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A disappointed Pakistani Christian

Pakistan always has and always will have minority groups...
That's not the question. Christianity and Judaism each have minority groups. In the past these religions were subject to violent sectarian conflicts. That's almost entirely gone now. You have a chance to learn from experience and you want your fellow Pakistanis to squander it.

you know what your problem is, Solomon? You realize the futility in what you do and yet you do it anyways.
Is it futile? Or are you trying to discourage Pakistani cultural progress for your own ends?

Pakistan is for PAKISTANIS. All those citizens of Pakistan are PAKISTANIS.
Pakistanis strike me at best as subjects of their state, not citizens. Here's to the day when sovereign power is shared by the people rather than greedily clenched by the military and political elite. :cheers:
 
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Pakistan always has and always will have minority groups....it's actually people like you that ''benefit'' from human misery because it gives you a chance to log on to defence.pk and spew out misinformation


you know what your problem is, Solomon? You realize the futility in what you do and yet you do it anyways.



Pakistan is for PAKISTANIS. All those citizens of Pakistan are PAKISTANIS.

irony is solomon makes a living and feeds his kids by spewing on this forum....so he should be thankful to Pakistanis who are a source of his income.:lol:
 
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That's not the question. Christianity and Judaism each have minority groups. In the past these religions were subject to violent sectarian conflicts. That's almost entirely gone now. You have a chance to learn from experience and you want your fellow Pakistanis to squander it.

you're right....Islam came after these religions. So give it time for the issues in the Muslim majority countries to be solved. Christianity and Judaism have also seen their fair share of violence and religious-motivated fanatisicm -- they still go on today.

if you stopped being steven cohen's intern and actually opened your eyes to ground realities....by the way, i've noticed your own presidential candidates are using sectarianism as well

A half century after the USA struggled over whether a Catholic Christian could serve in the White House, a question is lurking in the Republican race for president; can a Mormon serve?

Interviews across South Carolina revealed the antipathy some evangelical Christians hold toward Mormonism.


read this: Special report -Mormonism besieged by the modern age | Reuters


Is it futile? Or are you trying to discourage Pakistani cultural progress for your own ends?

Pakistan needs you, Solomon, to promote cultural progress in Pakistan :laugh:



Pakistanis strike me at best as subjects of their state, not citizens. Here's to the day when sovereign power is shared by the people rather than greedily clenched by the military and political elite. :cheers:






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well in 80s our school was CHRISTIAN AND ENGLAND PEOPLE RUNNING IT ....so germsans christians were called ......AND EACH AND EVERY SINGLE 1 was PROVED INDIANSHIT pretending ........so after they took over we came to know REAL CHRISTANITY FOR THE FIRST TIME ...

TRY TO CHECK ANY THIS SMASH HIT BEHIND MUST NOT ABUSE LIKE SHIAS >>>>OR PRETENDING MUSLIMS BEHIND ........JUST ONE AND ONLY WAY OUT KAAL BHI APP KO HI KARNAA HAI CHECK APPLY ALONG THUMB IMPRESSION .....

JUST STOP WORRYING ABOUT EVERY THING ......JUST THSI CHECK AND THUMB IMPRESSION AS ATTENDENCE >>>IS THAT HOW YOU CATCH T T P ......tu phir what T T P ...???

After reading that I had to book an appointment with my optician and a session with a therapist.
 
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I can relate somewhat similar situation. Where I was raised, everyone was Bralvi Muslim. There was only one Christian family of British origin. They lived in a very old big house. They couple had one boy. His only friends were me and my brother. We were the only one to visit him. Nobody would invite him to any sports or social event.
Later they got an opportunity and settled in UK. Since then, I don't know what happened to them.
Right now I live in a place where we have little to no Christians. But there is a large community of Christians not far from us. People in my area still don't like Christians that much but I have seen that Muslims living in those Christian majority areas don't have the same kind of attitude toward them.
But then again, where I was raised, people also had a little negative attitude toward Muslims of other sects. I visited that area some years ago and found that not everyone is Bralvi Muslim there. Many families have now converted to Shia Islam and Deoband Islam.

In short, some places are worst and some are not that bad. It all depends on where you live. But still, there is somewhat dislike for non-Muslims in Pakistan.
 
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