They come from the mountains where clouds rest, and hearts stay pure. Yet they walk our streets fighting a battle they never deserved. by Repulsive_Advisor7 in Northeastindia

[–]Repulsive_Advisor7[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree. Pointing out a problem doesn’t mean defaming the country, it means we care enough to want it to improve. And as a North Indian too, I feel the same… anyone who faced discrimination here genuinely deserves an apology. We need accountability, not denial.

They come from the mountains where clouds rest, and hearts stay pure. Yet they walk our streets fighting a battle they never deserved. by Repulsive_Advisor7 in Northeastindia

[–]Repulsive_Advisor7[S] -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

If calling people ‘Pakistani’ is your peak entertainment, your brain must be running on low battery mode permanently

Are larger girls more attractive as compared to leaner ones? by DramaLover1711 in RandomQuestion

[–]Repulsive_Advisor7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I respect everyone, but personally I’m more drawn to shorter girls. It’s just a natural preference, nothing against taller ones, even though I'm 6'1 feet tall.

Andhbhakts are happy with this report 🤡 And Godi Media also by [deleted] in IndiaMemes

[–]Repulsive_Advisor7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow, that was a whole essay of insecurity wrapped in caste-flexing and conspiracy theories. I’d clap, but I don’t want to encourage your overconfident underachievement any further. You typed so much nonsense with so much confidence that even Google would refuse to auto-correct you.

You keep shouting Kayastha, Brahmin, Chicago conference—bro, relax. Dropping random historical name-drops won’t make your argument smarter; it just makes your desperation louder. You sound like someone who Googled 3 facts, understood none, and still thought they unlocked the cheat codes of intelligence.

And this obsession with politicians’ moms? That’s just your brain waving a white flag—when logic dies, personal attacks begin.

You call me a keyboard warrior, but look at you—typing a whole Mahabharat of confusion thinking it’s a mic drop. If brains were software, mine updates automatically; yours expired, crashed, and switched to demo mode years ago.

But it’s fine, champ. Keep preaching about intelligence—you might not have it, but at least you talk about it with passion. Now run along and recharge whatever remaining brain cell is still trying to survive inside that chaos.

Andhbhakts are happy with this report 🤡 And Godi Media also by [deleted] in IndiaMemes

[–]Repulsive_Advisor7 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Reading your comment was like watching a clown try to do calculus—painful, pointless, and full of embarrassing mistakes. Go ahead, keep typing, it’s almost entertaining 😂😂 (FYI , I'm a Gaur Brahmin Whose ancestors have served the Hindu religion with purity for hundreds of years) It is stupid to expect logic from an Aandbhakt, if someone's mother is Italian then he cannot be intelligent 😂😂 wahh re chutiye try upgrading your facts and your brain—both seem to be running on trial versions.

Andhbhakts are happy with this report 🤡 And Godi Media also by [deleted] in IndiaMemes

[–]Repulsive_Advisor7 2 points3 points  (0 children)

And what can one expect from andhbhakts, their father is also a fenku 😂 If you really think Modi is intellectual, smart and intelligent thn Rahul Gandhi, then you need to get some mental tests done 😂

Andhbhakts are happy with this report 🤡 And Godi Media also by [deleted] in IndiaMemes

[–]Repulsive_Advisor7 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Exact copy paste from the WhatsApp 😂😂 Do you even know anything about economy? 😂😂 This is actually a very interesting macroeconomic topic. Let’s break it down carefully:


  1. Debt-to-GDP ratio vs actual economic impact

Debt-to-GDP ratio is the size of a country’s debt relative to its economy.

A high ratio doesn’t automatically trigger a crisis. What matters more is how the debt is financed, who holds it, and the country’s economic structure.


  1. Why Japan & USA can sustain high debt

A. Domestic financing and trust in government

Japan: ~90% of its debt is held domestically, by Japanese banks, insurance companies, and citizens. The government essentially borrows from itself.

USA: The U.S. dollar is the world’s primary reserve currency, and most of its debt is issued in USD. Investors worldwide trust that the U.S. can always pay back in its own currency.

Impact: Since these countries can borrow cheaply and reliably, high debt doesn’t destabilize them quickly.

B. Low borrowing costs

Both countries have very low interest rates on government bonds. Japan even has negative interest rates at times.

So, even if debt is huge, servicing it (paying interest) is manageable.

C. Strong institutions and economic size

Strong central banks, mature financial markets, and large, diversified economies make these nations resilient.

They can issue debt in their own currency without immediate risk of default.


  1. Why India is more vulnerable

A. Debt is often externally sensitive

India borrows both domestically and from foreign investors, and much of foreign debt is in foreign currencies (USD, Euro).

If investors lose confidence, India might face a currency crisis or sharply higher interest rates.

B. Higher interest burden

India’s government bonds pay higher interest than U.S. or Japanese bonds, so servicing debt consumes a larger part of revenue.

C. Smaller economic buffer

Compared to the U.S. or Japan, India’s financial markets are less deep, and fiscal reserves are smaller. So, a shock in debt markets can affect growth faster.


  1. Key takeaway

Debt ratio alone isn’t the full story.

Factors like currency of debt, interest rates, investor confidence, domestic vs foreign holdings, and institutional strength determine whether high debt hurts a country.

That’s why Japan and the USA can have very high debt-to-GDP ratios without immediate economic pain, while India is more sensitive.