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Pakistan should really invest in robotics and AI. That's the way to go and I'm pretty sure Pakistan will make great strides in this field.
Pakistan has great robotics potential . I have seen it myself during the NERC and robosprint competition held at EME and CASE. But problem is that there is almost no financial support or investment from government of Pakistan. So the students or the universities have to manage funds themselves. Due to this reason only two universities in Pakistan EME-Nust and CASE are competing in robotics competition. Whenever there is national held robotics competitions . The competition is only between these two universities . The rest are either very pioneer level in robotics design . Or they are not supported by their management. Which is kind of really sad.

I know the effort our university and students had to make. One time we had look for sponsors and donors whom will sponser our trip to foreign robotics competition. And after huge difficulty we found one. (Even till last day we were not sure if we will get one or not). And we scored high ranking position in that competition.
 
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Pakistan has great robotics potential . I have seen it myself during the NERC and robosprint competition held at EME and CASE. But problem is that there is almost no financial support or investment from government of Pakistan. So the students or the universities have to manage funds themselves. Due to this reason only two universities in Pakistan EME-Nust and CASE are competing in robotics competition. Whenever there is national held robotics competitions . The competition is only between these two universities . The rest are either very pioneer level in robotics design . Or they are not supported by their management. Which is kind of really sad.

I know the effort our university and students had to make. One time we had look for sponsors and donors whom will sponser our trip to foreign robotics competition. And after huge difficulty we found one. (Even till last day we were not sure if we will get one or not). And we scored high ranking position in that competition.
Very nice contribution @qureshi Sahab.. I don't know much about Pakistani universities but I have some cousins who graduated from Univ. of Engg & Tech. Lahore, NUST, Rwp and GIKI, Swabi and I found them quite capable. Let's invite Sir @django to join our discussion.
 
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Actually it is very easy build. It is not that challenging to make this type of indigenous robots. But only thing it requires is heavy investment on controls and base. My juniors in case made similar project few years back when I was also studying. The concept is the same but again it was a university students project with little funding. So can you check and inform how is this robot?

Amazing and all done on a extremely minuscule budget, it is imperative that our GEMS are given the required funding, their needs to be more private investment from individuals as previous govts have proven to be completely and utterly unhelpful, this video is over 7 yrs old, I expect big things from these folks in the coming years, real big things,,,,If ISRO wants a moon rover they should hire these guys and they will do an equal or perhaps a better job than any of the Indian IITS and all on a fraction of the budget, damn SUPARCO where have you been, their was a time when we were ahead of ISRO.Kudos bro

Very nice contribution @qureshi Sahab.. I don't know much about Pakistani universities but I have some cousins who graduated from Univ. of Engg & Tech. Lahore, NUST, Rwp and GIKI, Swabi and I found them quite capable. Let's invite Sir @django to join our discussion.
Bro check out this vid from 2010 that @Hammad Arshad Qureshi kindly uploaded.Kudos bro
@Zibago @Hell hound @Dawood Ibrahim @Moonlight
 
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Amazing and all done on a extremely minuscule budget, it is imperative that our GEMS are given the required funding, their needs to be more private investment from individuals as previous govts have proven to be completely and utterly unhelpful, this video is over 7 yrs old, I expect big things from these folks in the coming years, real big things,,,,If ISRO wants a moon rover they should hire these guys and they will do an equal or perhaps a better job than any of the Indian IITS and all on a fraction of the budget, damn SUPARCO where have you been, their was a time when we were ahead of ISRO.Kudos bro


Bro check out this vid from 2010 that @Hammad Arshad Qureshi kindly uploaded.Kudos bro
@Zibago @Hell hound @Dawood Ibrahim @Moonlight
It is really a good start. Of course it can be made much better. I actually met a few Pakistanis here who are working in the field of Robotics

"I don’t have any formal education. What use is education when we do not become a human being? My school is the welfare of humanity" That is EDHI @UN @HumanityStrong @edhifoundation @usconsulatekhi https://t.co/OOh6knCIE6
View attachment 439660
And he didn't get Nobel prize but Malala and Aan San Suuki got... that speaks volume of the hypocrisy of the West.
 
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It is really a good start. Of course it can be made much better. I actually met a few Pakistanis here who are working in the field of Robotics
I have a couple of relatives who are studying the subject, hopefully more and more of the Pakistani youth will embrace this modern and dynamic field.Kudos bro
 
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I have a couple of relatives who are studying the subject, hopefully more and more of the Pakistani youth will embrace this modern and dynamic field.Kudos bro
Sir that's great but what I foresee is that in future making / building a robot will be a child's play and common people with a little interest in robotics will be able to make at home and also buying off the shelf will be quite cheap. But then there will be a niche market for highly advanced and specialised robots use for special duties.
 
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I have a couple of relatives who are studying the subject, hopefully more and more of the Pakistani youth will embrace this modern and dynamic field.Kudos bro
Sir that's great but what I foresee is that in future making / building a robot will be a child's play and common people with a little interest in robotics will be able to make at home and also buying off the shelf will be quite cheap. But then there will be a niche market for highly advanced and specialised robots used for special duties.
 
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Thanks for this. I do agree with the guy that Stefan comes off as condescending/interruptive/projecting viewpoint and claiming broad ownership on that etc (and trust me its annoyed me quite a bit on a bunch of general Stefan videos too).....but both sides bring up good points if you can filter that Stefanitude out.

In a way they both do agree on a lot, but they get stuck up on the differences, the labels and nuances etc.

Like one classic example I saw about 1/3rd way through is about the healthcare thing. To me I'm fairly in agreement with Stefan on it (naming wise)....the pure free market is really the default putty of society, in essence its the clay we have when there is no authority (hands + direction) at all....in that essence I cannot see it as a tool per se (rather we as society shape it through various interventions, govt and more generally morals, ethics etc). Now it certainly can become a tool (good or bad depends on the long term moulding by many hands), and thats largely when there is authoritarian over and under intervention (and what that constitutes is really the debate). Cultured Thug simply continues using the free market moniker with this clay that has been shaped and contorted a certain way, whereas Stefan generally doesn't (given he is more after why the contortions and shapings and their motives etc rather than assigning the product to be the same as the clay it started with).

Its basically a naming rights issue and Stefan's attitude is silly, and the whole conversation gets stuck there pretty much unfortunately. I mean there is always a fine line between what the state should "handle" for the masses and what the masses themselves should be responsible for and thus equipped for from early age (and thats basically dependent on how society values and reinvests into itself).

Like a full on nanny state could create a mandatory insurance pool for every citizen from time of birth and you can make this cover as many things as you want (accident, cancer etc etc) but then you have to accept inefficiencies created by this by not delegating various things to the masses (like common sense, knowledge and wisdom related to health matters)....i.e where is the boundary for prevention being better than the cure?...it gets blurry when a state owns the whole or large part of the envelope (no matter how hypothetically good it can be at running it). That's why the democratic process hedges the best (i.e results based on input which can be measured and compared), but only when citizenry are well informed, rational and have both their best interests and society interests as main but equal drivers, rather than having it lopsided as one or the other.

The problem with capitalism is that always worms itself into the democratic political process with time and finds a way to create the least resistance to wealth accumulation, which always (given human nature) means the wealthy/powerful getting more so at the expense of others (at best relatively, at worst absolutely). The problem with authoritarianism (good intentions to limit capitalism somehow or even destroy it) is that it doesnt hedge well long term from a practical standpoint and displaces those responsibilities that should be vested at personal level (making everyone reliant on having a perfect leader and govt and then when one is inevitably removed/lost, complete collapse ensues....Communism/Socialism in effect prolongs this unnaturally at practical level, which is why its way worst thing ever politically).

How best to strike the balance? To me it has to start with educated citizenry and full meritocracy on that education....and then go from there (and very few times have we come close to that, and never big enough to really count...so it will be uncharted territory for most part as society if it ever happens, so I dont claim to know how it turns out exactly, probably lot better than this rut we are in though)

Problem is that education is in the control of the govt which restricts the supply, saturates the demand well beyond reason and over-intervenes in a monopolistic way in setting standards and procedures (with the specific intent of continuing the first 2 to ensure perpetuation of govt for govt's sake). At the risk of sounding like a commie (when they say no one really had the true communism so communism never actually failed etc)... the free market that Cultured thug describes simply never even had a chance to get properly established in education ....and its largely because of the way the dull masses are fine with the gluttony they get in exchange for the semblance of stability/malaise society gets. I can't blame the free market per se for it, neither will I suggest authoritarianism will long term fix that (given what it generally does on the ground compared to the theory it starts with much fanfare)....because such cycles come in short spurts and are highly variable in why and how they occur and somewhat unpredictable too.

I do agree that people themselves are responsible for the system they have in play wherever they are....it didn't come out of thin air after all.....the betters (the true leaders he talks about) do come from time to time, and I would imagine they permeate at a certain rate consistently with the population this big now....so maybe with the decentralised education (given the internet etc) picking up, there is a good silver lining for the world in the long run now. Let's see. It will be tough because internet is also perpetuating the vices/gluttony to solidify the groupthink too (given the powers that be that benefit from status quo and status quo tipping in their favour)...I have no idea which is growing faster, and I dont think anyone really does (given no real way to measure that).....but it will be borne out by the fate of this human species in the end.

More or less my view of that whole conversation is the same as yours. Both of them brought up some good points however Stephan's strawmanning of Cultured Thug's arguments, besides his interruptions, was dishonest on his part tbqh.

Like when he used the typical libertarian argument against collectivism by associating it with leftist regimes and failed social experiments and that therefore collectivism = giant Soviet-like government indefinitely (usually anytime they use the word "socialism" in this context that is what they're implying).

The problem with that is that it's historically inaccurate (and dishonest). The goal of Communism was to achieve some weird (unrealistic) Utopia on Earth and to that end they utilized brutal means through massive government to force the population towards that end.

To paint Fascism/National Socialism as left-wing is a fallacy. The word "Socialism" in National Socialism was a propaganda tool to undermine the grip that the Communists and Social Democrats held over the German working class. But it was also Nationalistic because you have to care for your own people in order to be considered a true Nationalist. One has to really view this within the context of that time. There was rampant unemployment, prostitution, spread of syphilis was a major problem, drugs, suicides, hunger and homelessness and you had the disconnected cosmopolitan elite with all their wealth who did nothing to help alleviate the pain and suffering of the common man while Marxist Jews on the other hand took advantage of the suffering of the masses to agitate for a Bolshevik style communist revolution with a similar bloody outcome like in Russia.

Therefore a large Nationalist & Socialist government (if we are to use that term for it's real meaning) was the need of the hour because who else would have tackled the major problems facing society and thus prevent a catastrophe of epic proportions? That however does not mean that a large state would be permanent. Fascism is not dogmatic in this regard provided that the interests of the Nation are not violated and progress is not hampered. However a state would still be maintained because one cannot have a stateless society.

And this is actually a very interesting article from the NYT I was reading yesterday which originally intended to do one thing but ended up doing something else, however it does kinda dip into our topic and the analogy made in this particular excerpt I thought was spot on:

"He name-drops Murray Rothbard and Hans-Hermann Hoppe, architects of “anarcho-capitalism,” with its idea that free markets serve as better societal regulators than the state. And he refers to the 2013 science-fiction movie “Pacific Rim,” in which society is attacked by massive monsters that emerge from beneath the Pacific Ocean.

“So the people, they don’t ask the monsters to stop,” he says. “They build a giant robot to try to stop them. And that’s essentially what fascism is. It’s like our version of centrally coming together to try to stop another already centralized force.”"


https://www.google.com/amp/s/mobile...25/us/ohio-hovater-white-nationalist.amp.html

And this brings me to my other point that fascism is not against individual initiative or property because it is seen as a vital source of social utility. Without it there is no progress and creativity. Here I will share an excerpt from an essay by Alfredo Rocco, one of the theorists of Italian Fascism:

"The chief defect of the socialistic method has been clearly demonstrated by the experience of the last few years. It does not take into account human nature, it is therefore outside of reality, in that it will not recognize that the most powerful spring of human activities lies in individual self interest and that therefore the elimination from the economic field of this interest results in complete paralysis."

"The recognition of individual property rights, then, is a part of the Fascist doctrine not because of its individual bearing but because of its social utility."


So free market is not the issue in itself but rather the room it leaves for certain subversive and selfish elements to undermine the national health and interests of the Nation. There are no regulations that prevent the abuse of this freedom.

Now I agree with Stephan with regards to the ruthless competition that the free-market allows which then stimulates growth. This is of course a great thing and Fascism seeks to encourage this growth as long as it is not to the detriment of the Nation.

On the issue of education, here too I agree with Stephan however I personally believe that gov.t funded public schools should still remain the default option but the options of private schools and home schooling should still be there for those who wish to opt out of public schools and who can afford to do so.

On the issue of propaganda I would disagree with Stephan here. Propaganda is everywhere and most people are susceptible to it because the great majority of people are not intellectuals. Logic is not appealing to them but only emotions.

Is propaganda bad? I think that depends on who's weilding that power. Certainly there are bad people who are using that power to mislead people. Interestingly those who created this art of propaganda were Marxist Jews. Even Hitler mentions in Mein Kampf that he learned propaganda from studying the methods of Marxists during his years in Vienna (before WW1).

But it certainly can be used for the good as we saw during the 2016 presidential campaign with the trolling and memes. Memes are a very effective form of propaganda, especially when there's humor attached to them.
 
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More or less my view of that whole conversation is the same as yours. Both of them brought up some good points however Stephan's strawmanning of Cultured Thug's arguments, besides his interruptions, was dishonest on his part tbqh.

Like when he used the typical libertarian argument against collectivism by associating it with leftist regimes and failed social experiments and that therefore collectivism = giant Soviet-like government indefinitely (usually anytime they use the word "socialism" in this context that is what they're implying).

The problem with that is that it's historically inaccurate (and dishonest). The goal of Communism was to achieve some weird (unrealistic) Utopia on Earth and to that end they utilized brutal means through massive government to force the population towards that end.

To paint Fascism/National Socialism as left-wing is a fallacy. The word "Socialism" in National Socialism was a propaganda tool to undermine the grip that the Communists and Social Democrats held over the German working class. But it was also Nationalistic because you have to care for your own people in order to be considered a true Nationalist. One has to really view this within the context of that time. There was rampant unemployment, prostitution, spread of syphilis was a major problem, drugs, suicides, hunger and homelessness and you had the disconnected cosmopolitan elite with all their wealth who did nothing to help alleviate the pain and suffering of the common man while Marxist Jews on the other hand took advantage of the suffering of the masses to agitate for a Bolshevik style communist revolution with a similar bloody outcome like in Russia.

Therefore a large Nationalist & Socialist government (if we are to use that term for it's real meaning) was the need of the hour because who else would have tackled the major problems facing society and thus prevent a catastrophe of epic proportions? That however does not mean that a large state would be permanent. Fascism is not dogmatic in this regard provided that the interests of the Nation are not violated and progress is not hampered. However a state would still be maintained because one cannot have a stateless society.

And this is actually a very interesting article from the NYT I was reading yesterday which originally intended to do one thing but ended up doing something else, however it does kinda dip into our topic and the analogy made in this particular excerpt I thought was spot on:

"He name-drops Murray Rothbard and Hans-Hermann Hoppe, architects of “anarcho-capitalism,” with its idea that free markets serve as better societal regulators than the state. And he refers to the 2013 science-fiction movie “Pacific Rim,” in which society is attacked by massive monsters that emerge from beneath the Pacific Ocean.

“So the people, they don’t ask the monsters to stop,” he says. “They build a giant robot to try to stop them. And that’s essentially what fascism is. It’s like our version of centrally coming together to try to stop another already centralized force.”"


https://www.google.com/amp/s/mobile...25/us/ohio-hovater-white-nationalist.amp.html

And this brings me to my other point that fascism is not against individual initiative or property because it is seen as a vital source of social utility. Without it there is no progress and creativity. Here I will share an excerpt from an essay by Alfredo Rocco, one of the theorists of Italian Fascism:

"The chief defect of the socialistic method has been clearly demonstrated by the experience of the last few years. It does not take into account human nature, it is therefore outside of reality, in that it will not recognize that the most powerful spring of human activities lies in individual self interest and that therefore the elimination from the economic field of this interest results in complete paralysis."

"The recognition of individual property rights, then, is a part of the Fascist doctrine not because of its individual bearing but because of its social utility."


So free market is not the issue in itself but rather the room it leaves for certain subversive and selfish elements to undermine the national health and interests of the Nation. There are no regulations that prevent the abuse of this freedom.

Now I agree with Stephan with regards to the ruthless competition that the free-market allows which then stimulates growth. This is of course a great thing and Fascism seeks to encourage this growth as long as it is not to the detriment of the Nation.

On the issue of education, here too I agree with Stephan however I personally believe that gov.t funded public schools should still remain the default option but the options of private schools and home schooling should still be there for those who wish to opt out of public schools and who can afford to do so.

On the issue of propaganda I would disagree with Stephan here. Propaganda is everywhere and most people are susceptible to it because the great majority of people are not intellectuals. Logic is not appealing to them but only emotions.

Is propaganda bad? I think that depends on who's weilding that power. Certainly there are bad people who are using that power to mislead people. Interestingly those who created this art of propaganda were Marxist Jews. Even Hitler mentions in Mein Kampf that he learned propaganda from studying the methods of Marxists during his years in Vienna (before WW1).

But it certainly can be used for the good as we saw during the 2016 presidential campaign with the trolling and memes. Memes are a very effective form of propaganda, especially when there's humor attached to them.

Yup, overall I would agree. Stefan btw is coming around to the whole idea of the imperative of nationalism in todays world (though I still disagree with a bunch of points he asserts) if you check his latest video. He is finally getting why the airy-fairy theory of the "libertarian ideal" (that he espoused so much earlier) has low application viability....much like sheer pacifism simply does not work when another side revels in violence.

The vehicle of fascism/nationalism/call it what you want .....literally has to be sustained at some basic level for that which is good to merely survive (much less propagate). I have my issues with the extent/details Hitler/Nazis went about doing it, but hindsight is 20/20 and I do not paint everything with broad brushstroke. In fact whether it is perceived as left/right/centre does not even come up as an issue for me tbh (given the whole left right thing is largely corrupted and abused for cuckpolitics sake)...its more aptly charted on the common sense vs idiocy line for me. I am well aware how the communists portrayed it as a fellow leftist cause when it suited them (Lenin congratulating Mussolini for his great socialist cause etc) and then ditched that and projected it as "far -right" later....similar to how the democrat party first indulged the KKK (in fact the KKK were much like antifa today in their utility) and then projected it as republican all along for political convenience sake.

This is what I mean when I say the left antics is turning out to be our best friend in rallying the worthy morally guided quality people to some basic truths over time, the more they get pummeled day in and day out by the BS. The ones who never get red pilled at all are simply sheep used by the wolves....and I leave them to their fates. But the quality few do need to rally to have any chance at achieving greater purpose for humanity, again referencing the law of entropy of the universe that we see in the stars and galaxies. The in group preference stefan talks about among the other basic realities relate to this as well, we cannot dream something to exist as reality, we must recognise what is the dream, what is the reality and how best to work with the reality (again ties in with his eloquent use of equal opportunity vs equal result).

Common sense/IQ/intelligence/logic/reason/morality is simply too variant in the normal distribution of populations to have an utopia kumbaya. Thus any other utopia/ideal must be postponed when there is globalist initiation of violence (using the state) to alter even status quo. This is what even a right leaning Jew (though it affects lot of non-jews too) like Ben Shapiro simply never understands (and he recklessly defends the globalist state and its organs even against all clear evidence, while claiming to be unemotional and fully logic driven)....you can have debates when the other recognizes and subscribes to such debate....when they mimic debate but do very un-debatelike policy on the ground, well then dont be a cuck, you have to deal with them on the same terms with action they understand. Concept of lesser of two evils (that you simply have to choose and not fence-sit, sorry thats how humans are), so we get to a place we can actually make a relative good long term is lost on so many....but at least ones like Stefan are coming around now.
 
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