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Please define what "warmer culture" means. Food culturing in a lovely pot of 四川火锅 is damn delicious.
Oh, we're talking about stereotypes, sorry. Well, all the Chinese are rude, pushy, disgusting, and somewhat xenophobic and all Indians are racist, xenophobic misogynistic, disgusting, and rape happy.
I actually don't find the Chinese immigrants living in the United States not rude for the most part that stereo type isn't correct in my opinion most are actually quite polite and chatty sometimes once the ice is broken.
With Indians it varies quite a bit more I think. I find some individuals can be quite blunt and abrasive with those that they view as not up to their level, but others are quite pleasant it varies quite a bit. I find there is much more variation in "Indian Culture" too complex to make generalizations.
I actually don't find the Chinese immigrants living in the United States not rude for the most part that stereo type isn't correct in my opinion most are actually quite polite and chatty sometimes once the ice is broken.
With Indians it varies quite a bit more I think. I find some individuals can be quite blunt and abrasive with those that they view as not up to their level, but others are quite pleasant it varies quite a bit. I find there is much more variation in "Indian Culture" too complex to make generalizations.
I was talking about Chinese in China, not immigrant communities, same for Indians.
No, no. All Indians are smelly, racist, xenophobic, and perverted. Generalizations and stereotypes are what fuel the World and Europe forums, get with the program, son
I was talking about Chinese in China, not immigrant communities, same for Indians.
No, no. All Indians are smelly, racist, xenophobic, and perverted. Generalizations and stereotypes are what fuel the World and Europe forums, get with the program, son
I know, I was responding to those stereo types you mentioned not your post specifically. I speak from what my experieces are I haven't been to India or China but have had expose to people who are recent immigrants from there.
Give me some credit I don't typically toot my own horn but I know what time of day it is.
Difficult to judge, because of language difficulties. In China, my Mandarin wasn't good enough for casual convesation, and I rarely encountered anyone who could speak English in the hinterlands, but I found people generally very hospitable and welcoming. But I have heard that in the 20 years since my visit, that has changed considerably for the worse
In India, English is not as universally spoken as one would expect, so in the countryside, it is not easy to relate to people. In the northeastern states of India I visited (Assam, Tripura, Meghalaya, Sikkim), the people seemed quite standoffish.
There is, in any random grouping of people, a gradient from the very friendly to the vary unfriendly, and one's impression arises from whom one has a chance encounter with.
Indians and Chinese are both ''not like us'' so automatically their culture is neither warm or cold its weird and smelly like what Unbrainwashed said.
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