- Joined
- Jul 18, 2014
- Messages
- 4,237
- Points
- 113
Can see how snakey and slick is this CECA. He acts innocent and at first claims to just bought a bag and NEVER took anything, NEVER took any wallet at all.
But when the police officer found the wallet in his backpack, he jitao changes his story and says ' No..she gave it to me!..." * Really must clap his tokong prata excuse, ...NBCB and PAP is importing such farkers into our country. Song Boh?
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The reason is very simple...he is only following his true traditional cultural talent:
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Indian national admits they are born fraudsters and hustlers
https://www.dailyo.in/variety/scams-nira...22537.html
Why cheating comes naturally to Indians
Scams are generational
" When an Indian child is growing up, her parents ask her at some point: "Beta, which one is your favourite scam?" The kind of scam you like reveals a personality type—a guide to the future, indispensable to worried parents. My answer as a schoolboy was unwavering: "Mummy, fodder scam."
Scams are generational. Those who are born about now will ten years later have their own favourites: Rotomac, NiMo and others that will show up in the time to come.
We Indians are born fraudsters and hustlers. The big guns obviously hunt bigger game. The returns are higher. Every Indian cheats to the best of her ability. You do the best you can. It’s what school taught us. "
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But when the police officer found the wallet in his backpack, he jitao changes his story and says ' No..she gave it to me!..." * Really must clap his tokong prata excuse, ...NBCB and PAP is importing such farkers into our country. Song Boh?
.
.
.
The reason is very simple...he is only following his true traditional cultural talent:
.
.
.
Indian national admits they are born fraudsters and hustlers
https://www.dailyo.in/variety/scams-nira...22537.html
Why cheating comes naturally to Indians
Scams are generational
" When an Indian child is growing up, her parents ask her at some point: "Beta, which one is your favourite scam?" The kind of scam you like reveals a personality type—a guide to the future, indispensable to worried parents. My answer as a schoolboy was unwavering: "Mummy, fodder scam."
Scams are generational. Those who are born about now will ten years later have their own favourites: Rotomac, NiMo and others that will show up in the time to come.
We Indians are born fraudsters and hustlers. The big guns obviously hunt bigger game. The returns are higher. Every Indian cheats to the best of her ability. You do the best you can. It’s what school taught us. "
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