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"Punji Hunting": Indian bashing Aussie gang member walks free from court.

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As much as I love Indian culture and the traditions and all that. I don't find Indian women all the attractive. The only exception may be Persians or some Middle Eastern women. However I've seen a few pretty decent Indian girls. But sorry to say I'd rather date a Persian girl

well brother u r just being honest but indians would label you racists
 
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If only we were on the other side of colonization, right?.

why do indians blame everything on british colonization? for god sake, almost every part of the world has been colonized at some point in history, india is not the only victim of colonization.
 
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India is a poor country.. We don't spend our money on beauty parlors and plastic surgeries. We can't spend all our hard earned money on luxury items. Even the basic items you take for granted are luxury for us. So we are sorry that we can't match your taste. If only we were on the other side of colonization, right?.

so you say all the other women except indian women do plastic surgery to look good HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA :lol::lol::lol:
 
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@mechanical, @yousaf

Have you guys have no shame? Your country is in utter disarray.. There's need for some meaningful discussion..but you are here trolling around.. Why not spend your time on something useful.

what dont you switch off the pdf, the internet, stop looking at white women pornos and do some charity to support your poor country men
 
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India is a poor country.. We don't spend our money on beauty parlors and plastic surgeries. We can't spend all our hard earned money on luxury items. Even the basic items you take for granted are luxury for us. So we are sorry that we can't match your taste. If only we were on the other side of colonization, right?.


My bad dude, I didn't mean it like that.... I was referring to the Indian girls brought up in the US. Most of them are well..... not my type. And I always see them with their own Indian crowd. Even Pakistanis, Indians, Arabs, Persians all have like a similar clique which they tend to stick to. But yeah I didn't mean to offend anyone here.
 
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India Targets $36 Billion Global Cosmetic Surgery Market


Looking for a nose job or a tummy tuck? It’s destination India. Asia’s third-largest economy is looking to further its reputation in the services sector by targeting the $36 billion global market for cosmetic medical services, or cosmetic surgery, which is growing at over 5 percent annually.

In the past five years, scores of Indian travel websites and entrepreneurial plastic surgeons have sprung up to use the power of the Internet to tap the "nip & tuck" or "pop for an op" market.

“We get 200 enquiries a month. Our patients are mainly from the UK, followed by U.S., Canada, Australia and African countries and the growth has been appreciable,” says Shweta Bhargav, a spokesperson for Indicure, a cosmedical tourism facilitator that reaches out to clients worldwide in 53 languages and has internationally certified surgeons on its panel.

According to a report by Global Industry Analysts, one of the world’s largest market research agencies, the U.S. is the biggest market for cosmetic procedures and is expected to reach $17.57 billion in 2015. In Europe, the market is expected to hit $2.66 billion by the same year.

According to consultants Deloitte, as many as 10 million Americans will seek medical remedies abroad by the year 2012 combining it with holidays, and India has its eyes trained on them.

Corporate hospital chains in India now have exclusive clinics focused on the cosmetic surgery market. In December 2010, India’s largest corporate healthcare group Apollo Hospital launched two exclusive cosmetic clinics in India’s southern cities of Chennai and Hyderabad. Plans are to set up six more across the country.

Chairman Dr. Prathap C Reddy said at the launch, "In the $1 trillion U.S. beauty and life enhancement market, $500 billion is with beauty shops and the rest with medical specialists. Apollo is gearing to tap that opportunity."

Dr. Devi Shetty, Chairman of Narayana Hrudalaya, often known as the Henry Ford of India for his low-cost medical services model, also has plans to set up a dedicated cosmetology clinic and aesthetic dentistry clinics across the country this year.

Other hospital groups in India like Fortis, Wockhardt and Max Healthcare have tied up with top U.S. medical travel facilitators websites like Healthbase.com and MedRetreat.com to cater to cosmedical tourism.

Dr. Ayyappan Thangavel, a practicing plastic surgeon in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad, says the country is seeing a huge cosmetic surgery explosion.


Medical Tourism: Is the Land of Smiles Losing its Crown?India’s Growing Fortunes Fuel Appetite For Private Jets
"My patients are housewives, students, businessmen, entertainers and they come from the U.S., U.K., Europe and Africa. About 80 percent of these foreign patients come for cosmetic reasons and only 20 percent for reconstructive procedures."

There are also a number of so-called "default patients." Like in the case of American Bill Vestal who runs an entertainment company. He came to Dr. Ayyappan for a dental implant, only to return a year later with his wife who was tempted to get a facelift given the lower cost here.

"India has all the ingredients to become a top-notch cosmetology hub. So long as it puts in place the right regulatory mechanism, the sky could be the limit," says Dr. Mohan Thomas, Medical Director at Cosmetic Institute of India (CSI) who is fashioning his cosmetic surgery practice in Mumbai on the lines of world-renowned Brazilian surgeon Ivo Pitanguy, known to be the "miracle man" behind several Hollywood stars.

There are several factors that work in India’s favor to become a front-runner in this market. First it has the expertise, around 2,500 certified plastic surgeons and their number is fast growing. A sizeable number of these doctors have been trained in the U.S., U.K. and Germany and have been certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, plus they have had long careers in international markets before returning home to practice.

According to a global survey conducted by the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ISAPS), India was ranked fourth with 894,700 surgical and non-surgical cosmetic procedures in 2010 thus accounting for 5.2 per cent of all procedures done worldwide. The Indian market is 14 times larger than Thailand, known as Asia’s plastic surgery hub, according to a recent study done by IBI Partners, an Asia-focused market research agency.

A report published by the Planning Commission of India shows the huge cost advantage that India has. In general, a plastic surgery procedure that will cost $20,000 in the U.S. and $10,000 in Britain, will be $3,500 in Thailand and only $2,000 in India, the report said.

A botox treatment that costs $500-$800 in the U.S. can cost $150-$250 in India, a facelift will be $6,500 in the U.S. and just $2,800 in India, while a liposuction costs around $2,500 in India compared with $8,000 in the U.S.

Besides cost-competitiveness India also has a unique advantage that could catapult it ahead of its peers Thailand or Singapore. It is its tradition of Ayurveda and yoga, both Indian-origin practices that are now being perceived the world-over as complementary rehabilitative practices to modern surgical procedures.

"Cosmetic surgery is not just about altering the biological clock or genetics. It is as much about feel-good, wellness and self-confidence. The experience can be enhanced in India by Ayurveda and yoga practices," say Dr. Thomas.

"Our forecasts say that in the next three years India will be the most promising market in Asia with foreign patients almost doubling — from 8 percent in 2010 to a 15 percent market share,” says Paul Benning, Head of IBI Partners in Singapore.

News Headlines
 
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My bad dude, I didn't mean it like that.... I was referring to the Indian girls brought up in the US. Most of them are well..... not my type. And I always see them with their own Indian crowd. Even Pakistanis, Indians, Arabs, Persians all have like a similar clique which they tend to stick to. But yeah I didn't mean to offend anyone here.

Its alright dude..actually it was my bad..I was too worked up by these damn trolls. Anyways people have their own tastes. Good luck finding a persian girl.
 
.
India Targets $36 Billion Global Cosmetic Surgery Market


Looking for a nose job or a tummy tuck? It’s destination India. Asia’s third-largest economy is looking to further its reputation in the services sector by targeting the $36 billion global market for cosmetic medical services, or cosmetic surgery, which is growing at over 5 percent annually.

In the past five years, scores of Indian travel websites and entrepreneurial plastic surgeons have sprung up to use the power of the Internet to tap the "nip & tuck" or "pop for an op" market.

“We get 200 enquiries a month. Our patients are mainly from the UK, followed by U.S., Canada, Australia and African countries and the growth has been appreciable,” says Shweta Bhargav, a spokesperson for Indicure, a cosmedical tourism facilitator that reaches out to clients worldwide in 53 languages and has internationally certified surgeons on its panel.

According to a report by Global Industry Analysts, one of the world’s largest market research agencies, the U.S. is the biggest market for cosmetic procedures and is expected to reach $17.57 billion in 2015. In Europe, the market is expected to hit $2.66 billion by the same year.

According to consultants Deloitte, as many as 10 million Americans will seek medical remedies abroad by the year 2012 combining it with holidays, and India has its eyes trained on them.

Corporate hospital chains in India now have exclusive clinics focused on the cosmetic surgery market. In December 2010, India’s largest corporate healthcare group Apollo Hospital launched two exclusive cosmetic clinics in India’s southern cities of Chennai and Hyderabad. Plans are to set up six more across the country.

Chairman Dr. Prathap C Reddy said at the launch, "In the $1 trillion U.S. beauty and life enhancement market, $500 billion is with beauty shops and the rest with medical specialists. Apollo is gearing to tap that opportunity."

Dr. Devi Shetty, Chairman of Narayana Hrudalaya, often known as the Henry Ford of India for his low-cost medical services model, also has plans to set up a dedicated cosmetology clinic and aesthetic dentistry clinics across the country this year.

Other hospital groups in India like Fortis, Wockhardt and Max Healthcare have tied up with top U.S. medical travel facilitators websites like Healthbase.com and MedRetreat.com to cater to cosmedical tourism.

Dr. Ayyappan Thangavel, a practicing plastic surgeon in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad, says the country is seeing a huge cosmetic surgery explosion.


Medical Tourism: Is the Land of Smiles Losing its Crown?India’s Growing Fortunes Fuel Appetite For Private Jets
"My patients are housewives, students, businessmen, entertainers and they come from the U.S., U.K., Europe and Africa. About 80 percent of these foreign patients come for cosmetic reasons and only 20 percent for reconstructive procedures."

There are also a number of so-called "default patients." Like in the case of American Bill Vestal who runs an entertainment company. He came to Dr. Ayyappan for a dental implant, only to return a year later with his wife who was tempted to get a facelift given the lower cost here.

"India has all the ingredients to become a top-notch cosmetology hub. So long as it puts in place the right regulatory mechanism, the sky could be the limit," says Dr. Mohan Thomas, Medical Director at Cosmetic Institute of India (CSI) who is fashioning his cosmetic surgery practice in Mumbai on the lines of world-renowned Brazilian surgeon Ivo Pitanguy, known to be the "miracle man" behind several Hollywood stars.

There are several factors that work in India’s favor to become a front-runner in this market. First it has the expertise, around 2,500 certified plastic surgeons and their number is fast growing. A sizeable number of these doctors have been trained in the U.S., U.K. and Germany and have been certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, plus they have had long careers in international markets before returning home to practice.

According to a global survey conducted by the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ISAPS), India was ranked fourth with 894,700 surgical and non-surgical cosmetic procedures in 2010 thus accounting for 5.2 per cent of all procedures done worldwide. The Indian market is 14 times larger than Thailand, known as Asia’s plastic surgery hub, according to a recent study done by IBI Partners, an Asia-focused market research agency.

A report published by the Planning Commission of India shows the huge cost advantage that India has. In general, a plastic surgery procedure that will cost $20,000 in the U.S. and $10,000 in Britain, will be $3,500 in Thailand and only $2,000 in India, the report said.

A botox treatment that costs $500-$800 in the U.S. can cost $150-$250 in India, a facelift will be $6,500 in the U.S. and just $2,800 in India, while a liposuction costs around $2,500 in India compared with $8,000 in the U.S.

Besides cost-competitiveness India also has a unique advantage that could catapult it ahead of its peers Thailand or Singapore. It is its tradition of Ayurveda and yoga, both Indian-origin practices that are now being perceived the world-over as complementary rehabilitative practices to modern surgical procedures.

"Cosmetic surgery is not just about altering the biological clock or genetics. It is as much about feel-good, wellness and self-confidence. The experience can be enhanced in India by Ayurveda and yoga practices," say Dr. Thomas.

"Our forecasts say that in the next three years India will be the most promising market in Asia with foreign patients almost doubling — from 8 percent in 2010 to a 15 percent market share,” says Paul Benning, Head of IBI Partners in Singapore.

News Headlines

Well. Its about India serving global market of cosmetics and not Indian market. Anyways good that India is concentrating on its economy exporting its products and services and not terror.
 
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Its alright dude..actually it was my bad..I was too worked up by these damn trolls. Anyways people have their own tastes. Good luck finding a persian girl.

I'm more into Oriental girls or Hispanic girls. To me its like

1. Orientals (Chinese, Japanese, Thai etc) - Dated 2 Japanese girls and one chinese
2. Blondes - only 1
3. Brunettes - Never dated
4.Hispanic - Never dated
5.Persian/Indians & Pakistanis - 2 but one was Persian and I think the other was Pakistani.. Is Aysha an Indian or Pakistani name?
6. Black - Never dated
 
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WOW!! So many small fries here are absolute nuts...guess they are just frustrated about the happenings in their country and taking out all the frustrations here!!

OT- there are idiots in all countries and they just cant get along well with people from other countries.
 
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Well some one should talk about the case on hand here-
I think the judge was biased- she should have sentenced that racist kid according to their law-
Tomorrow some one else might attack some one and claim i am feeling ashamed- please forgive me- Thats no solution-
Australians are racistssssssssssssssssss even the educated ones are-like her- The Judge- What an abuse of the her position she has made-
 
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I'm more into Oriental girls or Hispanic girls. To me its like

1. Orientals (Chinese, Japanese, Thai etc) - Dated 2 Japanese girls and one chinese
2. Blondes - only 1
3. Brunettes - Never dated
4.Hispanic - Never dated
5.Persian/Indians & Pakistanis - 2 but one was Persian and I think the other was Pakistani.. Is Aysha an Indian or Pakistani name?
6. Black - Never dated

What made you to list out your accomplishments?- Is it relevant in a thread where a racist was let go because he was ashamed?-
 
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