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Desi people behavior at cinema halls


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12 minutes ago, tom bhayya said:

6 yrs back times lo ee article vachindhi.. dallas meedha kuda evaro okaru rasthey chudaali ani undhi hhhhhhhhh.gif?1344628027

 

360_esstein_0705.jpg

 

Statement Appended: July 2, 2010

I am very much in favor of immigration everywhere in the U.S. except Edison, N.J. The mostly white suburban town I left when I graduated from high school in 1989 — the town that was called Menlo Park when Thomas Alva Edison set up shop there and was later renamed in his honor — has become home to one of the biggest Indian communities in the U.S., as familiar to people in India as how to instruct stupid Americans to reboot their Internet routers.

My town is totally unfamiliar to me. The Pizza Hut where my busboy friends stole pies for our drunken parties is now an Indian sweets shop with a completely inappropriate roof. The A&P I shoplifted from is now an Indian grocery. The multiplex where we snuck into R-rated movies now shows only Bollywood films and serves samosas. The Italian restaurant that my friends stole cash from as waiters is now Moghul, one of the most famous Indian restaurants in the country. There is an entire generation of white children in Edison who have nowhere to learn crime.

(See pictures of Thomas Edison's Menlo Park.)

 

I never knew how a bunch of people half a world away chose a random town in New Jersey to populate. Were they from some Indian state that got made fun of by all the other Indian states and didn't want to give up that feeling? Are the malls in India that bad? Did we accidentally keep numbering our parkway exits all the way to Mumbai?

I called James W. Hughes, policy-school dean at Rutgers University, who explained that Lyndon Johnson's 1965 immigration law raised immigration caps for non-European countries. LBJ apparently had some weird relationship with Asians in which he liked both inviting them over and going over to Asia to kill them.

After the law passed, when I was a kid, a few engineers and doctors from Gujarat moved to Edison because of its proximity to AT&T, good schools and reasonably priced, if slightly deteriorating, post–WW II housing. For a while, we assumed all Indians were geniuses. Then, in the 1980s, the doctors and engineers brought over their merchant cousins, and we were no longer so sure about the genius thing. In the 1990s, the not-as-brilliant merchants brought their even-less-bright cousins, and we started to understand why India is so damn poor.

Eventually, there were enough Indians in Edison to change the culture. At which point my townsfolk started calling the new Edisonians "dot heads." One kid I knew in high school drove down an Indian-dense street yelling for its residents to "go home to India." In retrospect, I question just how good our schools were if "dot heads" was the best racist insult we could come up with for a group of people whose gods have multiple arms and an elephant nose.

(See TIME's special report "The Making of America: Thomas Edison.")

 

Unlike some of my friends in the 1980s, I liked a lot of things about the way my town changed: far better restaurants, friends dorky enough to play Dungeons & Dragons with me, restaurant owners who didn't card us because all white people look old. But sometime after I left, the town became a maze of charmless Indian strip malls and housing developments. Whenever I go back, I feel what people in Arizona talk about: a sense of loss and anomie and disbelief that anyone can eat food that spicy.

To figure out why it bothered me so much, I talked to a friend of mine from high school, Jun Choi, who just finished a term as mayor of Edison. Choi said that part of what I don't like about the new Edison is the reduction of wealth, which probably would have been worse without the arrival of so many Indians, many of whom, fittingly for a town called Edison, are inventors and engineers. And no place is immune to change. In the 11 years I lived in Manhattan's Chelsea district, that area transformed from a place with gangs and hookers to a place with gays and transvestite hookers to a place with artists and no hookers to a place with rich families and, I'm guessing, mistresses who live a lot like hookers. As Choi pointed out, I was a participant in at least one of those changes. We left it at that.

Unlike previous waves of immigrants, who couldn't fly home or Skype with relatives, Edison's first Indian generation didn't quickly assimilate (and give their kids Western names). But if you look at the current Facebook photos of students at my old high school, J.P. Stevens, which would be very creepy of you, you'll see that, while the population seems at least half Indian, a lot of them look like the Italian Guidos I grew up with in the 1980s: gold chains, gelled hair, unbuttoned shirts. In fact, they are called Guindians. Their assimilation is so wonderfully American that if the Statue of Liberty could shed a tear, she would. Because of the amount of cologne they wear.

 

See TIME's Pictures of the Week.

 

 

See the Cartoons of the Week.

 

TIME responds: We sincerely regret that any of our readers were upset by this humor column of Joel Stein's. It was in no way intended to cause offense.

Joel Stein responds: I truly feel stomach-sick that I hurt so many people. I was trying to explain how, as someone who believes that immigration has enriched American life and my hometown in particular, I was shocked that I could feel a tiny bit uncomfortable with my changing town when I went to visit it. If we could understand that reaction, we'd be better equipped to debate people on the other side of the immigration issue.

deniki reply CNN lo

http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/07/13/parikh.stein.rebuttal/

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9 minutes ago, tom bhayya said:

6 yrs back times lo ee article vachindhi.. dallas meedha kuda evaro okaru rasthey chudaali ani undhi hhhhhhhhh.gif?1344628027

 

360_esstein_0705.jpg

 

Statement Appended: July 2, 2010

I am very much in favor of immigration everywhere in the U.S. except Edison, N.J. The mostly white suburban town I left when I graduated from high school in 1989 — the town that was called Menlo Park when Thomas Alva Edison set up shop there and was later renamed in his honor — has become home to one of the biggest Indian communities in the U.S., as familiar to people in India as how to instruct stupid Americans to reboot their Internet routers.

My town is totally unfamiliar to me. The Pizza Hut where my busboy friends stole pies for our drunken parties is now an Indian sweets shop with a completely inappropriate roof. The A&P I shoplifted from is now an Indian grocery. The multiplex where we snuck into R-rated movies now shows only Bollywood films and serves samosas. The Italian restaurant that my friends stole cash from as waiters is now Moghul, one of the most famous Indian restaurants in the country. There is an entire generation of white children in Edison who have nowhere to learn crime.

(See pictures of Thomas Edison's Menlo Park.)

 

I never knew how a bunch of people half a world away chose a random town in New Jersey to populate. Were they from some Indian state that got made fun of by all the other Indian states and didn't want to give up that feeling? Are the malls in India that bad? Did we accidentally keep numbering our parkway exits all the way to Mumbai?

I called James W. Hughes, policy-school dean at Rutgers University, who explained that Lyndon Johnson's 1965 immigration law raised immigration caps for non-European countries. LBJ apparently had some weird relationship with Asians in which he liked both inviting them over and going over to Asia to kill them.

After the law passed, when I was a kid, a few engineers and doctors from Gujarat moved to Edison because of its proximity to AT&T, good schools and reasonably priced, if slightly deteriorating, post–WW II housing. For a while, we assumed all Indians were geniuses. Then, in the 1980s, the doctors and engineers brought over their merchant cousins, and we were no longer so sure about the genius thing. In the 1990s, the not-as-brilliant merchants brought their even-less-bright cousins, and we started to understand why India is so damn poor.

Eventually, there were enough Indians in Edison to change the culture. At which point my townsfolk started calling the new Edisonians "dot heads." One kid I knew in high school drove down an Indian-dense street yelling for its residents to "go home to India." In retrospect, I question just how good our schools were if "dot heads" was the best racist insult we could come up with for a group of people whose gods have multiple arms and an elephant nose.

(See TIME's special report "The Making of America: Thomas Edison.")

 

Unlike some of my friends in the 1980s, I liked a lot of things about the way my town changed: far better restaurants, friends dorky enough to play Dungeons & Dragons with me, restaurant owners who didn't card us because all white people look old. But sometime after I left, the town became a maze of charmless Indian strip malls and housing developments. Whenever I go back, I feel what people in Arizona talk about: a sense of loss and anomie and disbelief that anyone can eat food that spicy.

To figure out why it bothered me so much, I talked to a friend of mine from high school, Jun Choi, who just finished a term as mayor of Edison. Choi said that part of what I don't like about the new Edison is the reduction of wealth, which probably would have been worse without the arrival of so many Indians, many of whom, fittingly for a town called Edison, are inventors and engineers. And no place is immune to change. In the 11 years I lived in Manhattan's Chelsea district, that area transformed from a place with gangs and hookers to a place with gays and transvestite hookers to a place with artists and no hookers to a place with rich families and, I'm guessing, mistresses who live a lot like hookers. As Choi pointed out, I was a participant in at least one of those changes. We left it at that.

Unlike previous waves of immigrants, who couldn't fly home or Skype with relatives, Edison's first Indian generation didn't quickly assimilate (and give their kids Western names). But if you look at the current Facebook photos of students at my old high school, J.P. Stevens, which would be very creepy of you, you'll see that, while the population seems at least half Indian, a lot of them look like the Italian Guidos I grew up with in the 1980s: gold chains, gelled hair, unbuttoned shirts. In fact, they are called Guindians. Their assimilation is so wonderfully American that if the Statue of Liberty could shed a tear, she would. Because of the amount of cologne they wear.

 

Lol, nice one. @Android_Halwa, the bold part is for you hhhhhhhhh.gif?1344628027

 

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1 hour ago, tom bhayya said:

we are cultured bro but imported desis are culture less brutes we cannot tolerate this bro

Ekkadiki poyyinna ruless aa ee desam lo..  kanisam mana vallani mana places lo kuda njoy cheyyaniche laga leru ee thread lo comments chusthe.. 

 

ps: nenu naku telisi eppudu theatre lo seats appaledhu

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31 minutes ago, nissan said:

Baa when u visit dallas dont forget to  visit

1) sarigama restaurant-mana college canteens lo inka tea stall pan dabba daggara cig taguthu ammala akkala kaburlu chepukune place kantidhi

2) almarkas--- u will feel as if u are living in karachi u will see paan spit everywhere, basically ojate complex lo you will find juice shop grocery travel agent office full pakistani atmosphere

 

3)walmart and regal movies in irving-basicay irving is such that with in a dpan of 5 miles there are atleast 10 telugu restaurants

5 miles aa 10 telugu restaurants ki.. abbey inka develop kaledhu Irving aithey @3$%. Newark Ave(indian street) jersey city, oak tree rd edison, el camino real sunnyvale lo chudaali

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1 hour ago, loveindia said:

exactly, TS kuda issue ni vadilesi indians on h1b ey issue annattu matladutunnadu... andukosamey nenu matladanu man.. when you want to point someone make sure you are clean ani cheptunna antey man... hhhhhhhhh.gif?1344628027

Ala ani ekkada cheppano oka sari choopi please?? Choosi taristha, nee mind lo unnadi nenu annattu don't make up stories bro.

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1 hour ago, loveindia said:

endi man gatha 2-3 weeks ga desi's meeda padi gila gila kottukuntunnav... nuvvu anni as per rules maatramey chesey pani aitey nee job contract aipogaaney india ki kada vellalsindi... ikkadey kurchoni projects vetukutunnav ga... malli vachi indecent people ani dialogue lu.... eppudanna pawan kalyan cinema ki vellavaa us lo.. 90% vachi arichi gola chesi paper vesedi masters chadivina students ye... india nunchi vachina vallani malli anadam easy kabatti aneyadam fashion aipoindi... 

America oodu neeku inka citizenship ivvaledu gaa mavni program lo appudey citizen laa feel aipotunnavu why man... nuvvu eppudu english movies first day chudaledu emo, Maa indians kanna mee american brothers inka kampu leputaaru ilanti vaatillo...

aina holiday season lo kuda nee crying ekkuva undi antey, either neeku job ledu or else kotha job raavatam ledu... renditlo edo okati confirm chey man... sorry@tom bhayya agreed ani cheppadam marchipoyaanu... hhhhhhhhh.gif?1344628027

Contract ayipothe immediately vellipovali ane rule ekkadundo please show me man. Also maa mestri gaadu visa cancel chesi vellipomantey sure vellipotha ledantey DA file chesukunta(option given to MAVNIs) but vaadiki leni edupu neekenduku man.

Plus naaku job undo ledo adi naa personal issue, neeku daanitho ibbandi emavvaledu kadaa. As long as whatever I do doesn't inconvenience you why do you care. As for the thread, nee lanti fellow desi galla behavior valla janalaki ibbandi avutondi ani cheppataniki thread vesa. Neeku nachakapothey nuvvu ade category ki chendinodivayithe either try to change or stick to your ways and see how you will be looked at going ahead.

Anthe kaani nenu H1B ano, H4 ano evarno specific ga target chesa ani cheppi stories raayaku. Nenu thread lo oka particular group of desis on a visa analedu, I just mentioned what I observed.

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