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- Jan 26, 2024
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The Government Servants ( Conduct) Rules, 1964 :
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Right. Therefore, lawlessness is not the government’s fault. The absence of the rule of law in our country is an integrated socio-cultural phenomenon. This problem is impossible to overcome.Rules in anything Pakistan are mere suggestions, not requirements. Only fools obey them and get left behind or kicked out.
Right. Therefore, lawlessness is not the government’s fault. The absence of the rule of law in our country is an integrated socio-cultural phenomenon. This problem is impossible to overcome.
In Pakistan, a civil/military government job has always proven to help someone with a lower social status quickly move up to a much higher social stature since the birth of the nation. Sometimes, government civil/military bureaucrats have even become kingmakers or kings themselves. These people's family and clan members, who are millions in number, are also beneficiaries of their government relatives. They make up a significant share of the population who control media and other socio-political institutions. It has given lawlessness the necessary survival fitness in society. I believe prevalent religions have much more to do with political and economic roots than spirituality. Very few people follow religions by knowing the exact philosophy of their religions, even though every religion claims to promote knowledge, contrary to popular belief. The saddest part is that we do not have a history of justice in the last five thousand years. Justice is a word that resides only on pieces of paper.Indeed it is integrated into the very fabric of society.
Please note I am not making any judgement as to whether it is right or wrong, just that it is the Pakistani way. And the majority of people are quite comfortable with this state of affairs, despite strident claims to the contrary and much invoking of religious ideals.
What we do speaks far louder than what we claim.
In Pakistan, a civil/military government job has always proven to help someone with a lower social status quickly move up to a much higher social stature since the birth of the nation. Sometimes, government civil/military bureaucrats have even become kingmakers or kings themselves. These people's family and clan members, who are millions in number, are also beneficiaries of their government relatives. They make up a significant share of the population who control media and other socio-political institutions. It has given lawlessness the necessary survival fitness in society. I believe prevalent religions have much more to do with political and economic roots than spirituality. Very few people follow religions by knowing the exact philosophy of their religions, even though every religion claims to promote knowledge, contrary to popular belief. The saddest part is that we do not have a history of justice in the last five thousand years. Justice is a word that resides only on pieces of paper.
The modern concept of justice, which puts great emphasis on civil rights and civic liberty, is light years ahead of the zanjeer-e-adal concept, which even never criminalized the slavery of human beings. There is also a lack of credible documentation about zanjeer-e-adal to put it into scrutiny. How would someone travel hundreds of miles from his home village on rural unpaved roads to Agra to seek justice? He would be long dead. Slavery was abolished in the sub-continent only in 1843 by colonial British rule, much later than zanjeer-e-adal. Silent and undeclared slavery is still active today.Well the subcontinent is where the zanjeer-e-adal once hung to provide justice to all and sundry. But what happens now is anything but justice, and far from speedy or fair.
However, as long as the people generally accept the system as it is practiced, no one else can change it for them. There is nothing sad about this realization, just a weary acceptance of reality by emigres like me.
The modern concept of justice, which puts great emphasis on civil rights and civic liberty, is light years ahead of the zanjeer-e-adal concept, which even never criminalized the slavery of human beings. There is also a lack of credible documentation about zanjeer-e-adal to put it into scrutiny. How would someone travel hundreds of miles from his home village on rural unpaved roads to Agra to seek justice? He would be long dead. Slavery was abolished in the sub-continent only in 1843 by colonial British rule, much later than zanjeer-e-adal.
The sub-continent could not properly transition from feudalism to a modern capitalist society. It remains semi-feudal, masked by fancy highways, malls, and electronic gadgets. My late grandfather and father claimed when they were alive that the colonial British court system was much fairer, and my grandfather and father both were alive during the British rule. People forgot how many died because the sub-continent was partitioned on sectarian lines. Millions of people still pay the price of a few politician's deeds. Selective dementia has captured the whole of society.
I agree that no one can change our people, and that is also why whenever anyone claims to be able to change this messed up society, that person immediately loses credibility to me.
LOL. Please remember that I am the guy who was derided and pilloried endlessly for saying that the much ballyhooed naya Pakistan will turn out to be just like purana Pakistan, which only makes me quote your last sentence again: I agree that no one can change our people, and that is also why whenever anyone claims to be able to change this messed up society, that person immediately loses credibility to me.