Thursday, May 28, 2026
29.1 C
New Delhi

Indians fill out every form without blinking: CEO says Americans are not lazy, they have low tolerance for meaningless paperwork

Indians fill out every form without blinking: CEO says Americans are not lazy, they have low tolerance for meaningless paperwork

US CEO says Indians are good at unnecessary paperwork which Americans hate.

Former US Merchant Marine captain John Konrad, the CEO of gCaptain, shared his experience of working in India and with Indians and said hardworking Indians or visa holders are not the problem. He said there is no doubt that Indians are hardworking but after spending some time in India, he realized why Indians are so hardworking — because they don’t want to return to India. Konrad said this is not culture but a cultural escape and if he were ever told that he had two options: working 18 hours a day or going back to the Bronx, he would have worked 18 hours a day.But if he were given two options: to move back to the Brox or to go to India where he worked for two years, he would choose going back to the Bronx, he said.Comparing the red tape between the US and India, Konrad said paperwork in the US feels like a cakewalk next to Indian bureaucracy.Sharing his experience of working in oil and gas around the world, and in both the US and India, Konrad said getting permits to even do the simplest things in America in a nightmare but the nightmare is nothing in comparison to India.And thus, he concluded that Indians, accustomed to such lengthy processes and paperwork, are better at navigating grinding.

Indians vs Americans

“The average American thinks navigating government websites and IRS forms is torture. Compared to India, it’s child’s play. And here’s the key: the more punishing the process, the more HR nonsense piled on top, the bigger the edge H-1B visa holders from India hold,” Konrad opined.”Americans quit before they’ll spend eight hours grinding through mind-numbing bullshit paperwork and HR training. Indians fill out every form without blinking.””When Americans hit a bureaucratic death loop, we call HR or tech support (often a call center in India) and rage. Indians trade notes with each other and hunt for the loopholes.””The real problem isn’t the visa holders. It’s that the system rewards them for making our bureaucracy worse, not better. Bureaucracy becomes an artificial moat, and the people who’ve mastered it have every incentive to deepen it.”Konrad’s conclusion was that Americans are not lazy or not qualified but they are unwilling to navigate boring paperwork which means nothing.”So the next time an executive at Amazon or Google claims they can’t find Americans capable of doing the job, ask the real question: Are Americans incapable of doing the actual work? Or just unwilling to navigate paperwork that never needed to exist? Are Americans lazy or do we just have a low tolerance for bullsh!t paperwork?” the CEO said.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Quote of the day by Canadian-American psychologist Albert Bandura: “Where everyone is responsible, no one is really responsible”

Albert Bandura (Image: Wikipedia) Some quotes remain relevant because human nature rarely changes as much as people think it does. Societies evolve. Technology changes rapidly. Entire industries disappear and new ones emerge. Read More

Oldest evidence of human cremation discovered: Burned 100,000-year-old Homo sapiens bones found in Ethiopia’s Afar Rift

ZME Science In a remote stretch of Ethiopia’s Afar Rift, something quietly unsettling has begun to emerge from the ground. Read More

The blood running through your veins has a 700-million-year-old story, and scientists just worked out how it begins

Image: AI Generated Every drop of blood in your body is doing something ancient. Read More

Meet Parveen Shaikh and Barkha Subba: The Indian conservationists who won the ‘Green Oscars’ for saving endangered species

Image(s): WFN Indian conservationists Parveen Shaikh and Barkha Subba have won the prestigious Whitley Awards 2026, widely known as the ‘Green Oscars’, for their efforts to protect endangered species and fragile ecosystems in India. Read More

US to set up Ebola quarantine facility in Kenya for exposed American citizens

The facility, approved by the Kenyan government, will initially include a 50-bed unit and specialised biocontainment wards as the Bundibugyo strain outbreak spreads across parts of Africa. Read More

Topics

Quote of the day by Canadian-American psychologist Albert Bandura: “Where everyone is responsible, no one is really responsible”

Albert Bandura (Image: Wikipedia) Some quotes remain relevant because human nature rarely changes as much as people think it does. Societies evolve. Technology changes rapidly. Entire industries disappear and new ones emerge. Read More

Oldest evidence of human cremation discovered: Burned 100,000-year-old Homo sapiens bones found in Ethiopia’s Afar Rift

ZME Science In a remote stretch of Ethiopia’s Afar Rift, something quietly unsettling has begun to emerge from the ground. Read More

Meet Parveen Shaikh and Barkha Subba: The Indian conservationists who won the ‘Green Oscars’ for saving endangered species

Image(s): WFN Indian conservationists Parveen Shaikh and Barkha Subba have won the prestigious Whitley Awards 2026, widely known as the ‘Green Oscars’, for their efforts to protect endangered species and fragile ecosystems in India. Read More

US to set up Ebola quarantine facility in Kenya for exposed American citizens

The facility, approved by the Kenyan government, will initially include a 50-bed unit and specialised biocontainment wards as the Bundibugyo strain outbreak spreads across parts of Africa. Read More

Adivasis demand halt to tiger safari push, evictions in south India forests

Representative image TOI correspondent from London: Save tiger. Sell forest. Scrap people. Stop. Read More

Lack of access to water, shelter at Delhi govt hospitals amid heatwave: Report

New Delhi, May 28 (PTI): A field audit conducted by an NGO has flagged gaps in heatwave relief measures for homeless people and patient attendants outside government hospitals in Delhi, with many reporting lack of access to water, shelter and medica Read More

New Punjab BJP chief Kewal Dhillon says party will form govt in state in 2027

Chandigarh, May 28 (PTI): BJP on Thursday appointed Kewal Singh Dhillon as the party’s Punjab unit chief and shortly after the announcement he claimed the saffron party will form the government in the state after the 2027 Assembly polls. Read More

Related Articles