They provide a “fully qualified engineer Saar”, take a cut of the paycheque, provide them lodging, take rent from the paycheque, so it’s 100% human trafficking.
indians need to be removed from the Civilised Christian Western World and banned from the internet.
Importing engineers from a country that hasn't mastered indoor plumbing, eats with their hands and rapes anything with a hole as a national hobby...quality stuff
I agree too much immigration without proper onboarding is not good, but this lady has horrible journalism. She doesn't understand how businesses work. Those companies are in the consulting business. It is very common in I.T. to work from home or the client's office. This is completely total normal. Those homes she goes to are run in their homes which is perfectly legal and normal. Yes the home work can have 27 employees registered to it. It’s like going to an hvac company with 200 employees and not seeing 200 employees at thier office. She has no legal questions to the owners with any substance.
That being said, immigrants need to assimilate to the culture here. The government should have a way of ensuring this. It is what unites us all. Mass immigration causes enclaves of people who just simply will never learn American culture. Many don't even believe the US has any culture. They don't understand being "free" is the culture. They will never protect it as they don't even know. This is very concerning.
Someone should knock at her door asking to fill out an application for her company and wait for her to send an angry Somali to screech back they aren’t accepting applications and to GO AWAY!
In an Indian village Nandgaon, Uttar Pradesh, a group of women go to a field, away from their village near Nandgaon in the early hours of the day to defecate in the open, behind the cover of bushes. Keshav has to marry a black buffalo because his father Pandit Vimalnath Sharma is a very religious and superstitious priest, and he believes that his son's marriage to a black buffalo will help improve Keshav's fortune.
Keshav meets Jaya, an educated college going girl, falls in love with her and eventually convinces her to marry him. However, Keshav's father is of the view that Keshav's horoscope is such that he can and should only marry a girl who has two thumbs on her left hand. Since Jaya does not fulfill this requirement, Keshav has an artificial thumb made and gives it to Jaya who wears it as a ring on her thumb. Keshav's unsuspecting father agrees to their marriage.
On her first morning in Keshav's house, Jaya reluctantly goes to a field to defecate, but comes back agitated without defecating and complains about it to Keshav. Despite Keshav's repeated attempts to convince Jaya to give up her stubbornness about needing a toilet, Jaya remains steadfast. He makes a couple of temporary adjustments to solve the problem, first taking her to a neighbour's house which has a portable toilet for a bedridden elderly woman, and later in a train that has a seven-minute stop at the village railway station, without actually constructing a toilet in his house, but after a while, one day she gets locked up in the toilet and train departs the station and agitated and frustrated Jaya leaves Keshav and moves back to her parents' house.
After a futile attempt to convince his sarpanch and villagers to build toilets in the village, Keshav, with the help of Jaya, contacts the concerned regulatory authority and starts the construction of a toilet in his front yard. When the construction is finished, Keshav's father and the sarpanch arrange to demolish the toilet while Keshav is still asleep. But Keshav wakes up before the toilet is completely destroyed and protects it from complete demolition.
Jaya now files for a divorce in the local court citing the unavailability of a toilet in her husband's house as the primary reason for seeking a divorce. Due to its unique nature, the case receives much media attention. Politicians and the concerned government departments spring into action to hasten the construction of toilets in Keshav's village. But Keshav's father remains steadfast on his decision to not have a toilet in his house, until one day, his mother, while going out to defecate, falls on the doorstep, injures her hip and cries vehemently that she can't possibly walk to the fields to defecate, and that she must use the toilet that Keshav constructed in the front yard. After much reluctance, Keshav's father gives in and helps his mother to the toilet. He then realises that a toilet is indeed a critical requirement within a household.
On the day of the hearing of the divorce case of Keshav and Jaya, the judge gets an official notice from the Chief Minister's office urging the judge to not grant their divorce as the construction of toilets in their village shall be started the very next day. The couple comes out together happily. Keshav's father apologises to Jaya for his stubbornness. In the end credits, villagers are shown lining up to use mobile toilets outside their village while the construction of toilets throughout the village proceeds.
...and it all started with one fine young man, Nick Shirley. And they say one person can't make a difference!
Everything starts with a thought in a person head and yes, one person can make a difference.
The ancestor to every action... is a thought.
Correct.
That’s right!
Lemme guess ...they're "brokering" these individuals to tech companies?
A more sophisticated version of human trafficking?
They provide a “fully qualified engineer Saar”, take a cut of the paycheque, provide them lodging, take rent from the paycheque, so it’s 100% human trafficking.
indians need to be removed from the Civilised Christian Western World and banned from the internet.
BINGO
Maybe just importing some sleeper cells.
Plano is a hot bed of Muslims right now. So it is possible.
https://www.myvisajobs.com/employer/innovative-datalytics-group/
More people are speaking up and this will get a lot more coverage.
Texas resident speaks out against his town being taken over by Indians on Visas
https://x.com/WallStreetApes/status/2032231822802014662
But where are they then?
You asking me? I have no idea.
Importing engineers from a country that hasn't mastered indoor plumbing, eats with their hands and rapes anything with a hole as a national hobby...quality stuff
LOL
I agree too much immigration without proper onboarding is not good, but this lady has horrible journalism. She doesn't understand how businesses work. Those companies are in the consulting business. It is very common in I.T. to work from home or the client's office. This is completely total normal. Those homes she goes to are run in their homes which is perfectly legal and normal. Yes the home work can have 27 employees registered to it. It’s like going to an hvac company with 200 employees and not seeing 200 employees at thier office. She has no legal questions to the owners with any substance.
That being said, immigrants need to assimilate to the culture here. The government should have a way of ensuring this. It is what unites us all. Mass immigration causes enclaves of people who just simply will never learn American culture. Many don't even believe the US has any culture. They don't understand being "free" is the culture. They will never protect it as they don't even know. This is very concerning.
Let's not do that any more.
Someone should knock at her door asking to fill out an application for her company and wait for her to send an angry Somali to screech back they aren’t accepting applications and to GO AWAY!
LOL
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toilet:_Ek_Prem_Katha
In an Indian village Nandgaon, Uttar Pradesh, a group of women go to a field, away from their village near Nandgaon in the early hours of the day to defecate in the open, behind the cover of bushes. Keshav has to marry a black buffalo because his father Pandit Vimalnath Sharma is a very religious and superstitious priest, and he believes that his son's marriage to a black buffalo will help improve Keshav's fortune.
Keshav meets Jaya, an educated college going girl, falls in love with her and eventually convinces her to marry him. However, Keshav's father is of the view that Keshav's horoscope is such that he can and should only marry a girl who has two thumbs on her left hand. Since Jaya does not fulfill this requirement, Keshav has an artificial thumb made and gives it to Jaya who wears it as a ring on her thumb. Keshav's unsuspecting father agrees to their marriage.
On her first morning in Keshav's house, Jaya reluctantly goes to a field to defecate, but comes back agitated without defecating and complains about it to Keshav. Despite Keshav's repeated attempts to convince Jaya to give up her stubbornness about needing a toilet, Jaya remains steadfast. He makes a couple of temporary adjustments to solve the problem, first taking her to a neighbour's house which has a portable toilet for a bedridden elderly woman, and later in a train that has a seven-minute stop at the village railway station, without actually constructing a toilet in his house, but after a while, one day she gets locked up in the toilet and train departs the station and agitated and frustrated Jaya leaves Keshav and moves back to her parents' house.
After a futile attempt to convince his sarpanch and villagers to build toilets in the village, Keshav, with the help of Jaya, contacts the concerned regulatory authority and starts the construction of a toilet in his front yard. When the construction is finished, Keshav's father and the sarpanch arrange to demolish the toilet while Keshav is still asleep. But Keshav wakes up before the toilet is completely destroyed and protects it from complete demolition.
Jaya now files for a divorce in the local court citing the unavailability of a toilet in her husband's house as the primary reason for seeking a divorce. Due to its unique nature, the case receives much media attention. Politicians and the concerned government departments spring into action to hasten the construction of toilets in Keshav's village. But Keshav's father remains steadfast on his decision to not have a toilet in his house, until one day, his mother, while going out to defecate, falls on the doorstep, injures her hip and cries vehemently that she can't possibly walk to the fields to defecate, and that she must use the toilet that Keshav constructed in the front yard. After much reluctance, Keshav's father gives in and helps his mother to the toilet. He then realises that a toilet is indeed a critical requirement within a household.
On the day of the hearing of the divorce case of Keshav and Jaya, the judge gets an official notice from the Chief Minister's office urging the judge to not grant their divorce as the construction of toilets in their village shall be started the very next day. The couple comes out together happily. Keshav's father apologises to Jaya for his stubbornness. In the end credits, villagers are shown lining up to use mobile toilets outside their village while the construction of toilets throughout the village proceeds.
Darn, I thought you were pulling my leg. It's a real story.
LOL