Happy Birthday, America! Coming to the U.S. changed the trajectory of my life. It truly is the land of opportunity where a shy immigrant kid like me can start from nothing and create...something. I have now been a proud U.S. citizen for over 25 years.
100% agree. I keep wondering what life would be like if it wasn't for America giving me an opportunity. It is truly an egalitarian society, where nobody can become somebody.
THE land of opportunities with the most rational merit based system!
I'm grateful to be an American. I'm also grateful for the outsized contributions that immigrants have made to our country like you. I realized sometime ago that many of the Business Leaders that I most respect are immigrants. There is something about the people that choose to live here and/or the immigrant experience that I don't quite understand but that I'm enamored.
Happy Birthday, America! Your story is truly inspiring, showcasing the endless possibilities this country offers. Here's to many more years of opportunity and growth! 🎉🇺🇸
In deed, Dharmesh Shah you have one of most inspiring stories. For you won’t remember me, but I will vividly remember the conversation you talked about the ambitious plan of Hubspot, almost 20 years when Texhcrunch had the first gathering at Boston. Congrats!
I hope we don’t have to immigrate today’s India to build something from nothing! You are an inspiration Dharmesh!
Dear old friend! I’m so proud of you in so many ways. You created your own opportunities. It was easy to see your potential way back in those days.
Grateful for America! 1st Generation here, and without the US, my family and I would be in a repressive nation. Thank you for sharing your great story. This is what dreams are made of!
Can you share .. what improvements are required that the same can be replicated in India?
Marketing and Digital expert, Mental health advocate, queer
2wI think messages like this are very disingenuous, Dharmesh. You can't deny the fact the country you found when you moved in was not as hyper neo liberal it is today, a process that truly started in the 80s. The conditions that allowed you to do all the things you did, high school and college, are not possible for a kid from a small Indian village anymore. Not only that, the environment is objectively more hostile. I believe that sweeping the truth under the rug does not benefit anyone, and most certainly not the majority of us