Thank you
@JamD for tagging me.
I still haven't graduated yet, but I've had my first (and I hope to God its the last) taste of these fauji uncle/sitting-on-their-butt/darbari types - 1) by studying at a military college 2) by working on some aspects of some of the projects that Admiral Zafar Mahmood Abbasi proudly mentioned.
The one positive point I take away from your anecdote:
That top 5-10% of an engineering class (from NUST, GIKI, AU, LUMS, etc) still exists and is still as good as it ever was. So we haven't stopped producing good (perhaps even great) minds - although at the rate we have squandered the skills, talents and genius of our youth, we should have stopped long ago.
It took a lot of self-coaxing for me to actually write here because 1) it pains me a lot when I read everything that you all have written and 2) some part of that idealist in me has started to die.
Personal anecdote:
My grandfather worked at Pakistan's first (and perhaps only) electric lamp manufacturing company - Hyesons (aka Electric Lamp Manufacturers of Pakistan) from 1949 till the late 70s. He used to tell me stories of an age when a newly born, self-confident nation strived for excellence, when transfer-of-technology actually meant something, when a Pakistani company could build products of such high quality that my house in Karachi still has 5 operational 100W bulbs which were manufactured in the late 70s. Infact, I used two of these bulbs to test an energy meter for a project in my power electronics course in 2020. As a curious 10 year old I used to ask him as to what went wrong. And he replied, '
Upar ke log kharab hogaye hain' (The people at the top have become insincere/corrupted).
These people aren't going anywhere, so my bet's on Pakistan.
Unless the ground shakes beneath their feet hard enough to make them fall.
I can actually hope for Scenario 3 a little more than for 1 and 2. But maybe I'm just too young.
The JF-17 Block-III, Azm NGAF, Shaheen-III and Ababeel are not going to save us.
We are looking at an impending disaster. The average level of competence and professionalism across all professions and across all sectors of the economy is falling. Morale, capabilities and just plain genius is atrophying across the board and there's nothing in the way to stop this bleeding. 'Brain-drain' doesn't even describe what is happening. Forget about Pakistani professionals running abroad - not everyone has the opportunity/resources for that - there are Pakistanis doing great work in the private sector but for some high-powered MNC which stashes its profits abroad.
We have succeeded in creating a situation where the idealists, dreamers, livewires, changemakers are too afraid to come forward, where they are hounded and hunted, treated like criminals by some pathetic sentry at the entrance of some 'strategic' organization. There's probably no statistical measure for this atrophy, but you can see it.
Just to push you in the right direction:
A pilot ignores landing instructions from the control tower and belly lands an aircraft at an extremely steep angle of descent. He then takes off again and makes a second attempt - killing 97 people in the process, including himself. The organization was PIA. But what's stopping an NPP operator from suffering from the same abject lack of professionalism? Can we trust the PAEC to run our NPPs safely just as we can trust the PIA to get us from LHR to KHI safely?
Has anyone seen PIA pilots? They're OLD. Experienced, but OLD. You don't see pilots like that anywhere. These guys are ancient. And they have the toxic uncle mentality. They don't LET new guys come in, and if some young innocent idealist wanders in, they BREAK him.
I hope you get the point I'm trying to make.
1. Pakistanis are extremely susceptible to becoming absolutely corrupted by absolute power.
2. In Pakistan, 'enlightenment' only strikes you if the 'establishment' wants it to.
3. We all know who the few powerful and entrenched men actually are
In short, to sum it up:
I have the pleasure to inform you gentlemen, we stand at the threshold of the night of eternal darkness. There is time to turn back, but not for long.