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Modi's Hypocrisy on Full Display at Davos 2018

indians have a GDP per-capita less than Africa actually so just stop your nonsense and learn to accept the fact.

No Africans brag about they will become a super dope power by 2010 despite of they are richer and have far more resource than you:rofl:, yet the pathetic indians keep bragging about that.

Btw, even North Korea produce more food per-capita-wise than India, yet Noko try to import food whilst indians export food, so maybe not only Noko design better ballaistic missiles than you but also they feed their citizens less hungry than you do as well:rofl:, you can clearly see how pathetic india really is.

As for being homeless?

I am not sure how indians calculate their mudhutlessness, but it seems that in the table you cited, the US has higher homeless rate than you do:rofl:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_homeless_population

The list must have been created by an Indian for use in a Bollywood movie. The movie is likely India 2030 Supa Powa movie. It’s well known that Indians know no shame. And with Wikipedia, Indians can put anything in it to brag. To stay credible, Wikipedia need to monitor any modification relate to India.

Finally, India need lessons on integrity of character. And to be incredible, first be credible.
 
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With world's 5th largest homeless population it is obvious we Indians will behave like beggars worldwide

ycvmdEC.jpg


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_homeless_population



Unfortunate that Indians your friend met were like that

But a Taiwanese friend revealed Chinese traders he had the most unfortunate experience of doing business were most filthy subhuman degenerative scum he has ever met. Almost all of these traders have connection with Chinese organized crime syndicate and assist these groups in smuggling and trafficking. They make the most profit in trafficking desperate Chinese village women to brothels in East Asia, specifically Japan and Thailand. Those wretched scum boasted about how they made an extra bonus on a rural Chinese teenage girl sold off to a prostitution den in Japan, with the most perverted gleeful blush.


I have not made my mind on Chinese traders yet as subhuman flesh merchants, since I have never done business with one.



There are two kinds of pariahs in the arms trade world

one pariah who cannot afford arms

other pariah is not allowed to buy arms and cast out of the arms trade like diseased filth.

Its natural for the latter pariah cannot parse a basic arms trade and whine about.

issue here is what Indian call a home could hardly be described as a dog shed everywhere
 
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#India's #Modi disappoints at #Davos. #ModiAtDavos https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-01-24/modi-disappoints-at-davos … via @bv

https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-01-24/modi-disappoints-at-davos

He (Modi) had a big act to follow; at the same conference last year, Chinese President Xi Jinping caught the attention of the world when he essentially sought to take up the mantle of global leadership that the U.S., under President Donald Trump, seemed to have carelessly discarded. Xi's speech was a bravura defense of globalization, not one whit less impressive for the fact that his regime is not precisely the sort of global leader that much of the world would wholeheartedly welcome.

Modi, too, spoke of the fear that the tides of anti-globalization were rising, and that countries were becoming more "self-centered." But he didn't seem to be offering Indian leadership in response. Certainly, he correctly identified three worldwide problems -- climate change, terrorism and anti-globalization -- and committed India to the fight against them. But it wasn't clear what, concretely, India would do to persuade or win over waverers; how it would forge new alliances and blaze new trails to progress.


This was particularly disappointing when, to Indian ears, much else in Modi's speech struck precisely the right note. Like all Indian leaders before him, he spoke of his country's diversity, of how democracy was its strength, of how it sought consensus and unity in politics at home and abroad. Modi's party and his government may consistently have fallen short of these goals, but there is some comfort to knowing that he too acknowledges that they lie at the heart of the Indian project.


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... instead of going the whole way toward seeking to lead, Modi instead repeated tired tropes of India's defensive past diplomacy: condemnation of Pakistan's silly distinctions between "good" and "bad" Taliban, and reminders that the United Nations and the Bretton Woods institutions should create more space for India. The old India might bang on about representative institutions, but the India of this uncertain moment surely should seek to create new ones. Why worry about not being represented when you are the only one on the stage? That's when you seize the initiative. Tell us how the promotion of democracy and a commitment to diversity link up with India's re-imagination of the global order; tell us how connectivity and trade can be supported without the dangers inherent in Beijing's Belt and Road initiative, which is fueled by debt and promises; tell us how India's decades-long effort to give its Muslim citizens a stake in power has lessons for a world struggling with violent political Islamism.

Perhaps the problem is that Modi's pitch fell between two stools. He wanted to both hard-sell India to his audience and to address the search for global solutions. Had India been growing at over 8 percent, its economy sound and his management unquestioned, he wouldn't have felt the need to waste much of his speech on the kind of public-relations blitz that many in the audience would've heard before. Although India's economy may be rebounding -- slightly and hesitantly -- after a self-inflicted slowdown, Modi's government is obviously still under-confident, still conscious of the need to push its growth story on the world.

But Davos is more than just any investor conference, and the prime minister could have saved the "invest in India" pitch for the roundtable meetings with executives that he does so well. Davos didn't want India to sell itself to the world; it needed India to lead.
 
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The #India that #Modi sold at #Davos isn’t quite the India we live in. #ModiAtDavos https://qz.com/1186653 via @qzindia

https://qz.com/1186653/davos-the-in...onomic-forum-isnt-quite-the-india-we-live-in/

Silence and violence
So is the case with the fractures in Indian society.

One of the key issues the Indian prime minister sought to highlight was that of terrorism. “As dangerous as terrorism is, the artificial distinction being made between good terrorist and bad terrorist is more dangerous,” Modi said.

This assertion, perhaps pointing at Pakistan’s dilly-dallying with sections of the Taliban and Kashmir-focused militant groups, seems a little off in the Indian context, not the least under Modi’s watch.

India, of course, is no stranger to religious or caste-based strife.

However, since he took power in 2014, incidents of Hindu right-wing aggression, both online and offline, have gained momentum. Yet, the prime minister and senior leaders of his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have mostly turned a blind eye towards those indulging in such violence—sometimes even tacitly backing them.

The argument could also be extended to Modi’s claim of “inclusiveness” followed by his government.

“In 2014 after 30 years, Indian voters provided complete majority to any political party to form a government at the centre. We took the resolution for the development of everyone and not just a specific group. Our motto is sabka saath sabka vikas,” Modi said at Davos, referring to his campaign motto that roughly translates to “Support for everyone, development for everyone.”

However, many would counter him on this front, too, not just on the basis of his government’s and colleagues’ public stances but also his own personal approach.

In the Gujarat legislative elections late last year, for instance, his party used outright toxic rhetoric against non-Hindus and Dalits. And Modi, as prime minister, spearheaded such bigotry. In campaign mode, he hasn’t shied away from gaining electoral dividends by sharpening religious divides.

At other times, when serious crimes were committed against non-Hindus, he chose a piercing silence.

Speaking at Davos, Modi quoted Rabindranath Tagore, the venerated poet who espoused universalism and striving for an India that was “a heaven of freedom where the world is not divided by narrow domestic walls.”

It is ironic then that the Nobel laureate himself would likely be branded an anti-national today—not the least by Modi’s own partymen.
 
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The list must have been created by an Indian for use in a Bollywood movie. The movie is likely India 2030 Supa Powa movie. It’s well known that Indians know no same. And with Wikipedia, Indians can put anything in it to brag. To stay credible, Wikipedia need to monitor any modification relate to India.

Finally, India need lessons on integrity of character. And to be incredible, first be credible.

Many India related wiki pages were edited by dishonest people, and cited by dishonest people and dishonest media to fool illiterate masses.
 
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School bus attacked by a mob protesting a movie in India, India is a disgrace and yet their PM is saying India is great.
 
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Lol, 180 million people in China live in slum, are you out of your mind you dumb piece of curry? The number smells very curry, where is your source?:rofl:

Do you even know how ridiculus the number look like, show me your source, I bet the slum in China count as manson in your pathetic country.:rofl:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_slums

China have 180million live in slum yet not a single one noticable here, you beat me with your typical curry number:rofl:


Shameless people are invincible. 人至贱,则无敌
 
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Typical ignorant, out-of-context response of an unread Pakistani. He was in fact challenging Trump's stance. See what other world media had to say..



China hails PM Modi's Davos speech, says will jointly fight protectionism


Butthurt pakistanis should stop following prime minister Modi and better follow their puppet PM abbasi .. may be a ISI man is standing behind him wherever he goes.
Old man Riaz should stick to his usual fake accent talks in somed shit program .and this age he should chill and relax. Dont worry about our PM what he says..he is our PM and he is doing a great Job...
 
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Let's be truthful here. The first irritant for any Pakistani is seeing Indian leaders in global forums delivering keynotes. That is the #1 heart burn for the OP as well.

apart from the likes of Trump , Netanyahu etc, no international leader worth his salt takes this hugpolacy clown or his country seriously, international forums are meant for these clowns domestic PR stunt

DUUjj3dUMAAJRVx.jpg:large
 
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