Oh my God! You are alive!Only possible as comment from someone who mistakes the deep shared affinity for the language for a desire to re-imagine nationality!
Oh my God! You are alive!Only possible as comment from someone who mistakes the deep shared affinity for the language for a desire to re-imagine nationality!
Who, I? Who said so?Oh my God! You are alive!
Nice to see you post again. I pray that you are doing well. It has been a while since I saw any of your posts.Who
Who, I? Who said so?
Just being here on this forum alone, you can see divergent views - it is good but that is 5% of the entire forum, the rest let us not talk about the wumao pinkies and banyani brigades.So many things, indian opposition says about india about its real issues, about the situation with minorities and all. You should make threads on them too.
As far as IT is concerned. Ofcourse india entered into IT sector much earlier and it has 6 times larger population and better institutions for IT. Indians who went to US in 70's, 80's or 90's are now leading tech sector and they also contribute a lot in giving business to india.
But having said that nothing remains permanent in course of history. Pakistan has huge potential in IT. It not neccessarily need to beat india in it, but it still can make a fortune out of it.
@waz @LeGenD
There's so much india related posts in PDF lately ? Sorry to say its becoming indian forum. They don't tolerate any Pakistani in their forums, here they are just spamming it.
Unfortunately people like these are very difficult to come by.Noone is stopping you to emerge. It needs someone like Saddam at times to round up these nefarious elites and generals and give them Maoist style re-education or visit to the local rivers to bid farewell. exiling them is too easy.
i hope it will be so.Unfortunately people like these are very difficult to come by.
We don't need a messiah to magically make us rich, but what's needed is someone to rid us of the parasitical elite and leave behind a strong system of governance and powerful competent institutions.
With the above we can hope to make a steady recovery and grow.
New Recruit
Well in my opinion it went "downhill" after Zia died.It’s deeper than that, IMHO. A decades long system that Zardari learned and maneuvered within. many of the problems started to form in the 60s/70s. Key being where we got our FDI and technology (US aid) as well as the loss of East Pakistan from which we didn’t structurally reform. The South Koreans studied and implemented our 5 year plan from the 60s and we didn’t. Economic reforms are structural and will persist even when these current lot pass away, unless we make serious reforms.
Zia tried to reverse the nationalization of Bhutto but he wasn’t able to manage to attract investment while also supporting the global effort to push the Soviets out of Afghanistan. The Afghan war made Pakistan look unstable. A lot could be turned around in the 80s, China haven’t really emerged the way it did in the 90s. The political instability scared away investors and talent. Then when democracy came back in ‘88 it wasn’t focus on the economy they way a state with long term vision would have planned for.Well in my opinion it went "downhill" after Zia died.
Add BSing to the list, forget Pak no one can compete with India.Yes Pakistan cannot compete with india in rapes riots failed states aids slums lawlessness etc india is number 1 in above things
Add BSing to the list, forget Pak no one can compete with India.
What bullshit you just wrote can't understand a dingy what you told indian blackmail what blackmail?The corporate bullying has resulted in an Indian monopoly in the IT sector. The modern day operations can only be summarized as being hold hostage by India. Even Israel struggles to cope with the Indian monopoly in the western world.
Pakistanis however have carved a niche in the market but face biased odds in the present market.
The Industrial sector cannot remain chained to the Indian blackmail.