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Haters gonna hate but the future belongs to us! :D

We Filipinos stay away from indians in our country because of the stereotype that indians have bad smell and don't take a bath.
You must be living in Mini philipines in some failed country because on my trip to south east Asia, I discovered something else. But you know what, the world stays away from people of certain country and don't even allow them visa. now that's a shame
 
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There are Muslims and christians in the RSS? Meaning I can be a Bhakt too?

Do tell....:-)

What kind of an idiot are you ? For you all patriotic Indians are hindus & members of RSS ?

I am a syriac christian from Kerala,south India.
 
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Many Filipinos also hate the indians because of their shameful 5-6 lending business.
 
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Many Filipinos also hate the indians because of their shameful 5-6 lending business.
Had you been a Filipino you wouldn't have been offended by my posts at all so stop speaking on behalf of a country that is much peaceful and progressing. Speak for your own country that is going down the hill on every aspects. what about that?
 
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I'm Filipino, I have a fair skin unlike you jealous indian.

Naah... you are Not... you are jus a chinese false flagger who get butthurt when someone speaks against china (indians or vietnamese). And you also call moderators to ban them for speaking the truth... :lol: hipocrit
 
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Naah... you are Not... you are jus a chinese false flagger who get butthurt when someone speaks against china (indians or vietnamese). And you also call moderators to ban them for speaking the truth... :lol: hipocrit
He is pakistani. See how he got offended by my posts aimed at Pakistan :lol:
 
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That inferiority complex-ridden, little Bilal keeps shooting off his mouth claiming Indian members who call him and his countrymen out on their bullsh*t for various reasons and those Indians who disagree with him in general, belong to the cadre that he so lovingly likes to name drop every minute of every day. Talk about obsession. Not once has any Indian member spoken about religion to denigrate his opponent, which by the way, is hardly worthy of being an opponent. We speak about facts, and work done on the ground, and about real infra development as well as development on other indicators, not some faff that some fanboy just read about. It just goes to show how the majority of you are still rooted in the boring old/medieval way in which you were brought up :lol:

Let's not talk about 'shudh' upbringing now - shall we?

None of your three working stiff friends could replicate my lifestyle here in LA even if you tried all your life - I only have pity for the miserable little existences you three have in whatever Tier 1 Piece-of-crap rathole you live in. Do kadi ka log...Internet hero ban gaya. Try to get out in the real world and compare it to your rathole sometime...

I resisted the urge to say 'Bhag yahasey' so many times....

You can hide your head in the sand all you want - but at the end of the day Bharat is still a royally effed up Third world mess no better or worse than Bangladesh. Some parts of Pakistan are a little better. There is no shame in admitting this. Its all over YouTube and everyone knows what it is like. We've all been to India. We in Bangladesh and most reasonable Indians understand this. One tiny Noida doesn't turn India into America all of a sudden.

Leave the empty armament boasts and try to go to the villages sometime to build some toilets and help your farmers. It's a damn shame. That's where the boast should come from, not some rocket copied from the 50's era Atlas program, nor some ugly office towers next to a slum or useless showcase projects like a Mars Mission that gets votes but won't feed anybody.

There are more people dying of hunger and malnutrition in India (195 Million) than the entire population of Bangladesh itself....

I seriously don't see any point comparing any Bangladeshi cities with tier-1 and tier-2 cities of India . That's is height of trolling.

Yeah effed up third world mess and a larger Tier-1 Bhartiya version of it. I don't get the vedic math....:-)

You know all of a sudden its hitting me, all the jealousy and trolling is coming from Kolkata Ghotis and Bangals (mostly). Do they hate Bongs (the common name is effin' Bongs) so much in India that they have nowhere to go but come here in the PDF Bangladesh section?
Yet they keep licking RSS boots...the habit of ghulami is hard to get rid of....
 
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Let's not talk about 'shudh' upbringing now - shall we?

None of your three working stiff friends could replicate my lifestyle here in LA even if you tried all your life - I only have pity for the miserable little existences you three have in whatever Tier 1 Piece-of-crap rathole you live in. Do kadi ka log...Internet hero ban gaya. Try to get out in the real world and compare it to your rathole sometime...


Your clueless statement above just goes to show the kind of backward thought process that goes on inside that head of yours. I guess ignorance is bliss! :lol:



You can hide your head in the sand all you want - but at the end of the day Bharat is still a royally effed up Third world mess no better or worse than Bangladesh. Some parts of Pakistan are a little better. There is no shame in admitting this. Its all over YouTube and everyone knows what it is like. We've all been to India. We in Bangladesh and most reasonable Indians understand this. One tiny Noida doesn't turn India into America all of a sudden.

Leave the empty armament boasts and try to go to the villages sometime to build some toilets and help your farmers. It's a damn shame. That's where the boast should come from, not some rocket copied from the 50's era Atlas program, nor some ugly office towers next to a slum or useless showcase projects like a Mars Mission that gets votes but won't feed anybody.

There are more people dying of hunger and malnutrition in India (195 Million) than the entire population of Bangladesh itself....

Yeah effed up third world mess and a larger Tier-1 Bhartiya version of it. I don't get the vedic math....:-)

You know all of a sudden its hitting me, all the jealousy and trolling is coming from Kolkata Ghotis and Bangals (mostly). Do they hate Bongs (the common name is effin' Bongs) so much in India that they have nowhere to go but come here in the PDF Bangladesh section?
Yet they keep licking RSS boots...the habit of ghulami is hard to get rid of....


Here comes the real bilal, vomit-spewing and everything. ha ha

The rest of your post smells like dhaka does, besides, you're clearly the product of a medieval way of life. Step aside and let the adults do the talking. :)
 
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What kind of an idiot are you ? For you all patriotic Indians are hindus & members of RSS ?

I am a syriac christian from Kerala,south India.

You lying. I know you are from Orissa. Syriac Christian :omghaha:

I know South Indians. They could not care less about Bangladesh.

You are obsessed about Bangladesh and are here 24/7.

Your clueless statement above just goes to show the kind of backward thought process that goes on inside that head of yours. I guess ignorance is bliss! :lol:






The rest of your post smells like dhaka does, besides, you're clearly the product of a medieval way of life. Step aside and let the adults do the talking. :)

Still stinks less than the shit-hole you live in :omghaha:

Get a load of this - 'Shit and Go' about 'Mumbai'....:laugh:

 
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Still stinks less than the shit-hole you live in :omghaha:

Get a load of this - 'Shit and Go' about 'Mumbai'....:laugh:



haha Russel Peters is awesome. Doesn't change the fact that dhaka smells worse than a public lavatory in somalia (if there ever was one). Bombay is changing, despite what you want to believe, you fourth world pimple. :D
 
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Allowing for the relative newness of the contributor - his perceptions are however universal across the Bangladeshi population, whether they are young or old.

The perception in Bangladesh is Indians are essentially looking at every opportunity to screw over Bangladesh. In terms of Indian Govt. intent they may be partially correct. But I don't think the private sector in India will see this favorably - where it concerns their (collective) pocketbooks.

Now if popular opinion in a neighboring country of 15 crores does not matter to the Indian policy maker or Indian Industry - I have nothing to say. Intra-country Trade stands at officially $7 Billion yearly, informally again just as much (total of $15 Billion a year and growing phenomenally). Out of this only $500 Million is our exports to India - tilted heavily in India's favor.

Millions of Indians are working in Bangladesh without papers - Bangladesh is the third largest source for remittances to India. The Bangladesh govt. for now is looking the other way.

CPD study on Bangladesh as an Indian remittance source - Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD)

Things cannot continue at this state of affairs. Popular opinion can lead to boycotts of Indian products which can be a noticeable issue. Other negative things could follow.

This is a PR problem for India - borne out by the Indian Govts. step-motherly actions and Indian ignorance.

Not belittling Bangladeshi achievements on PDF could be a start in the right direction.



The reason I am highlighting some of these issues is it is important to understand how backward and medieval these RSS extremists are (who inspire our PDF Indian trolls) - and law and order people in India are powerless, they don't have a RAB like we do, It's effed up. There is no Rapid action control of law and order visible in the video below....if police are bystanders then that means they endorse this behavior.

The mastermind of the club attack on women (he even got booted out of the extremist Bajrang dal),

Pramod Muthalik - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Some RSS goons attacking women just for going into a club,


Another nutcase openly declaring war against minorities,


People being slapped around and insulted by Hindutva goon moral police just for being seen with girlfriends is a common scene in India..

In effect India is not as liberal as we think it is, it is filled with hatemongers (and especially RSS women haters. Muslim haters).

In recent times we have controlled Muslim extremists in Bangladesh, but there is no controlling Hindu extremists in India which is a huge problem.

Certainly it is also a bad place for minorities to be in unless you are rich and powerful...

It's for India's own interest that they should abandon parties like RSS. These primitive organizations should be banned in India but as we see Indians are worshiping them.

Here's another way we can solve India's problems - helping their chronically hungry. Very few in India care about the marginalized and their hunger rates. If Indians boasted about this for a change - I'd really have appreciated that...

From famine to food basket: how Bangladesh became a model for reducing hunger

A recent UN report on global hunger highlights Bangladesh – a onetime food basket case – for having cut chronic hunger by more than half since 2000.

WASHINGTON — Four decades ago, the newly formed and desperately poor South Asian nation of Bangladesh saw its already-high levels of extreme poverty and chronic hunger skyrocket with floods, leading to the Bangladesh famine of 1974.

Farmers and farmland were swallowed up in rampaging waters, distribution of the imported food supplies that the country depended on became impossible, and an estimated 1.5 million people died. The country – which former Beatle George Harrison raised money and awareness for in the 1971 Concert for Bangladesh – became associated for the long term with hunger and malnutrition.

Today, the onetime food basket case has transformed into something of a food basket – and a model for hunger reduction for the rest of the world.

Recommended: Think you know Asia? Take our geography quiz.
A recent United Nations report on global hunger highlights Bangladesh for having cut chronic hunger by more than half since 2000. The generally upbeat report, which finds that the number of hungry people worldwide has fallen to 795 million from 1 billion in 1990, cites Bangladesh as one of a number of bright spots in a global effort to eradicate hunger by 2030.

“Bangladesh is one of three success stories of the last 10 to 15 years – Ethiopia and Nepal are the other two – that give us some hope on this goal” of eliminating hunger, says Glenn Denning, a professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs in New York and a noted expert in development and nutrition.

“These kinds of successes have demonstrated that if you bring certain things together” – he lists economic growth, improved agricultural productivity, a focus on farmers’ market accessibility, and social safety nets for the most vulnerable – “you can bring hunger down.”

In Bangladesh’s case, a revolution in rice production beginning in the 1980s has helped turn a country that was dependent to some degree on food imports into a self-sufficient producer. Small-farm mechanization, irrigation, and particular attention to boosting women’s participation in the economy, along with girls’ education, have combined to erase the old image of Bangladesh as a hunger hot spot.

“I would list three drivers of poverty reduction and hunger reduction, and all those things are happening in Bangladesh today,” says Akhter Ahmed, chief of strategy support at the Dhaka, Bangladesh, office of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).

He lists regular economic growth; “human development,” which he defines as a focus on education, health, and nutrition; and a “safety net” that provides cash transfers and other assistance to that part of the population that can’t participate in the “growth process” as the “essentials” that have worked together to bring down high poverty and hunger rates.

“I do believe Bangladesh can serve as a model,” Dr. Ahmed says, “particularly to other countries in South Asia that haven’t done so well.”

One standout poor performer in the neighborhood is India, which, despite its regularly higher economic growth rates, has been a laggard in hunger reduction. The UN report places India atop the world hunger list with 195 million chronically hungry people – or about a quarter of the world’s underfed total of 795 million.

But another big neighbor, China, accounted for two thirds of the global reduction in hunger since 1990.

India’s stubbornly high hunger numbers amid impressive economic growth have led to what Columbia’s Dr. Denning says is widely referred to as the “Indian enigma.” But underneath the head-scratching, he says, is a web of “complex issues,” ranging from stalled rural development (particularly roads to get food production to market) to cultural factors.

Not the least of those cultural factors, for example, is rural Indians’ preference for what is delicately referred to as “open defecation.” That practice leads to sanitation and public health problems, which are linked to high rates of malnutrition and hunger.

In contrast to India, Ahmed notes, Bangladesh in its four decades of independence from Pakistan has been open to deep cultural change – like a generalized participation of women in the economy, notably in the garment industry – and to a significant role for nongovernmental organizations. Those are both identified as important factors in Bangladesh’s reduction of hunger.

Bangladesh is the birthplace of what has become a global movement for microfinance, by which very small loans enable small-business creation that in turn boosts economic development.

It was also a pioneer in the area of social safety-net development with its “Food for Education” program. In the 1990s (and with the help of US foreign aid dollars), the program launched the idea of providing cash or food vouchers to families that pledged to send their kids to school.

The idea has now spread around the world, with the UN hunger report citing such safety-net programs as a key to reducing hunger – while crediting the implementation of such programs in Brazil, Mexico, Honduras, and elsewhere for Latin America’s reduction in chronic hunger.

In addition to those elements, Ahmed of IFPRI recalls how the government of Bangladesh responded to what became known globally as “the great food crisis” of 2007-08. Food-importing Bangladesh was caught off guard when India suddenly halted food exports to respond to a global spike in food prices. Efforts were redoubled and new ideas implemented to ensure that Bangladesh would become self-sufficient in food production.

“I really haven’t seen the willingness anywhere else that successive governments in Bangladesh have had to reform and to try new ideas to achieve social improvement,” says Ahmed, who has worked in a number of developing countries from Asia to Africa.

None of which is to say that Bangladesh has solved its hunger problem.

Bangladesh, Ahmed says, has three key hunger challenges: continuing chronic hunger, with the UN report finding that about 27 million Bangladeshis are still underfed; “transient food insecurity,” or the sporadic lack of sufficient food supplies, largely as a result of the natural disasters that Bangladesh has increasingly experiences; and what Ahmed calls the “hidden hunger” resulting from nutritional deficiencies.

This last factor includes what many international experts consider to be Bangladesh’s biggest failing in an otherwise impressive food production and accessibility policy: its stubbornly high child stunting rate. “More than one third of children are still stunted,” says Ahmed, using a term that refers to a child’s height in relation to age. “This tells us that nutrition is still poor and that there is too much dependence on rice in the diet.”

Globally, experts see a largely parallel, but in some aspects differing, story. Like Bangladesh, the world must still press ahead on reducing chronic hunger, and developing countries in particular will have to focus increasingly on food-production disruption as a result of climate change.

And food waste – whether it’s the tons of good food that go in the developed world’s dumpsters, or the high food loss in developing countries from poor storage and inadequate transportation – will have to be addressed everywhere.

But Denning says that even as the world tackles those challenges, it will have to confront what he describes as the “much more complicated” scenario of 21st-century “malnutrition” – which includes both under-nutrition and over-nutrition, increasingly in the same countries.

“What is so alarming is how rapidly this double burden of malnutrition, with continuing under-nutrition at one end accompanying skyrocketing rates of over-nutrition and obesity at the other, is occurring in poor countries,” he says. “Many poorer countries suddenly find themselves having significant numbers of people in both baskets, and they are not prepared to deal with it.”

Denning, who is a regular consultant to the UN on nutrition and development issues, says he’s watching for world leaders to pay more attention to the double malnutrition burden that developing countries face as they move toward adoption of a list of global “sustainable development goals” in September. So far, however, he sees negotiators of the new goals giving the emerging problem too little attention.

What does give Denning hope is the growing attention he sees the world paying to hunger and malnutrition issues. “We know we have the tools to bring down hunger,” he says. “When you see everybody from Bill Gates to the leaders of the [Group of Seven] putting up big resources to address this, you know it’s an issue that’s out there, and one that people know has a solution.”

From famine to food basket: how Bangladesh became a model for reducing hunger - CSMonitor.com

India has a lot to learn from us, only if they could get rid of their fake pride.

Congratulations to my brothers in Bangladesh, and also cool to see Makati, Philippines in the list. :yahoo:
Sad to see the butt hurt comments from indians, i think it's expected since india always dominate at the bottom of every lists.

There is a reason why they call it the 'Asian Century'! ;)
 
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You lying. I know you are from Orissa. Syriac Christian :omghaha:

I know South Indians. They could not care less about Bangladesh.

You are obsessed about Bangladesh and are here 24/7.

lmao....what ?

ഞാൻ മലയാളി ആണോ അല്ലയോ എന്ന് തീരുമാനിക്കാൻ നീ ആരാടാ ബംഗ്ലാദേശി ?

We do care about your pole-vaulting cousins - 7 Bangladeshi immigrants arrested in Kerala | Business Standard News

btw,Odishans are better than Bonglodeshis..:lol:


And yes bongoloid-I am a Syriac christian - And I don't want to prove it to you.

India has a lot to learn from us,

:lol: Learn from you ? You lag behind us in global hunger index
 
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Sorry dear,they can't ignore us...

We are building their Roopur power plant..Its a JV

We were project consultants for Dhaka metro

Although Russia is constructing their first nuclear reactors,Russians might source subsystems from India

See the irony ?

Just because we are paying you doesn't mean you became our idol. Be Thankful.

Low tech is low tech - and India is the cheapest bidder in some of this. So its OK.
 
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