Ex-Singapore Diplomat analysis on Pakistan with Pakistani journalists

Moving onto Indians, if you believe they see you as inferior, then you are wrong. Indians have an inferiority complex rooted in both race and religion, and they only lash out in hatred as a coping mechanism in rage. There's no "superiority", it is insecurity they see Pakistanis as generally lighter skinned, better looking and the region's heritage is the actual inheritor of the best history of South Asia, from the Indus Valley main archeological sites to the Vedic ara.
Agree completely. In other words, their * visible * condescension towards us is grossly misplaced. Inside, they burn with insecurity. I think that's the more correct way of phrasing what I was trying to say originally.
 
When was the last time you walked down the street, saw a wrapper strewn across the road and thought to yourself, let me pick that up... This is known as citizenship and civic pride... Words like "introspection" and "change" are seeds planted that rise from the ground up, or as they say... "From tiny acorns do mighty oak's grow".

i feel you bro. We all want best for the country but the awaam have been kept illiterate by the ruling feudals. They don't want change cuz it threatens their hold/power over the masses.
You can easily see so much improvement even in more corrupt countries in africa, latin america, central asia, etc yet we are just stuck in a "nazuk tareen mor of our tareekh" for decades

Hence I come to believe that only a Big WAR can cleanse our country when we have all these feudal families and their entire tabbars taken out.........The current status quo by the army gens is not helping anything.....
 
Hence I come to believe that only a Big WAR can cleanse our country when we have all these feudal families and their entire tabbars taken out.........The current status quo by the army gens is not helping anything.....
That is the definition of fitna. Actually, it is a purification process that is achieved through sabr during turmoil. It cleans the person/society.

It is a constant phenomenon and never-ending.
On topic: if Pakistan is fine, then you may not believe Afghanistan is fine too.
The change will only come if people feel agitated. It is a precursor for growth.
 
His conclusion is no different from others who can read, write and think a bit.
Says a lot about Pakistanis who ask such silly questions, probably buoyed by the intoxicating PR blitz at home. Hopeless!
 
Beautiful post, sadly our Babbu's don't care. Let me give you another example. A dear friend of mine is a double PhD in Engineering and Environmental Science. He was one of 5 Pakistanis who were sponsored by China to study a post doc in China on Environmental Science, where the govt of China spent 20 crore on his group, lodgings, fees, stipend etc.

This was the time the smog situation in Pakistan was critical, his paper on the effects of stubble burning and smog impact on human health was published in China. He returned to Pakistan to help his nation.

Keep in mind that he had studied how China had implemented cleaner air reforms in Beijing, read this paper here if you have time:

Instead of taking his qualified expertise on board, he was ushered out of a meeting with the DG EPA Pakistan, because he debated that the "Anti-Smog vans" being considered for tender by Govt. of Punjab were not fit for purpose and produced the wrong kind of particle, actually making the smog situation worse not better- six months later Punjab launched the Punjab Smog "Cannons".

===
Tldr;

What can you do with these babbus?
The only thing that can be done, is when the political winds shift, the next democratic (non-“hybrid”) government delegates power to independent apolitical planning agencies, who implement real changes, especially ones that jump start economic employment and growth. If the average person feels their lives are improving, it will empower the democratic government to implement more and more reforms, allowing the babus to be eased out of all areas of control.

I gave the local consulate a copy of the book on Japan’s MITI and Modernizers, the two books on how Japan reformed in the post as well as the pre-war period to bring out explosive economic growth. I was hopeful that the CDF, who did advanced training in Japan, would appreciate the books. Japan didn’t get rid of its oligarchs, but got rid of ineffective middle men.

Maybe Pakistan’s rich don’t want to get much more richer. Maybe they want to remain big fish in a small pond, ruling over the serfs we call citizens of Pakistan. This applies even more to the feudal land barons, who hold too much unproductive influence over the majority of the population, who are small farmers, such as my own family use to be.

Then what they are doing is just fine.

This does not mean even the oligarchs are beyond redemption. Perhaps the younger generations can see the errors of the ways of their ancestors, and put their energy and finances into growing the pie rather than hoarding it. When people say this is not possible, they fail to realize it has already happened… IK…. He was a member of the oligarchy, who tried, but needed to carry the rest of the oligarchy with him to succeed.

Instead of sending our best and brightest to China first, we should send the oligarchs on an all expenses paid trip to see how China developed. Send them to South Korea, Japan and Singapore. Then finally send them to North Korea and Belarus, so they can see the contrast.

The oligarchs, it seems, are the only ones who get a real vote in Pakistan. It maybe the most effective to turn the young “nobles” of Pakistan’s “second estate”. Give them purpose, rather than their fathers letting them only live lives of low brow debauchery in Dubai nightclubs or at their farmhouse parties in Pakistan.
 
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The only thing that can be done, is when the political winds shift, the next democratic (non-“hybrid”) government delegates power to independent apolitical planning agencies, who implement real changes, especially ones that jump start economic employment and growth. If the average person feels their lives are improving, it will empower the democratic government to implement more and more reforms, allowing the babus to be eased out of all areas of control.

I gave the local consulate a copy of the book on Japan’s MITI and Modernizers, the two books on how Japan reformed in the post as well as the pre-war period to bring out explosive economic growth. I was hopeful that the CDF, who did advanced training in Japan, would appreciate the books. Japan didn’t get rid of its oligarchs, but got rid of ineffective middle men.

Maybe Pakistan’s rich don’t want to get much more richer. Maybe they want to remain big fish in a small pond, ruling over the serfs we call citizens of Pakistan. This applies even more to the feudal land barons, who hold too much unproductive influence over the majority of the population, who are small farmers, such as my own family use to be.

Then what they are doing is just fine.

This does not mean even the oligarchs are beyond redemption. Perhaps the younger generations can see the errors of the ways of their ancestors, and put their energy and finances into growing the pie rather than hoarding it. When people say this is not possible, they fail to realize it has already happened… IK…. He was a member of the oligarchy, who tried, but needed to carry the rest of the oligarchy with him to succeed.

Instead of sending our best and brightest to China first, we should send the oligarchs on an all expenses paid trip to see how China developed. Send them to South Korea, Japan and Singapore. Then finally send them to North Korea and Belarus, so they can see the contrast.

The oligarchs, it seems, are the only ones who get a real vote in Pakistan. It maybe the most effective to turn the young “nobles” of Pakistan’s “second estate”. Give them purpose, rather than their fathers letting them only live lives of low brow debauchery in Dubai nightclubs or at their farmhouse parties in Pakistan.
Why would a feudal government have an incentive to implement any of these reforms?

Once you understand that these political faces are merely feudals in their medieval kingdom of subjects, you'll understand why none of them care for such reforms.

The only peaceful way where anyone would have the incentive or power to do this would be perhaps a nationalistic army chief that's visionary. But the PPPs and PMLNs certainly dont.
 
Why would a feudal government have an incentive to implement any of these reforms?

Once you understand that these political faces are merely feudals in their medieval kingdom of subjects, you'll understand why none of them care for such reforms.

The only peaceful way where anyone would have the incentive or power to do this would be perhaps a nationalistic army chief that's visionary. But the PPPs and PMLNs certainly dont.
Perhaps not the party officials, but the electables and the apolitical oligarchy. Those that collaborated with these parties, to be allowed to do business.

Growth for them and the nation is in exports. A functional government that facilities their export earning business will make them an order of magnitude richer in a generation, maybe sooner.
 

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