Last Thoughts on Pakistan
We have to close this journal now for the following reason: http://watchful.wordpress.com
About Pakistan — it seems like only yesterday that our grandparents told us how they dressed the wounds of the people who arrived to our homeland from India, they were wounded on the way by Sikhs and Hindu extremists. We also provided them shelter until they could find their own.
The following article names Pakistan a sleeping superpower. They call India an emerging superpower, but we know “they” aren’t going to allow Pakistan and India to become superpowers. Who are “they?”
Well, the Mughals weren’t supposed to be true symbols of Islam. They killed each other for power. So the British monkeys showed up to say they’d take over our lands. Pakistan and India were separated on the basis of religion. At the Mohatta Palace in Karachi, we have seen drinking vessels for Muslims separated from those for Hindus.
But how many Pakistanis feel free to share their drinking vessels with each other today? Prophet Muhammad, the truest symbol of Islam, had stated that you aren’t a Muslim if your neighbor feels unsafe because you’re somewhere around. Every fourth or fifth Pakistani makes you feel unsafe in Pakistan. In other words, the hypocrites of Pakistan — not Muslims — are fully armed. Even the police feels afraid of them.
It was during the 1970s that the first Bhutto came to power. We hope PPP is abolished some time soon in the future. Our grandparents told us they would sell off Pakistan.
Then came Zia-ul-Haq, used by the United States to recruit the Talibans against Russia.
United States was desperate through the 70s. The oil crisis was threatening its very fabric. Since the 70s, that terror state has never lifted its chinky eyes off Pakistan.
There are Freemasons or the Illuminati, the promised Dajjal of the End times. Their main symbol is the One-Eye, just as Prophet Muhammad, peace on him, had told us.
The Freemasons support terror groups such as the Mossad and the U.S. government, which in turn support corruption in Pakistan and other terror groups across the world, for example, al-Qaeda. These are all Dajjal organizations. Because Dajjal is an impostor, he won’t use his name in support of such groups. Middlemen or pimps like the U.S. government are hired for this purpose.
The U.S.-Mossad-Freemasons-al-Qaeda gang tell people like Musharraf that Pakistan will be bombed back to the Stone Age unless their agenda is followed. So Pakistan could not make humans out of uneducated hypocrites who make our country unsafe from within. In fact, education is not considered important at all. It’s only buying and selling of weapons of mass destruction that matters now. America insists on war, because as Arundhati Roy stated, the main business of the NATO nations is weapons trade.
All our resources must be used on weapons for this reason. Development is impossible. Pakistan is called a failed state not because everybody among Pakistanis has turned non-Muslim or hypocritical (as described in the Qur’an); rather, our sold out politicians have to listen to Freemasons out of fear.
But, don’t think the West is safe for you if you’re Pakistani. They don’t respect your human rights in America or Canada. Even Indians are being attacked by racists in Australia. It’s monkey time now. Non-extremists in both Pakistan and India would agree that we don’t mind becoming one nation again if it would help us to ward off racist attacks.
In any case, let Allah be with you if you’re a good Muslim (peaceful) citizen of the world who doesn’t make his or her neighbors feel unsafe. Prophet Muhammad told us that his community won’t last for more than 1500 years, now we’re reaching the end. 1400 years had passed in the beginning of the 80s.
This is the end of time, but don’t fear hypocrites in Pakistan or the West. And never bow to them. Your Lord is only Allah.
http://www.daily.pk/local/other-local/10407–pakistan-a-sleeping-superpower-.html
| Pakistan, A Sleeping Superpower |
| Written by www.daily.pk |
| Friday, 12 June 2009 00:00 |
| In the 60s the building that we all know as Habib Bank Plaza in Karachi was the tallest building all the way from the Middle East down to Singapore. In the 1960s almost every army, navy and air force in the Middle East was manned by Pakistani officers and men. We literally raised those armed forces. Many airlines that operate from the Gulf have actually been trained, organized and manned by PIA. Sure, Pakistan has fallen on tough times. But let all Pakistanis take strength from the fact that this great country needs to be put back on the track from which it got derailed in the 1960s. We Pakistanis have to once again regain our lost glory.Way back in the 1960s Pakistan was truly on the move.
The early Ayub years gave us the “Green Revolution” because of the construction and commissioning of dams such as Mangla and Tarbela. Barrages were erected all the way down to the Guddu near Hyderabad. These dams and barrages gave birth to an efficient network of canals and small distributaries which in the sixties not only made Pakistan self-sufficient but surplus in agricultural products. In the 60s the building that we all know as Habib Bank Plaza in Karachi was the tallest building all the way from the Middle East down to Singapore. In the 1960s almost every army, navy and air force in the Middle East was manned by Pakistani officers and men. We literally raised those armed forces. Many airlines that operate from the Gulf have actually been trained, organized and manned by PIA staff when they initially started operations. Today they are amongst the best in the world while PIA is in a total mess. In 1972 it was Pakistan that created history and paved the way for the world to move in the direction that it actually has moved by being instrumental in bringing about President Richard Nixon’s visit to Beijing (then Peking). That visit helped both China and USA equally and opened the world to be shaped as it is today. Not long after that, in 1979, if Pakistan had not taken on the USSR on its own initially, along with the Afghan Mujahideen, the world today would have been very different. One can go on recounting many more aspects of Pakistan to show what a potently viable country it should have been today with an economy strong enough to stand it in good stead for exercising an independent foreign policy as well as in bringing about an environment in which the country would have had a content population which would, in turn, have excluded space to all sorts of disruptions. What, then, went wrong and why do people now talk in terms of whether Pakistan will be able to outlast its present crisis? Pakistan indeed lost its way in the years that followed the incidents I have quoted; military coups, the judicial murder of an elected prime minister, frequent derailing of the political process, an erratic foreign policy pursued by a bunch of minds that were driven by reasons other than prudent statecraft, importing of self-seeking bankers and making them prime ministers, denying of provincial autonomy to the federating units, allowing ethnic and other kinds of militancy to grow, letting fiefdoms be created right under the nose of the state, making talent become subservient to cronyism, treating education as if it was insignificant and so much more is all responsible for the dire straits we find ourselves in after having made a great start in the early years of our freedom. It is said that South Korea laid its foundations for progress and prosperity on Pakistan’s First Five Year Plan. Pakistan never made a second five-year plan and in fact the First Five Year Plan was followed by unplanned improvisation. Who knows, had Pakistan followed its own First Five Year Plan like South Korea did, in the subsequent years Pakistan too may well have been one of the biggest economies of the world today. (South Korea is now the fourth-biggest of Asia and the world’s 15th.) Most Pakistanis are known to have a strong faith in the country’s ability to bounce back from the wilderness. Pakistan is not a country that can be written off because a handful of insurgents have taken the state on frontally and because the state has not responded as responsibly as it ought to have ever since the crisis was evolving. Reacting to situations when crises explode in the face cannot be the best of situations for any state. Where have all the leaders gone? The present crisis should never have gotten to where it now stands. Now that it has and now that it has to be handled, let all Pakistanis take strength from the fact that this great country needs to be put back on the track from which it got derailed in the 1960s. We Pakistanis have to once again regain our lost glory and win back our rightful, respectable and dignified place in the comity of nations. We can and must do it. MASOOD SHARIF KHAN KHATTAK |
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You’re currently reading “Last Thoughts on Pakistan,” an entry on Pakistan Politics Journal
- Published:
- June 20, 2009 / 4:24 pm
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- Poetry, Essays, Analyses
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- al-qaeda, america, arundhati roy, australia, authors, bhutto, british, business, corruption, education, freemasonry, illuminati, india, international business, musharraf, novelists, pakistan, peace, politicians, politics, prophet muhammad, racism, taliban, united kingdom, ussr, war, weapons, west, writers, zardari