VCheng
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2010
- Messages
- 48,460
- Reaction score
- 57
- Country
- Location
You live the US, right?
It is always interesting to seek other perspectives.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You live the US, right?
As a Pakistani American I know it's hypocritical to say this
But home is home, fix our home guys - it's irreplaceable
Just my 2 cent's
What do you think of Dave Ramsey?It is always interesting to seek other perspectives.
What do you think of Dave Ramsey?
Is he thinking of leaving Pakistan?
I didn’t even know he ever went there.
No, my reference to Dave Ramsey is the response younger American men have to Dave Ramsey calling them out for being “males not men”. Also, I’m referencing that even in the US, there is despair amongst many young men.
Come on man, I can't be the only person from the younger generation who wants to come back
There is a story around dwindling remittances apart from the crooks ruling.
The first generation immigrants would be sending a sizeable savings to their close relatives. As the years go by, the immigrants would be naturalized or have children in the residence country.
This would cause less and less $ to be remitted back to Pakistan and more income spent in the resident country itself.
Add to the fact that, less and less people (comparatively) are able to move abroad which fails to cover the gap.
So there you go.
Even the most extreme cases of people wanting to come back, face a sad reality and do a runner.
Pakistan cannot be fixed as it is not faulty. Pakistan was designed to be run the way it is now. You can't fix something that's not broken.
Bro honestly, I can only echo this sentiment. For all of my kids, the first thing I did was get them a Nicop. And people always asked why? What value does this document have?We're five brothers beside me investing here and there. The others have never sent a dime to Pakistan and never will per their desire and have flat-out rejected even getting their NICOPs as they feel it's a useless piece of plastic with no value. One of my brothers said the driver's license I have in my pocket holds more weight than Pakistani citizenship; besides my parents, wife, and I, none of them or their spouses have a NICOP.
A feeling of attachment developed with overseas Pakistanis slowly within the newer generation before seeing the No-Confidence Vote. It's all gone; as the saying goes, it takes years to build trust and one mistake to destroy it.
No more actual words have been said than yours.
Honestly, they've brought Billo to wow the crowd in the West, but they failed at realizing the younger generation is more well-read overseas and understands his disgusting family's history. None of us can relate to anything in him as an individual (or whatever you want to call that makhlooq).
So what is your perspective on the causes of this despair among many young men here, that could apply to those contemplating leaving Pakistan, in reference to the topic of this thread?
If they are contemplating leaving, the costs are will be high for their personal lives in so many ways, which wasn’t as much the case in many ways a generation or two ago, and without the right education they will struggle to enter and stay in the middle class. Their children will grow up in a western culture and will be westerners with a western mindset by and large (with all the plus and minus that entails, many of the ills I see more and more in Pakistan when there isn’t much for the comfortable and educated to do).
Usually it requires both, but without a real focus on their upbringing or good educational opportunities, children of immigrants will be less well equipped then those of native born parents to handle the competitive job market for well paying jobs.
If the kids aren’t successful, they will have to settle for living in less desirable neighborhoods with their own social ills and negative influences.
This is not exclusive to the West, but the same in most developed nations they move to. It’s similar to the Lie Flat and Let It Rot sentiment in China.
Similar to professionals fleeing after the fall of the Soviet union, If people really want to leave they would best be as educate as possible, and even then be prepared to not be working at the same level they were back in their home country. I knew of a Soviet doctor that worked as a nurse in NYC. Nothing wrong with being a nurse, it’s a highly respectable job, but the shift maybe hard for some to handle.
Also the cost of living is high in the west, especially in or near major cities most immigrants want to move to. I’m thinking of Orange County, California, where my Vietnamese refugee friends moved to in the 80s and compare it with how the Afghan refugees have to live in the Bay Area, and what prospects they have. It’s not that they will have to live that way forever but will require a lot more hard work then it use to.
But all these points must be moot if the situation is this bad that so many want to leave. For many bright and driven young men and women, they see the remittances or savings their family members or friends send back home and think of the lives they could have if they just spend a few years abroad, some in my family initially thought when they first moved.
But at this point, I can see that it has become either no opportunities in Pakistan just anything to get by if they live abroad.
Overtime they stayed to give their kids a decent chance to be as successful as possible. Considering how ill adapted the next generation was to going back, that thought of going back faded. It reminds me of the journey of the Pakistani-New Zealander YouTuber that moved back with her family to Pakistan, but couldn’t make a go of it.
What Pakistan has going for it under proper management is the potential many southeast and east Asian countries had a genration ago. Thailand and Bali have become go to places for young professional people to remote work from. Lower cost of living has also made these places pleasant for retirees to move to. Young families have worked years in places like Dubai if their children get first class educational opportunities, while parents feel they are earning decent wages or making a difference. Mid-career middle age people have reinvented themselves in new cities and new countries, and the shift has been historically beneficial to them and their new cities. The wealth of knowledge these experienced people can bring to Pakistan can help not catch up and being a networking opportunity for local talent looking to live in Pakistan and not have to move abroad to access these experts as mentors.
All these potential strengths don’t seem to be in hands of common people, so despite the headwinds they will face abroad, who can blame them for wanting to leave. It’s just that they should know what they are getting themselves into if they make the move.
Btw, are you “ethnically Pakistani”? It doesn’t make your arguments any more or less valid, just want to see what lens you also view these issues from.
No, just interested into the future of the PAF.Thank you for your perspectives. Does your handle mean that you are planning a reverse move to join PAF in the future at some point?
No, just interested into the future of the PAF.
How about you? What does your handle mean and you didn’t answer by question from the last post; are you “ethnically Pakistani”?
Many here would love to tell you how they know more about me than me, but you can start at my profile.
The future of PAF interests you? It cannot be bright if all the bright young future pilots want to leave the country.