Wood
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yes it matters, they are the founding fathers of our nation. when a nation strays from its initial vision and becomes something else, then only bad things can befall it. we were meant to have a state whose institutions enshrine principles of khilafat e rashida. Pakistan cannot adopt some purely western type system that does not incorporate Islam into public life and governance, because that defeats the purpose and is against our people's wishes as well.
for the democratic process to work effectively you need a well informed, educated electorate, and people/parties contending that have a clean record with no ill intentions. despite massive illiteracy and miseducation, people are coming around to being more critical and informed. but there are still some parties whose affiliates spew hatred towards certain people and call for murder openly. they mostly get negligible number of votes but end up with enough power to achieve their limited ends unchecked because of alliances with the larger mainstream parties. besides, all elections in the past have been in namesake/just for show, or heavily rigged with disastrous consequences.
that's why if this election is fair, no fudging or funny stuff. then it will be the most important election in our history thus far. its a major test for Pakistan whether it will be impartial and honest, or back to the same old.
Nations evolve like organic entities. Britain was once a colonizer, now it looks more like a nation of immigrants with each passing day. Ultimately it is the will of the people of this day and age that matters. Pakistani mainstream parties align with religious right wing because of their existent support base. Those people who reside on your religious right wing will get their representation one way or the other. It is better for them to have a democratic voice. Even Jinnah would have not wanted anything less?
If you think 'educated electorates' can make democracy work, then you are wrong. Education does not guarantee religious moderation. Education merely makes individuals erudite, does not free them of their inherent biases. So if the people of Pakistan want an Islamic Pakistan, then who are the 'founding fathers' to deny them of that right? After all, it is only with the support of the masses that the country for created in the first place.
Lastly, I do not argue for or against Islam in your country's politics. I only raise the notion that democracy will forge your destiny. Good luck for a free and fair election.