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FILM REVIEW: India the Worst country on Earth

anarchonomicon.com

4Chan's First Feature film is also the first Feature length AI Film.

The Conceit? Aside from a few Joke stills, none of the visual film is AI. It is a "Nature Documentary" Narrated by David Attenborough... It is also maybe the most disturbing film ever made, and possibly the most important/impactful film of the decades so far.

Reality is more terrifying than fiction.

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The movie is most likely made by Pakistanis or Bangladeshis or the Sikhs. The three despise Hindus (upper ones) in particular and feel that they are above the slur pajeet despite all having worse per capita GDP and other issues. India is not for beginners but Pakistan and Bangladesh are worse and khalistan is a pipe dream that is about as realistic as lighting striking me thirty times in the next 10 seconds.

These things are very common on Twitter, people have such infighting to prove that they are better than each other (groups I mean). The writer of the movie is most likely a pajeet, just not a Hindu pajeet but a pajeet nonetheless since people of European origin do not care enough about the subcontinent to spend so much time and have a refined sense of racist humour.

the Sikhs

The vast majority of Sikhs live in India, and want to continue living in India. They have some of the highest rates of participation in the military, and the most visibile parts of Indian culture are directly inherited from them. If a small diaspora of Canadian Sikhs have a bone to pick, then they must be singled out as such. I have a large group of Sikh friends, and they're all tired of having to demonstrate their allegience to the country because of Khalistan fantasizers in Kaneda.

Say what you want about Hindus, there isn't a better majority religion to sharing your borders with. There is a reason that India has been a place of refuge for persecuted minorities for millenia.

Is there a reason you're spelling Canada as Kaneda or is it just for fun? Is spelling it that way "a thing" in India or somewhere, so to speak?

"Kaneda" is how rural Punjabis (sikhs) pronounce Canada. Khalistan fantasizers often live in ghettotized conditions, building their own parallel society within Canada. This parallel Punjab-inside-Canada is jokingly referred to as 'Kaneda' in India.

I see. Thank you for this.

The writer of the movie is most likely a pajeet, just not a Hindu pajeet but a pajeet nonetheless since people of European origin do not care enough about the subcontinent to spend so much time and have a refined sense of racist humour.

This claim seems plausible to me, though @WestphalianPeace's claim also seems plausible (and overlapping) to me:

I suspect the creator is actually Canadian. Either Old Stock Anglo-Canadian or the 90's generation of Cantonese/Korean first gen Canadian. There's also a smaller but real possibility of earlier Indian immigrant family who moved to Toronto specifically to get out of India and now feels like the Old World is chasing after them.

Indians definitely fall into "fargroup" territory for me. I have known many professionally, and all were uniformly and unapologetically caste-ist (is there a better word for this?). Americans who grew up post-civil-rights are frequently stunned by the vitriol Europeans often seem comfortable spouting about Gypsies, and I think I feel something similar when I hear Indian physicians and lawyers and professors talk about lower castes. Because with respect to American politics, they are often quite woke, or at least willing to play the "race" card whenever it seems likely to benefit them. Listening to "brown" people complain about racism in one breath and then air disdain for the browner people of their homeland gives me culture war whiplash, I guess I'm saying.

I watched part of the video and it seems like pretty high grade troll bait, but like most of 4chan's projects I am skeptical that it gets anywhere interesting, ultimately. Perhaps I am underestimating the level of public fascination with AI-generated stuff, though.

There's a Garth Ennis graphical novel set in WWII called Out of the Blue that touches upon this. There's a Hindu Indian Brahmin serving in the Royal Air Force (not the main character but one of the main cast) and he's resentful of bigotry but he also believes in the caste system to some extent.