Indian Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Faisal Iqbal

New Member
Registered Member
That charlatan who according to his own admission, has more vermillion circulating in his veins than blood, he gives few lines about the Indian engine in a Indian fighter (in almost two hours long BHASHAN), there goes this forum down the rabbit hole of the best path to achieving it, you guys are talking about the reason and logic, that's for the losers, it's known fact, have you heard about the idiom, vanishing into thin air, how does that come about in English language, its based on yogi trick of throwing the rope towards the sky, where it becomes taut, fellow climbs up the rope and vanishes in the thin air, afterwards the rope falls towards earth (moral of the story, SURELY ITS MAGIC)

Indian themselves think about indian jet engine as nothing but boasting, why do you guys become so serious, if you guys want to talk about some magical method to achieving this goal I am all ears, but if solution is based on logic or hard work, or starting with the small scale licensed version of some outdated engine and then increasing industrial strenght step by step towards the ultimate goal of making indiginous aero engine in next quarter century, not going to work in magical, mystical, mysterious realm of Bharat.
 
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Black Wolf

Junior Member
Registered Member
You know we Pakistani's have bad reputation, espacially as far as our neighbours daughters are concerned, no good at all, but if we had captured her dead or alive without letting out a peep, we are not that scrupulous.

Let’s not fall into the trap of blaming ordinary Pakistanis or making sweeping generalizations. If there’s anything that should concern us, it’s not individual behavior but the consistent pattern of state-sponsored overreach.

From the fall of East Pakistan to enforced disappearances in Baluchistan, and now regime change operations, our military establishment has always acted to secure its own power, often at the expense of justice, dignity. Security agencies have gone so far as to abduct our own mothers, sisters, and daughters, all in the name of control and silencing dissent.

These aren't isolated incidents, they reflect a system that prioritizes power over accountability.

These aren’t just political moves, they reflect a deep institutional problem where power is prioritized over justice, rights, and accountability.

Before pointing fingers outward, we need to honestly examine what’s happening within our own system.
 
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Faisal Iqbal

New Member
Registered Member
Let’s not fall into the trap of blaming ordinary Pakistanis or making sweeping generalizations. If there’s anything that should concern us, it’s not individual behavior but the consistent pattern of state-sponsored overreach.

From the fall of East Pakistan to enforced disappearances in Baluchistan, and now regime change operations, our military establishment has always acted to secure its own power, often at the expense of justice, dignity. Security agencies have gone so far as to abduct our own mothers, sisters, and daughters, all in the name of control and silencing dissent.

These aren't isolated incidents, they reflect a system that prioritizes power over accountability.

These aren’t just political moves, they reflect a deep institutional problem where power is prioritized over justice, rights, and accountability.

Before pointing fingers outward, we need to honestly examine what’s happening within our own system.
Dear Black Wolf, if you don't mind me asking a question, I will venture for one anyway, are you a real person or am I replying to some AI chatbot? Because if its AI, then I wouldn't spend much time expalining wit and satire (a certain leeway that we are allowed over here), now if you are real person, then you have real problem of differentiating between literal and figurative meaning of anything that's written, hopefully you will not take offence.
 
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