Bro @nikitabier you can’t stay silent on this.
The entire Indian side of X is blowing up over the exposé of the TF-2990 syndicate running numerous Telegram groups to coordinate mass anti-India spam, dehumanization, algo gaming, and hate on YOUR platform.
It looks incredibly suspicious because what exactly does “DM Nikita” mean here especially when a regular X user doesn’t have that option? Why does this syndicate think they have a *personal line to you* to silence an exposé?
P.S.: The last image is still up on X as of 9:32 am pst
Elon Musk recently agreed with a post claiming American whites are the ‘least racist people in human history.’
Meanwhile, 28 year old Indian student Anshul Kuncha from Telangana, was lured to a vacant apartment through a fake pizza order and shot dead while working a late night delivery job in Philadelphia.
Which is exactly why people shouldn’t make such sweeping civilizational claims about entire racial groups being the ‘least racist in history’.
Elon’s platform X mainstreamed anti Indian hatred to a level where people openly use slurs, call for deportations, mock victims and dehumanise Indians for engagement. Online hatred eventually translates into real world hostility and over the past few years we have seen increased amount of racial attacks on Indians abroad.
And that’s why cases like Anshul’s need serious attention and intervention from authorities in India and abroad.
Fox News blames Indians on H-1B visas for everything from housing prices to America's tech workforce, while conveniently ignoring the facts.
The same narrative relied on recycled 20-year-old anecdotes, distorted visa statistics, and unrelated fraud cases to paint Indian professionals as a problem.
Reality check: H-1B visas are capped by law, heavily scrutinized, and filled largely by highly skilled professionals powering America's tech sector.
And now, a U.S. federal judge has struck down Trump's proposed $100,000 H-1B fee as unlawful.
It's easier to blame immigrants than confront the real causes of housing shortages and economic challenges. Indians didn't break the system they helped build it.
Judge tosses out Trump's $100,000 fee for H1B visas.
The court rules that it's a tax, and taxing is something that only Congress can do.
The president can't simply tax Indians because people in his administration hate them.
So, let me get this straight @elonmusk & @nikitabier:
It's ok to cover X with the word "Jeet" but not "Redneck?"
What in the actual eff is going on here?
This dude kept talking shit and that ended his political career 🤣🤣😂😂
Btw , Please end the H1b program , so finally these grifters will find some other reason to complain.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I lack civic sense.
They can overturn cars, burn streets,
and vandalize a city after a championship game.
I dance at an airport excited about my first foreign trip, and suddenly I am the face of poor civic sense.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I steal jobs.
They move factories across oceans,
shift profits through tax havens,
and automate entire industries overnight.
I study, compete, earn a visa, work 18 hours a day, sometimes multiple jobs and somehow I am the one stealing jobs and scamming the system.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I am everywhere.
I build your software,
treat your illness,
teach your children,
drive your taxis,
and open your stores.
The world became a village,
yet my presence remains a problem.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I am too loud.
The evening news screams outrage.
Political rallies shake entire cities.
The internet echoes with anger day and night.
I celebrate a wedding, a festival, a victory,
and I am told my joy is too loud.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I smell of curry.
The world smells of gunpowder,
of hatred,
of division,
of endless arguments about race and religion.
I carry the fragrance of spices from my grandmother's kitchen,
and somehow that is what offends.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I have no culture.
I come from a civilization that counted the stars
when much of the world was still learning maps.
I speak languages older than nations.
I celebrate hundreds of traditions,
yet I am told I have no culture.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I am backward.
I send missions to the Moon.
I build vaccines for millions.
I run companies across continents.
Yet a viral video of one fool becomes evidence against a billion people.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I worship celebrities.
I celebrate my favorite actor's success
with flowers, music, and a few glasses of milk.
Others worship influencers who sell outrage, turn every disagreement into a battlefield, and every opinion into a war.
Yet my celebration is the one that makes headlines.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I gather in crowds.
We walk together in processions,
celebrating our faith, our culture, our traditions.
Everyone is welcome.
No shops are looted.
No neighborhoods are burned.
No one is threatened for thinking differently.
We sing.
We dance.
We pray.
And somehow our gathering becomes the problem.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I bring my culture everywhere.
I light a lamp in a foreign land.
I wear a saree in the snow.
I teach my children the language of their grandparents.
Others build walls between neighbors,
argue endlessly over identity,
and forget where they came from.
Yet I am told I should leave my culture behind.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I live in the past.
But my past gave me yoga,
mathematics, philosophy, meditation,
and the idea that the world is one family.
The future keeps borrowing from my past,
while telling me to be embarrassed by it.
I am an Indian,
and everyone says I should be ashamed.
Ashamed of my accent.
Ashamed of my food.
Ashamed of my festivals.
Ashamed of my traditions.
Ashamed of existing.
But I am not ashamed.
I am the child of farmers and philosophers,
scientists and saints, workers and dreamers.
I come from a land that taught the world
that truth can be many-sided,
that all paths deserve respect,
and that the entire world is one family.
Yes, we have flaws. Every nation does.
But judge me by my actions, not by your stereotypes.
For I am an Indian.
And before you tell me what is wrong with me, look honestly at what you have normalized in yourself.
For I am an Indian.
The world may mock my accent,
question my customs,
laugh at my celebrations,
and judge me through a thousand stereotypes.
Yet I stand tall.
For I belong to a civilization older than empires, a culture richer than prejudice, and a people whose spirit refuses to bend.
Jai Hind
Psyops, manufactured outrage, and narrative campaigns will come and go. That's part of life on social media these days.
People of Indian origin in the US should remember one simple fact: by virtually every measurable outcome, they are part of one of the most successful immigrant communities in American history.
Not just in education, income, entrepreneurship, patents, medicine, engineering etc, but also as a community that is overwhelmingly law abiding, family oriented, and civically engaged.
This is obviously not due to any immutable characteristic or ethnic superiority. Anyone claiming that would be stupid. It is the product of a highly selective immigration system, the extraordinary opportunities that America provides, and generations of discipline, perseverance, and sacrifice.
Loudest voices online are not representative of real life. Most Americans judge people by the coworkers they work with, the neighbors they live next to, and the friends they know, not by whatever outrage is trending on X this week.
The noise will pass. The record will stay!