thoughts on this. Thanks!
Lets not be too shy in naming Indians. As a former Indian H1B tech worker who left Silicon Valley, finding the entire culture unpalatable, I can throw some light with some hindsight after being redpilled.
I believe that everything is long planned when it comes to Cabal's operations, including immigration, technology and research etc.
I think the quality of Indians that made it suitable for the planned Big Tech creation was, imho, not because of "untouchable people" but because the British education system created the most obedient and authority following educated class of people.
This was very important in ensuring there is no problem in creating technologies that could clearly be abused at a grand scale. This was deeply embedded from the bottom most engineer to the topmost VC. As long as they got an order from someone, they would do it - no matter how dangerous it could be, because "There are safeguards in place and it will never be abused" or "If something goes wrong, the person giving me the order will be the responsible one".
It might have changed in recent years after MAGA, where the primary motive could be to "oppress Trump supporters", (I couldnt say because I left long before that) but the entire machinery had been in progress for decades before that, and my first hand experience was that obedience and meeting deadlines and getting promotions trumped common sense.
This is why I found the SV culture so unpalatable. There was not an ounce of ethics or morality in most people, esp as you go higher up.
I wouldn't be shy in naming my own people of Sri Lanka into this as well, at least the wider population; meek in the face of authority, but dragons in the face of someone below them.
Thankfully though, I work with a bunch of people that are both ethical and professional. But for the most part, people are too scared to even tell their boss that something is literally not possible to be done efficiently.
The office group chat lauds those Indians that make it to CEO positions, only for me to point out that there is nothing special other than the fact that they are obedient "yes-men".
It's rather unfortunate that this is the state of this industry, considering that I grew up in the 90s with a lot of Indians that were well worth their salt. Unfortunately the ability to earn oodles of cash and coveted US citizenship meant this would blow up into the low-quality, 1984-esque nightmare that it is today.
I find the majority of the Indian workers who come to my country in IT to be just smart enough to push buttons and get the job done. Our Sri Lankans are a tad bit better (surprising considering the lack of English fluency), but still.
About the British thing: I don't think it created anything. It just exacerbated that underlying part of our peoples. At least in our country, people are capable but not interested in self-actualization or being independent. I think it's a holdover from being ruled by monarchs that has now been shifted to the government/educational institutions.
Even funnier is how they masturbate to US/UK/Aus/NZ but actively put down the "suddas" ("gori" in Sinhala) that live in the country.
It'll take a long time to fix this shit.