Don't assume things about me first of all, thanks. I am far younger than you clearly and have only recently understood how things work. Before that yes, I supported PTI wholeheartedly and still do (as long as they remain pro civil-supremacy). If Imran ever cuts a deal I'm out.
So thanks for writing those long paragraphs criticising PTI but I don't really care. Thank you however for admitting that this army sucks.
Also, once again it really does not matter how those 180 seats came, because they came with OUR votes. I saw so many people vote for PTI not because they gave a shit about Imran Khan but out of pure spite for how 'in-your-face' the army was about rigging the election. Have you forgotten the election symbol nonsense?
What pettiness. I can only expect it from small hearted people who graduate from that bloody colonial remnant college in Kakul.
Yes, PTI got votes.
Nobody is denying that.
People were angry about the bat symbol mess and angry at how openly the system was trying to screw PTI. That clearly pushed more people toward them.
But that still does not prove what you think it proves!
A lot of people voting for PTI does not magically erase PTI’s own history with the same establishment. It just proves PTI became the main outlet for anti-establishment anger.
That is the part you keep skipping.
You are treating public support as if it wipes the slate clean. It does not. A party
can get real votes and still be fairly criticized for how it behaved when the same power structure was helping it.
So yes, people voted for PTI.
Yes, many did it out of spite.
Yes, the symbol issue mattered.
But none of that means PTI is automatically consistent, principled, or above criticism.
That is why “180 seats came with our votes” is not some final answer. It answers whether PTI had support. It does not answer the hypocrisy point.
The hypocrisy aspect is when the establishment hurts PTI, suddenly it is all about civilian supremacy, democracy, and stolen rights.
When the establishment was helping PTI, that moral language was a lot quieter.
That is the issue. Not whether PTI had voters. They obviously did.
The military does not rule in a vacuum just because of some leftover colonial arrogance. They hold power because civilian politicians constantly invite them into the political space to crush their rivals. Every single time a politician runs to Rawalpindi to get an advantage, or acts as a political front for the establishment, they are the ones enabling the system. Calling the army a “colonial cult” is just a convenient trick to let civilian politicians off the hook. It allows leaders to play the innocent victim when the tiger they spent years feeding finally turns around and bites them.
You said you are younger, you recently figured out how things work, and you will drop PTI if Imran Khan ever cuts a deal.
Fair enough. I respect that. That is a principled stance.
But if you genuinely care about civil supremacy more than a personality, you have to drop the “colonial” excuse. It is a crutch. You can keep blaming the ghosts of 1971 or the British Raj if it makes you feel better, but doing so just gives a free pass to the politicians who actively enable the military today.
If you want to prove your generation is actually going to fix this, then you have to accept that the military’s power comes from civilian complicity. You have to demand that your own side takes responsibility for empowering them in the first place. You can either hold onto the comforting anti-colonial slogans, or you can face the ugly reality of how power is actually traded in Pakistan. Your call.