Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Oct 4 2012
Posted: 26 Oct 2012 18:20
the dossier always travels from east-west .. it is a one-way traffic.
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
https://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/
Its to please US and claim to be a normal country. What is the use of banning an org when the same people who run it have a name change and operate openly?Anujan wrote:pakis have released a list of banned organizations.
http://tribune.com.pk/story/456294/list ... -pakistan/
Surprised that LeT is in there. It has never been formally banned.
Get ready for the first suicide explosion in space, taking down a couple of Jewish satellites with it.Brad Goodman wrote:Pakistan's first astronaut wants to make peace in space
Well mam space is peaceful because till now your brothers and sisters havent figured out how to reach there and do a dawah. Hopefully it stays the same
Realism will force him as he needs to concentrate on domestic priorties so has to pay baksheesh to TSP and force India to kowtow.KJoishy wrote:Romney is pro Pakistan just like Bush.
I bet if he becomes POTUS, he will resume paying them billions of our tax money.
KJoishy wrote:Romney is pro Pakistan just like Bush.
I bet if he becomes POTUS, he will resume paying them billions of our tax money.
First astronaut indeed!!Brad Goodman wrote:Pakistan's first astronaut wants to make peace in space
Well mam space is peaceful because till now your brothers and sisters havent figured out how to reach there and do a dawah. Hopefully it stays the same
Chasing your dreams doesn’t always come cheap, Salim paid $200,000 to sign up with Virgin Galactic in 2007, funded with support from her family, who run a heavy construction equipment firm in the UAE. The weightless component of the flight will last for only a few minutes.
Why do I see this for the link above?Brad Goodman wrote:Pakistan's first astronaut wants to make peace in space
Well mam space is peaceful because till now your brothers and sisters havent figured out how to reach there and do a dawah. Hopefully it stays the same
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What is so great about buying a trip to space? it need not be in one's DNA, you just need money. BTW, She also has jehadi DNA, she forgot to mention.As a child I always believed I would go to space. It’s not that I read about it one fine day and thought of signing up. I’ve always said this was in my DNA,she told AFP by Skype from Dubai.
KLJoishyji, wouldn't 'Amit Ramani' be more appropriate?KJoishy wrote: Hoping for Ombaba to come back. Amit Ramanna (sorry ramana ji) will be bad for India and the US.
Just how does one go about 'making' peace in space or will she be thinking of 'blowing to pieces' or 'making love' or 'blowing love' or ....???Jaspreet wrote:Kenop,
‘First’ Pakistani astronaut wants to make peace in space
Afghanistan’s contention is that the Durand Line Agreement – signed by the erstwhile governments of Afghanistan and India (under the British) to demarcate their respective territories – was valid only for 100 years and the land that had been made part of the British holdings should return to the Afghans.
Among the Pashtoons in Pakistan also, there is a section which advocates this position; primarily because of ethnic loyalties and the general demand for a Pashtoonistan. Pakistan rejects the 100-year time-frame of the agreement and maintains that binding bilateral agreements are passed on to successor states; making the Durand Line the official Pakistan-Afghanistan border. In fact, Pakistan is prickly about the border with Afghanistan being called the Durand Line.
Nandu wrote:twitter rumour. Immy has been offloaded from a plane in Toronto to be questioned about his views on and ties to the Taliban.
PTI Chief Imran Khan off-loaded from U.S. flight in Canadapartha wrote:Nandu wrote:twitter rumour. Immy has been offloaded from a plane in Toronto to be questioned about his views on and ties to the Taliban.
habal wrote:the dossier always travels from east-west .. it is a one-way traffic.
Nandu wrote:twitter rumour. Immy has been offloaded from a plane in Toronto to be questioned about his views on and ties to the Taliban.
Something is cooking on the Durand lineAjay Sharma wrote:http://www.thehindu.com/news/internatio ... 031545.ece
Afghanistan’s contention is that the Durand Line Agreement – signed by the erstwhile governments of Afghanistan and India (under the British) to demarcate their respective territories – was valid only for 100 years and the land that had been made part of the British holdings should return to the Afghans.
Among the Pashtoons in Pakistan also, there is a section which advocates this position; primarily because of ethnic loyalties and the general demand for a Pashtoonistan. Pakistan rejects the 100-year time-frame of the agreement and maintains that binding bilateral agreements are passed on to successor states; making the Durand Line the official Pakistan-Afghanistan border. In fact, Pakistan is prickly about the border with Afghanistan being called the Durand Line.![]()
Lazy Chillumudins and FakkardeensThe republic founded by Jinnah and conceded in all good grace by the British is dead. Let’s not be coy about this fundamental circumstance. Without the British there would be no Pakistan. The Raj did not greatly trouble the Muslims of India. The prospect of living under a Hindu majority did.Our forefathers fought not for liberation from foreign rule. Sir Syed Ahmed Khan at least was in no doubt about the benefits of British rule: “...for the peace of India and for the progress of everything in India the English Government should remain for many years – in fact for ever!” (This speech in Meerut, March 1988, makes for interesting if not extraordinary reading.) No, our forefathers struggled for safeguards to protect their separate status. And the British, not averse to playing the higher game of divide and rule, as any imperial conqueror would have done, gave them those safeguards.Fear about the future, which for the leaders of the Muslim community became a consuming insecurity, led over time to the demand for a state on the grounds of separatism: that we were a separate nation distinct from the Hindu majority, with our own culture and way of life. This was the two-nation theory and, try as we may to give it a modern interpretation, its foundation was religion. Not theocracy, far from it, but on nationhood defined in religious terms. There is no getting away from this.And since our foundational principles were cast in these terms is it any wonder that the divines and mullahs who had opposed Jinnah and the Muslim League abandoned their old positions once Pakistan was created and went about appropriating the ideology of the new state to use it for their own ends and impose their own brand of philosophy on it?Yes, Jinnah outlined an altogether different vision in his address to the Constituent Assembly on August 11, 1947: you are free to go to your temples, free to go to your mosques, this has nothing to do with the business of the state. There could be no clearer exposition of a secular polity. How desperately some of us clutch at the straw provided by this speech?
Tailpiece: By the way, a nation which must have five to six holidays every Eid is in no mental condition for any kind of struggle. So I agree with those who say no unnecessary risks and that discretion is the better part of valour
AnujanAnujan wrote:pakis have released a list of banned organizations.
http://tribune.com.pk/story/456294/list ... -pakistan/
Surprised that LeT is in there. It has never been formally banned.
Actually, it appears that it was $$ that Im the Dim had collected in Toronto, that he did not declare while crossing over into US. You're legally supposed to declare cash at hand beyond a certain threshold.Anujan wrote:He went to US for fundraising. There was a 5000$ per plate dinner for him. He must have forgotten to declare what is rightfully his.
Didn't he want suspension of US aid?
The people who stopped him from going to FATA believe that FATA is their land and they have drawn a border between Pakistan and FATA. These people do not recognize the Durand line, but they recognize a border between FATA and Pakjab.Anujan wrote:Even with the security check, it is easier for him to travel to Canada and US than to FATA. That is something to think about.
When he was stopped from going to FATA why wasn't there same outrage?
Minor correction here. FATA doesn't share a border with Pakjab. The Pashtuns and Taliban want all the land right upto the Indus river which ranges from 20 to 140 kms beyond the FATA region.shiv wrote: The people who stopped him from going to FATA believe that FATA is their land and they have drawn a border between Pakistan and FATA. These people do not recognize the Durand line, but they recognize a border between FATA and Pakjab.
...
Border 2 is the Taliban/Pashtun border which rejects the Durand line and restricts Pakistan to Pakjab and Sindh the Taliban seek to control Kabul as well as FATA across the Durand line.
Thanks. My fault for not looking at a map before I typed. I am not sure exactly what the Taliban want but I think they certainly want to dissolve the Durand line. Not really sure about their ambition to the east, although I have heard, from time to time, the assertion that they want to control all of Pakistan. But I have also heard the slightly different take that they do not consider themselves Pakistani, or Punjabi.Rohit_K wrote:Minor correction here. FATA doesn't share a border with Pakjab. The Pashtuns and Taliban want all the land right upto the Indus river which ranges from 20 to 140 kms beyond the FATA region.shiv wrote: The people who stopped him from going to FATA believe that FATA is their land and they have drawn a border between Pakistan and FATA. These people do not recognize the Durand line, but they recognize a border between FATA and Pakjab.
...
Border 2 is the Taliban/Pashtun border which rejects the Durand line and restricts Pakistan to Pakjab and Sindh the Taliban seek to control Kabul as well as FATA across the Durand line.
Excellent !mraghu wrote:Drones Strike zones : http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_ ... rikes.html
He can't deny that he didn't know about that rule being the seasoned traveller that he is, as similar rules are in place in nearly every country in the world. I bet that silly idiot was probably planning to pinch some of it for his personal use and declaring the amount at the airport would have let other people know how much was originally donated.Rangudu wrote:Actually, it appears that it was $$ that Im the Dim had collected in Toronto, that he did not declare while crossing over into US. You're legally supposed to declare cash at hand beyond a certain threshold.Anujan wrote:He went to US for fundraising. There was a 5000$ per plate dinner for him. He must have forgotten to declare what is rightfully his.
Didn't he want suspension of US aid?