Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

WATCH: In A Secretly Filmed Video At Ohio Park US Man Says 'Indian Crowd Has Ravished' Midwest

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Mar, 2017 10:07 AM
    Members of the Indian community in the US have been alarmed by a video posted on an anti-immigration website, which shows Indian families relaxing in an Ohio park, while a man taking the video accuses them of stealing American jobs, the media reported.
     
    The video is titled "Welcome to Columbus Ohio Suburbs -- Let's Take a Walk to Indian Park" and was posed on SaveAmericanITJobs.com. The website is run by 66-year-old computer programmer Steve Pushor, reported BuzzFeed News.
     
    The video has a running commentary showing men, women and children playing and relaxing in a public park. 
     
    The description of the video reads "Ohio's suburban park is occupied by rich Indians". 
     
    "These Indians have to be clocking in at $$$150 - 200K plus in salary to live in this area. The clothes they are wearing, the cars in the parking lot, the expensive baby strollers, ALL pointed to BIG $$," the narrator said in the video, adding the Americans found it difficult to get IT Jobs.
     
     
    "The number of people from foreign countries blows my mind out here. You see this whole area is all Indian, amazing. It's an amazing number of jobs have been taken away from Americans. The Indian crowd has ravished the Midwest. It's a takeover," the man said. 
     
    Pushor told Buzzfeed News that the immigrant visa-holders are a threat to the IT jobs.
     
    The website saveamericanitjobs.org says its mission is to "save American IT jobs for future generations" and has sections like 'Indian IT Mafia' and posts on 'I lost my job to H1B' and 'the perpetuated H1B scam that is hurting USA IT workers and abusing H1B Indians'.
     
    "What we're trying to point out is people in Ohio, IT workers and other professional people, have lost their jobs to foreign guest workers. That's what our point is," he said.
     
     
    The video has many Indian families worried. It comes after Hyderabad techie Srinivas Kuchibhotla was shot dead last month at a bar in Kansas city.
     
    Last week, Indian-origin convenience store owner Harnish Patel, 43, of Lancaster in South Carolina was found dead of gun shot wounds in his yard. However, police said in Patel's killing his Indian ethnicity does not appear to be a factor.
     
    In another troubling incident, a Sikh man named Deep Rai working outside his home in Kent, Washington, was shot in the arm by a stranger who allegedly shouted "get out of my country" before pulling the trigger.
     
     
    Many people have reacted to the video, some calling it an attempt at starting a racial discord.
     
    "As a citizen of this great nation I find this video against the fundamental American values of diversity and equality of all races," commented a user with a profile name Stem Mentor.
     
    "As an American, I apologize for this man's behaviour!," commented another user.
     
    Bhavin Bavalia, an American-born IT professional and the son of Indian immigrants, was quoted as saying, "It's very scary for me knowing that I have a lot of family in these small Indian communities."
     
    "To think that there could be some weirdo filming my cousin's kids as they're playing at the park, and possibly fomenting resentment towards them, is just disturbing," he said.
     
     
    Kaplesh Kapadia, the Indian-born CEO of a California startup called SelfScore, said Pushor's website was the subject of discussion this week in at least five different Whatsapp groups.
     
    "This is spooking people, combined with the Kansas murder," he was quoted as saying.
     
    During the entire video, the narrator has used words like "insane", "hell" and "mad" looking at footage of Indians in the post.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    B.C. Government To Fund Up To 1,100 New Teachers With $50-million Instalment

    B.C. Government To Fund Up To 1,100 New Teachers With $50-million Instalment
    British Columbia is providing $50 million for school districts to hire hundreds of new teachers in response to a scathing Supreme Court of Canada decision, but the educators' union says that's just a fraction of what's needed.

    B.C. Government To Fund Up To 1,100 New Teachers With $50-million Instalment

    NRIs Need To Declare Demonetised Notes At Airport

    NRIs Need To Declare Demonetised Notes At Airport
    NRIs coming for the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (PBD) here from Saturday and resident Indians returning from abroad need to declare at the airport on arrival the number of demonetised Rs 500 and 1,000 notes they are carrying, said a Customs official on Friday.

    NRIs Need To Declare Demonetised Notes At Airport

    Cash Deposit Deadline Extended For Those Outside Country

    Cash Deposit Deadline Extended For Those Outside Country
    All Indian citizens, who were outside India from November 9 to December 30, will be able to exchange or deposit the old currency note of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 till March this year, an official statement said on Friday.

    Cash Deposit Deadline Extended For Those Outside Country

    Yahoo Deletes Trump Tweet That Included Racist Slur

    Yahoo Finance says it accidently tweeted out a racial epithet when promoting a story about the cost of President-elect Donald Trump's plans to increase the size of the U.S. Navy.

    Yahoo Deletes Trump Tweet That Included Racist Slur

    WATCH: Son Of Former Taiwanese Official Hires 50 Strippers For Procession Of His Late Father

    WATCH: Son Of Former Taiwanese Official Hires 50 Strippers For Procession Of His Late Father
    Fifty pole dancers clad in black bikinis gave one Taiwan politician a raucous final send-off in an eyebrow-raising funeral parade that jammed traffic and drew crowds of onlookers.

    WATCH: Son Of Former Taiwanese Official Hires 50 Strippers For Procession Of His Late Father

    Mysterious Radio Signal Traced To Distant Dwarf Galaxy

    Mysterious Radio Signal Traced To Distant Dwarf Galaxy
    In a first, astronomers, including one of Indian-origin, have traced the source of a mysterious radio signal to a dwarf galaxy more than three billion light years from Earth.

    Mysterious Radio Signal Traced To Distant Dwarf Galaxy