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British are terrible people and they never want to solve their own problems.
This criminal guy has been lived in British for over 50 years and is a British citizen according to their own laws.
Excellent points - that's what it looks like.This issue goes far deeper than just a government failing to solve its own domestic problems. It feels like there is a deep seated hostility within certain British society, institutions and media outlets toward Pakistan. While the historical roots of this prejudice are complex, the legacy of blatant P-a-k-i bashing from earlier decades has clearly laid the groundwork for the current climate.
Right now, it looks like a deliberate attempt to drag Pakistan into a domestic mess and humiliate a nation of 240 million people. The narrative being pushed essentially implies that Pakistan is somehow responsible for producing monsters who enter a supposedly flawless Britain to abuse white British angelic girls. That is the damaging, underlying message they are trying to broadcast to the rest of the world.
The real question we need to ask is: Should Pakistan tolerate being made the scapegoat for a uniquely British systemic failure?
Thus far, the Pakistani government has resisted these narrative traps. However, the sheer aggression of this blame shifting campaign suggests that certain factions in the UK are willing to severely damage diplomatic relations just to deflect accountability.
If you ask me personally, the time has come to review the relationship with Britain in its entirety.
There's no "deep seated hostility". In truth, neither country is that important to the other nowadays except for trade markets. Britain's relevance has waned massively.This issue goes far deeper than just a government failing to solve its own domestic problems. It feels like there is a deep seated hostility within certain British society, institutions and media outlets toward Pakistan. While the historical roots of this prejudice are complex, the legacy of blatant P-a-k-i bashing from earlier decades has clearly laid the groundwork for the current climate.
Right now, it looks like a deliberate attempt to drag Pakistan into a domestic mess and humiliate a nation of 240 million people. The narrative being pushed essentially implies that Pakistan is somehow responsible for producing monsters who enter a supposedly flawless Britain to abuse white British angelic girls. That is the damaging, underlying message they are trying to broadcast to the rest of the world.
The real question we need to ask is: Should Pakistan tolerate being made the scapegoat for a uniquely British systemic failure?
Thus far, the Pakistani government has resisted these narrative traps. However, the sheer aggression of this blame shifting campaign suggests that certain factions in the UK are willing to severely damage diplomatic relations just to deflect accountability.
If you ask me personally, the time has come to review the relationship with Britain in its entirety.
There's no "deep seated hostility". In truth, neither country is that important to the other nowadays except for trade markets. Britain's relevance has waned massively.
What is true though is that Indian-Zio lobbyists and media will amplify this matter and drag English people along as enablers. Make no mistake. This drama is all being promoted by our real enemies.
Good conversation to have in a dedicated thread. Feel free to include me. In summary, I would argue that the British Pakistani community is fully established and has evolved drastically over many decades. Our relationship with "native whites" (for want of a better term), of all classes, is quite different today to how it used to be 3 or 4 decades back.I think we need to have a serious, unfiltered conversation about where the current wave of anti-Pakistani rhetoric in Britain is actually coming from. There is a frequent tendency to blame outside influences attributing this hostility to geopolitical friction driven by Zionist or Indian nationalist elements influencing UK politics. `to a certain degree that might be true.
But let’s be honest, Britain is not a toddler.
While outside political dynamics definitely exist, the homegrown hatred we are witnessing from the far-right in Britain isn’t imported. The history speaks for itself. It wasn't Israel or India that whispered in the ears of British street gangs decades ago to invent slurs or institutionalize targetings. The UK far-right literally invented the concept of "P-bashing" back in the 1970s and 80s entirely on their own turf.
When we look at the modern far-right movement in the UK, we are seeing the continuation of a deeply rooted, organic British xenophobia. Stripping local actors of their agency by pretending they are just being manipulated ignores the very real, historical domestic racism that Pakistani communities have faced for generations.
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