I see so many mean comments on here, like "indians only poo in the streets" or "they wipe with their hands." Let me tell you, it is actually more sanitary to wipe with your heads. You probably do not know this, but in India, we only wipe our behinds with out NON dominant hand. This allows us to thoruhgouly get all of the poop out. When other countries wipe, they use weak toiler paper that still leaves stuff in their butt and doesn't totally clean it. With your hand you can really clean it. And we use our other hand for other activities like eating.
So no, it actually is totally sanitary. It makes more sense to wipe with your hands than with soft paper.
>>39488686
1. poop should on be on your butthole
2. I don't know how you are using your hand or fingers, It would be like trying to clean a sauce bottle
3.people wash their hands with soap and hot water and you are not getting any poop on your hands in the first place with toilet roll
4.the proof that toilet paper works and hoses or hands don't is the fact that country's who use toilet paper don't suffer from the same bacterial diseases that they used to and the country's who don't use it
5.the faecal matter is flushed away and doesn't fester on your hands
>>39488686
Superpower by 2020 my fukn ass hope china obliterates your joke of a country
>>39488686
Fuck off pajeet nobody cares
>>39488686
Poopjeet, just calm the fuck down and stop making cancerous threads. Go to >>>/pol/ , people there would be much more eager to discuss this issue.
>>39488686
You are dirty and stinky, why are you so obsessed with shit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixJgY2VSct0
Yes to street shitting.
No to loo.
poo is how i do.
~typical hindu.
>>39488686
What is the opposite of "thinly veiled"?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollution_of_the_Ganges
>A 2006 measurement of pollution in the Ganga revealed that river water monitoring over the previous 12 years had demonstrated fecal coliform counts up to 100,000,000 MPN (most probable number) per 100 ml and biological oxygen demand levels averaging over 40 mg/l in the most polluted part of the river in Varanasi. The overall rate of water-borne/enteric disease incidence, including acute gastrointestinal disease, was estimated to be about 66%.
anyone see that ted talk.
the one were this curry lady says only 51% of india shits in the street.