Failed Terrorist State of Pakistan: Idiotic Musings

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Red circle wali meriii... baki bhai log apna apna dekh lo. :roflb:

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No drooling over women please.

I will handout bans.
Why are people drooling over Pakistani women so much? I am in no way denying that there are many beautiful girls in Pakistan but there is no need to simp so much for them. Izzat nam ke bhi koi cheez hothi hai iss duniya mai.

Beautiful people (both men and women) exist everywhere. Then again beauty is subjective, what I may find beautiful you may not, what you may find beautiful I may not, it's completely subjective as said before.

While not trying to come out as a simp myself but as someone living in Goa, I have seen some of the most beautiful girls I have ever seen, and they look way better than your typical instagram models.

Pakistanis should be the last ones to troll us on the context of "Tharki Indian Men". Pakistanis literally run grooming gangs in the UK where they kidnap & groom underage white British girls. Also Pakistanis were caught & beaten in Turkey for recording and harassing Turkish women.

Oh and you guys remember PDF aka Pakistan Defence Forum? A friend of mine who used to visit their site had told me that they literally had a thread where they would post images of Indian Bollywood actresses and all the perverts of the forum would gather there.

I am sorry if my post was a bit OFF-TOPIC but I couldn't keep quiet and had to speak up. Hope sense prevails. Let's keep simping & drooling to the minimum and bashing Pakistanis to the maximum. :peace:
 
No End to the India–Pakistan Conflict

It is a huge myth that Pakistan will drop its hostility towards India, no matter how much you punish Pakistan with repeated wars and defeats. I will explain why?

To understand the persistent hostility between India and Pakistan, one must consider the broader historical context. The origins trace back to medieval times when Muslim Arab armies, followers of Prophet Muhammad, invaded and conquered parts of the Indian subcontinent. The local Hindu population, deeply immersed in spiritual and philosophical traditions, was unprepared for the militarized, expansionist forces of the Arab world. As a result, much of northern and western India fell under Muslim rule.

For nearly 700 years, Muslim dynasties governed large parts of India, often using force to convert sections of the Hindu population, especially in the western regions. This era ended with the arrival of the British, who defeated the ruling Muslim powers and colonized the subcontinent for two centuries. Upon their departure in 1947, Britain divided the region into two nations: Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan.

This partition, while aimed at resolving communal tensions, planted the seeds of enduring conflict. Pakistan’s ruling class harboured aspirations of regaining influence over India, leading to a series of wars. In 1948, they attempted to seize Kashmir. In 1965, they made a failed push toward Delhi. A more devastating defeat came in 1971 with the creation of Bangladesh. Another confrontation followed in 1999 during the Kargil conflict. Now, in 2025, tensions flare again—but India, far more prepared, stands ready to respond decisively.

This cycle is unlikely to end soon. In many ideological and strategic circles within Pakistan, the notion of defeat is unacceptable. As long as that mindset persists, conflict will likely continue.

Meanwhile, India has surged ahead in economic and military strength, while Pakistan has struggled, burdened by economic instability and reliance on subpar Chinese military equipment.

In the end, there may be only one path to lasting deterrence: asymmetry. If one side grows powerful enough, the other may stop considering war as an option. India appears to be pursuing this strategy—growing so strong that conflict becomes inconceivable.

Perhaps this approach will reduce the frequency of clashes. But eliminate them entirely? Unlikely.
 

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