Where Did Modi Go? A Deep Dive into Indian Politics

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  • The video explores the current state of India, political dynamics, and cultural phenomena.
  • It raises concerns about the declining popularity of political figures like Narendra Modi and Rahul Gandhi.
  • The piece highlights the brain drain and changing career aspirations among Indians.
  • There is a critique of the Western influence on Indian culture and lifestyles.
  • Predictions are made about future developments in Indian society and the economy.

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All right, after making so many videos about India, Indians, and Indian politics, by the way, where is Narendra Modi? Where is the BJP? They look like they have vanished, especially after their popularity has been declining. Before, Modi was always "in everything," and, you know, with Bear Grylls, he was appearing at Temple festivals, taking the orange—the color of Hinduism. He seems to have quietened down. I don't know where he has vanished. I'm not making fun of him; I'm sincerely asking you where he has vanished.

And then we have Adani's new scandal, which he'll get away with because he has contacts and connections with Modi, so nobody can touch him. You know, all Modi needs to do is, you know, secretly tell Don Donald Trump, "Come on, you know we understand each other. Yeah, sure, sure, sure, we'll drop the charges; don't worry." Okay, so yeah, and Rahul Gandhi is still moaning and groaning and whining. I don't know—all that nonsense. The only thing he does is moan and groan and complain. At least Modi is doing something. You are just, you know, it's like a female having her periods and constantly whining.

So you can make out, I'm not a Congress guy or anti-BJP; I'm kind of neutral. And then we have Mamta Banerjee, who once in a while just appears and vanishes. So, anyway, you can fill me in with the details; I don't know what is going on. Before, there was a lot of action in India: demonetization, which I don't know if it has helped India in any way. There still seems to be so much illegal stuff going on. Modi's demonetization? I don't know how it helped.

Then what is that? The Citizenship Amendment Act? You know, we will take Hindus from Afghanistan, Pakistan, all the neighboring countries. We'll take Christians also; we'll take every other religion except Islam. You go and die there only. So that was a big alula—nice little coincidence, Allah Gula. Oh good! And now I know what you'll say: "Rice bag." All the Christians are rice bags, yeah! They love rice; they eat rice with almost everything. They don't have cow dung and cow urine mixed, you know—it's rice.

So anyway, I don't know. Modi has been keeping a very low profile. I guess now that he is not as popular as he was—you remember during COVID how they were banging the plates, ding ding ding ding ding, to say bye-bye to COVID? People were drinking more cow urine and eating cow dung to boost their immune systems against COVID. I guess it worked because now COVID is in decline in India, so drink more! People are even telling me there is what, Harvard? Harvard? Harvard? What study has been done that cow urine is number one?

They should come out with a like gold spot; thumbs up, you know those drinks in cold drinks in India—what? Maybe "Gau Mutra" or, you know, cow dung drink or something like that. Anyway, let's see; maybe it'll sell well.

This video is about India. This video is about, um, since I've spoken so much about India, Indians, and you, the great stuff that our Indians do, especially when they go abroad for free food. Free food in Canada! Even if they are, you know, earning big salaries, even if they are working in a well-reputed IT company, they will still, I don't know, surprises me, an Indian man will show his wife and children, and he will admit that we have good jobs—but he will also show, "See how much free bread I got from the homeless shelter that they were giving for poor people? See how much yogurt? See free, free! See how much strawberries? See how much apples and tomatoes?"

Indians don't pay; don't spend money. You can get food for free from Canada food banks which are meant for poor people. We Indians are for free! We are so smart! Guys, don't spend money; free food! Bharat Mata ki Jai! Well, and then they wonder why people don't respect Indians here, why, why, why!

So anyway, all this circus we saw, so now after all these wonderful things about our Indians—who believe in free food, who believe in taking buffet in their bags—you know, they'll take bun and they'll take tissue box and they'll take cutlery when nobody is looking. And yes, before they fly out back to India, they will take the accessories from the towel, towel is for free, slippers are for free, shampoo and soap we don't get in India, we will take that also for free.

"Oh, look at that decoration up on the wall, that also is free for us!" And when you get caught, "Hey, hey, don't act too smart, okay? How much, how much I will pay? I'm from India, I will pay!"

So anyway, after speaking all this about our Indians and bobs and vaginas, you just have to go to some Facebook group, just type "search," don't take my word, go to Facebook and type "nightlife" or say the country's name—say, for example, you say Dubai or you say Cambodia or Vietnam or Philippines, say "nightlife," "nightclubs," "bar girls," and there you'll get to see all these girls who are showing their, you know, assets to invite guests—you'll get our Indians who say, "I love you, I love you." They think that this girl is actually posting it!

What they are not aware of is the bar owner or the social media guy, the guy who's handling the social media; he's posting this. So our Indians say, "I love you, I love you," and they'll put their number plus 91 whatever. You'll say this is fake, "No Baba, not fake!" How I know? Very simple. "Please, I love you, I love you; please, my name is so and so," and when you click on the profile, it's actually the real profile of the guy unless of course somebody else is making someone else's profile.

So yeah, bobs and vaginas, which our Indians are well known for. Now having such a wonderful reputation, having so many stories to share, is there anything good that I can share with you? Is there anything worthwhile which does not make fun of Indians? Well, I thought in this video I'll make you—the 23 predictions that I have for India.

23? Why 23? Well, I don't know; I just wrote them down. So you give me your thoughts—what do you think? Which one do you think is right or wrong? And how did I come to these points? I was looking at the behavior patterns of our Indians for the last 5 to 6 years. As you know, the majority of my clients are Indians who are based overseas—very few Indians from India, mostly Indians who are based overseas who are doing very well, who are earning a substantial sum of money.

Based on these patterns, I see patterns, so I just evaluate, and I thought I'd share these 23 points. So you tell me which one do you think is right, which one do you think is wrong, and feel free to add your points as well.

The first point that I tend to see, which is a reality, is the sad brain drain which is still occurring in India. I mean, we thought the brain drain phenomenon was over—like the best minds leaving India has stopped. Sadly, what has happened is because of the cost of living, the increased congestion, increased pollution, increased stress—the levels of stress in India are so incredibly high. I mean, just think for a minute, you get up in the morning, and the first thing that you're worried about is, "I need to have my tea, coffee; I need to run to get to work because I'm going to be stuck in traffic for 1 hour, 2 hours."

Whether I go in a taxi, whether I go in railways, there's no place—you can't even enter without pushing and shoving people. And, um, especially like where they call the Silicon Valley of India, Bangalore—I've seen some of the youngsters share the photographs—it's a terrible mess, man! So to reach the office is such a headache. Once you get to the office, well obviously you have to work. It's not that Narayan Murthy is 70 hours—that's not what I'm focusing on; that was his opinion that he gave which people are now simply making a controversy.

It's up to you; you want to work less than the hours that you're being paid for? You work; nobody's forcing you to work 70 hours. You're working for yourself; you're not working for the world—you work for yourself, okay? Okay, so, by the way, I endorse Narayan Murthy's opinion. If the country has to grow, you have to work, not only for the country, you have to work for yourself. If you have the self-entitled generation, nothing is going to work.

So okay, you have these— um, you go to the office; you work there. There are some time wasters who will sit in the office and just gossip and talk, but then you have to get back home, right? And imagine you were in the office; you took so much stress and now you can't just directly go back home. To go back home is itself a struggle, and by the time you reach home, you are so bloody exhausted. You're tired, and you wanted to go to the gym, but then you're like, "Oh, I have to go meet my friends. We'll sit for a, you know, just having tea, coffee, or shisha, or have some drinks."

So time is so less, and then before you know it, you plan out the next day again. So when you're given this kind of life where you're just like a rat in a rat race, or life is so monotonous and routine, you just lose the flair for goals, dreams, ambitions.

You know, when you are studying in college, you think, "One day I'll be an entrepreneur. One day I'll be successful. One day I'll migrate abroad. One day I'll have a good life, good wife, good house." But here you're working like a dog, and yeah, you earn a salary, but then in the end, you have to pay taxes, you have to pay expenses, groceries, travel—what are you left with? So what is the solution?

You begin to think, "Man, I'm just frustrated and fed up of this life." Yeah, at least I want to go to like, say, you know, all these wonderful stories: Denmark! You work 5 days a week, you'll work mandatory 8 hours and, you know, if you want to take annual leave or, you know, your wife is pregnant, you can claim leaves, or, you know, you get paid by the hour, which is much more than India.

So why should you stay in India? My simplest question: Why do you pay taxes in India? Why do you pay taxes? What the bloody hell do you get? I'm not able to figure out a single good answer for this. So people think, "I might as well go abroad where, oh, old age home, unemployment benefits—okay, I'll get medical care, even if it's delayed. Oh, you begin to think, or free education."

So brain drain, I mean, there are so many Indians who I chat with. I'm not saying all of them want to leave abroad, but many of them think, "If I could go abroad, I could earn more, send the remittance, and at least have savings and a better life." And yeah, no population explosion nonsense, no congestion, no traffic, no pollution—that's another thing!

Then the second prediction—so the first one is brain drain. The second prediction is I see a lot of Indians trying their hand in non-standard Indian choices. Like, for example, I see many of them trying businesses online. They're trying e-commerce stores; they are trying consulting online; they are trying freelancing online. They are trying even jobs related to AI, artificial intelligence.

I was just chatting with one guy in my WhatsApp group; he was saying that he is doing Bitcoin mining. So these are all new avenues or areas. People are talking, okay, for some time about being a YouTuber, being a social media influencer. Then on the serious note, they're talking about AI tech, blockchain, digital technologies—working, you know, as a freelancer for a company to cut down overheads. I have around four of them in one of my other groups.

So Indians are looking at different options; they are just fed up, tired of being doctors, engineers, you know all the cliché careers. They are asking themselves, "Is there something more that I can do at the side to earn more money?" So Indians are being a little creative there.

Number three is, this one is without a doubt, the Western influence on Indians. I mean, gone are the days where Indians were proud about their culture, their tradition, their religion. There was, at I don't know for lack of a better word, authenticity, or that brand image or the identity that you had of being Indian.

Today, Indians are like—they are openly stating, "I'm in an open relationship." Oh, I want to explore the possibilities of doing open AI—sorry, what? Oh, "Only Fans," "Only Fans," sorry! Then they are talking about multiple partners. I was going through Instagram and I saw these guys; they are openly LGBTQ. And a guy is like, "Hi, you want to see my bag? I bought from, you know, Gucci. I went to London and I bought a Gucci!"

You're talking of a guy with a mustache, and he's wearing a kind of skirt. So forgive my ignorance or whatever, but I didn't see this very common before; now I'm seeing it. By the way, I even saw one video of an Indian guy who has tattooed his eyeballs, who split his tongue, who got all his teeth removed and put metal, who, you know, they peel off your skin. He peeled off in different areas to show like scar marks; he has tattooed his private parts.

He also wants to split his dick in half or put rings on that—much more extreme than me; I don't want to do all that! He tattooed his eyeballs on his completely black, and he wants to do more. He was giving speeches about, "I'm living a spiritual experience," or, "I live life to the fullest." He kind of was repeating the same words I used to use, and I was like, "What nonsense!"

Here, I mean, he's saying that he's living life to the fullest because he split his tongue, because he got genitalia tattooed; he was talking about tattooing inside his bum hole. So, um, I guess each do his own—well, it's his body, his life; do what you want!

I'm just finding it like, yeah, you're young, you're in your 30s, but you need to focus on your career, right? He seems to be a nice guy; he's a nice guy. But I mean, you need to focus on how to earn. Yeah, all this we're doing for attention—this tattoos and all that, great attention! Oh wow, you are so different; can I take a photograph with you?

I did it for attention, I'm being honest with you. I wanted to show, "I'm different." But at some point, after your testosterone and all that madness settles down, you begin to think that I need to be serious about my life and career, man! How am I going to earn? What, by tattoos am I going to earn? No, I need to do something intelligent.

So I'm not saying that guy is dumb, whomsoever that guy is, but okay, he's articulate; he had the money to go to New York or USA and get the tattoo artists or the people who make holes in his flesh and all that from Australia. He was able to maybe get them or fly them down. But for a normal Indian, for a normal person, if you start getting into the direction of tattooing yourself, making holes, and trying to be a rebel like there are so many followers of Andrew Tate who like to say, "Oh, I don't want to join part of the Trix; I believe in keeping those and keeping them in their place," and their personality is more like a, I don't know, bathroom towel, so to speak.

I mean, how will you earn money? At least get a job! See, you can do whatever you like; you want to split your tongue, chop your balls, be LGBTQ—all that is perfectly fine, but you need to earn money because at the end of the day, you need to earn money to take care of yourself, your family, pay your expenses, buy things that you like, invest in your future.

So anyway, the Western influence is impacting a lot of the Indians—fine, you don't want to get married, don't get married. You don't want to take care of your parents? Don't! You don't want to be part of society? You don't! You want to have an open relationship? Sleep with guys, sleep with girls?

You don't believe in—like there are youngsters who tell me proudly, "Hey bro, I'm an atheist!" Like, you a atheist? Yeah, fine, whatever, but tell me about your job and career. I'm more interested in that; atheism is not going to pay anything! So yeah, they want to be the new generation; they want to be like Greta Thunberg to change the world, but first, focus on this.

So anyway, the point being point number three is the Western influence on Indians. Then point number four is the middle class will have more opportunities to make money. Okay, there will be more focus on service-related jobs; manufacturing also will come down. Although it's very unpredictable, like if you have a manufacturing plant in Kerala, you cannot live a single day without a strike, or protest, or some communist nonsense, and then obviously you have, you know, unions and all that.

So I think they'll try to solve all that and tell people: "Listen, you want to make money? Just come to work, do your work properly; otherwise we'll shut down, go to China, or Japan, or some other country, you know?" So, manufacturing will come down—service tech-related jobs, AI jobs, and to kind of lure the people in, they will not only give them training because they obviously need skills, they will also have slabs.

Like, you learn this course and you're able to do this job independently; then we'll give you another course—but you need to work for three months, and then we increase your salary, so this will give them more money to spend. That, in turn, will increase the standard of living of the middle class and push them slightly higher.

Point number five is there are, you know, okay, one is college graduates who don't have any skill but are looking to get experience, but then you have companies that invest in people, or there are people who have experience and they will demand bigger salaries, or they'll say, "Okay, otherwise I'm sorry, I'm not interested; I will go elsewhere."

So companies, in order to retain talent, they will pay—not only good salaries, they'll offer perks, benefits, and even though we keep saying that many Indians will migrate abroad, there's a strong contingency of Indians who believe that, "I don't want to go abroad." Because there are an equal number of challenges, I might as well be here; I have my friends, I have my family, I have people that I know.

So they will charge more money and they would want to live in India, even if they are earning slightly lower because at the end of the day, it’s not just about money; it’s quality of life.

Then number six—this one is unfortunate! There'll be plenty more college graduates which never stops, which in turn leads to massive degrees of unemployment. I mean the number of messages and emails that I get of youngsters not having jobs is not even funny! On top of that, they have more stress; there are more suicides, which is not a very frequent thing, but depression—depression is much more, a lot more confusion.

And they are all wondering like, "What do I do? Do I stay in India, but there's no job? Do I travel within India to get a job, or do I travel abroad?" So the college graduates will face plenty, plenty of stress, pressure, and headaches here.

Number seven is the rise of inflation, the rise of the cost of living! I mean, I just found out that Bombay, or Mumbai, the property prices there are the highest in the world, it seems. I was kind of like, "Oh really? Okay!". It's higher than Dubai; it's higher than even Manhattan—so correct me if I'm wrong over there!

So cost of living is super high, pollution though, anyway we know is very high. There is more stress; people are more, you know, they don't have time for anything, and they will also start selling more cars—the roads can only hold so much. Then you have more population, and everyone, if they have a car or a scooter, this thing becomes a big headache.

And there is more chaos, so all this will be more, which will result in more stress, more depression, more dependency on alcohol, more dependency on vices, smoking, addiction to porn, addiction to online and tablets, and medicines and bad health—so all this will be more!

Number eight, the trend is already started, but many Indians will opt for not getting married, for not wanting to have children, for not wanting to settle down. So this will be a big challenge, and there will also be joint families—that'll be a thing of the past. Well, not everywhere, but let's say for example, you are in Gujarat and you're not getting a good job over there, you'll go to, let’s say Pune, or you’ll go to some other part of India.

And then obviously you’re not with your parents, you're not with your family, you're independent. So, you know, you'll want to have a girlfriend or live a new life, so then that closeness goes, and just imagine you have five sons, and all five are working, or five daughters, all five are working in five different places. So that will erode the Indian joint value system.

Number nine is Indians will have more purchasing power. They’ll spend a lot more money; they will travel a lot more, they will want to invest more into fashion, into travel, into gadgets, into fun, into pleasure.

It'll no longer be just go to work and come back home; it'll be go to work and from work itself, they'll want to, you know, go to movies, go to malls, go eat outside, go experiment and enjoy life. It'll be more like, "Let's enjoy life; we are young!" So that trend will be very, very strong, which was not that before—it was work and go home!

So they will see avenues where they can spend their new purchasing power, which is why we have so many Indians traveling abroad. Number ten is visas—visit visas, tourist visas will be made easy for Indians. Before, Indians were not welcome, especially Thailand, Thailand and all these farthest countries, saying, "Indians, no need visa on arrival, just come down, don't need to worry!"

And some in Thailand had before—it was 2 weeks on arrival, then they said, "We'll give you 3 weeks on arrival," then they said, "We'll give one month on arrival!" I think very soon they'll say, "Just keep coming down, you know, and every month go, you know, go out for a week and come back again!"

So most of the whites or the "goras" or the westerners, they're not very happy with this because they know Indians don't spend too much money. They don't spend a lot of money like the westerners. Like a Westerner will spend $1,000 on booze but an Indian will not spend $1,000 on booze; he will buy the booze and go home and drink and then come out.

He will spend money on other things like girls, or you know, that's how they are! Our Indians always try to see the best value money can buy, and they'll always bargain, which you can't help, like the Chinese. So, there will be many more Indians spending money, and countries have realized, "Okay, one for example, I'm just giving one American or British will spend $10,000. One Indian will spend only $1,000."

So why don't we get 100 Indians, $1,000 into 100? So much more, right? Something is better than nothing! Right?

So yeah, they will make this happen, but at the same time, on the flip side, because of the nuisance of having so many Indians, we have had news about Indians polluting, throwing garbage into clean areas, you know, making places dirty. I hope they don't start pissing and spitting on the streets, because then that'll be even more bad for the name of India and Indians.

But, uh, there'll be regulations as to how Indians, especially long-term, they will not want Indians long-term, which is why Canada, USA, Australia, all these countries, they're making it very difficult for Indians to stay. See, many Indians, our problem with our Indians is—they love to take advantage.

They took a college, like, admission to actually not study, but to get a job and settle down, and many of them used fake degrees; many of them used the loopholes of the system; many of them cheated the system, they don't even know English! Imagine someone saying, "I have a PhD in English," then doesn't know how to speak English.

So they'll make it much more harder for Indians to come into the country. They'll make sure that you have enough money; they'll make sure that, whatever education you claim, they might even ask you for online tests or write in front of them. They'll make you go through a test, and they will filter out Indians. And if you are coming to study, you only study and go back to your country; you don't come here to study and work, and you don't study.

So they will make it very difficult for Indians, and not make it easy to migrate. Even in United States, people have been their Indians 10 years, 15 years; they've just been sent back once they lose their jobs.

So keep that in mind, they're going to make it difficult for Indians. Point number eleven is, which our Indian market, or Indians are famous for, you know, scam calls, um, you know, scam centers.

So you'll have more frauds, more scams, more illegal ventures, more fake degrees, more fake documents, more Indians using the loopholes of the system, more Indian businessmen, more bad suppliers—this will grow so much that, uh, if you say I'm from India, I mean, they will literally put you through a cause correction or prove it!

Like if you go to Alibaba or, um, you know, Ali Express, they have a very stringent rating system that if you cheat the seller, you either not only lose points, you get deplatformed or you can even get banned. So there will be some sort of, some sort of body that will make sure that you only get the crème de la crème, and in order to be recognized or get that seal of approval from the embassy or from the council or from the country, you'll have to maintain certain standards, okay?

So frauds, scams, illegal ventures, bad quality, bad actors—plenty! Number twelve is, um, India will bring out more laws to regulate the online space. We saw that with content creators promoting financial products.

So you'll see Indians—they will also have to comply with these rules from the government because the government will want a slice of the pie—or slice of the action. Okay, you're a YouTuber; you're making so much money. You want this? You're a YouTuber; you're making this content. What is the content? Is it attacking India? Attacking Indian government? Attacking us?

And, you know, they will make a lot of rules over there because if you're a YouTuber with, let’s say, 20-25 million views and you're based in India, well then you come under the media rules. So they will try to bring out these laws—how far they are effective, that is a big question.

Number thirteen, because of more people in the online space, more crimes will take place; more quick get-rich schemes, more investments, more fraudsters, and many of them—it'll be impossible to catch all of them.

I would say out of 100, they would manage to put rules where 40 will be visited; 20 will be caught, and 10 will be persecuted—the rest will run away. So there will be plenty—plenty of fake apps, fake websites, fake investors, fake suppliers. Get ready for plenty of this to be reported.

Point number fourteen is Indian women—they are going to, because of the population and because the laws are supporting them, they will report a lot more false cases against men, false charges, false everything, you know just to take revenge, and they'll make the lives of many Indian men miserable—completely miserable!

Because they can just have these claims or allegations or, you know, false reports—there will be plenty of them. And this will result in Indian men kind of having disdain towards the good guys. I'm not saying all Indian men are saints; I'm not saying Indian men are suddenly going to become goody-goody guys.

There will still be guys who will take advantage of the system; there are plenty of females who are still kind of like, "Don't want to get into that route." But Indian women are going to, for lack of a better word, empowered, which is going to affect Indian men, and yes, many of them, especially the innocent ones' lives, will be destroyed.

Point number fifteen is Indian products, service suppliers—they will be sought after overseas, but they'll have to maintain stringent levels of, you know, quality. They'll have to make their presence known, so there will be plenty of registered companies overseas.

So you'll see a lot of Indians traveling back and forth, a lot of presence abroad, and the kind of awareness about the Indian name and the Indian brand will at least change slightly compared to thinking Indian guys have the turban and flying carpet and cobra and, you know, just traditional.

Indians look at Indians say, "Okay, maybe his products are good, maybe services are good," but yes, for every one good apple, there will be at least five or six bad apples. Number sixteen is Indians will be—which they already are—completely addicted to online activities: relationships, friendships, business, communication, correspondence, gaming, gambling—everything will be online!

And I think India will be one of the largest markets for, I don't know if it is for everything related online. So it will be too much, and the Indian government will not be able to clamp down on each and everything other than having a blanket. For example, blanket ban like TikTok—just ban! So they will try all that, but, um, there are limits. How much you can do? You can't, like they tried having a replacement for Twitter—failed!

So there are some things you can do, some things you can't do. Like you can say that, "I ban Facebook," but guess what? What is the replacement?

Number seventeen is Indian culture, Indian lifestyle, Indian food, Indian festivals, Indians’ norms will be more global. And, um, in a way, it's kind of nice that people get to see more of Indian culture, Indian dance.

But then when you have substandard performances that are being done on New York Times Square or, let’s say at a college fest or in Canada, you know they’re doing the bhangra dance and they're just doing it just to encourage each other without putting effort, without putting, you know, the blood, sweat, and tears of giving a great performance.

And you give a substandard performance breaking coconuts on the streets and shouting—and it ruins the name of India! But you can be rest assured they will spread it across. I just hope they do it in a very classy manner.

Number eighteen—this will be sad; there will be a lot more hatred, indifference, bias, racism, and attacks on Indians. They will target Indians; they will, you know, if they identify you as an Indian, they'll classify you, they'll have bias against you. You might just get attacked just simply because you're an Indian, and you can't just blame the whites; it's a two-way street!

So you know, when, for example, the white community or the whites who are there in Canada, let’s say, for example, they don’t get jobs and they are being replaced, and, uh, when they had a white neighborhood, all of a sudden you have all these Indians coming and they'll have their Indian ways and Indian norms.

So people will feel, "I stayed here 50 years at a quiet Christian, you know, kind of Christmasy environment where everyone is nice to everyone, now all of a sudden we have these Punjabis and care lights, and nobody talks to anyone, and they talk in their own language, and they are indifferent towards us." And you get what I'm saying? If you are an Indian and all of a sudden you're surrounded by all Africans or Taliban or Pakistanis, you would feel the same! Come on!

So, um, Indians will be targeted, that is, whether you like it or not! And especially when people are hurt, the people who lived there for many years and now their livelihood or their lifestyle is destroyed, they will target you—they will not stop.

Then you'll have, number nineteen, more countries would want to deal, associate, and build their friendship and relationship with India in terms of politics, economics, because they'll see India as a growing market.

And if, like Modi, who opened up the Indian economy and encouraged investments and he personally went there as a brand ambassador; if more and more of our politicians do that, and I hope we get politicians who are slightly more educated, or I'm not saying Modi is bad, but who take on the Modi style of inviting others, I think it'll be good for the country.

So, but countries will definitely now target India as the promised land which, uh, after China and all these other countries, they'll see India as the place where you can get big returns. But it's a long way off because of the Indian mentality.

Number twenty is you'll see more Indians, um, sorry, um, yeah, you'll see more Indians wanting to invest in India in terms of wanting to retire there. Before, we used to see Indians who want to retire in, let's say, the Middle East, tax free, say Switzerland or foreign countries.

In a shocking twist, there'll be many Indians who will say I would rather be close to my relatives, my family, my roots. So they'll keep a low profile; they may keep their investments overseas so that they don’t get taxed, but they'll definitely want to be close to their roots. Remember this: the weather in Canada, the weather in the Western countries is not very conducive, or not very welcoming, especially for Indians who are slightly old.

So they will not like that very much. Number twenty-one: mixed marriages, mixed relationships, mixed, I don't know, gender identities, LGBTQ—there will be a massive rise! A lot of girls will be single because Indians would not want the complications that come with an Indian girl and Indian family and their expectations, which are not at all realistic.

So Indian men will be like, "I might as well get a female from a different nationality which is lesser headache." That is why you see many Indians now with Russians, Eastern Europeans, Vietnamese, Cambodians—or not from the same village but from a different part of India because they are fed up and tired.

Yeah, how much you want, the sun, moon and stars, and you think your 'bang' is the greatest thing on the planet. Your parents might think; you might think, the guy has to manage and maintain. So, but women, the females, because they are earning money, they'll give a damn!

And because of the Western lifestyle that they can sleep around and date and all, they will think, "No need to get married now; I'll postpone it as long as possible."

Number twenty-two is many Indians will get jobs at senior levels globally, both in politics, business, economics, whatever. You won't be surprised if you see he's of Indian origin. Because Indians are very good managers; they know how to be diplomatic, especially the educated ones who have a high EQ and IQ, so there will be plenty of Indians in senior positions.

My last prediction for India is, India will be the wild west for investments, business opportunities, growth relationships. Why do I say 'Wild West'? There will be massive confusion; there will be massive speculation; there will be massive fraud; there will be massive risks; there will be opportunities, don't get me wrong.

But because there are so many areas and so many markets and so many things happening in India, it's growing too fast! The government will not be able to handle all this; you're talking of a population of 1.4 billion! The government will not be able to do everything, and there will be a lot of people who will do fraud and run away within India, and they'll never be caught.

And that's why don't be too surprised if you had many more people like Vijay Mallya do their stick and run away, like Bretton Woods, Vijay Mallya, whatever.

Anyway, these are my 23 predictions for India, including my thoughts. Let me know what do you think; you agree, disagree? I would love to know your thoughts in the comments below. Feel free, and uh, do share your thoughts. If you watched this whole video, please do comment down below, "You watched the whole video," so I know who you are.

You guys take care. Any questions? Comment down below, and uh, I'm pretty sure you'll tell me I'm wrong in some places—agree, disagree, whatever—I will read your comments. You guys take care.

C [Music]