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The Indian and his insatiable appetite for the college degree

124 pointsby stephenhackingover 11 years ago

27 comments

r0h1nover 11 years ago
The fact that a formal engineering&#x2F;MBA education isn&#x27;t a prerequisite for business success is almost a tautology now, especially among software startups. So there is nothing new here.<p>There are some half-truths though:<p>&gt; For some reasons, Indians just can’t deal with the fact that someone without pedigree can get somewhere in life.<p>- Airtel, India&#x27;s largest telecom company, was started by Sunil Mittal, armed with just a Bachelor of Arts degree from a second-rung university.<p>- Reliance Industries, India&#x27;s largest private conglomerate, was started by Dhirubhai Ambani, had no college degree.<p>- The Zee TV group, one of India&#x27;s largest media and entertainment conglomerates, was started by Subhash Chandra, who dropped out of school after class 12.<p>- There are many more multi-billion dollar enterprises like Adani and Sobha, that were founded by entrepreneurs without college degrees.<p>- Quickheal, India&#x27;s largest anti-virus company, was founded by Kailash Katkar, never studied after school.<p>- Maxx Mobile, one of the leading low-cost phone makers in India was founded by Ajay Agarwal, a class 9 dropout.<p>I could go on.<p>By insisting that Indians &quot;just can&#x27;t deal with entrepreneurs without pedigree&quot;, the author is at best being disingenuous, or at worst slaying a straw man only to elevate his own achievements.<p>Finally, the stereotyping in the linkbait title, &quot;The Indian and his insatiable...&quot; doesn&#x27;t help. As others have already pointed out, people (not just Indians, but around the world) make career&#x2F;education choices in response to the financial&#x2F;cultural environment around them.<p>To the average middle-class parents who grew up dealing with scarcity, low incomes, corruption and limited opportunities, the &quot;multi-national job&quot; represents stability, meritocracy, global opportunities and a respectable income.<p>There really is no reason to belittle them for their choices.
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kamaalover 11 years ago
Firstly being entrepreneur and going to college are not orthogonal goals.<p>Secondly for any poor person in India, without any funding or support. No infrastructure, no exposure and having to fight a historic burden of poverty in the family. Not getting a college education means, the guy will eventually end up working at a tailor&#x27;s shop or a garage or driver. Working whole life only to hope his son breaks of the cycle of poverty in the next generation.<p>Contrary to whatever you might think, you can&#x27;t hard-work your way out of all problems all the time, I know that from personal experience. For a rich person a big financial failure means, a good decent chance to start up again. For a lower middle class person such a failure means, the end of life. Full Stop! Because the debts will drown you till you reach your grave.<p>The fact is for any lower middle&#x2F;class and poor person. Getting a decent education is the easiest way to get a job, and then use that money to bootstrap their projects or start up.<p>You might not learn anything in a college, or a degree might not prep you up for prime time rock star development shops. But it will get you a job, buy you some financial freedom. And then you will have good enough time to iteratively learn and bootstrap your own business.<p>And beyond all, not everyone&#x27;s family can write them a check to start something their teens or at any age. Most people live so hand to mouth, without a monthly salary they are pretty much bust!<p>Before criticizing some one please take into note the fact, they don&#x27;t enjoy the same privileges and benefits as your do.
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ashrayover 11 years ago
This isn&#x27;t specific to Indian culture. There are several cultures that will emphasize college degrees over entrepreneurship. I know this is hard to understand from a fairly successful entrepreneur&#x27;s perspective but the cold hard truth is that most entrepreneurs fail. This is what causes the whole &#x27;it&#x27;s safer to get a college degree&#x27; mentality.<p>I&#x27;ve been an entrepreneur (fairly successful) since I was 13. Yet my folks said I should get a college degree. I did get an engineering degree while &#x27;entrepreneuring&#x27; at the same time. Does my degree help me in any direct way ? Nope. But there are several indirect benefits that a degree can get you first amongst which are that in general people think you are capable and well educated. I don&#x27;t personally subscribe to this thought process but hey, we have to live in this world with everyone else, right ? My degree has opened doors for me and made some people take me more seriously. It has had zero practical contribution towards my endeavors but sometimes opening a door is all it takes. Not only people but even governments sometimes want certain degrees for certain categories of work permits (even if it&#x27;s totally irrelevant to your work but a degree helps you). Then of course you have the benefits of an alumni network, etc etc. but those are really what you make of them because you can network otherwise as well. But a degree is a formal qualification - treated as such by society and the government. Does it mean you know more ? Probably not. Do people in general think you do ? Probably yes.<p>I&#x27;d still say that in the world today, a college degree matters a lot depending on who you are talking to. It won&#x27;t matter if you&#x27;re talking to me but there are a lot of people out there who care about whether you have one or not.
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evincarofautumnover 11 years ago
&gt; Indians just can’t deal with the fact that someone without pedigree can get somewhere in life.<p>I am not Indian, nor have I spent time in India, so I hope I am right in thinking that this speaks to present growing pains in Indian tech culture. I say growing pains because I think, and hope, that this valuation of pedigree over merit is coming to an end, as it is already at an end in parts of the U.S.<p>There are, if I may say so, a lot of bad Indian programmers. They’re bad not because they’re Indian, of course, but because they don’t really <i>want</i> to be programmers. It’s a career option. Engineering and business are things you study in school because they’re where money and prestige are. But studying in school and <i>learning</i> are entirely different things.<p>&gt; The only way your son is ever going to succeed being an entrepreneur is by getting himself an MBA.<p>I want to believe that this, though it be the present, is not the future of Indian tech entrepreneurship.
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rayinerover 11 years ago
So my family is from Bangladesh. My aunt and uncle moved to Toronto. My cousin wants to study business and get an MBA, but his parents want him to study electrical engineering. I didn&#x27;t get it, until I realized its all about risk aversion. An engineering degree is a secure path to the middle class. A business degree isn&#x27;t, and entrerpeneurship certainly isn&#x27;t. The business degree might have a higher potential reward, but middle of the class engineers still get jobs.
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stephenaturnerover 11 years ago
I agree it&#x27;s perfectly possible to get somewhere as an entrepreneur without a college degree. But it&#x27;s hardly detrimental to have one either.<p>And I&#x27;m kind of sick of the US-centric view that all college degrees cost $100,000+ -- many high quality degrees in other western countries cost as little as 10-20% of this figure (and often are paid for in a deferred payment scheme). As with so many things (like healthcare) it&#x27;s just another area the US seems to have gone insane with.
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shayonjover 11 years ago
Just like you even I wanted to dropout and start something I wanted or wished to do. My parents aren&#x27;t too conservative. But my dad told me something which I believe is very true - &quot;Getting a degree is highly rewarding. If tomorrow your business crashes, you&#x27;d at least have a degree to back you up with a job. Degree is for your secure future not to please the society around you&quot;. No doubt this is true. And as my dad said, its more for you than anyone else. But again its more than that, getting a degree pays more than just societal status and a more savvy future. That being said, I personally want to know each and every specific topic in full depth. And I believe that can only happen with a proper mentor over me and like-minded peers around me. In other words, in a &quot;university&quot;. Plus college helps you with many other things in &quot;life&quot; and not just academically. But then it depends on what you want to do and accordingly it matters if a degree is worth it or not.<p>I hope students (especially) take this post in the right gesture. Dropping out is not the best solution always. Doesn&#x27;t work for everyone. Its not cool to dropout because Zuck, Gates and Jobs did. You &quot;have to have&quot; a strong reason why university isnt the best option for you.<p>+1 otherwise for the post. Good to know you had the support you needed. Doesn&#x27;t happen with everyone. All the best ;)
ateevchopraover 11 years ago
I see college as a learning place. A place where you learn about everything but study topics. College is the place where I met my co-founder.<p>It is really a great place where you can meet new talented people, learn how to work in a team. Its a place where you can have fights, fall and learn again.<p>It is the place where you learn to present your Idea by presenting it among your friends first. They can help if you lack something. This kind of things are usually not very easy in the outside world. Because the outside world is busy competing with you.<p>You meet so many types of people that you learn to categories the people. What kind of people are A Grade and what kind are B grade. This helps you to when you will start hiring.<p>You say going to college is not worth it. Well another big problem with our thinking is that we think that college is just to learn the &quot;courses&quot;. Well its not. Its a lot more than that. I am also a student in one of the most reputable colleges in India, but the way I think, learning is just a state of mind, place doesn&#x27;t matter. I myself use to think that i have wasted my 4 years learning computer science, that I could have learnt all this in just a year and a half, but today as I am trying to build my startup, I understand that this all connect dots. Even I am not interested in grades at all, but i never stop working on my startup.<p>So, As I see it, college is like a big sand ground, where you can fall, again and again, and learn to fight. And all this without hurting yourself.
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thansharpover 11 years ago
I think people underestimate the systemic restrictions placed on the Indian Middle Class, and fail to realise the connection to a larger problem India faces, viz. drastic shortage.<p>You want to become a doctor? Too bad you don&#x27;t have an MBBS. We don&#x27;t care whether you decided to become one only during college, and are willing to spend a few extra years catching up.<p>Except for diplomas (by which I mean qualifications like CA, which you theoretically could get without attending classes at a college) doesn&#x27;t place a prerequisite on having a degree. Every master&#x27;s program I have come across requires a bachelor&#x27;s degree. Some are more flexible, admitting degrees outside the relevant fields. But most are not.<p>The reason is pretty simple : In a country like India where anything good suffers a big shortage, people generally prefer to stick to rules, creating many false negatives. This is because no one wants to take up liability in case a false negative crops up. &quot;I followed all the regulations and suggestions,&quot; they say.<p>So anything that involves an expected, and common path ends up needing college degrees as prerequisites. For the Middle Class which cannot afford to wait out a few years, they have no choice but to toe the line. Only if you have any capital (and in India, connections) to begin with, can you expect to change the system. (The author here is a businessman in the crudest sense : not a very conventional career path in a lot of families).<p>My parents generation mostly got their jobs before the liberalisation of the economy in 1991. In those days, a lot of people dreamed of government jobs : stable, decent paying, and allows you to slack off. In spite of globalisation, we cannot expect their mindset to change a lot after they&#x27;ve fought so badly for jobs, right? This old mindset comes into play when they suggest us to go to college : they&#x27;ve seen decades of public sector employment, this new path (entrepreneurship) seems new, and they honestly believe they are trying to help you. There is no ill-will here.<p>I do agree one can still earn a good living without college in India too. But I feel what I said has a considerable effect in societal status of middle class people (most of whom are not extraordinary), and this in turn makes people want the college degree.
anupshindeover 11 years ago
First they got me to go to a college - I really dint want to go - wanted to start &quot;something on my own&quot; - pretty weak argument - I din&#x27;t have any idea. Then they insisted to go to a Master - bcoz you need to get above the crowd - and I got into one of the best institutes - that made it even harder to dropout even when I knew after 6 months that I was wasting time<p>Then I jumped into entrepreneurship - And they insisted that I should get a job to get a hands-on experience. I gave up after 8 months - to their preferences - but this is when I started seeing success, but couldn&#x27;t prove it to them. They didn&#x27;t see it as &quot;lasting&quot;<p>Today, even at this moment, I can feel &quot;the burden of giving up&quot; because most people around me &quot;insisted&quot; on doing something I dint want to do. Ultimately, I am to blame.<p>10 years later - I am pretty successful in my career, with a job. My job is not &quot;secure&quot; as they mentioned. Its not satisfying and frequently frustrating. I know no &quot;other job&quot; can fix that ... I want to take the jump into entrepreneurship again - and I am doing whatever I can. And many times I wish I could undo that mistake I made 10 years back. It is seriously less riskier and easier to start young rather than doing it after you are a husband&#x2F;father&#x2F;etc.<p>As far as Education is concerned - That is important. But Degree! - I know most universities in India will give you degrees that don&#x27;t speak for your talent&#x2F;skill. It just shows that you passed your exams - and if you have extra money - some universities will give you a degree without you reading a single line.
escherbaover 11 years ago
I have been pondering about this for a while and have developed a hypothesis as to why Indian parents (and those from similar nations) tend to overvalue college degrees.<p>It is mostly due to the parents having low self-esteem. It comes down to the following two facts:<p>(1) While there are plenty of exceptionally capable young individuals like OP who have been proving everyone wrong, it usually takes a lot of parental skill and know-how to produce a wunderkind with social skills necessary to navigate the adult world in a foreign country.<p>(2) Parents who are recent immigrants (especially from poorer nations or from nations with significant cultural differences from the host nation) do not see themselves as capable of providing that know-how. Note that I did not say they can&#x27;t provide it -- just that they do not see themselves as capable to (it turns out that more often than not they underestimate themselves).<p>Therefore, if you are a parent in a similar situation, it (often wrongly) appears to you that the only way your children stand a fighting chance is if you they spend as much time in school as possible. Then, of course, is the social pressure from family friends.
alphakappaover 11 years ago
&gt;&gt;But, something he said really shocked me. It goes like this — “Oh, my sister’s kid is just like you. He’s got a $10,000 grant to go build a business and he’s in the 10th grade. My sister asked me what she should do. I told her to ask him to focus on finishing his college first before doing anything else.”<p>I don&#x27;t find this particularly shocking. Without knowing the particulars of this kid, it sounds like pretty sane advice to a 16 year old - finish your education. School, strangely enough, gives people a lot of free time too, probably more than a full-time job does. It&#x27;s possible to get an education, and dabble in entrepreneurship, and find friends who gel with you enough to make you might want to take on as partners. Someone with the aptitude for entrepreneurship will likely find a way to do all that while getting an education, but it&#x27;s not irresponsible for a parent or guardian to encourage kids to focus on their education -- Just because some kids turn out to be successful dropout-entrepreneurs doesn&#x27;t mean that dropping out at the first opportunity is a well-defined path to success.
bilalqover 11 years ago
Speaking as Pakistani in his early twenties, I can confirm that I get asked many of the same questions. I have a B.S. in Computer Science right now, but frequently get asked &quot;When are you getting your MBA?&quot; by family members. I hate how the question always implies that I will undoubtedly be pursuing one.
Isamuover 11 years ago
Since many of the comments here seem to miss the op&#x27;s point:<p>He is saying that Indians seem to <i>think</i> that you need a degree to be successful, and discount the entrepreneur category by itself. He clearly thinks this is untrue and a counterproductive attitude, but there it is.<p>He is probably bringing it up because it is hard enough to be an entrepreneur without people constantly telling you that you will fail for one arbitrary reason or another.<p>By the way, this holds pretty much true in the United States -- most middle- and upper-class people think you need a degree to succeed.<p>But the entrepreneur category is probably given more respect. E.g. my friend&#x27;s daughter is postponing college to work on her startup - she mostly getting very positive reinforcement all around.
Nano2radover 11 years ago
Caste system it is all about qualification. Only trader community can trade. Only priest community can pray. Now hereditary qualification a has given way a little bit to official qualifications. Qualifications gets precedence over skill.
16sover 11 years ago
I really dislike articles that generalize based on race, religion, sex, etc. It&#x27;s inappropriate and says nothing about individuals (all of whom are unique).<p>When you&#x27;re researching a large nation with more than a billion people, you&#x27;ll find a lot of people who have degrees and a lot of people who do not and a lot of people who like chewing gum and (again) a lot of people who do not.<p>The only thing the results should tell you is that there are a lot of people there. They say nothing about the average individual.
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whistlerbrkover 11 years ago
I have regrets on going to college when in 2001 I was a good coder and running a successful&#x2F;profitable gaming oriented website&#x2F;community. I was heavily discouraged from that path and it set me back a bit, when I got back into coding in 2005 I felt like a dinosaur. College was neat though.
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jalanover 11 years ago
Really loved the article Ashwin. So true. Specially the para:<p>For some reasons, Indians just can’t deal with the fact that someone without pedigree can get somewhere in life. It’s unbelievable that you can be a good programmer, successful businessman or great marketer without an {insert random college degree here}.
Mikeb85over 11 years ago
This is pretty much the way of the world, not just in India. The &#x27;safe&#x27; route is to get a technical degree, work for a large corporation, and hopefully retire some day. Can&#x27;t blame parents for wanting to shield their children from risk and potential failure...
lilpirateover 11 years ago
Well, you were lucky your parents let you skip out on college. I was kind of forced to do engineering. Even when I got into a rather crappy college (I had started working for a start-up which never took off rather than study for entrance exams). But hey, whatever.
itsbitsover 11 years ago
All entrepreneurs are not successful..Not just India but every where middle class families force their children to study well and do a corporate job rather jump to the place where success is less than 20%..
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qwertaover 11 years ago
Not sure about education, but Indian developers tend to be very proud of their job titles. I had to formally become &#x27;senior super developer&#x27; so they would not look down on me.
therandomguyover 11 years ago
Indian here but on the other side of this. Got MS, MBA, and currently thinking about Doctorate. May or may-not do a startup.
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linux_devilover 11 years ago
Where there is a will , there is a way!!1
hypertextheroover 11 years ago
From Think on These Things (aka This Matter of Culture), by Jiddu Krishnamurti - <a href="http://books.google.it/books?id=IsldnzHkxpsC&amp;lpg=PP1&amp;dq=think%20on%20these%20things&amp;pg=PA1#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;books.google.it&#x2F;books?id=IsldnzHkxpsC&amp;lpg=PP1&amp;dq=thin...</a><p>Chapter 1 - The Function of Education -------------------------------------<p>I WONDER IF we have ever asked ourselves what education means. Why do we go to school, why do we learn various subjects, why do we pass examinations and compete with each other for better grades? What does this so-called education mean, and what is it all about? This is really a very important question, not only for the students, but also for the parents, for the teachers, and for everyone who loves this earth. Why do we go through the struggle to be educated? Is it merely in order to pass some examinations and get a job? Or is it the function of education to prepare us while we are young to understand the whole process of life? Having a job and earning one&#x27;s livelihood is necessary but is that all? Are we being educated only for that? Surely, life is not merely a job, an occupation; life is something extraordinarily wide and profound, it is a great mystery, a vast realm in which we function as human beings. If we merely prepare ourselves to earn a livelihood, we shall miss the whole point of life; and to understand life is much more important than merely to prepare for examinations and become very proficient in mathematics, physics, or what you will.<p>So, whether we are teachers or students, is it not important to ask ourselves why we are educating or being educated? And what does life mean? Is not life an extraordinary thing? The birds, the flowers, the flourishing trees, the heavens, the stars, the rivers and the fish therein - all this is life. Life is the poor and the rich; life is the constant battle between groups, races and nations; life is meditation; life is what we call religion, and it is also the subtle, hidden things of the mind - the envies, the ambitions, the passions, the fears, fulfilments and anxieties. All this and much more is life. But we generally prepare ourselves to understand only one small corner of it. We pass certain examinations, find a job, get married, have children, and then become more and more like machines. We remain fearful, anxious, frightened of life. So, is it the function of education to help us understand the whole process of life, or is it merely to prepare us for a vocation, for the best job we can get?<p>What is going to happen to all of us when we grow to be men and women? Have you ever asked yourselves what you are going to do when you grow up? In all likelihood you will get married, and before you know where you are you will be mothers and fathers; and you will then be tied to a job, or to the kitchen, in which you will gradually wither away. Is that all that your life is going to be? Have you ever asked yourselves this question? Should you not ask it? If your family is wealthy you may have a fairly good position already assured, your father may give you a comfortable job, or you may get richly married; but there also you will decay, deteriorate. Do you see?<p>Surely, education has no meaning unless it helps you to understand the vast expanse of life with all its subtleties, with its extraordinary beauty, its sorrows and joys. You may earn degrees, you may have a series of letters after your name and land a very good job; but then what? What is the point of it all if in the process your mind becomes dull, weary, stupid? So, while you are young, must you not seek to find out what life is all about? And is it not the true function of education to cultivate in you the intelligence which will try to find the answer to all these problems? Do you know what intelligence is? It is the capacity, surely, to think freely without fear, without a formula, so that you begin to discover for yourself what is real, what is true; but if you are frightened you will never be intelligent. Any form of ambition, spiritual or mundane, breeds anxiety, fear; therefore ambition does not help to bring about a mind that is clear, simple, direct, and hence intelligent.<p>You know, it is really very important while you are young to live in an environment in which there is no fear. Most of us, as we grow older, become frightened; we are afraid of living, afraid of losing a job, afraid of tradition, afraid of what the neighbours, or what the wife or husband would say, afraid of death. Most of us have fear in one form or another; and where there is fear there is no intelligence. And is it not possible for all of us, while we are young, to be in an environment where there is no fear but rather an atmosphere of freedom freedom, not just to do what we like, but to understand the whole process of living? Life is really very beautiful, it is not this ugly thing that we have made of it; and you can appreciate its richness, its depth, its extraordinary loveliness only when you revolt against everything - against organized religion, against tradition, against the present rotten society - so that you as a human being find out for yourself what is true. Not to imitate but to discover - that is education, is it not? It is very easy to conform to what your society or your parents and teachers tell you. That is a safe and easy way of existing; but that is not living, because in it there is fear, decay, death. To live is to find out for yourself what is true, and you can do this only when there is freedom, when there is continuous revolution inwardly, within yourself.<p>But you are not encouraged to do this; no one tells you to question, to find out for yourself what God is, because if you were to rebel you would become a danger to all that is false. Your parents and society want you to live safely, and you also want to live safely. Living safely generally means living in imitation and therefore in fear. Surely, the function of education is to help each one of us to live freely and without fear, is it not? And to create an atmosphere in which there is no fear requires a great deal of thinking on your part as well as on the part of the teacher, the educator.<p>Do you know what this means - what an extraordinary thing it would be to create an atmosphere in which there is no fear? And we must create it, because we see that the world is caught up in endless wars; it is guided by politicians who are always seeking power; it is a world of lawyers, policemen and soldiers, of ambitious men and women all wanting position and all fighting each other to get it. Then there are the so-called saints, the religious gurus with their followers; they also want power, position, here or in the next life. It is a mad world, completely confused, in which the communist is fighting the capitalist, the socialist is resisting both, and everybody is against somebody, struggling to arrive at a safe place, a position of power or comfort. The world is torn by conflicting beliefs, by caste and class distinctions, by separative nationalities, by every form of stupidity and cruelty - and this is the world you are being educated to fit into. You are encouraged to fit into the framework of this disastrous society; your parents want you to do that, and you also want to fit in.<p>Now, is it the function of education merely to help you to conform to the pattern of this rotten social order, or is it to give you freedom - complete freedom to grow and create a different society, a new world? We want to have this freedom, not in the future, but now, otherwise we may all be destroyed. We must create immediately an atmosphere of freedom so that you can live and find out for yourselves what is true, so that you become intelligent, so that you are able to face the world and understand it, not just conform to it, so that inwardly, deeply, psychologically you are in constant revolt; because it is only those who are in constant revolt that discover what is true, not the man who conforms, who follows some tradition. It is only when you are constantly inquiring, constantly observing, constantly learning, that you find truth, God, or love; and you cannot inquire, observe, learn, you cannot be deeply aware, if you are afraid. So the function of education, surely, is to eradicate, inwardly as well as outwardly, this fear that destroys human thought, human relationship and love.
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eriksankover 11 years ago
University is not a way to give people jobs. It is a way to prevent people from getting jobs. These universities have a problem now. They were not capable of preventing the poster from getting a job in computing, game platforms and other such enterpreneurial fields, because there is no &quot;Medical association of game programmers&quot; demanding that you first waste a decade of your life. They cannot control the internet and prevent people from leading their own lives as they please. So, now they are frustrated ...
auctiontheoryover 11 years ago
At 22, he must have his B.Tech. Pretending to not have gone ... is this some hipster&#x2F;ironic brand-building shtick?
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