Most Americans of Indian origin (including Suni Williams) are Gujaratis, who are known for their entrepreneurship. And I'm from a different state (West Bengal), which is not really known for business.
By my cultural heritage (50% Saxon), I should be raiding Roman cities by ship. Which I don't do (because there is no roman city left). Why don't you try to be more than your past?
Also, try looking at India as people would see it from outside, you can maybe also notice something important: The same little you know about the big USA the people outside India really know about India. I work together with Indians and am now employed at a big Indian enterprise. I
slowly learn the everyday differences between working in Germany and working in India. And I am far from fully understanding how living in India would be like. I also slowly notice that Indians don't really think the same about other Indians as Germans would do about other Germans. Its a really exotic culture clash here and I am sure, I drive my Indian managers and coworkers crazy with my character.
Tip for understanding better: The Americans that landed on the moon were not the same. Not of a kind, no clones of a mystical race. There are
MANY different talents and skills that came together. A part of the team were even former Germans from Operation Paperclip. Or an Egyptian.
Even the astronauts were not born to be astronauts. Neil Armstrongs father had nothing to do with engineering at all, but had a pretty mid-level job. John Young had to grow up without his parents, because his father went to the Sea Beas after a long time of unemployment and short term jobs, and the mother was hospitalized with schizophrenia. Buzz Aldrin was maybe the most elite of the group, his father already legend as the first US test pilot.
If you would have seen them at that point in their lives, just short after the end of World War 2, would you have guessed that these young men would be walking on the moon just 25 years later?
And now tell me, where do
you want to walk in 25 years?
