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tv   Lets Talk Bharat  RT  June 11, 2024 8:30am-9:01am EDT

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for us, the least interest in indulging zalinski is incessant demands. have the best of luck to all result in france with the anti establishment national rally party trouncing mac holes establishment party by over double the votes. last september zalinski dropped into the canadian parliament and fis pumped an actual world war 2 ukrainian nazi who served in heinrich him. lawyers watson, s as alicia of division canadian primary suggesting true though also stood there smiling next to zalinski and cheering. while the house speaker from tree goes on liberal party. he prays on this nazi for killing western allies in world war 2, because they just happened to be russians. i read to read my profound regret for my error and recognizing an individual in the house during the joint address development by presidents who lensky, that public recognition has cost paying to individuals and communities, including the jewish community in canada and around the world. as well as to
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survive as of now it's, it's possible and, and other nations. shortly thereafter, the same canadian house speaker volunteered to make himself into a speed bump for team through those bandwagon. as it seemed to be heading straight for the political wilderness at full speed. but where would the western leaders be if they didn't have zalinski hanging around? well, maybe still in power to start. check out all the western establishment leaders whose careers magically just kind of ended after they ended up in the when skis, blast radius shaking is and former us how speaker kevin mccarthy met with zelinski . them was suddenly dropped, kicked out of his job by numbers of his own republican party, which was the 1st time that it never happened in history. so yeah, by all means don't hang out with a lot of shots in germany. sounds like a great time for zalinski to go there and work more of his magic. and that's the
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all big. now i'll see you again. that's up. i'll be off by the the companies that we might have an express thanks for percent from the merchant. if i read all the site and you guys free ebony overnight success story is 20 years in the making. as i already said, right in india marriage is not an if washed. so when question, i think this is the 1st time in our history that we have clarity and vision in terms of what he wants to achieve. the other one will come on, a punk kid and the evolving landscape of the 21st century. the focus no more than
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it is on india. i my guess when i did an indian business executive and angel invested in the shop one shop tank, india and the founder off in the oldest online match making service shoddy. dot com that is going on with them. thank you sir. no problem. can i find the dog, the say, my name and the route to be sharing my name with you? so am i or decided about to keep your name? i know from my mother and non you decide that, okay, and you know, it was still in a new shouldn't name when i was born. you know, it means unique not competitive, but not comfortable. that's a better definition income problem. so there are 2 people sitting at a 100, were boundary content anywhere. the only difference is one person has $15000.00 and the other person does. everyone 15 goes. but of course made a lot of hardware and, and that parents blessings, the karmic people. yeah, the leaving the site looked like yes. what did your father do when?
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what is his name? his name is gopalakrishnan. does he just boss to be uh, earlier this year. uh, god, best a. so my dad uh, you know, comes from a very young blue background. his father died when he was about 16 years old. any of 4 sisters and 3 brothers to look often and just on, well, he has to stop school. i need a couple job which paid him under the bees month. im gonna cut off and show the sony most of them by and by the time he came to me by his started do, will it be better and done the salary? and then i was born and i saw him to walk my life spending, you know, 16 hours a day and look up building a life for himself. and i was, but he brought it up as businesses and fixed. and so he had a job and then made enough money to set up his own businesses. he set up factories and they'll move a lee in building b, which are far strong, some ups of them by and become an industrialist and his own right. and to come from nothing at that point because very difficult. right, and sort of just forced independence in the he was born and then sort of the
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opportunities were not as much as they are today. right. and the only way you could do it is to shield hard work the culmination and when, you know, i have huge respect and admiration and he's my role model. in many ways, e started out as a very strict aggressive father in some ways. but it was the 2nd half he had become so philosophical and you know, he was very spiritual is view i buttons become that become over time. not about what you can do for me. but what can i do for you? so i remember i spent 10 years in the us and that i used to call you, i had only 2 questions used to say, are you happy? i'd say yeah that and say, do you need something? i'd say no, it's okay. talk to them. all right, so there was never any. when are you coming back? what are you going to do that what they need to mon for me for the others? what can i do for me? and so i think that was really powerful and enabling for me as an individual,
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but your understanding of that then that it was possible that happened later on. it happened later on i in fact kind of part of for the loose. yes. i felt that was in the us can be more things was indeed more involved in my life. so at some level like kind of held it against him for a very long time and you picked up on that. but you know, as a introspect and i look back, i think it gave me the freedom and the wings to be able to do it will go anywhere and do anything without having to feel the pressure off of my going. i have to, you know, a dealer by my duty of being the only son and being with my parents. my father was a lot of came to father's department. they, they have people who was essentially an engine. so when i made it and movies, every conversation will end up, can you send me some more money? so after some family started editing. so i said, if you finish a conversation with that, i will not talk to you for calling me. i've been used to and then say,
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are you listening to what i'm not saying? so means basically saying the same thing. yeah. and when he passed away, and i ran into some law and i'm a native and i've been to him like to do is be a set of many thousands of people can because he was very popular as a bus. and he was very helpful. and then what about 50 people in the line to say thank you to me. i need this said 15 people. he said he was running out of homes. wow, that was what he was doing with the money that i was sending data so amazing unsung . no, not announcing non and onto yeah, that's very much like my father of and he just bought to be a decent fee. there were people who are there from far flung areas of india. we was hoping 12, his life, but he never told us either. right. so yeah, i can totally understand. i think it's very powerful when a lot of people give, but very few people who came on announced what made you come back during the after 10 years, because i saw my dad working 16 hours and you know all the time doing business.
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that's the only thing i knew as a teenager. i tried a few different businesses and i tried working with my dad as well since he had his business, but nothing was working out. and because i was kinda young and brash and perhaps it was very different at that point, right? we're talking, you know, ninety's now, you know, i mean there was just opening up as a country. we were still a very close socialist society. so i kind of blamed the city, you know, this is all because there's no opportunity. if people don't get it, they don't give up their word. so i'm going to go overseas. so i took off the, on a, at an out of money. i came back home with my data between my a legs that i said the, your prop, the problem is that the all the yeah. so this the hudson us us is whether brings, i mean india that i grew up. it was very thought, don't know why that was socialist in some respects. you know, we never said anything against you and i should be just, that's something clos, you never actually questioned that. and the modus operandi was the pieces were read
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out the books and tasks, and you used to just sit and listen. and i never got that. i said, i can do this at home by my offending class. and very interesting, even though it's in the us, the 1st in class, and one of my co student, the sick, the peach of steve. i don't agree with you. i was shocked to, i said, 1st of all, you're calling the visual by his name. and secondly, you say, you don't agree with the beach. i was that even the boss and i said you're in probably the boy. but done this out, steve, the professor, he said, tom, why don't you agree with me? can you show perspective? i mean orange to say and off of that you know, he shared with us how is it i'm likely perspective see over the same problem, but my life change. i kept my hand up all the time just because i could say, i don't agree with it. even if i agree and what i realize at that point and in the subsequent the time is that your perspective, regardless of what it matters site and that was confidence. and i think from there i was able to pick up a lot. and in fact,
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i would call those my former computers here in the i was always in trouble. i was getting the bad company. i didn't know what i wanted to just because i was getting costa for the bed. i started to believe in was. and once that happened, you know, i got a job after college, it took me a while to find a job one. so what i'm investigated, that work ethic. i started to believe that i could do anything i could build anything. and so i, you know, after a 10 years that i said look, maybe it's time to be proud and melancholy. right. maybe it's time to get back to mom and dad and you know, i've been to the father long enough and, and that's kind of when i decided that look, let's set up a company the, let's set up a business. let's see how it does. and if it starts doing well, i moved back and that was 10032004 is when i move that 49, did you do you just said tradition point then came back on because generally further that it's time to do something for and then you achieve, you want to move on. that's right. that's what your graph sales life. not only as a successful businessman or the burner, but the other person on. yeah, it was
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a couple of things. one, the company that i was working in, you know, this was off of the dot com inclusion happen. and so it was going to its own struggles. so i knew that there's maybe not a very long future, a bright future here. but in badly i did have job offers from other companies, wanted me to come in as one of the co founders or early employees and they were getting by the way, in my early twenties and the company i was working in, i visit not quite trafficking and i was a multi millionaire in my on the 26th i based on paper. the fact remains that after that i lost it all and then became bankrupt. that's when i moved to india and i was actually in debt, which i prepared off before i moved there because of some bad decisions. but i've done very well for myself. so there are other companies that i wanted to hire and they offered me ex salary, which was always in 6 figures for somebody in the early twenty's. i mean, you can buy any car you warranty can live anywhere you want. and they offered
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leadership positions. but i always had a condo for them in terms of all for that site, but what was more like with nobody quite we couldn't bridge? did they have match locations? you don't have that stage in life. i don't know how in more of your decision making is it becomes more about ok. you didn't give me what i want, or maybe i'm going to do something else as opposed to maybe. so what, you know, let's, let's find a way to, you know, meet off. so i think it was a bit of that and it was a bit of which, but i couldn't, i want to do something big. my brains will becoming bigger because i just seen this whole internet thing. the come something in the us and i knew that it's going to take or the what and at some point. so my dreams are becoming bigger. at the same time, i was feeling separation, anxiety. you have been yes, so many years and 3 of the circles have created this friendship and this lifestyle i was going to give it out. so i did something. but i think 9 site was very smart. i started spending more than more time and, and getting the so 1st year i spent 34 months next to i spent 6 months and so it
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took me 3 years to complete the transition. in fact, after i moved back, yes for 2 years, i did not even give up the home that i had been slipping. then from here because it was just such a big decision. i let go of everything that i had spent 10 years doing is that when you started shot the dot com, that's what i started because you can kind of try to shut the door. come in america . actually i did. you did. i did, did as well in india that point this is lot has changed, but you had a software engineer was 7000 would be someone who had a designer. it was $5000.00 a piece a month. so i had done one of my vacations, hired a 70 people. it was like an opening of editing the paycheck that i was getting right. it was nothing. it was $500.00 a month. and you know, my dad had some office space which was kind of like, you know, behind the college shed, which was just the room lying around. so i started using that and then i used to
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work nights. so with that more light thing with these guys trying to think of different businesses, that'd be due. and he actually started a bunch of business and, and i've sorted a couple of them since then, but of course shoddy dot com became the most popular. so that's how people know me, but be launched. my gone dot com, the launched a couple of other gaming businesses. you know, one of the 1st in the country to launch a gaming business. but charlie dot com. interesting. lee was a very unique story because one of the yours when i was here in india, i was very independent. so my dad at that point the i develop the camaraderie and i'm friendship. so he wouldn't tell me. and as i said, he will use you become the police officer, what can i do for you know, what can i do for me? so he will never put the pressure on me that way. you should get mad it and these need this person. so, one day as i was sitting some, a gentleman losing his, my dad's friend came in. right. and you know, typically petitioner being at match making happened of india and you know, very soon within 5 minutes of the conversation, i was pretty clear with us because,
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you know, you open up this briefcase on my desk and he started pulling or bio d. does. what i called really intrigued to because i was just coming from us with everything was back in a way. and then it was just becoming a thing. i said, how many of these body does new gaddy me? you said, oh, i got a about 5060 in my bag, but i have more you want to see more than a realize how many people do you know in your community. you said maybe 200 or so. so i said that for my choice of life buckner is limited by how much we're different getting and how far you can drive it. that's why, oh, here looked at me a little confused and possible and maybe a little song. but i said, look, i'm not trying to the media business, my only point is why don't give me all these. i have this team of people to be a bidding different, but this is the worst big then we put them on the internet. yeah. now, and he, this, in the word, but you can find the, you know, portion of their dreams. why just limited to me. and he said yes, but he looked at me as if i was crazy and he never came back. the idea was mine.
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and so he said this is interesting. and so we see that it'd be, be this website i went back and what's the phone? what's the need for this service? what's much more pronounced in america in the you can because these are geographically dispersed indians wanted to connect with like minded people, and then network stable very small and some desktops or to take off. so be focused on the anybody that didn't have much of an internet. there was only a 1000000 people on the internet in their main like that for can you see that? so the business started to grow and you'll established offices in the us. you can kind of built it out and then i moved back as i said in 2004, and that became a success overnight or no, it took a while. right? yeah, it'd be overnight. success story is twin deals in the making. and i always say, right, right, it's just that when people see it, they suddenly see it. of course we started 200-2003 with 14 focus and gusto. and i think it took
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a few years and we started seeing some form of success. so do you think that the 2003 we had in 2024. know how come it's still sort of living? they seem to be now in india, also having live in relationships. we are much more a different outlook goods life, lots of relationships, manage and thing that what these people who use are the, how did you, me to of life? one of them we were best offend your best of yeah. you know, i actually just posted the video and instagram recently talking about the secret to successfully managing it. so and i said in that that if you want to successfully manage mario best friends, may, somebody will even talk to a lot because after a few years that's all you will be doing that side. absolutely. back right here. and, and so you and i perhaps lucky, smaller percent that just that happen to have that. but for the vast majority and this a great question. you said, why is it still development for the vast majority? this doesn't happen, but what happens in india,
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marriage is not if pushed it so when crushed lights on the diamond a child, they're talking. what do you manage at by somebody as indians, we love celebrations that it is marriage. and if a man has lived enough, then it's death thoughts. that's as much as we just need any of these and to go on the streets and don. yeah, i always, i know you have the confidence to do it open and open you earlier. if you just want to do it in the home, so she knows that yeah, yeah. overseas the music, but i haven't used to walk around with the heads down not to be c. like now we do it aloud, but i do think so. i think there's been a major consultation. i think it's fine. the people are proud to be right. whether it's your passport ranking, whether it is your diplomatic relationships, whether the softball leadership is very important for any organization that it's a country, whether it's a company or any pursuit. and i think since independence, we've had some buckets of strongly in the shipping by and large, we've been confused to. i think this is the 1st time in our history that we have
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clarity and vision in terms of what we want to achieve. and i think that is very important. the 2nd thing is the kind of leadership is not shy about who we are and our background, and i, st. we don't apologize for the identity. absolute side, all these here is the somehow been reading a western cloak coming floats aside, but pretending to be something they are not. and when you start opening up an embracing, we why? i think a lot of people respect you more for the exact right. and so that's what i see happening in the fact that, of course, is economic success. as soon as you become a market that people want to be and as opposed to a lender snake chalmers, an elephant, and anybody now suddenly wants a piece of us. i mean, the reason more of these situation is a great example of softball, right? and our ability to influence people and the word based on a softball and
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a market economy. and it's only a situation like this. you can tell google that i don't like you. yeah, yeah, that's true. that's what you did. i did and, and i will continue to what is the issue of the americans? why eventually they do get to that came on, ah, please like they've done with been going, but they call, they've broken all of these up over the years, right? they're very reactive in nature, right? sometimes it's too late. and because of their companies that are creating a monopoly, sometimes it benefits them because they are going on to the monopolies all over the world. so it's better for us to be me good at these situations. what, what we're seeing, the google app, or to some extent is they have on our log swedes of the internet system to bundling and walk out and payment on, or monopolistic behavior and made it very difficult for anybody as to prosper and 95. so google, it says if you think about it is really a beneficiary of unbundling. microsoft,
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microsoft used to bundle that internet explorer browser to which you could access the internet. yeah. with the operating system in which, with their software moving for the case and broke that bundling up. so they could introduce chrome, which is the browser to which we all now experience the internet. so they themselves, out of beneficiary off and be helpless to action. but i completely agree company wants to be a monopoly, so i don't blame them as much as i blame governments, particularly in the west, not good. i think these situations in time because ultimately entrepreneurship suffers, innovation suffers, customers suffer because they have less choice. what incentive do i have as a monopoly? don't give you better price single, better products, because i'm already a monopoly. so i think that's what google has done today. in india, if you want to run it into the business, you'll pay google 2030 to 40 percent off your revenue as advertising,
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because that's the only way to access customers. and that's fed, i think, to some degree that's that which is almost wide with us. but now what they're saying is, you would also be anywhere between 15 percent with 30 percent off field avenue was if you want to be on our app store. wow. so if i'm willing to pay 60 to 70 percent of my revenue to google, how am i going to wireless? and i think this is a thing that we missed as a company. what did you think about china? they had me a handy or every one of these entities very close and given protection, not even for i won't even say production of please give it a level playing fee was domestic. i'm right. because the internet, i can produce a weapon to start just on the media. it's everything, all your data, everything besides you, can these companies be able to pick it out. so if we have done that, we would have had 5 companies today in search, in email, in social media,
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which one each me what $100000000.00 to wonder, bring it in. in addition to the $34.00 companies that you already know, that could be transformation for the country, these will become global companies and die, right? of course we missed that boat and that's fine. but at the same time, i ended, i don't you called at the head of the all these companies as an indian, isn't that great? how do you think in the present situation, we can come through this or we can handle this? i think there's a couple of this one is a more passively which is, you know, and ccr has already actually passed a very strong order against google. google is simply not implementing it using physics of the trade, which they've learned globally and trying to score them out of it. and that's why i said that they will end up being a very heavy brand if you can badly for them because they're playing with the law. and today's dispensation and government doesn't take that like so. i think since you have come, don't have any of this of the order on that which is competition permission of
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india. so one is a passive, it already can play by using organization such as c, c. i wouldn't show it. there is no monopolistic behavior in the level playing field is available to everyone and nobody's taking advantage of our ongoing companies. but i was small and medium in the process, right? that's certainly one the other way is a more active a which the government has already been doing. so if you look at do b, i d, b, i the only country your credit cards are struggling because you guys become the preferred mode of payment. absolute. i think companies that we might have an express 64 percent funding much. it is highlighted already by new p, eyes 3 of what are the kind of a piece of innovation amazing by taking his own b. c, which they have time to do for e commerce. what they did for being told is our health initiated which again, clips common public infrastructure for those to bring up on me, we can do the same thing for that stuff that shift to shop there. yes, i find it very exciting and not finding that c o w as an actor. what i'm no acting
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of being myself, but there's some drama you'll see a this is actually as real as it gets b, c, the richard who comes on stage to pitch. when you see, you have no idea with the pictures, you walk on stage and the see the find the company. but you're right. i mean, you know this better than anybody else as soon as a camera, or don't you. yeah. however, the old a show is that is some drama that comes in because you know, and you know that a theme cameras on shop and so you know, you become a performer at some level, mike laughed to an interest in acting out on an acting school. so i, i detect a possible act of something that, oh yes, you will, john, one of the most popular acting schools for the longest time, i felt it was not, you know, deep down. maybe it was something i cherished or add value for, but you don't always put a down going operate really going to have anybody you know, right. this is all the books i read on adult. absolutely. i remember that when we had all of us had black and black and white televisions,
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and then mr. model of that was for by the knob i was in my next door. you go to the color gate in this week and we're going to deal with it. so we said that he's a cut up man. do you have to justify for yourselves? yeah. all right. and so for the longest speed it i was, i wasn't that god at this point in my life, i think i'm really enjoying the role that i play on shop banking. i don't know if i have the patients or the talent, be very honest. be an actor, right. i've experienced what it is. uh, you know, waiting invited events doing it in shock. thank. do you have a different floor? might be a busy to out of the car, so please is driving actually organizations like patients. not foot ballad. ok, then you're headed, but other than i did. yeah. but i don't have that. i couldn't be sitting waiting for one shot doing one shot. and then wrapping up and waiting. that's one seconds. i don't think i have the bad code. i think i'm far more effective given everything i've known is to continue furthering onto pro shipping this country,
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building companies. so i think might impact, and that is so which is as far as each ad relation and the recognition. i'm now getting to shop by the list that part is inactive because that's what and i think that's the only part that perhaps is very interesting is an act on the ending for that is you get to play so many different professions and understand so many different facets because you have to do some level of research whenever you please . so i can get it to. i think i find the equity compelling one day you would be, i think, you think a 100 plus a $100.00 and then not. and that's a good thing that can happen because you must do something that you think you've got to take you out of your comfort. so yes, i've read somewhere that you of x pitcher the bus and what is good to other teeth. you know, we are seen as a land of believers because we have here, right, at least so many gods. but reality, historically issue located we are lando seekers and spirituality,
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to me is really about seeking. and you know, when you said you are restless, right? but that's, that's what's coming to well, that's less than this and confusion is the most creative state of affairs. that's why i don't, i have not had a so called traditional holidays. yeah. and all these 40 is that i look, i don't think i have gone to some beach in thought of lead on, and then i see i can do that. have not done. i can do that myself. yeah. and i find people to the why do, why are you so restless? why do keep on doing that keeps me well to am. so you had more of an angel than a shock. i'm more do that and sure. i don't know if the phone, those who come and shop thing would agree with you. they think i'm always trying to get the better be. but yes, to answer that question in one word, a split it try to view seeking, and there is no end to seeking. that's right. that's where you can go. all right. it's on it's, it was
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a pleasure talking to you on the same here on no problem. thank you so much. wonderful. one, lovely, lovely, talking to and thank you for watching. join me next week for the in dm it yet engaging debate on the on let's talk about it. i'm on with, i'm a kid. i'm a scott. the take a fresh look around his life. kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion, by how of tired vision with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse who really wants a better wills. and is it just as a chosen few fractured images presented to this, but can you see through their illusion going underground? can the,
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[000:00:00;00] the malawi confirmed the death of its vice president who was killed in a plane crash along with 9 offers the east african nations moscow's top diplomatic surrogate lobrado slobs. the west was killing me with naziism in ukraine, saying it's using the key of regime of the war again against russia. and that's, that's the us lift. it's almost a decade long, bad on supplying weapons to the nature of national relief as of fatality. any new trade, moscow, bronze gonna be desperate such as something to change in washington's position,

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