Sher Khan Suri, u have got everything wrong from the very time u registered urself on this forum....
ur history and general knowledge command is very much clear from the nickname u have....
Sher Shah Suri i right and the nick u have selected, thinking that u have chosen sher shah suri, is wrong....
alright, so the thread was initially supposed to be about gujurat's improvements, and an inside look onto how many gujurati families oppose hate pakistan be suspicious of pakistan propaganda being taught to their kids. so if they're planning to take it out of the textbooks, or atleast the new ones, so this should be something good right? how come the guys here on this paticular thread always find some way of spoiling good news, especially if its about india?
[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by armughal: *
Sher Khan Suri, u have got everything wrong from the very time u registered urself on this forum....
ur history and general knowledge command is very much clear from the nickname u have....
Sher Shah Suri i right and the nick u have selected, thinking that u have chosen sher shah suri, is wrong....
[/QUOTE]
Harrray chuuutttaaarrr I'm not wrong you are @*#&$^.
Bhai jaaan I had the nick Sher Shah Suri, it was banned, I had the nick Shah Suri Sher, it was banned, I had Sher Suri, it was banned, I had Shah Suri, it was banned, now I have Sher Khan Suri, till it gets banned, I have to come up with something else.
You got it you coconut head?
You don’t believe me, ask Spot, ask Anti, and ask Bhai loog Fraudia.
[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Sher Khan Suri: *
Pakistan should do the same, and they just might since they copy Indians in everything.
Something interesting:
In Pakistan it is thought to kids that when you see a red ant, it is a kafir ant, you must kill it, when you see black ants, those are good ants, but when you see the large black ants amongst the regular black ants, those are Hindu ants, you must kill them and you get sawaab doing so.
In Pakistani schools India is always refereed to “Hindustan”, a constant reminder that it is a nation of “Hindus”. Majority of Pakistanis don’t know that there are more Muslims in India then Pakistan, let alone that those Muslim of India are more practicing then the one you will find from Pakistan.
In fact, majority of Pakistan don't want to admit that Pakistan was ever a part of India.
BUT! BUT! All of the sudden, majority of Pakistanis dont mind the new ties and well wishes between the two nations.
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What the f**k? Are you stupid? You deserve to get stepped on for such a stupid post. Black ants, red ants, big ants what the hell? What kinda school did u attend? Hindustan is not a name given to "bharat" by pakistanis.
Do you know that right now such schools are operating in Karachi, Lahore, Pindi, and Islamabad? I'm not going to mention Peshawar, that is of course, a fact.
I believe their is a thread in this section about Geo tv and some kids, and how they view Hindus and Kafirs, and to what extent will those kids go to save their holy nation.
Here is another one, do you know there are Osama bin laden toys being manufactured in Pakistan? There are posters on sale in every city, their cds, dvds, vcds all over the markets? You can buy eemmmli with Osama picture on it, taste good, yum yum.
Lets blame the Afghans, lets blame the Hindus, lets blame the Jews as well.
The greatest threat to Pakistan’s future may be its abysmal education
system. Pakistani schools—and not just madrassas—
are churning out fiery zealots, fueled with a passion for jihad and
martyrdom. The obstacles to reform are great. For example, recent
street rampages by Islamists forced Musharraf 's former minister of
education, Zubaida Jalal, to declare herself a fundamentalist and
denounce as unacceptable school textbooks that do not include Quranic
verses on jihad.
The United States, along with the United Kingdom and the European
Union, has recently poured hundreds of millions of dollars into the
Pakistani educational system—but with minimal effect. USAID officials
in Pakistan have shown little inclination or desire to engage with
the government on the issue of eliminating jihad and militarism from
school books. Indeed, rather than calling Musharraf 's government on
the continuing espousal of jihadist doctrine, the White House, out of
either ignorance or compromise, even praised former Education
Minister Jalal for her “reforms.” Jalal’s successor, General Javed
Ashraf Qazi, is a former intelligence chief known for his ruthless
tactics. It therefore appears that Musharraf 's educational
curriculum will go unchanged. This difficulty, of course, reflects
the underlying problems of Pakistan’s government. Aware of its thin
legitimacy and fearful of taking on powerful religious forces, no
reigning government has made a serious attempt at curricular or
educational reform, quietly allowing future minds to be molded by
fanatics. But without such critical reforms, the long-term prospects
for Pakistan are anything but comforting.