I am not sure what you posted but I saw that you thanked that troll post. Now I will ask, what the hell are you doing in an Arab country (UAE) with that attitude? Should you not return to Pakistan or move to Turkey and live and work there instead? Preferring to piss on the bowel from where you are eating? People like you should be immediately deported from the GCC. I think that I should contact the UAE authorities and tell them that a citizen of theirs hosts a hostile element.
In fact I think that I will do that myself.
@Khafee take a look at this bro.
BTW the flags were designed by Arabs using historical Arab colors. More Turkish propaganda due to butthurt.
The
Pan-Arab colors are
black,
white,
green, and
red. Individually, each of the four Pan-Arab colors were intended to represent a certain Arab dynasty, or era.
[3] The black was the color of the
banner of Muhammad and the
Rashidun Caliphate and was later adopted by the
Abbasid Caliphate; white was used by the
Umayyad Caliphate; green was used by the
Fatimid Caliphate; and red was both the flag held by the
Khawarij and also represented the
Hashemites, as well as the
Ottoman Empire.
[4] The four colors derived their potency from a verse by 14th century Iraqi poet Safi Al-Din Al-Hilli: "White are our acts, black our battles, green our fields, and red our swords".
[5]
Pan-Arab colors were first combined in 1916 in the
flag of the Arab Revolt.
[6] Many current flags are based on Arab Revolt colors, such as the flags of
Jordan,
Kuwait,
Palestine, the
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, and the
United Arab Emirates,
[7] and formerly in the flag of the brief six month union of the
Arab Federation of Iraq and Jordan.
From the 1950s onwards, a sub-set of the Pan-Arab colors, the Arab Liberation colors, came to prominence. These consist of a
tricolorof red, white and black bands, with green given less prominence. The Arab Liberation colors were inspired by the use of the
Arab Liberation Flag in the
Egyptian Revolution of 1952.
[8][
full citation needed] These appear in the current flags of
Egypt,
Iraq,
Sudan,
Syria, and
Yemen, and formerly in the flags of the rival states of
North Yemen and
South Yemen, and in the short-lived
Arab unions of the
United Arab Republic and the
Federation of Arab Republics.
[7]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan-Arab_colors
The four colours of the flag refered to a poem by Safi al-Din-al-Hili (1278-1349): "White are our acts, black our battles, green our fields, And red our swords."