Archive for August, 2014

Loud Thinking August 18, 2014 at 03:46PM

PML-N threatens to launch civil disobedience movement

December 21, 2011RECORDER REPORT

Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) on Tuesday threatened to lunch civil disobedience movement against the government if it didn’t resolve the problem of gas load-shedding in Punjab. Abid Sher Ali of PML-N on a point of order in National Assembly said that federal government was targeting Punjab as far as gas load shedding was concerned.

He said that as many as 600,000 workers were being deprived of their livelihood due to closure of industrial units in Faisalabad owing to gas load shedding. He said that the people of Sindh were facing just 12 hours gas load shedding per week while Punjab was facing three to fours days per week load shedding. He said that gas load should be divided equally among the provinces. “If the government did not resolve the issue of gas load shedding, the PML-N can lunch civil disobedience movement against it,” he warned.

He said that the government was extorting money from the people in the name of fuel adjustment surcharge. He said that industrial units of Punjab were being closed down due to gas load shedding. Hanif Abbasi of PML-N raised the issue of gas load shedding in twin cities of Islamabad and Rawalpindi.

He said that the PML-N had called for mass protest against gas load shedding in Rawalpindi. “I hope that the Interior Minister would assure the House to resolve this problem. We will call off this protest if the minister gives assurance to resolve the issue, otherwise he would be responsible for any law and order situation,” he warned.

Responding to the opposition members, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said that the Secretary of Petroleum and Natural Resources had assured him that gas pressure would be normal till the evening in twin cities. He said that the government and opposition should sit together to resolve the issues.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2011
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Loud Thinking August 18, 2014 at 02:56PM

Stop Bragging About Being Busy

We’re all too busy — and we’re proud of it. We want to do it all, have it all, and achieve it all. It’s no wonder why we backdoor-brag about being swamped: it’s code for being successful and important. But in the long run, all this motion leads to burnout. The antidote is to pursue less: design your life around what is essential and eliminate everything else. Disciplined prioritizing can leave you with work-free weekends, more thinking time, and time with friends.
Set up a personal quarterly offsite. Here’s a simple rule of 3: every three months take three hours to identify the three things you want to accomplish over the next three months.
Add expiration dates on new activities. Not every new activity has to become a tradition.
Say no to a good opportunity every week. This is counterintuitive, but if we don’t do it, we’ll never have enough time to figure out what we really want to invest our time in.

Adapted from “ Why We Humblebrag About Being Busy” by Greg McKeown.

Loud Thinking August 18, 2014 at 10:52AM

“Life is precious, do not waste it doing anything that your heart does not respect or agree with.”

— Leon Brown

Loud Thinking August 16, 2014 at 08:56PM

“Just because it didn’t last forever, doesn’t mean it wasn’t worth your while.”

— Author Unknown

Loud Thinking August 16, 2014 at 12:32PM

Miltablishment’s End Game

Najam Sethi
TFT 15 August, 2014.

It isn’t a coincidence that Imran Khan has woken up a year after the elections to contest their wholesale legitimacy and demand the ouster of the Nawaz Sharif government while Tahir ul Qadri has simultaneously leapt out of far-away Canada to demand nothing less than a “revolution” to change the political system. Nor is it pure political opportunism that has compelled Imran Khan to constantly change the goal posts of his “azadi march” from a recount of votes in four Lahore constituencies, to the resignations of the four provincial election commissioners, to a reconstitution of the Election Commission and a reframing of electoral laws, to the establishment of a Supreme Court body for investigation into charges of electoral fraud and legitimacy, ending up with nothing less than regime change as a prelude to all of the above.

Both Imran Khan and Tahir ul Qadri have demonstrated links with the military establishment, or “Miltablishment”, dating back to the Musharraf-Pasha era. This powerful military establishment is now separate from and distinct from the defunct notion of the “Establishment” which denoted the military-bureaucratic steel-frame that once ruled Pakistan before the politicians corrupted and politicized the civil bureaucracy and co-opted it on their side. This agenda has been facilitated by the Chaudhries of Gujrat and Sheikh Rashid of Lal Haveli who are self-avowed proxies of the “Miltablishment”.

The “Miltablishment’s” aggressive but indirect interventionism in the political system stems from the potential tilting of power from the military to the civilians as electoral democracy has taken root internally and the external prop of the military in the form of the United States has withdrawn from the region. It first flexed its muscle during the Kayani era when the PPP government was straightjacketed and compelled to concede on all issues of “national security” as exclusively defined by GHQ-ISI. Now it has moved decisively to cut Nawaz Sharif to size after his decision to seize control of, and redefine, “national security” policy, especially as relates to regional foreign policy and ant-terrorism strategy. Mr Sharif’s decision to try ex-army chief Musharraf for treason has raised the hackles of the Miltablishment and compelled it to strike back.

This is to say that the Miltablishment’s preferred strategy now is to remain in control of the commanding heights of “national security” by making new allies in the media and even judiciary, both of which now claim “independent” status as organs of the state, to compensate for the abdication of the civil bureaucracy and loss of power to the representatives of the electorate.

This helps to explain not just the current movement for “azadi” or “revolution” by the political allies and proxies of the Miltablishment but also the critical role of the “new media” from the corporate sector in sustaining this development (The Jang/Geo Group is getting the stick because it belongs to the old media which is hamstrung by notions of “journalistic” independence.)

More significantly, it helps to explain how the Miltablishment intends to steer the ongoing political turmoil to its advantage in the next few weeks. A Zia-ist coup is not on the table. Equally, a Kakarist shove can be ruled out because the Nawaz Sharif of 2014 is temperamentally poles apart from the Nawaz Sharif of 1993. This leaves the Kayani option on the table. If Nawaz Sharif, Iftikhar Chaudhry and the old media were key allies in the game to make Zardari politically impotent, then Imran Khan, Tahir ul Qadri and the new media are allies today in the game to cut Sharif down to size. This is to say that the dogs of war will be called off from besieging Islamabad after Sharif concedes the demand to investigate the elections of 2013 via the Supreme Court, reconstitutes the Election Commission with the approval of the chief protagonists immediately, lets Musharraf off the hook, backtracks on his regional foreign policy initiatives and commits to dissolving parliament and holding fresh elections if the SC so directs on the basis of its findings.

Needless to say, however, the best-laid plans can go awry when these are subject to unpredictable mass crowd behavior. Any deviation from the script by Imran Khan and/or Tahir ul Qadri in the heat of the moment can have unintended consequences no less than the premeditated provocation of terrorists. Certainly, after a series of miscalculations – starting with the Model Town incident and the stop-go measures to close and open the routes for the long marchers and the stubborn refusal to open negotiations with Imran Khan on his core issues some months ago – the Sharifs cannot afford to ride on their high horses any more. They have lost their foothold and standing and will be totally dependent on the goodwill and support of the Miltablishment to complete their term. Those who have pulled out the demagogues of today and also reigned them in can all too easily pull them out again, should the need arise, for a more decisive round in the future.

Loud Thinking August 15, 2014 at 11:25PM

Twitter message of Imran Khan.

@ImranKhanPTI:

The dharna venue is Kashmir Highway Serena Chowk. I am near the airport and arriving at the venue soon InshaAllah.

Loud Thinking August 15, 2014 at 08:29PM

“We do not heal the past by dwelling there; we heal the past by living fully in the present.”

— Marianne Williamson

Loud Thinking August 15, 2014 at 08:23PM

MOST WICKETS AGAINST PAKISTAN

Player Mat Wkts Ave. 5wkt

N Kapil Dev India
29 99 30.12 7

SK Warne Aus
15 90 20.17 6

A Kumble India
15 81 31.97 5

GD McGrath Aus
17 80 21.70 3

M Muralitharan SL
16 80 25.46 5

HMRKB Herath SL
17 79 30.31 5

DK Lillee Aus
17 71 30.43 5

CA Walsh WI
18 63 23.04 4

Sir RJ Hadlee NZ
12 51 28.39 4

CEH Croft WI
9 50 19.56 1

Loud Thinking August 15, 2014 at 06:11PM

“To put the world right in order, we must first put the nation in order; to put the nation in order, we must first put the family in order; to put the family in order, we must first cultivate our personal life; we must first set our hearts right.”

—Confucius (551-479)
Philosopher

Loud Thinking August 15, 2014 at 06:09PM

General Raheel Sharif has appreciated the successful action of the all Pak security forces in foiling the attempt of the terrorists to damage the installations at the 2 Quetta airbases.

Any appreciation from the PM???

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