Re: Terroristan - November 11, 2019
Posted: 18 Nov 2019 02:02
Watch for “hamza” pics releasing soon.
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
https://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/
https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-day-i- ... 1467385905sudarshan wrote:Apparently Atish Taseer, when he got his GC, wrote some article bidding India "goodbye and good riddance?" Is this true, and if so, does anybody have a link? Just for my private collection, it's my hobby . I'm willing to pay up to one thousand thanks for this.
Thank you saar. Tausend Dank (thousand thanks). Is there a way for me to access the full article without a subscription? I googled, and I can't find the article anywhere else. There were some suggestions online on how to access the article, but none worked for me.A_Gupta wrote:https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-day-i- ... 1467385905sudarshan wrote:Apparently Atish Taseer, when he got his GC, wrote some article bidding India "goodbye and good riddance?" Is this true, and if so, does anybody have a link? Just for my private collection, it's my hobby . I'm willing to pay up to one thousand thanks for this.
Send me your dm.sudarshan wrote:Thank you saar. Tausend Dank (thousand thanks). Is there a way for me to access the full article without a subscription? I googled, and I can't find the article anywhere else. There were some suggestions online on how to access the article, but none worked for me.A_Gupta wrote: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-day-i- ... 1467385905
Guptaji,A_Gupta wrote:https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-day-i- ... 1467385905sudarshan wrote:Apparently Atish Taseer, when he got his GC, wrote some article bidding India "goodbye and good riddance?" Is this true, and if so, does anybody have a link? Just for my private collection, it's my hobby . I'm willing to pay up to one thousand thanks for this.
I don’t have access either, so I can’t help, sorry!g.sarkar wrote:Guptaji,A_Gupta wrote: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-day-i- ... 1467385905
Could you post the important/relevant parts of this article. In the past I was able to read WSJ without paying, now I find that I am unable to. Your help is much appreciated. Thanks.
Gautam
g.sarkar wrote: Guptaji,
Could you post the important/relevant parts of this article. In the past I was able to read WSJ without paying, now I find that I am unable to. Your help is much appreciated. Thanks.
Gautam
“Welcome home, sir,” the immigration officer said when I presented him with my green card at John F. Kennedy Airport in May. Three very sweet words, and they made me smile: As a South Asian male, with a Muslim name, I had hardly ever before entered the U.S. without being carted off to secondary screening. Now, married to an American, I was entering for the first time as a permanent resident.
And already I could feel the warmth of the American welcome. Here, at last, was a country where a document meant something! I was overcome by what must be one of the most unfashionable emotions of our time: boundless, unqualified love for America.
In India, where I grew up and where my mother lives, university students had been dragged off to jail on charges of sedition for attending a protest at which anti-India slogans were shouted. As for Pakistan, a crowd in the tens of thousands had just poured into the streets to bid farewell to the man executed the week before for assassinating my father in 2011. My father, then serving as the governor of the province of Punjab, had provoked the ire of fundamentalists by defending a Christian woman accused of blasphemy.
India was more complicated, but there too, inclusion in society depended on a set of categories that ran far deeper than citizenship. It was, as the writer Siddharth Deb calls it, a “high-context culture.” From the moment you arrived—sometimes from your name alone, which often revealed caste, religion and region—the immigration officer was busy making judgments about who you were that mattered infinitely more than what document you presented, in my case a Person of Indian Origin card.
“Aatish Ali?” one said to me just a few months ago as I arrived in New Delhi. “Quite a name you’ve got there.” The subtext was: You’re not part of the Hindu majority, so not part of the deeper organization of caste. The fact that I spoke English would have given him an intimation of class, and by the time he waved me through with a sneering, “Well, go on then, Aatish Ali!” he would have computed a whole range of information and bestowed upon me an identity from which there was no rescue. It was oppressive.
Vikas JiVikas wrote:Aatish Ali Taseer is a bloody liar. Never ever have I seen rude immigration officers and I have consumed more than 2 passports because of all the stampings. They may ask questions but that is their job.
So immigration officer in USA warmly 'welcomes him home' while Officer in India is making snide remarks and judges his caste. Idiot doesn't realize that every Tom, Dick and harry who is a PIO and is coming from abroad speaks English and Immigration officers could not care less.
There is no way on earth that any Indian would figure out caste or region of a person just by name. Religion yes but other markers No. You can guess caste if they belong to your sub group but beyond that Impossible.
Good riddance this Paki, Black list him for next 15 years.
Yes but he didn't offer tea and biscuits so how'd he know? Where is proof.And already I could feel the warmth of the American welcome
It is always fault of hindoo, even after nothing happened. More like dimran Khan at UNGA talking gibberish from podium.he would have computed a whole range of information and bestowed upon me an identity from which there was no rescue
Tausend Dank (thousand thanks) to you too.Chinmay wrote:g.sarkar wrote: Guptaji,
Could you post the important/relevant parts of this article. In the past I was able to read WSJ without paying, now I find that I am unable to. Your help is much appreciated. Thanks.
Gautam
Here you go
...
Thanks from my side too. The whole write up was just a gobbledygook of imaginary situations meant for goras who already have a negative opinion of India. Good riddance. But I do wish the name OCI is changed into something that reflects what it is, a permanent visa given to people of Indian descent and not a second citizenship. India did not take away his citizenship, just his visa for misrepresentation of facts.sudarshan wrote:Tausend Dank (thousand thanks) to you too.Chinmay wrote:
Here you go
...
Pakistan is the first country in the world to introduce World Health Organisation-recommended typhoid conjugate vaccine (TCV) in its national immunisation program.
In this big move, an India-made vaccine Typbar TCV, will play a significant role. About 1.2 crore doses of the vaccine have been supplied by Hyderabad-based Bharat Biotech for this initiative.
According to international reports, Pakistan is launching the project in Sindh province, which is the centre of an ongoing extensively drug-resistant (XDR) typhoid outbreak that began in November 2016.
“In February 2019, the Pakistan government approached the Indian vaccine manufacturer through the GAVI Alliance to supply TCV,” Azra Pechuho, Health Minister of Sindh, told journalists, according to a report in The News, Pakistan.
She maintained that the Indian manufacturer had assured it would supply the vaccine in batches but the full consignment would be received in October 2019.
In the same month, the CMD of Bharat Biotech, Krishna Ella, had told media that the company had received a request from Aga Khan University, Karachi, to immediately despatch the vaccine. The company will also ship two lakh doses to Pakistan, he had said.
In late 2018 too, the company had donated one lakh doses of the vaccine to Pakistan, according to media reports.
Even in his articles, this leech could not call himself Indian and yet craves for OCI and mommy does the rudali act. Why not eff off and get citizenship of his daddy's country. They do allow dual citizenship and multiple wives....
As a South Asian male.....< Khatna>
Here I was entering a alien country and I was overwhelmed with unqualified love and the country that I was raised in by my grand parents, Good riddance.I was overcome by what must be one of the most unfashionable emotions of our time: boundless, unqualified love for America.
Tomato prices are skyrocketing in Pakistan. The prices have touched Rs 300 mark per kg tomato. While most of Pakistan is struggling to buy tomatoes, some who are buying it are keeping it nothing less than gold. A Pakistani bride found a great way to make tomatoes a show off items at her wedding. This bride chose to wear tomato jewelry instead of wearing traditional gold ornaments. Video clip of a Pakistani journalist in conversation with the bride has surfaced on social media wherein the bride is proudly announcing that her family gave her 3 boxes of Tomatoes. She is also seen showing off a costly dry fruit gifted to her by her family. She goes on to say that a father who has given his daughter and tomatoes to the groom has given everything.
Bhat eej EnnArrOh, bliss?given his sister Aleema Khan an NRO.
The only thing stupider than a Paki apparently is TOIlet. That was a parody video made by Pakis to mock Dimran and TOIlet is peddling that as serious news.Ashokk wrote:Why tomatoes are the new show off items at weddings
Tomato prices are skyrocketing in Pakistan. The prices have touched Rs 300 mark per kg tomato. While most of Pakistan is struggling to buy tomatoes, some who are buying it are keeping it nothing less than gold. A Pakistani bride found a great way to make tomatoes a show off items at her wedding. This bride chose to wear tomato jewelry instead of wearing traditional gold ornaments. Video clip of a Pakistani journalist in conversation with the bride has surfaced on social media wherein the bride is proudly announcing that her family gave her 3 boxes of Tomatoes. She is also seen showing off a costly dry fruit gifted to her by her family. She goes on to say that a father who has given his daughter and tomatoes to the groom has given everything.
Paki version of a plea bargain, usually resulting in exile for a period.UlanBatori wrote:Bhat eej EnnArrOh, bliss?given his sister Aleema Khan an NRO.
It was an amnesty scheme to allow all the NaPak faujis, civil servants, and some chosen politicians such as Yousuf Raza Geelani, Zardari (10%) and the likes to have cases dropped against them to pave way for reconciliation between the Fauj (Musharraf) and establishment. It was thrown out of the door by the their Chief Justice, which eventually led to his sacking, and consequential downfall of Mush.Bart S wrote:Paki version of a plea bargain, usually resulting in exile for a period.UlanBatori wrote: Bhat eej EnnArrOh, bliss?
So the number that Mullah Diesel cited was his conservative under estimate of Dimraj Mian's/BBDimran's loot? What was the sewing machine reference?The National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO; Urdu: قومی مفاہمت فرمان 2007ء) was a controversial ordinance issued by the former President of Pakistan, General Pervez Musharraf, on 5 October 2007.[1] It granted amnesty to politicians, political workers and bureaucrats who were accused of corruption, embezzlement, money laundering, murder, and between 1 January 1986, and 12 October 1999, the time between two states of martial law in Pakistan. It was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of Pakistan on 16 December 2009, throwing the country into a political crisis.
ISLAMABAD, Nov. 19 (Xinhua) -- The expressway section of the Karakorum Highway (KKH) project phase two was inaugurated in Havelian in northwestern Pakistan on Monday, marking another step forward to complete the early harvest project under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).
Addressing the inauguration ceremony, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan said the expressway is a part of CPEC, which is not a name of a road but a way of Pakistan's development and will play an important role in his country's rise and development.
The prime minister said that under CPEC, Pakistan will get assistance from China in technical education, agricultural technologies and development of Gwadar port and all of these will contribute to the country's economic growth.
The inaugurated expressway section from Havelian to Mansehra, is 40 km with four lanes. The rest 80-km secondary roads under the KKH phase two project is expected to be completed in February 2020.
Mullah wants industry khullam khulla.What was the sewing machine reference?
Emerging team used to be a step below India-A but a step above Under-19. Lot of current players were part of Emerging team. They used to play against Australia and SA but this is the first time I heard of this tournament. Maybe this is the first addition.saip wrote:India's emerging team is playing Paki emerging team in Dhaka. Never heard of that tournament.
cricinfo.com
Vikas wrote: ...
As a South Asian male.....< Khatna>
Vikas Ji :Even in his articles, this leech could not call himself Indian and yet craves for OCI and mommy does the rudali act. Why not eff off and get citizenship of his daddy's country. They do allow dual citizenship and multiple wives.
Kureel is an IndianUlanBatori wrote:Brave cartoonist & editors/publishers!Guddu wrote:
Classic.