Madhu Gottumukkala, the Indian-origin acting director of the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), recently uploaded sensitive government contracting documents into the AI model ChatGPT. These files were marked “for official use only” and were not meant to be public. The documents were not classified but this led to security alerts and a review by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Soon after, a self-described 'Christian nationalist' and MAGA supporter on X blamed Indians in tech for incompetence. He claimed that Indian workers at tech companies treat every task as a "P1 urgent priority" without providing reasons. He also said they use threats and yelling to get results. He linked this behavior to explain Gottumukkala’s mistake. Many online users called this view xenophobic and a harmful stereotype. In response, a US-based software engineer named John Freeman defended Indian professionals. He shared his experience working with several Indian colleagues and leaders who he described as competent and professional. Freeman said, "Competence is not determined by nationality," and suggested that when someone faces poor coworkers, the problem is with specific companies’ hiring, not with all Indians. Indians form a large part of the US tech workforce, especially on H-1B visas. They hold many key roles in Silicon Valley. Democrats see this workforce as vital to the economy. However, MAGA Republicans argue that Indians take jobs at lower salaries and reduce opportunities for American workers. This debate has continued since the Trump era, with supporters like Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk backing the visa programs.