Oh, so you're now more of a Brit and less of a Pakistani?! And Pakistanis are now "they"? This always happens. Here in the US I have noticed that when Pak is winning at the cricket my Pakistani colleagues start tom-toming their Pakistani origins. Rest of the time (e.g., when they're caught with OBL in their backyard), they start referring to Pakistan in third-person. I find it both comical and tragic at the same time. OTOH, I never see the Indian immigrants feeling defensive about their origin. Anyway I digress.
I think it was you that first mentioned winning and losing arguments. There were many relevant points from that post that on which you conveniently failed to reply. An ad-hominem attack is about the surest way to indicate that one is losing an argument.
I was never a Brit or a Pakistani coming into this conversation. I'm a British Pakistani and I never proclaimed I was either or none at the beginning. Yet again your insinuations have got the better of you and now there's confirmation that your previous 'misunderstandings' were quite deliberate. You consider any criticism of India as a pro-Pakistan stance which demonstrates your bipartisan mentality whereas I have tried to maintain impartiality and discussed for purely academic reasons to learn how to end this conflict peacefully.
I joined this forum during the recent CT final and during that time I was questioned by a Scottish colleague on what divides the two countries and not being able to provide a definitive answer I researched the issue which brought me here to discuss some of what I've learnt. I've made it clear when I use 'they', I refer to the people of Pakistan, their government and that other than my genetic and ancestral connection I don't represent Pakistan more than I do Britain.
About your friends in the US, from experience, I'd consider their behaviour to be limited to your social circle and the fact that they've decided to befriend you knowing your disdain for basic human rights. Indians aren't defensive about their origin? Goodness Gracious Me had a sketch solely about Indians for this very reason:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2h-t8vVi0zc.
So no, we don't need to hear from that racist Churchill on what democracy means. For a civilization that's been all about the concept of Vasudaiv Kutumbkam (the whole world is a family) and a nation founded on the bedrock of Swami Vivekanand and Mahatma Gandhi's principles, we feel very comfortable about our value moorings. I have close friends who happen to be Muslims, Sikhs, Christians and nothing has changed between us over the past 25 years. If I were to notice even 1% hint of self-doubt on either side, we'd know that we have failed as a nation. But that's not about to happen.
Churchill may or may not have been racist, but he played a major part in forming what you call India today most probably due to his dislike of the influence of the the Indian Congress. Racist or not, he was a wise old bloke. In fact he pushed for the partitioning of India whilst Clement Attlee's government the final call which was against the latter's previous convictions on the issue. Nonetheless, you still use the word 'democracy' and it's the first I've ever heard of "the whole world is a family" concept. I'd be more inclined to believe you if you'd said "except Pakistan, Kashmir, China and any critic of India's policies". Or maybe you're just used to tumultuous families.
You have an interesting take on the Lahori Hindus. Alas, they didn't feel protected (the way Muslims always felt protected in India) so they chose to leave. Turned out to be quite right as the dwindling Hindu population in Pak shows. OTOH, Muslim population in India has grown at a rate faster than the Hindus have. So QED.
I don't know about what went on in Lahore, but I do know that many spoke of living in peace and harmony with Sikhs and Hindus in general. Post-partition migration didn't necessarily mean driven out due to persecution but about the fear of the unknown with rising religious tensions(two-nation theory) The migration went both ways and it spurred violence in the whole of the region. Indian Muslims like the Kashmiris are beginning to feel uncertain about their future under Modi, hence the constant mentioning of uncertain times ahead,
It's definitely not as simple as people like yourself make it out to be because its independently recognised that evidence is hard to come by due to the exaggerated and unverified accounts similar to the Pandit exodus. Ultimately I want peace and prosperity for all in the region and condemn persecution anywhere whether it comes from minorities or majorities.
And how many times do I need to say that the Kashmiris already have their freedom? Is anyone stopping them from doing whatever they want? Can you point me to a story where India has forcibly asked Kashmiris to stay behind in the hell-hole that is Kashmir today? What more can the Indian govt. do for them? Buy them a business class ticket?
When I left India to come to the US a few years ago, I didn't wait for a letter from the government of India telling me that I was free. I just booked an airline ticket and left. This is what freedom truly means! (Churchill wouldn't have told you this). Some day I might get bored of the life in the US and would consider going back to India. And I'll do so happily. And none of this is any way connected with a piece of land I may or may not own either in India or the US. So why do the Kashmiris care about a small plot of land in Srinagar or Baramulla? Let the rapist Indian scumbags have it. Won't the generous Pakistanis give them the apple orchards on the banks of Jhelum or Chenab?
This is just plain ridiculous. You've just used two paragraphs of rhetoric and hyperbole to state that Kashmiris have the freedom to leave and you have displayed willful ignorance of other freedoms the free-folk wish to exercise. Even when they do decide to exercise their freedom to travel they get this:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...s-rajnath-tells-states/videoshow/58295371.cms
"The reason the politicians didn't come up with this idea earlier is simply because this is NOT a new idea. As I keep saying, they already have their freedom."
[B[You're getting your ideas mixed up in more ways than one. It never was an idea at all that Kashmiris should leave. It'd have been political suicide because the reputable politicians weren't so stupid to forget international law, constitutions and treaties protecting Kashmiri land. Like I say, only under Modi's uber-patriotism are such ideas considered normal and the worst thing is his supporters are proud of it.[/B]
And BTW, now that I know that you're a Brit pretending to be a Pakistani, 50L means 5 million to you. It's a fairly small number. This will roughly translate to 1 million families. Let's say 50% of the families want to go to Pak (I'm being generous here, I know that Kashmiris' love for Pakistan is way overstated) -- that's just 500K families. Couldn't you find place for 500K families in POK? Seems very doable to me.