Yep. As expected. Slavery has been so deeply ingrained in you, there is just no hope. That's the difference, you want to salute Trump and get a "good boy" while we think Pakistans independence should mean something.
This is your definition of "diplomacy"? Bend backwards, get taken advantage of and hope overlords agree?
Also, why are you same people then complaining about gulf countries in other threads? But if I call out the hypocrisy "cult saaar!"
No one is suggesting bending backward or seeking a “good boy” pat on the head, but confusing loud slogans with actual independence is exactly why this mindset always crashes into a wall. Real sovereignty isn't about throwing tantrums at superpowers but knowing to do so only when you have the economic, technological, and institutional leverage to tell them no.
You think shouting at the US makes Pakistan independent, but an “independent” country doesn't have to go to the IMF every three years, beg for deferred oil payments, or export its citizens for cheap labor just to keep the central bank afloat. The people who actually weakened Pakistan's independence aren't the ones calling for pragmatic diplomacy, they are the politicians and cheerleaders who thought running a country on debt and defiance was a viable foreign policy.
Your comparison to the Gulf thread actually proves the point perfectly, and ironically, it only reinforces why people call this mindset a cult. You are angry at the Gulf for looking out for their own interests, angry at the US for doing the same, and angry at anyone who points out that Pakistan needs to operate pragmatically within that reality. You want a world that accommodates
your feelings rather than a foreign policy that deals with facts. The Gulf countries actually
have independence because they don't scream at superpowers because they quietly balance them, build leverage, and run economies that force the world to take them seriously.
That is the contradiction of a cult: demanding the swagger of a superpower while defending the financial decisions of a failed state. Slavery isn't understanding how leverage works in international relations. True slavery is being financially dependent on the world while living in a closed echo chamber where empty rhetoric is mistaken for bravery. If you want Pakistan to be truly independent, build an economy that doesn't need bailouts. Until then, diplomacy requires playing the hand you actually have, not the one your political messiah pretends you have.