Is India really as backward as some Chinese news suggests?

Mondo International Updated on 2024-02-02

Is India really as backward as some Chinese news suggests?

Let me tell you one, in the past, my colleagues were Indians and often came to China. He is a Kshatriya, I went to India to play in India's house, his family is a rich man, and his family is hundreds of miles away. (I don't know if it's an exaggeration) all the lower castes are his tenants. The local township chief and police chief were shocked when they saw that his father was going to kneel down and kiss his feet (they were shocked when they saw it at the scene). The governor is still the governor or something, and he is very polite when he sees his family, because when he elects, he says that whoever he chooses, all the people will vote. I asked him if it wasn't democracy? He said yes, I have the right to vote. I said what about the people who work for you, and it dawned on him that oh yes, they're human too. My expression at the time ( Add something today, some of the answering friends questioned me for making it up, which made me cry and laugh. I searched the Internet again and found an article in Tianya that said it was written by an international student, and put my passport and visa at that time below.

The passport is missing a corner because this passport is full, and if the new passport is replaced, the public security bureau will cut a corner to show invalidation. I often travel abroad for work reasons, and I have several such passports. As for the similarity with that post, I think it's also normal, because I'm also going to India (maybe it's all one state, I'm sorry, I'm not familiar with the name of the state in India, and I went very early, I went in 08, I can't remember clearly), these are their customs. You can't say that I said that Japanese people should bow before seeing people, and you question me if I am false, right? I think it's a good thing to have doubts to discuss, but to always speculate on others with sinister intentions is too dark for you, right? On the other hand, when I went there there was a meeting in Bangalore. This place is known as India's Silicon Valley, the third largest and fourth largest city. The hotel is still very good, 5 star and extremely luxurious inside. But my Indian buddy told me that when someone knocks on the door, you should first see who it is, and don't open the door if it's not a waiter. I was nervous, but luckily no one knocked on my door that night. The next day I asked him why, and he said that beggars would come into the hotel and knock on the door to beg... I was like this in my heart at the time (,, You basically can't walk the sidewalk when you go out, because the sidewalk is full of homeless people and wild dogs. You can only walk on the road, and a three-jumper or one of those taxis without mirrors will speed past you at a speed that will quickly fall apart, and only a few centimeters away from you, and they are all masters. There are all kinds of poop all over the floor, and the smell of toilets fills the air. And the visual impact of the building is very strong, you feel quite good in the hotel, less than half a meter away from the hotel, it becomes a rural area, and it is the most broken kind. You can understand the visual impact, right? Besides, why is this guy good to me? One is that I often help him at work and solve several of his very difficult problems. In addition, India's middle class thinks so much about the gap between China and India (and it still does today), and China is 5 or 6 years ahead of India, and India is a little harder to easily surpass it. I took him to our companies in Beijing and Shanghai, and he walked around the building downstairs, and he said that this building is good, and I said yes. It's really good, an office building with more than 50 floors. Then he said something about this, which we also have in India, and I didn't understand what he meant. Later, I took him around for a few days, and he told me that he thought Beijing and Shanghai were nothing, they were better than New Delhi or something, but they were nothing, and the image project was nothing. As a result, a few days later, we took him to Weifang, and saw the wide and neat streets of Weifang, as well as various residential buildings, office buildings, and development zones. My colleague muttered what to say, and then he had an idea and said did you see the license plate, Lu Z. Our Chinese license is based on the size of the economy, and it is ranked from A. He was shocked at the time, knelt down and licked, saying that the gap between China and India was at least 30 years, and then he was completely convinced.

Yuan Fang, what do you think, please leave a message.

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