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better solution .
Yes it did..What's with this comments?
Did Fauji Cement prevent you from starting a software house?
Did Shaheen Airport Services prevent you from creating a Google/Facebook Ads Media Agency?
Or was it Navy Housing Scheme that prevented you from creating a textile mill?
Also, a guaranteed decently sized apartment (not house) in a max 5 story building for each veteran during their career, could be the basis for building out apartments in each city and fixing our housing stock.Nice suggestion, I think this would be very beneficial
Yes to all three.
Yes it did..
Nope they are joining it by bribing their way up and not paying any taxationSo my extended family who are self-starters are some bada$$es fighting the power of the Establishment. TIL.
So my extended family who are self-starters are some bada$$es fighting the power of the Establishment. TIL.
@VCheng and others can tell me if I am wrong on any of this.
Nope they are joining it by bribing their way up and not paying any taxation
Hate to be the bearer of bad news, but if they managed/manage to fly under the radar of interest, what they're doing is of ultimately next to no impact on Pakistan's predicament.
All I can say here is that fighting such claims is pointless.
My Nana didnt raise his daughters to be like that. Nor did his daughters raise their children to be the epitome of destruction.
It took 30 years for the feudals to feel threatened by the new rising industrialist crowd before they decided to nationalize the factories of entrepreneurs that made Pakistan the darling of the developing world.
Flying under the radar is fine when it more than covers the $100,000/person buy-in of citizenships in the Caribbean. Entrepreneurship isn't left behind in Pakistan. Plenty of Mango plantations to buy in Nicaragua for tax free export to the US.
My Nana didnt raise his daughters to be like that. Nor did his daughters raise their children to be the epitome of destruction.
It took 30 years for the feudals to feel threatened by the new rising industrialist crowd before they decided to nationalize the factories of entrepreneurs that made Pakistan the darling of the developing world.
Flying under the radar is fine when it more than covers the $100,000/person buy-in of citizenships in the Caribbean. Entrepreneurship isn't left behind in Pakistan. Plenty of Mango plantations to buy in Nicaragua for tax free export to the US.
I am unsure who still actively posts on this forum in qualitative way regarding socioeconomics of Pakistan's predicament (i.e as it relates to its political power setup)....maybe folks can tag them and we can hash and flesh out any more meaningful points for discussion.
@SQ8 and @VCheng are only two bedrocks I see (whom I have followed at some length) around here lately.
There is no "predicament" in Pakistan over its socioeconomic model, let us be clear.
Its power setup achieves exactly what it needs to do, to deliver the results that it wants, perversely unfathomable as it may seem to outside observers. And there are many intentionally dishonest propagandists with anecdotal "evidence" as above, that never provide the true background connections of, and hidden benefits to, the surprisingly successful "entrepreneurs", or merely selective data pickers like the inimitable Brofessor Riaz Haq, and the many military (ex? or related) personnel, who do so merely to push forward a similarly dishonest obfuscating agenda.
That is about the best summary I can give on this topic, for now.