ROT IN HELL.
knicq posted in Knicqisms on May 13th, 2007
I stopped having an opinion sometime ago when I discovered that the world did not care as much about my opinion as it did about just about anyone else’s. But, today, I have an opinion, and it is not humble. Musharraf, and his cronies must all perish; in a planecrash, but then they are not worth losing a plane over. They must all die though. Horrible natural deaths, because they are not worth going to prison for, and someone will if someone decided to rid Pakistan of them. They are most definitely not worth the 30 Pakistani lives that were lost today. 30 lives lost are 30 too many for Musharraf and his goons; but then they were not lost for them, they were snatched away by them.
Musharraf, Benazir, Nawaz Shariff, Qazi Hussain, Altaf Hussain, MQM, PML (A-Z), ARD et al – may you all rot in hell.
All of this because the chief justice of the counry was to address the bar association..!
May they all ROT IN HELL.
May 13th, 2007 at 10:13 am
Couldn’t agree with you more Nadeem bhai. May the media Rot in hell too for its overexposure of the CJ issue..makes one wonder if this adds to the hype and mob mentality.
May 14th, 2007 at 8:35 am
My father normally says that we should burn the national assembly along with the politicians and their families alive sitting inside it.
I never understood why he is so cruel but now I think he has shown mercy on them. If its in my hand I would burn them all including the CJ or CJs and who ever thinks to be in politics not once again and again and again and again. They are all worth less than those who have died in these riots.
One question though, how many of those who have died were innocent does anybody know that, I am sure few of them were those who may have started this somehow.
May 14th, 2007 at 9:13 am
Usama: Take out the President’s office (and let that cover the US president’s office also), and the most corrupt, morally bankrupt, socially irresponsible and self serving institution ever would have to be Media; not just in the current scenario but in every scenario. Sometimes I wonder if we need the media as much as we don’t.
There was no mob mentality in Karachi though; there were no mobs; it was gangs of Karachi, hoodlums and ghundas all of them.
Zafar: I may have a different opinion on the CJ; I don’t recall having seen him meddle in the politics any more than his office requires him to. It is a dictator running scared of a possible autonomous judiciary who has politicised the CJ. The CJ ha steered clar of making any political statements also. But, you are right the ruling elite is all worthless, and calls for a COUP just by being there.
There is a strong feeling that most of those killed were part of those sent out to create trouble themselves, but there were innocents killed – especially the Edhi foundation workers, who would have enjoyed protection from enemy forces in times of war also!
And goon or not, no Pakistani should have to die to facilitate the bigger goons in power!
May 15th, 2007 at 9:02 am
CJ is as much responsible as anyone else in the government. He is addressing the bars that is fine but he should refuse to do so when the bar meetings and gatherings turn into political Jalsa. The CJ and government both are acting like children by going into streets and pressurizing courts for the decision of their liking in this matter.
CJ was told not to go to Karachi but he did and then he sat at the airport and death starting dancing in the streets of Karachi, our president same day at night addressed to a meeting in capital without having any shame or sorrow on the events in Karachi.
So tell me my friend why should we not blame CJ too, if he is really a CJ and wants the Law to rule then he should have remained in Islamabad where the proceedings of the court are going on, lawyers and political parties if they arranging any rallies in his support he should have thanked them and asked them to cool down and let the rule of Law prevail and wait. This would have been a slap on the face of government also and would have showed that he cares.
Having said all that my friend the power is very harmfull and when you have tens of thousands of people running in streets chanting the slogans in your favour the sanity is lost and that is what has happened to our CJ also. He has lost his sanity and has been highjacked by the same bloody bastards against whom he thinks he is fighting because in our politics none of these politicians are different they are all same. Tommorrow they all will leave CJ and sit in the government benches if they have a chance and will do the same what their counterparts are doing today. CJ being the literate and intelligent person should have realized all this before falling for this trap.
From the images of TV I saw on that fatefull day one image has jammed in my eyes, an old man who have been hit by a bullet in his back trying to sit in a car and the poorfellow neither could sit nor could he lie or stand and the pain in his eyes made me cry and I have tears rolling down my eyes at this very moment also because this has reminded me of another image that I will never forget. The last earthquake in Pakistan and the TV is showing one little girl saying that her mother never eats without her. She was crying and there were many people standing around her but none of them were able to console her.
The government has not been able to heal the wounds of that natural clamity and they have created another one.
I do really understand why my father says burn them all alive.
May 16th, 2007 at 11:17 am
Bravo! The first effing honest opinion I’ve read on the issue thus far. While everyone else skirts around what they actually feel for the sake of diplomacy, you go straight for the jugular.
Well done, indeed!
May 18th, 2007 at 3:53 pm
Zafar: I am afraid I must disagree again, when it comes to holding the CJ responsible for the terrorism on May 12 in Karachi.
The Govt. propaganda machine went out of its way to tell us that because the CJ did not heed the Govt.’s warning that his visit to Karachi might spark violence, he is directly responsible for the violence. Its what we call post hoc fallacy in Economics: because A follows B, A is an outcome of B. It is also what is normally called blackmail: If you go to Karachi Mr. CJ, our goons will terrorize the city. What happened in Karachi was State Terrorism at its worst; MQM ostensibly the party calling the shots in Karachi carried out the Government’s bidding and sent out its goons to kill the people it is supposed to represent. the Government machinery sat out in Islamabad, and ‘the president’ shed “tears of blood” helplessly as real blood was spilled in Karachi; and then they all came out behind bulletproof screens to tell Pakistanis that the “people had shown their power” by dying at the hands of Government goons. Why was that Goddamned rally not called off and arrangments made to address the situation in Karachi? If the CJ instigated terrorism just by being at the Karachi airport, why did the President not fly down to Karachi and calm matters – one answer: because he needed that terrorism for his own ulterior motives!
Lets remember what th facts are: The terrorism was carried out by MQM, which is in cohoots with the Musharraf government, and the Musharraf government was addressing pathetic and forced rallies meant to help Mushbush show the world he was popular while blood was spilled in Pakistan’s streets.
The Olive Ream: I hope my prayers are answered one day, because it was not in a fit of rage that I wrote those lines. I believe the Govt. machinery must stand trial for each of those deaths, and for each pakistani life lost that day, one from those responsible must hang!
May 28th, 2007 at 11:32 pm
If they knew how to respect the life of the common man, they would not be fiddling around in politics. It’s obvious that they were born without a conscience – hope they die with one.