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The Emperor has no cloths on.

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Dajjal: The King Who Has No Clothes: Ahmad Thomson: Books

I think I read that 16 years ago. I was going through that Imam Mehdi and Free Masons phase. I am glad I got over this phase.

Sadly, there is no short cut. We just have to work within the system to improve it. It is hard work, no doubt. It is perhaps easier to shed others' blood than to shed own sweat.

The only thing democracy is good at, is control over violence. Democracies, despite their faults, act as a bulwark against anarchy.

Emperor may be naked today, but we have no battles in the streets. One day, we will elect an emperor who is clothed. Another day we will elect someone who refuses to be an emperor. I hope to live to see that day.
 
I think I read that 16 years ago. I was going through that Imam Mehdi and Free Masons phase. I am glad I got over this phase.

Sadly, there is no short cut. We just have to work within the system to improve it. It is hard work, no doubt. It is perhaps easier to shed others' blood than to shed own sweat.

The only thing democracy is good at, is control over violence. Democracies, despite their faults, act as a bulwark against anarchy.

Emperor may be naked today, but we have no battles in the streets. One day, we will elect an emperor who is clothed. Another day we will elect someone who refuses to be an emperor. I hope to live to see that day.

Personally, I don't think Pakistan is going to improve any time soon no matter who is in power or what type of Government it has.


It is a nation consisting of 796,000 square kilometres with a population of 185 million people as of 2014. Just laying all the roads on those 796,000 square kilometres will cost hundreds of billions of dollars... and that's just the roads, never mind millions of other things.

Due to its population and geographical size, a country like Pakistan needs trillions of dollars from the outside, not billions, to make it a success story and I can't see that happening in the short term.

Pakistan's population grows by over 3 million people a year which means building new schools, new hospitals and everything else that goes with it just to cater for those 3 million people every year which doesn't leave any room for any other improvements.


And, what were you doing going through the Freemasonary phase? I've always thought of such conspiracy theories as fabrications. The last time I watched anything to do with conspiracy theories was to watch The Arrivals episodes and that only because it had been aired on ARY News.
 
Personally, I don't think Pakistan is going to improve any time soon no matter who is in power or what type of Government it has.


It is a nation consisting of 796,000 square kilometres with a population of 185 million people as of 2014. Just laying all the roads on those 76,000 square kilometres will cost hundreds of billions of dollars... and that's just the roads, never mind millions of other things.
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not true, in fact Pakistan + Pakistan Administered Kashmir is close to 870,000 sq km , & you don't need trillions of dollar for connectivity, in fact with an average width of 225 to 400 km in the north & from 500 to 800 km in the south & with a length of 1800 km ,roads, rail & dams can be build within a 50-60 billion dollars @ max, for example India had near all out connectivity by the 1990's, it literally renovate its rail, build new roads along with dams & it was no where even near a trillion dollars & this was all before their economic took off, what Pakistan needs is stability along with continuation of system , let democracy take its time to evolve, just think about it, in the whole of 90's not a single elected gov't was allowed to complete its term. each of the 4 elected gov't were ousted after every 2 to 3 years. that's like 10 years wasted. & these repeated break weakened the system. & then you had almost a decade of military rule,which again sabotaged any growth for the systems & institutions of the country to evolve , that's like 20 years of lack of continual growth. naturally with that sort of break every now & then, how can ones institutions work , it will have its flaws but these flaws will decrease & improvement will come once the system is allowed to evolve which will lead to better performance , along with conscience of the people will grow with time & world. how can one blame the system, if one doesn't even allows it to evolve ? so let the system evolve, give it its time to grow & mature, & it will improve naturally , their are no short cut to success , the only way forward is patience & hard work , let democracy evolve , it will improve with time, just give it some time, things don't change over night & even nature has it's course,
summer can't come before spring ,
& winter can't fall before autumn
 
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The article was good!!
I like the kind of "awakening" Pakistani populace has been showing.Pakistan has to get over some white elephants that it has been carrying for so long.It has to get over the patronage system in politics.
Afaik in Pakistan when a political boss supports his party by bringing in a number of voters he can expect to be appropriately rewarded ....which ofcourse is not a good way of running a democracy.No wonder democracy is in shambles there.
Another thing that comes to my mind when I think of Pakistan is thats its a living and breathing demonstration of the failure of the US’s militarized foreign policy. US's support of the Pakistan military has facilitated the development of a parallel government in Pakistan which in turn has fomented a significant proportion of the country’s domestic political troubles for example the military coup that deposed Nawaz Sharif when he was Prime Minister back in 1999.
The best thing for the people of Pakistan may not be any revolutionary adventures......but the exit of the US from neighboring Afghanistan after more than thirty years of meddling there.

The problem here is that awakening you are talking about in only confined to a small percentage of the population and that too only in the urban Pakistan and mainly in Punjab and Karachi, but together they cannot change Pakistan. Our politician and military rulers did not keep majority of Pakistani uneducated for no reason, they kept the wadera system intact because it was all the chaudrys Maliks and Waderas who were part to Muslim league, and Jinnah who needed the tribal areas of then India (Sind, KPK, Baluchistan, southern Punjab, Northern areas) to join Pakistan and for he had to please them and give them a piece of power...so basically we were screwed from the begining, these people has always been in power since inception, they control their people and the area under their rule, they dont let govt provide them education and use school for their cows. So we have Pakistan, change if it you dare!
 
The only salvation for Pakistan is EDUCATION. Governments over time destroyed education system on purpose uneducated minds can be controlled and moulded to your liking (jihadist).
 
The only salvation for Pakistan is EDUCATION. Governments over time destroyed education system on purpose uneducated minds can be controlled and moulded to your liking (jihadist).

Our community of Urdu Speaking people are the most educated among any ethnic group. Highest literacy we have

And yet our @rses are controlled by an internationally known murder and money laundrer.

So perhaps you need to go back and revise your theory.

thank you.
 
Our community of Urdu Speaking people are the most educated among any ethnic group. Highest literacy we have

And yet our @rses are controlled by an internationally known murder and money launder.

So perhaps you need to go back and revise your theory.

thank you.

I am not sure what am i surprised at the Most. You rejecting the importance of education or a PDF Mod thanking you for that .
 
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The problem here is that awakening you are talking about in only confined to a small percentage of the population and that too only in the urban Pakistan and mainly in Punjab and Karachi, but together they cannot change Pakistan. Our politician and military rulers did not keep majority of Pakistani uneducated for no reason, they kept the wadera system intact because it was all the chaudrys Maliks and Waderas who were part to Muslim league, and Jinnah who needed the tribal areas of then India (Sind, KPK, Baluchistan, southern Punjab, Northern areas) to join Pakistan and for he had to please them and give them a piece of power...so basically we were screwed from the begining, these people has always been in power since inception, they control their people and the area under their rule, they dont let govt provide them education and use school for their cows. So we have Pakistan, change if it you dare!
I hope this time the awakening spreads to every nook and corner of Pakistan.

Btw whats wadera system? Is it the same patronage system I was talking about?
 
I hope this time the awakening spreads to every nook and corner of Pakistan.

Btw whats wadera system? Is it the same patronage system I was talking about?

Levina behn

I used to think in my so-called educated nay pompous mind that I having gone to university could automatically become more enlightened than those dirty smelly villagers of Punjab and Sindh.

No Siree Bob, it turned out that majority of them knew more about life than majority of my pompous @rse city dweller mates.

I realized that you know about life and its harsh realities much more when you work the land instead of sitting in cushy desk in some city,

In Pakistan, 90% of our wealth is generated by those enlightened and hard working villagers.

But we the city dwellers take all that in the name of high society,
while still calling them dumb and dumber village idiots living under some waderas.

Guess what, in terms of exploitation of villagers, we the educated elite are worse than waderas.

We just pretend not to know about it.

Sadly.
 
The Emperor has no clothes on.


Pakistan’s worst kept secret is not a secret anymore: There is something very rotten in the corridors of power, and there is something very sickening in the games that rulers play.

The seemingly never-ending story unfolding on D-Chowk is now gradually folding up. The capital’s Red Zone resembles a gaping red festering wound on the fair face of this normally manicured locality. The wound however is not just physical; it has seeped puss out of the decomposing body of governance in Pakistan and exposed the terminal illness that plagues the system. The disease has finally been diagnosed.

Yes, it had to take a thousand megawatt shock for the limp body to respond. But respond it has, perhaps fighting for its last breaths. And the ruler - PML-N and their allies and the rest who infes parliament — are suddenly talking about issue that everyone except them had been talking about for years and years. It had to take a shock for these zombies to lift their chins, look around and see a tidal wave of discontent, frustration anger and loathing roaring towards them.

No, this tidal wave is not measured in the numbers gathered outside Parliament on Constitution Avenue. No, this tidal wave is not gauged by the inflammable rhetoric of Imran Khan and Tahirul Qadri, or the pitched battles of their supporters. This tidal wave, in fact, is no even registered by the cacophony on TV screen or the blistering headlines in the morning papers. No, none of this is a true measure of the loathing that is steaming and bubbling like red hot lava inside Mount Vesuvius.

This loathing is a natural reaction of a society in transition. It is a loathing borne of greater exposure to the outside world and the ideas that drive the future. It is a loathing that wraps itself around a new realisation among the rapidly urbanising population of Pakistan that is forced to beg for its natural born rights. It is a loathing that is triggered by the hypocrisy of the ruling elite and the inequality bred by a system twisted and manipulated to serve the interests and agendas of those who have clawed themselves into the corridors of power and privilege.

It is a loathing of the disenfranchised and the disbarred; a loathing of those who are denied their fundamental rights and their basic privileges as the citizens of Pakistan. They may be born free, but everywhere they are still in chains. It is indeed the beginning of the end of the era dominated by rural grandees and urban tycoons. The end may take a while, and it may experience violent convulsions and sporadic eruptions,but the end is nigh. It has to. There is a change in the air. No, perhaps not the change defined by Imran and Qadri,but a change all the same.

This change is spurred by harsh realities of a world in transformation. Indeed this transformation is too rapid for the traditional elites to grasp. It is everywhere. Like an angry wave crashing against stony shores, the change is manifesting itself on TV screens, computer screens and cell phone screens; in 3D and 3G; flooding minds with information and awareness and spreading ideas and knowledge at warp speed. No, this is not our Daddy’s Pakistan. Can someone tell this to the uptight and pompous men and women in Parliament?

The fabled kid has finally pointed out that the emperor has no clothes.

For this fabled land ha been ravaged by those who have been blessed with all. But it seemed the land was frozen in an era long time ago; an era in which the landed an the privileged grew fat on the sweat and blood of the weak; an era in which time moved in slow motion and progress in slower motion.

This was an era when only the selected few rose to positions of power and then exercised this power without restraint,without accountability,without checks and balances. In this era the dispossessed remained without possessions, and the marginalised stayed on the margins And everyone accepted this state of affairs. The mighty played their electoral games on their own rules.They mimicked their ancestors and their ancient traditions; drawing strength and self proclaimed legitimacy from regressive practice and degenerate rituals. And they ravaged this fabled land with a ferociousness hard to imagine.

But now change is in the air. Such hypocrisy and duality cannot endure.The rotting and crumbling status quo cannot endure.

This state of affairs where children go hungry and rulers build temples to democracy — cannot endure.

This blatant inequality before law cannot endure. A system that rewards the corrupt and pulverises the weak cannot endure.

A governance structure that lets the police torture people while the mighty feed on the bounty of this land cannot endure.

A parliament that speaks for its privilege and traditions but cannot legislate true justice cannot endure.

A cabinet that makes policies to suit itself while our children cannot go to school such a cabinet and all that it represents cannot endure.

The last three weeks of turmoil has reminded us that this nation called Pakistan has had enough ,No more. The system either reforms, or dies.

That’s it. For all our sake, the men and women entrusted with our destiny must see the reality for what it is, not what they would wish it to be.
The fabled kid has spoken.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 7th, 2014.

If this is not another plot by PA to destabilize Navaz and efforts of his government to mend ties with India, then only this all 'dharanas' are welcome and should be welcomed.
 
If this is not another plot by PA to destabilize Navaz and efforts of his government to mend ties with India, then only this all 'dharanas' are welcome and should be welcomed.

There is reality

There is always perception that has nothing to do with reality.

Dharnas are based on perceptions.
 
There is reality

There is always perception that has nothing to do with reality.

Dharnas are based on perceptions.

There are many sources which say that PA wasnt happy with NS's 'Mend Ties with India" scheme.

And if we look at past, the claim looks logical. Afterall if ties improve between Paksian and India, the importance of PA will reduce and ultimately it is not in the interests of Pakistani Deep State.
 
There are many sources which say that PA wasnt happy with NS's 'Mend Ties with India" scheme.

And if we look at past, the claim looks logical. Afterall if ties improve between Paksian and India, the importance of PA will reduce and ultimately it is not in the interests of Pakistani Deep State.

We are hostages of our dreaded past. Aren't we?

PA strategic plan has gone through a sea change.

What you say was valid (perhaps partially) in 1990s.

Too bad many analysts especially in India are still stuck in decades old mindset.

peace
 

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