March 15, 2006

March 11, 2006

blocked!!

:(( I'm still blocked


I'm unable to visit any blogspot blog

Thanks to Urdu Planet i'm still able to read you people.

jab lecture boring ho to ....

jab koch na kerna ko mila to jo sab bool reha tha type ker dia
--------------------------------
me to faisal:

faisal why dnt u stop typing??



i couldnt understand him :

our teacher to us:

make class nehi to app har dafa points hi change ker reha ho ga

mfc ka fida nehi ho ga

3 points main divide kero

make sure size should be relative to the window size


dead line.... thursday hahahahahhahahahahha ahahahah hahahaha hahahhaha


mara khial ha main asa hi lecture dun


question ??

ager ajj bana suro kerian to ajj hi ban jay ge


]


isko divied by 3 kerain
19,20 ka faraq ho ga is sae koi faraq nehi paera ga


jab app user interface banta hain to isa user friendly b hona choia


app looog jasa marzi banain


mari requirement siraf yeh ha ka appp loog cube ki class banai


jasa PowerPoint main nazar a rehi ha

any question?

app loog notice boadrd check ker lain
koi b neh?? clkass??


chelo theek ha

most probaly lecture wednes day ya thursday ko


5 baja ker lun
no no no (qurat ul aen cries)

kisi 1 ko b probelm ho ga to main nehi ker sakta
ager koi class available na hui


to majbooori ho gi

werna mujha koi itrazz nehi
kamer na koi khali na hiuia

March 02, 2006

American Fear!!


South Asia Features
Perils of Pakistan riotsBy William S. Lind Mar 1, 2006, 14:24 GMT

WASHINGTON, DC, United States (UPI) -- The riots in Pakistan are hardly news anymore: if they appear in the paper at all, it is on page C17, between a story on starvation in the Sudan and a report that Mrs. McGillicuty fell down the stairs. The riots continue nonetheless, seemingly unconcerned that the rest of the world is no longer watching.
Perhaps it should. Periodic riots are normal in parts of the world; England was famous for them in the 18th century. But when rioting continues day after day, it can serve as a sort of thermometer, taking the temperature of a population. Pakistan, it would seem, is running a fever, one that shows little sign of breaking.
On the surface, the rioting is a protest against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. Throughout the Islamic world, the anti-cartoon demonstrations are both an expression of rage at Islamic states` impotence and a demonstration of Islam`s power outside the state framework. But in Pakistan, the immediate target of the riots is all too evident: Pakistani President Musharraf and his working relationship with America`s President George W. Bush (in Pakistan, Musharraf is often called Busharraf).
After Sept. 11, 2001, when Bush announced that anyone in the world who was not with us was with the terrorists, Musharraf had to make a strategic choice. He had to make it fast, since America wanted to attack Afghanistan, and it needed Pakistan`s help to do so. Musharraf chose to ally with Bush. That choice has paid Pakistan dividends internationally, but at a price: Musharraf`s legitimacy at home became dependent on the Pakistani people`s view of America. In effect, Musharraf reincarnated himself as a political satellite of Bush.
Not surprisingly, America`s popularity among Pakistanis was not helped by our invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. The Taliban was largely a Pakistani creation, and its fall was not welcomed in Pakistan, especially when Afghanistan`s American-installed President, Mr. Karzai, quickly cozied up to India.
Then, the strong American response to Pakistan`s disastrous earthquake turned Pakistani opinion around. Only America really came through for the tens of thousands of people de-housed by the catastrophe, and other people noticed; when mullahs in radical mosques denounced the Americans, their congregations told them they were wrong.
Of course, America blew it in classic American fashion, with the Predator strike on homes in a Pakistani border town. As always, the target wasn`t there, because, as always, we depended on intelligence from 'systems' when only humint can do the job. The resulting Pakistani civilian deaths threw away all the good will we earned from the earthquake response and made America the Great Satan once more. Musharraf paid the political price.
If the riots continue and grow, the Pakistani security forces responsible for containing them will at some point go over and join the rioters. Musharraf will try to get the last plane out; perhaps he will find Texas a congenial place of exile. If he doesn`t make that plane, his head will serve as a football, not just of the political variety.
A new Pakistani government, in quest of legitimacy, will understand that comes from opposing Bush`s America, not getting in bed with it. Osama bin Laden will be the new honorary president of Pakistan, de facto if not de jure. Our, and NATO`s operation in Afghanistan will become strategically unsustainable overnight. That nice President Hamid Karzai will, one hopes, find a seat on a U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane to safety.
The fall of Pakistan to militant Islam will be a strategic disaster greater than anything possible in Iraq, even losing an army. It will be a greater disaster than a war with Iran that costs us our army in Iraq. Osama and Co. will have nukes, missiles to deliver them, the best conventional armed forces in the Muslim world and an impregnable base for operations anywhere else. As North Korea`s Dear Leader has shown the world, nobody messes with you if you have nukes. Uncle Sam takes off his battle rattle and asks Beijing, or somebody, if they can possibly sponsor some talks.
That ticking sound Bush hears is the crocodile, and he`s getting rather close.
(William S. Lind, expressing his own personal opinion, is Director for the Center for Cultural Conservatism for the Free Congress Foundation.)
(United Press International`s 'Outside View' commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)
Copyright 2006 by United Press International
WASHINGTON, DC, United States (UPI) -- The riots in Pakistan are hardly news anymore: if they appear in the paper at all, it is on page C17, between a story on starvation in the Sudan and a report that Mrs. McGillicuty fell down the stairs. The riots continue nonetheless, seemingly unconcerned that the rest of the world is no longer watching.
Perhaps it should. Periodic riots are normal in parts of the world; England was famous for them in the 18th century. But when rioting continues day after day, it can serve as a sort of thermometer, taking the temperature of a population. Pakistan, it would seem, is running a fever, one that shows little sign of breaking.
On the surface, the rioting is a protest against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. Throughout the Islamic world, the anti-cartoon demonstrations are both an expression of rage at Islamic states` impotence and a demonstration of Islam`s power outside the state framework. But in Pakistan, the immediate target of the riots is all too evident: Pakistani President Musharraf and his working relationship with America`s President George W. Bush (in Pakistan, Musharraf is often called Busharraf).
After Sept. 11, 2001, when Bush announced that anyone in the world who was not with us was with the terrorists, Musharraf had to make a strategic choice. He had to make it fast, since America wanted to attack Afghanistan, and it needed Pakistan`s help to do so. Musharraf chose to ally with Bush. That choice has paid Pakistan dividends internationally, but at a price: Musharraf`s legitimacy at home became dependent on the Pakistani people`s view of America. In effect, Musharraf reincarnated himself as a political satellite of Bush.
Not surprisingly, America`s popularity among Pakistanis was not helped by our invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. The Taliban was largely a Pakistani creation, and its fall was not welcomed in Pakistan, especially when Afghanistan`s American-installed President, Mr. Karzai, quickly cozied up to India.
Then, the strong American response to Pakistan`s disastrous earthquake turned Pakistani opinion around. Only America really came through for the tens of thousands of people de-housed by the catastrophe, and other people noticed; when mullahs in radical mosques denounced the Americans, their congregations told them they were wrong.
Of course, America blew it in classic American fashion, with the Predator strike on homes in a Pakistani border town. As always, the target wasn`t there, because, as always, we depended on intelligence from 'systems' when only humint can do the job. The resulting Pakistani civilian deaths threw away all the good will we earned from the earthquake response and made America the Great Satan once more. Musharraf paid the political price.
If the riots continue and grow, the Pakistani security forces responsible for containing them will at some point go over and join the rioters. Musharraf will try to get the last plane out; perhaps he will find Texas a congenial place of exile. If he doesn`t make that plane, his head will serve as a football, not just of the political variety.
A new Pakistani government, in quest of legitimacy, will understand that comes from opposing Bush`s America, not getting in bed with it. Osama bin Laden will be the new honorary president of Pakistan, de facto if not de jure. Our, and NATO`s operation in Afghanistan will become strategically unsustainable overnight. That nice President Hamid Karzai will, one hopes, find a seat on a U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane to safety.
The fall of Pakistan to militant Islam will be a strategic disaster greater than anything possible in Iraq, even losing an army. It will be a greater disaster than a war with Iran that costs us our army in Iraq. Osama and Co. will have nukes, missiles to deliver them, the best conventional armed forces in the Muslim world and an impregnable base for operations anywhere else. As North Korea`s Dear Leader has shown the world, nobody messes with you if you have nukes. Uncle Sam takes off his battle rattle and asks Beijing, or somebody, if they can possibly sponsor some talks.
That ticking sound Bush hears is the crocodile, and he`s getting rather close.


(William S. Lind, expressing his own personal opinion, is Director for the Center for Cultural Conservatism for the Free Congress Foundation.)
(United Press International`s 'Outside View' commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)
Copyright 2006 by United Press International