You really should stop pretending that it is others who hate, not you. Also, don't endorse players who you want to succeed. They will prove you wrong the next day. I have nothing but sympathy for Imam, he is a young and talented player who cannot be blamed for having a famous and influential uncle. But he can be held responsible for his own performances with the bat. And so far it is a bit of a mixed bag. Lots of players have good basics but never make it and it is not incidental that the players you hate the most, such as Younis Khan, precisely defied this neat formula you continue to invest in. Nor that it never mattered how well Younis performed, he would always occupy the place of some strange kind of betrayal in your narratives, his very success evidence of that things don't quite work the way you think they should work.
The biggest problem that people have with Imam (including you) is his surname. He is not a world beater and hardly anyone from Pakistan is, but he has performed at a reasonable level so far and has shown enough composure to suggest that he can play for Pakistan for a considerable period of time. If his surname was not ''ul-Haq", people would be cutting him a lot more slack and would be singing songs of how he kept his head amid all the chaos in the Asia Cup for example.
He has his limitations, but he has a good head on his shoulders and has been pretty prolific with his run scoring. Yes he has done his fair share of minnow bashing, but that has not prevented you from glorifying Faheem's ODI bowling average for instance, an average that paints an ugly picture if you take out Hong Kong and Zimbabwe.
Most of the criticism that Imam is copping is more due to the perceived nepotism behind his selection rather than his actual performance. For a young Pakistani batsman, he has not been bad at all. Considering all things, I would give his career a solid 7/10 so far. The players that he may have side-stepped due to Inzamam's influence can replace other players in the team.
Younis Khan's example is irrelevant here because the ratio of successful orthodox batsmen is higher than the ratio of successful unorthodox batsmen. Majority of the quality batsmen will always have good basics - the likes of Younis, Smith, Chanderpaul etc. are exceptions and you get maximum 2-3 every generation, i.e. batsmen with iffy techniques making things work.
Imam is certainly not in the league of Younis, but he has done enough to not be dropped for a while I think. People need to get off his back and let him play. It is not his fault that he is Inzamam's nephew, and nepotism did not help him from being the only batsman in the team (along with Malik) to not embarrass himself in the Asia Cup or the Ireland Test which we may as well have lost without his composed innings.