Forsvaret
Trusted Member
Aww. Saudi masters of Pakistan do not want to give asylum to Imran Khan. Pity!Except that the Saudis do not want him at all, after what he tried to do.
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Aww. Saudi masters of Pakistan do not want to give asylum to Imran Khan. Pity!Except that the Saudis do not want him at all, after what he tried to do.
Huh? WHY should any country "take" Imran Khan when he rather prefers to stay in prison in Pakistan?Right. But I still wish they take him in as a HUGE FAVOR to Pakistan!
But the present setup is not relevant at all despite military establishment is trying their very best to push them at the center stage too!And just to be clear , SS and the present setup is not any different either. That is just the next act in the same circus.
Then why the top engineers of the present setup are giving themselves lifetime immunity from any future prosecution in Pakistani courts?…but other side of the game, he is inarcerated and not in the position to form a strategy.
IK will NEVER do any kind of deal with military establishment as long its current man in charge is Hazrat Asim Muneer. That ship sailed long time ago!Just for the sake of "no one would care listening" he has to change course which is to negotiate with army, head down and bid time.
And that’s like "good" for Pakistan in the long run? Have we actually learnt absolutely nothing from past military dictatorships in the country?…if Pakistan army can settle the score once and for all, I can accept a military dictatorship for 10 years.
Hasina Wajid’s party Awami League kept "winning" elections for years because main opposition party BNP boycotted those fraud elections. Eventually, the people of Bangladesh rose up against that setup and forced Hasina out of power. Now her party Awami League that used to "win" elections is banned from running in future elections.And just now, despite his party veterans' appeals, he made another terrible choice by largely boycotting the by-elections. It is well understood by now in Pakistani politics to not let your opposition have a free hit despite the odds by boycotting the elections and yet he ignored his advisors again! Benazir Bhutto lamented her party's boycott of the 1985 elections till decades later, as did MQM when they gave the ground to Jamat e Islami.
Secular khooni liberals who got off watching mutilated children's bodies after drone attacks back in the war of terror days were never supporters of Taliban Khan.Huh? But in this same thread, you said earlier that you actually supported IK until 2022. So which one is it?![]()
But I am happy with the current arrangement. I always liked Shahbaz Sharif anyway and I despise his elder brother almost as much as I despise Imran.
Pakistan’s military dictatorships in the past "delivered" economically for a short-term followed by many years of economic stagnation. Ergo, this is what you always get when a political setup ain’t organic but kept afloat through artificial means.The reason is very simple: anyone or any setup that can deliver economically…
The reason is very simple: anyone or any setup that can deliver economically is preferable to one that is ideally Constitutional, given the deep doldrums Pakistan finds itself in currently.
The time to move towards better rule of law under the Constitution will unfortunately have to wait until we have a few more rupees to be able to aspire towards such higher goals of a civilized society.
And where exactly is this authoritarian Hasina Wajid residing right now and what became of her authoritarian party Awami League?And I see how Bangladesh progressed during the 'authoritarian' Hasina Wajid's long rule.
I am not happy with the current arrangement, to be clear, but then again I would be far unhappier with the realistic alternatives, so I guess SS wins by virtue of being lesser of the possible evils.
Realism wins over idealism any day with me.
The reason is very simple: anyone or any setup that can deliver economically is preferable to one that is ideally Constitutional, given the deep doldrums Pakistan finds itself in currently.
The time to move towards better rule of law under the Constitution will unfortunately have to wait until we have a few more rupees to be able to aspire towards such higher goals of a civilized society.
I have come to conclude that pinning hopes in 'democracy' as a panacea is too much idealism. Every country's situation is different. We can see countries with 'totalitarian' systems progressed after some decades of stability, focus and continuation of policies. And we can see 'democratic' countries, without even external threats and without internal widespread terrorism such as Sri Lanka defaulted. And I see how Bangladesh progressed during the 'authoritarian' Hasina Wajid's long rule.
So I have decided to be on side of the caution and put my faith in a rigidly controlled 'hybrid' system where the military acts like a Godfather to manage the civilians to 'perform'. At any rate despite Imran's supporter wailing, the current Parliament of Pakistan does have a large number of genuine people's representatives, for whatever they are worth.
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