Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
Gawd the sarcasm is so thick, you could cut it with a knife:) . I love it
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
Gawd the sarcasm is so thick, you could cut it with a knife:) . I love it
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
I sure hope ur not being sarcastic with the “i love it” ![]()
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
no sis. no sarcasm there. I usually like your posts. We are kindred spiritis.
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
Thanks ![]()
Then again knowing how u introduced yerself here… I think ur just being sarcastic ![]()
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
Aside from the fact that you hate me..
just because you disagree with my opinion doesn’t mean it’s wrong. and yes, i thought before typing. not of what people like you would think by reading it, but more about whether or not i think it’s right/appropriate.
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
You don’t talk like this…looks like you’ve catched up with the world!
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
pakis shud be given the right to do wrong. :)
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
yeah…I second that!
you leave the lil pink lady alone.
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Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
Its a combination of jahalat and corruption. Pretty much sums up the tribal areas really.
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
I dont hate you becasue i dont think anything of you. I simply object to lack of thought and prejudice.
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
^ Alright then if that's the case then could you please stop quoting my posts and writing rude remarks? :(
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
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Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
:)
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
Im mortally offended, please stop :)
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
:)
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
what do we have here... cat fight. i've got 5 bux on phatima1... anyone else in?
thread about man on woman violence shall have a virtual cat fight. excellent.
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
I was interested in reading this thread as it involved smoking (tobacco) but it is about smoke.
Any ways, Government have increased price of cigarettes in Pakistan. Since over 60% men smoke in Pakistan so increased rates of tobacco leads to increased expenses and thus more fights amongst partners (husband & wife). As most smokers belong to lower class so these increased rates can be deadly too in some cases. In this case both husband and wife might have strong character but they faced this situation due to the increased rates of cigarettes.
It is Government's duty to consider every situation before they put some burden of taxes or release some burden or make some rule or…….. It is not woman's fault and no one should blame the husband for it too. It is just a result of poor decision made by people in power who have almost no idea about people and country.
Re: What are Pakistanis smoking these days?
If this means what I think it means then…
D:D
Pakistani man cuts feet off ‘promiscuous’ wife
Anyone support the right to cut off the feet of your wife if she is cheating?
…
A Pakistani man and some of his relatives chopped off his wife’s feet after accusing her of being promiscuous, police said yesterday.
The woman survived the gruesome attack, the latest in a wave of assaults that have raised international concern about the plight of women in rural Pakistan.
‘It is a shameful act of cruelty against a woman,’ said Talat Ali, a senior police official in Punjab.’
The 32-year-old woman told police her feet were chopped off on 24 June by her husband, her father-in-law, a brother-in-law and two others after they accused her of being ‘of bad character’, a euphemism for promiscuous.
Violence against women is common in rural Pakistan where tribal and feudal customs hold sway.
The latest incident occurred in central Punjab province where the 2002 gang-rape of a woman, Mukhtaran Mai, on the orders of a village council, triggered an international outcry.
Pakistan president Pervez Musharraf, who is trying to project his country as a moderate Muslim nation, has condemned violence against women.
The woman in the latest incident had separated from her husband but had gone to his family’s house to see her daughter, police said.
Her father-in-law chained her up and that night he and the others took her to the edge of their village and cut off her feet.
Two days later her parents reported her missing and police raided the house, found her and took her to hospital, where she remains. ‘There is no evidence that she was of bad character,’ Ali said.
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,1525238,00.html