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The Importance Of Being Mr. Jinnah

Go F off! Jinnah had nothing to do with your laundry list. You want to slave of the RSS Indians please be my guest. Most probably you are an Indian.

Jinnah incubated the Bangladeshi identity. If wasn't for him and Pakistan, Bangladesh would be an oppressed part of India right now.

It's not his fault the retarded generals and politicians are clueless.
 
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Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah poses with Tribal Maliks in Landi Kottal, NWFP (KPK)...
Year: April 1945
Courtesy: Dawn - White Star.

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I think Jinnah was a very smart guy, but his theory got proven wrong when 1971 happened.
Why do you pigeonhole his theory only to South Asia and beat it with 1971? Expand your horizon and see that he constructed the theory of Muslims as a separate nation and Civilization. That is a richer sociology than India-Pakistan partition.
 
1. Proven wrong when Bangladesh was made.

2. Sells out its own citizens for dollars and drones, contradicting the "Muslim homeland where Muslims are safe" trope.

3. Country died in 1971, so its ideology is a lab accident between Bhutto and Zia.

4. Ibn Saud united the Arabs of Saudi Arabia, if he wanted to go back to the past he would've kept the region divided and promoted tribalism. He united all Arab tribes.

5. Pakistani ideology promotes the shedding of native cultures and languages. This is why Pakistani schools give fines to children who speak their native tongue instead of Urdu.

6. Temporary struggles with troubles in certain areas lasting for 70+ years.

7. India with all of its faults utilizes its young talent. There's no Zardaris and Ishaq Dars in India lmao.

2022 taught me in the end you should only care about your own people and group, useless to extend olive branches and care about others.
1. Bangladesh was a political blunder, nothing more.

2. Sounds like you're sympathising with terrorists + Pakistan is not in the leagues to go to war with the US, otherwise you'd become refugees next door and have something else to complain about.

3. Highly opinonated.

4. Okay

5. Not at all, that's impossible. Perhaps you should take a walk around Pakistan where people identify by their ethnicity, and are commonly bilingual/trilingual. You can hear people speak many languages in the same area sometimes. It's a multicultural country. You are born and raised in America, no? How many cultures and languages are you well versed in?

6. Many nations experience such things, just like Afghanistan who experienced much worse and even India, etc. In Pakistan's case it can largely be attributed to the backwardsness and uncivilised nature of certain groups.

7. Okay, irrelavant, yes it has a lot of faults that need immediate attention.

I hope 2023 teaches you not to sit in America while spewing rhetoric that many people have fought their entire lives for, and then themselves admitted it was a useless battle and regretted it.

Otherwise at least have the balls then to come down to Pakistan and fight alongside those people you are indirectly encouraging to engage in questionable acts.

Why do you pigeonhole his theory only to South Asia and beat it with 1971? Expand your horizon and see that he constructed the theory of Muslims as a separate nation and Civilization. That is a richer sociology than India-Pakistan partition.
Exactly, it can be applied to many regions across the planet. It's about lifestyle, laws, how you want to shape your society and social culture.

There would be a stark difference between Muslims and the non-Muslims, especially if those non-muslims are atheists or Hindus.
 
1. Bangladesh was a political blunder, nothing more.

2. Sounds like you're sympathising with terrorists + Pakistan is not in the leagues to go to war with the US, otherwise you'd become refugees next door and have something else to complain about.

3. Highly opinonated.

4. Okay

5. Not at all, that's impossible. Perhaps you should take a walk around Pakistan where people identify by their ethnicity, and are commonly bilingual/trilingual. You can hear people speak many languages in the same area sometimes. It's a multicultural country. You are born and raised in America, no? How many cultures and languages are you well versed in?

6. Many nations experience such things, just like Afghanistan who experienced much worse and even India, etc. In Pakistan's case it can largely be attributed to the backwardsness and uncivilised nature of certain groups.

7. Okay, irrelavant, yes it has a lot of faults that need immediate attention.

I hope 2023 teaches you not to sit in America while spewing rhetoric that many people have fought their entire lives for, and then themselves admitted it was a useless battle and regretted it.

Otherwise at least have the balls then to come down to Pakistan and fight alongside those people you are indirectly encouraging to engage in questionable acts.

1. Bangladesh was a foreshadow into today.

2. Yes, yesterday's freedom fighters are now today's terrorists. Helping them go to war with the Soviets then acting surprised when they turn on you.

3. New constitution was written in the 70s.

4. //

5. Pakistani schools issue fines to kids for speaking their language.

Evidence here:

6. Who installed Akbar Bugti in the 70's? Who helps PPP stay in power?

7. //

Idgaf you guys beg us for help too bad to the point remittances were greater than the exports LMFAO. More people especially investors are taking their money out.

Real questionable acts are assassinating Arshad Sharif and blacking out media whenever Imran Khan gave a speech or when protests in Gwadar happened. Authoritarian mindset is going to lead the country to a default. Yay!
 
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296946745_5317789254968151_4253914442997336442_n.jpg


Qauid e Azam M A Jinnah's Peshawar visit in Apr 1948.

Meeting officers of Royal 6/13th FFR (59 Scinde/ 1 FF) Murtaza Jan is 1st from Left (Third officer from left is Mian Taskeen ud Din sb. CO Bakhtiar Rana and Lt Gen Nazir can be seen with Qauid. In the foreground is JInnah's ADC)

Courtesy : Ali Jan
 
We needed him to stay alive for slightly longer to properly shape the power structures and the foundation well.

We haven't had a truly intelligent and visionary leader with a long-term plan ever since he was around.

Imran Khan is the closest we got, but the khakis and the Number 1 agency in the world tried to have him killed in broad daylight, after they ousted him following their imperial masters orders, and replacing him with their PDM mafia thugs.

We also had Jinnah's sister, but we saw how that turned out.. the 'great' self appointed Field marshal rigged the elections and ran a demeaning campaign against her calling her a female dog openly.. yet she was one of the co founders of Pakistan, unlike the Mir Jaffar generals who continued to rape Pakistan, even after disremembering the federation in 1971, they still not done raping her.. sick b4stards the lot of them.
 
Imran Khan is the closest we got, but the khakis and the Number 1 agency in the world tried to have him killed in broad daylight, after they ousted him following their imperial masters orders, and replacing him with their PDM mafia thugs.

We also had Jinnah's sister, but we saw how that turned out.. the 'great' self appointed Field marshal rigged the elections and ran a demeaning campaign against her calling her a female dog openly.. yet she was one of the co founders of Pakistan, unlike the Mir Jaffar generals who continued to rape Pakistan, even after disremembering the federation in 1971, they still not done raping her.. sick b4stards the lot of them.
Imran Khan is the only honest and truthful person we have with no vested interests, but unfortunately I wouldn't put his intellect at revolutionary level.

He can't do that type of stuff, his foreign policy and security policy is evident of this.

For IK to be effective he needs a strong team surrounding him.
 
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Commemorating the founder of the nation, notable leader and Pakistan’s 1st Governor General, Mohammad Ali Jinnah on his 140th Birth Anniversary. He was born on December 25, 1876 and died on September 11, 1948.

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Jinnah addresses the Muslim League session at Patna, 1938:​



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Jinnah (front, left) with the Working Committee of the Muslim League after a meeting in Lucknow, October 1937:​



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Jinnah and Gandhi arguing in 1939:​



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The leaders of the Muslim League, 1940. Jinnah is seated at centre:​

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Jinnah makes a speech in New Delhi, 1943:​



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