JonAsad
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i am sure najam shetty's chirya has brought him that news--
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I know from experience when Indians ask me where I am from, I will say Pakistan and they quickly say oh well it's the same country.
I'm like.. THE Faak?
Never heard any Pakistani calling himself Indian. Biggest Indian wet dream of the century.
LMAO.
Dude not even Bangladeshis want to be mistaken as Indians.
Please stop. This is too funny.
You gentlemen have some funny friends.
Many customers of Pakistani business are Indians. So yeah this works. As long was Pakistanis realize the problems in their country they don't need to pretend as Indians. They should try to educate others and make their country "shining Pak", so everyone is proud about their nation.Imagine you are a Pakistani and open a restaurant.
If you call it "Pakistani food", many potential customers will scratch their heads, "What food is that? Palestinian? Peruvian? South American?"
Now, if you call it "Indian food", most people will have some idea what to expect.
It doesn't mean anyone is ashamed of anything; it's about leveraging existing brand recognition.
Imagine you are a Pakistani and open a restaurant.
If you call it "Pakistani food", many potential customers will scratch their heads, "What food is that? Palestinian? Peruvian? South American?"
Now, if you call it "Indian food", most people will have some idea what to expect.
It doesn't mean anyone is ashamed of anything; it's about leveraging existing brand recognition to maximize business potential. Now, people could argue that Pakistanis should build the Pakistani brand but, given the fact that most Western countries have 10x as many Indians as Pakistanis, it makes sense to target the largest demographic. Especially, since Nepalese, Bangladeshi and Sri Lankan customers will also gravitate to an "Indian" restaurant as a "good enough" compromise to their native restaurant.
P.S. The other day, I was talking to a Sudanese woman at a bus stop. I kept telling her "Pakistani", and she kept repeating "Palestinian". I eventually gave up and dropped the subject.
Imagine you are a Pakistani and open a restaurant.
If you call it "Pakistani food", many potential customers will scratch their heads, "What food is that? Palestinian? Peruvian? South American?"
Now, if you call it "Indian food", most people will have some idea what to expect.
It doesn't mean anyone is ashamed of anything; it's about leveraging existing brand recognition to maximize business potential.
P.S. The other day, I was talking to a Sudanese woman at a bus stop. I kept telling her "Pakistani", and she kept repeating "Palestinian". I eventually gave up and dropped the subject.
Why the hell we will call ourself Donkeys when we are lions?
OK, now have a go at introducing the PPC. The Pakistani Prehistoric Civilisation. Video-tape it. Let's make some money.
Why the hell we will call ourself Donkeys when we are lions?
Lmao the guy who wrote this article "Jack Shafer" has a history of making up his own stories. Here's from the source itself
Slate's author of "Monkeyfishing" now says none of his story was true. - Slate Magazine