Indian man slams peers faking 5-10 years of experience in the US

New Delhi: An Indian man slammed his peers for faking years of experience in the US. The professional, earning 22 lakhs per annum, also explained the difficulties he had to undergo in his career. The post grabbed the attention of many online.

“Honestly, I worked very hard to reach this position. Many of my classmates who never wrote a single line of code went to the US and joined some dummy universities with fake test scores, SOPs and all,” vented @Majestic_Anybody_77 on Reddit. The 26-year-old further added, “Now I see them putting fake experience of 5-10 years and getting jobs which pay around 150-250K USD per annum with bonuses and stocks totalling 350-500K USD.”

Indian man slams those faking 5-10 years of US experience

He also added that such people managed to get employed as software development engineers and solution architects. “I am just wondering why things work for people like these scammers always. They easily earn crores just because they moved abroad, despite lacking real knowledge,” wrote the Reddit user. He then ranted how just moving abroad accelerated growth in their career.

 

The Fake USA dream.
byu/Majestic_Anybody_77 inhyderabad

“I am unable to understand and take this hard pill that people just went to a country, worked part-time jobs, faked assignments and interviews, and now earn crores. Meanwhile, many of us here work tirelessly to support families and parents, and it still takes years to make that kind of money. Why does this happen?” said the Redditor.

Several netizens commented on the post. One wrote, “Most of the people who cheat got into Amazon (idk why it’s always Amazon). But before the end of the first year they were laid off. My friend worked as a proxy for a woman while doing his masters. He got into a well paid job.” A second individual commented, “That’s life. I went to do M.tech in IIT and one of my b.tech batchmates went to low tier university in the USA. Now, I work in FAANG India and he is in our same org in the USA. He is the org leader at least 3 levels above me and I’m just a senior engineer.”