raamu kaka
Tape Ball Star
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2012
- Runs
- 792
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^^ these are TV ads or Youtube vids?
We are missing a trick here... Need to go for attack ads and expose PMLN's pathetic performance... I am sending out an e-mail to asad Umar soon to consider those things for Media Blitz!!
^^
Keep the advice coming... I think they need some blows to soften them up and then go for how we can fix this
Attack ads are good to show public their real face.
We are missing a trick here... Need to go for attack ads and expose PMLN's pathetic performance... I am sending out an e-mail to asad Umar soon to consider those things for Media Blitz!!
ads sir. we get to see 'em every evening from 7-12 on all tv channels![]()
"meanwhile some pathans decided to start taking pictures" could've been "some people decided to start taking pictures.
We are missing a trick here... Need to go for attack ads and expose PMLN's pathetic performance... I am sending out an e-mail to asad Umar soon to consider those things for Media Blitz!!
Hajjan's show from NA 56..
PTI leading and we have yet to unleash TRs
<iframe width="600" height="350" src="http://tune.pk/player/embed_player.php?vid=63145&folder=2013/04/12/&width=600&height=350&autoplay=no" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen scrolling="no"></iframe>
Klasra has been in great form. He was ripping into PPP. Now he is tearing apart PMLN:
![]()
Rauf Klasra is in very fine form these days, he is openly asking people to vote for Imran Khan which is a big change. Just a year ago he said he would vote for PPP because they they support South Punjab province.
There should be a poll in this thread.
PML (N)s campaign song sounds a lot better than PTI's. Also sung by Rahat Fateh Ali Khan.
PML (N)s ads and the campaign song video look very professional at least. PTI's feels like stuff thrown together at the last minute to get it out the door and get it aired.
Ummm No... Otherwise PML-N would not be copying off of every PTI campaign
PML (N)s campaign song sounds a lot better than PTI's. Also sung by Rahat Fateh Ali Khan.
PML (N)s ads and the campaign song video look very professional at least. PTI's feels like stuff thrown together at the last minute to get it out the door and get it aired.
The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) informed a full bench of the Lahore High Court on Friday that no commercial bank, except one, had shared accounts detail of their customers with it.
FBR Intelligence and Investigation Inland Revenue Director Muhammad Tanvir Akhtar stated before the bench hearing several petitions seeking implementation of Articles 62 and 63 of the Constitution in the election process that the FBR had no access to information of the account holders as individual but the banks provided the board consolidated statements about them.
The Zarai Taragiati Bank Limited is the only banl( that has given the FBR access of its accounts. He said only the State Bank had the access to these accounts.
Justice Ijazul Ahsan heads the bench along with Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah and Justice Syed Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi.
Mr Akhtar said that the FBR provided the record of 24,266 candidates to the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP). The record contained NTN (national taxnumber), income of three years, and tax return. He said that 10,794 candidates did not possess NTN as per their nomination papers. He said the FBR could not find record of any person without an NTN.
The bench directed the FBR to provide the ECP, within three weeks, complete record of tax default of all candidates and also publish the same on website. The bench directed the board to provide record of those candidates by April 17 about who appeals were being heard by election tribunals.
The bench also directed the ECP to get the record from departments concerned about the candidates defaulted on utility bills and submit the same before the court on Monday (April 15). On the request of ECP`s representative, the bench issued notices to SNGPL, Wapda, power distribution companies, PTCL, NTC and Wasa directing them to submit record of their defaulters.
Earlier, senior joint director of State Bank Ali Jafar told the bench that names of all candidates, whose names appeared on the list of defaulters maintained by the Credit Information Bureau, had also been provided to the ECP and was available on its website. Such information also included information relating to written off loans, he said, and added that over 500 cases of candidates/members of their families had beenfound to be defaulters.
Syed Faisal Raza Bokhari, NAB counsel, said that information regarding 23,599 candidates had been provided to the ECP. The bench noted that there appeared to be a difference in the total number of cases sent by the ECP (24,094) and the number mentioned by NAB. The bench asked the counsel to clarify the differential as to why information regarding the rest of the candidates had not been furnished.
During the hearing, Justice Ahsan remarl(ed that the judiciary fully supported the democratic process and efforts of the ECP. He said the election process would not be stopped orinterrupted under any circumstances. Justice Ahsan said the ECP was trying to hold fair, free and transparent elections on time despite time constraints and logistical issues.
The judge dispelled an impression and remarked that there was no question of stopping the election process by the courtfor any reason.
The bench directed the SBP, FBR, NAB and other agencies of the government to support the ECP.
Lahore High Court Bar Association`s President Abid Saqi, additional attorney general Syed Abdul Hayee Gilani and deputy attorney general Nasim Kashmiri, assistant advocate general Shan Gul also made their submissions on the matter. The hearing was adjourned till April 15.
Nawaz Sharif talking about Bullet trains in Pakistan. *facepalm* wow just wow! Railway is incurring losses of RS2.50 billion ($25 Million) every month and they are talking about bullet trains.
really great to see that election fever is slowly but surely building up, whoever wins it is an extremely positive thing for Pakistan.
and Imran is talking about wiping out corruption in 90 days, we should believe that?![]()
really great to see that election fever is slowly but surely building up, whoever wins it is an extremely positive thing for Pakistan.
and Imran is talking about wiping out corruption in 90 days, we should believe that?![]()
PML (N)s campaign song sounds a lot better than PTI's. Also sung by Rahat Fateh Ali Khan.
PML (N)s ads and the campaign song video look very professional at least. PTI's feels like stuff thrown together at the last minute to get it out the door and get it aired.
no point-most ppers live abroad.
i live aborad but am campaiging continously for PTI ,have convinced most of my faimly and friends back home to vote PTI
PTI will win abroad anyways.
really great to see that election fever is slowly but surely building up, whoever wins it is an extremely positive thing for Pakistan.
and Imran is talking about wiping out corruption in 90 days, we should believe that?![]()
THE YOUTH VOTE: MORE HYPE THAN REALITY
THAT well over half the Pakistani population is now under the age of 25 is well known. But while there has been plenty of hype about the so-called youth vote, getting from the demographics to young people’s voting habits and preferences has generally been an exercise in speculation.
Now that voter registration is linked to computerised national identity cards (CNICs), some statistics are available about how the youth bulge has fed into electoral rolls. We know that nearly a fifth of the 85 million Pakistanis registered to vote in the upcoming elections are between 18 and 25 years old, and that another 15pc are between 26 and 30.
What we don’t know is how this compares to previous elections, since no data is available about the age distribution of voters in past polls. So the claim that young people will have an unprecedented effect on this year’s elections has no concrete figures to back it up.
Second, it is unclear how likely young people are to turn out on voting day, particularly since those who reached voting age after the elections were registered automatically once they got CNICs.“
For the first time we are getting bits of data on voters’ age distribution, but they are all pieces of a puzzle that hasn’t been put together,” says Mudassar Rizvi of the Free and Fair Election Network (Fafen). “There hasn’t been academic work on the topic, and we haven’t studied voting behaviour. A lot of the analysis has been based on assumptions.“For one thing, voter turnout in Pakistan in 2008 was 44pc. So all 30m voters under the age of 30 are not going to be casting votes.”Mr Rizvi also questions the assumption that the youth are more likely to vote for the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI), adding that there is no evidence to suggest that young people aren’t just as fragmented in terms of political preferences as the rest of the population is.
But a 4,450-person nationwide survey carried out by Fafen in January does provide some clues about how young voters might behave. Only 48pc of voters aged 18-25 said they intend to vote in the coming elections, far behind other age groups (68pc of the 26-35 age group said they would vote, and the number rises with age to reach 84pc of those above 55).
Another 47pc of those 25 and under simply didn’t answer the question, so the number who actually do turn up to vote could be higher. But what is clear is that the youngest respondents were either less enthusiastic about voting or less clear about whether or not they will vote.
Fafen also asked respondents whether they consider themselves to be associated with any political party in any way, whether as a worker, registered member, office-bearer or simply someone who is “close” to a party. While over half of those aged 55 and above said they were, only 37pc of the youngest voters — a level of political involvement lower than the national average — said the same.
One popular claim does seem to be borne out by the survey results — the youth’s attraction to the PTI. Of those who said they were affiliated with a party, the highest proportion in every age bracket named the PML-N as the party they were associated with. But among those between 18 and 25, 20pc — far higher than in any other age bracket — named the PTI. This number falls off sharply with age; even in the 26-35 bracket, only 12pc named Imran Khan’s party.This may have something to do with the basis on which young people select their party of choice. The numbers show that voters above 25 are more likely to base this decision on a party’s track record of performance in their area — 16pc for this age group versus only 9pc for those 25 and under. Instead, 40pc of the youngest age bracket base their loyalties on a party’s manifesto and another 21pc on the party’s ideology.But Dr Mohammad Waseem, a professor of political science at the Lahore University of Management Sciences, argues that the popular perception about the youth’s preference for the PTI may be overstated because of the visibility of its supporters, the urban youth.“Youth from bigger cities can make their presence felt through social media and cable television,” he explains, “but voting is also territory-bound and constituency-bound, and there are local power structures at play that limit Imran Khan’s penetration in many areas.“Because urban youth are more visible, they have become a platform for the PTI to claim widespread youth support.
”Aside from party preferences, the Fafen survey showed that on several issues young people have opinions very similar to those of older Pakistanis. They are close to the average on questions such as voters’ confidence in Pakistan’s electoral process and whether or not respondents consider past elections in their constituencies to have been free and transparent.
So while the political views and voting behaviours of the country’s youth are widely speculated about, they are not particularly well understood. At the moment there seems to be little hard evidence to suggest that young people will behave significantly differently from, or are more politically conscious than, the rest of Pakistan’s electorate.
http://dawn.com/2013/04/12/the-youth-vote-more-hype-than-reality/
I feel sorry for leaders like IK...who got no grip on reality..
I feel sorry for some Pakistanis who got no grip on reality.
Imran Khan won't be an ultimate loser because he is NOT power hungry and MOST sane people know he is not dying to get into power. He would spend more time with kids and relax a lot more but it's people of Pakistan who would see same madness that we have been witnessing for decades.
It is NOT Imran's test, it's test for people of Pakistan who need to decide if they really want change![]()
i disagree...
ik wants to implement his plans/ideas to Pakistan...and for that he would need to win...
its all open competition to win the votes...
if he is not after power then he should forget about his plans for Pakistan!
Kia baat hai gujranwala walay barbar ke!!!
this Pic is from NA1 Peshawar
![]()
Kia baat hai...meaning wa wa kia kaam kia hai![]()
really great to see that election fever is slowly but surely building up, whoever wins it is an extremely positive thing for Pakistan.
and Imran is talking about wiping out corruption in 90 days, we should believe that?![]()
Pakistan as a whole is divided into ethinic groups.....IK will face a big defeat in Punjab .....Lot of Punjabis I know are still going to vote for Nawz sharif only cuz he belongs to punjab....Likewise Imran is going to win from kpk very easily this time around....But its the province of Punjab that makes the difference cuz of its huge population, but sorry to say the people there are very dumb to say the least.....I mean after seeing the performance of PML N in 5 years who would want to vote for them.......these guys are even more dangerous than zardari group.....
^^
LOL...
Time for some Angrazi...
I meant "Amazing stuff by barber in Gujranwala![]()
In my parents areaof Punjaab, Chakwal district, IK is very strong. I don´t think it will be a "big defeat" to whoever loses in punjab. It will be a nail biter. Touch and go :ramiz
On what basis you say that?
People in all villages usually vote for someone who promise them gas, road, bridge, job, etc etc. In my village youth have passion but some of them can't resist the choice of elders.
Where in Chakwal you belong to?
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^village name?
I'm really not supporting PML-N, but objectively speaking that is a well done ad/song.
sar kalan... (close to buchal kalan/laffi/lilla)...
What you should believe in is listening/reading careful. He said he will end the big corruption at the top level which is destroying the county like Power Plant, railway, etc. Never he said he will end all the corruption in 90 days.