Grow up and smell the Coffee - An Article in Dawn, Premier Daily in Pakistan



An interesting article in Dawn, the premier political daily in Pakistan. The
good sign is that the democratic ethos are slowly taking roots in Pakistan.
Free Press is an important part of Democracy. Otherwise how do you explain
that this Author, however irrelevant he is, has the integrity to say that
the Political thinking in Pakistan is juvenile. He says the obvious when he
mentions that India would not budge and it is better to forget Kashmir. If
you seriously look at the criteria that the Author uses to assess the
current thinking in Pakistan and apply the same to India, what do we think
about our political behaviour? After all we both belong to same stock. Read
an interesting article on the political situation in Pakistan in the Premier
Daily Dawn that is widely popular in Pakistan.

[image: While individuals can indulge in daydreams, nations do so at their
own peril. So wake up and smell the coffee. —APP/File Photo]
While individuals can indulge in daydreams, nations do so at their own
peril. So wake up and smell the coffee. —APP/File Photo
 *THE late Enid Blyton enriched my childhood with tales of adventure and
derring-do, as she did for millions of kids around the world. I am happy to
see her Famous Five and Secret Seven series still on sale, an indication
that some things, at least, have not changed. *
However, I did not associate the author with serious, philosophical views
until I came across this quotation attributed to her: “Growing old is
compulsory; growing up is optional.” The more I reflected on these words,
the more I saw how relevant they were for Pakistan as a nation.
In the 1950s, the constant refrain I heard was how young a state Pakistan
was as an excuse and an explanation for the new country’s many failings and
shortcomings. Gradually, this mantra has faded as Pakistan grew older, even
though things have got worse, not better, with the passage of years.
As I look around, I see many signs of a country that has grown older, but
has failed to grow up. For one, we remain too immature as a nation to
reflect on where we have gone wrong, and what needs to be done to set
matters right. We live from one day to the next, confident in the
expectation that generous adults will look after us, no matter what
transgressions we commit.
In the event, foreign aid has propped us up, relieving us of the tough
decisions we need to take in order to make Pakistan a viable, prosperous
state.
Other examples abound. When we see we can’t have something, we tend to throw
a tantrum and dig in our heels instead of moving on. For over 60 years, we
have been fixated over the Kashmir issue. Whatever the legal rights and
wrongs of the matter, the harsh truth is that India is not going to budge,
and there is nothing Pakistan can do to change this reality.
Hundreds of billions of rupees and thousands of wasted lives later, we are
where we were decades ago. In fact, we have lost whatever diplomatic support
we once had. The world is heartily sick of the dispute, and wishes we could
just put the matter to rest and move on.
We are aggressive and touchy to the point of paranoia. Take the recent
furore over the Kerry-Lugar law as a good example. For weeks, the media and
the military were in hysterics over the evil intentions of the Americans who
were bent on throwing billions of dollars in our direction.
Pundits and TV anchors fulminated and frothed at the mouth, insisting that
somehow ghairat or our national honour had been affronted. Then suddenly, as
though a switch had been turned off, this crescendo of irrational argument
ceased. What had changed? Probably the dollars had started coming in, and
nothing shuts up a needy teenager like a fistful of cash.
Like most young boys, we love playing with toy guns, only in Pakistan’s
case, they take the shape of lethal weapons, including nuclear ones. All
nations have armed forces and arsenals, but they do not generally take such
pride in them. In Pakistan, derelict jet fighters are mounted in public
squares; models of missiles decorate parks; and mock-ups of Chagai where our
first nuclear tests were conducted, sprout in open spaces.
Kids usually hate being mocked or criticised, and take umbrage at the
smallest slight, whether it is real or imagined. So, too, do our leaders. A
few months ago, a law was seriously being considered to prevent people from
passing around jokes about the president on the Internet, or by SMS. This
move drew much derision internationally, and was mercifully dropped.
More often than not, children are intensely self-absorbed, caring little for
the needs of those around them. Similarly, our well-to-do tend not to think
about the rest of their countrymen, focusing only on their immediate
families. And when they do give to charity, they are concerned only about
how their alms will buy them a place in heaven. Partly as a consequence of
this callousness, poverty continues to stalk the land. Illiteracy, hunger
and disease are endemic. Nevertheless, enclaves of obscenely ostentatious
wealth flourish amidst a vast ocean of poverty.
Impatience is another attribute of the young. Living only in the present,
they want everything now. So, too, do our politicians demand regime change
whenever they are not in power. Unwilling to wait for a government to
complete its term of office, they plot with the military or the judiciary to
overthrow the ruling party so they can grab power. More often than not, the
army uses these discontented politicians as levers to upset the political
applecart.
This refusal to follow the rules and allow a government to complete its
tenure is rife among the media as well. Thus, we can see the feeding frenzy
among TV chat show panellists and their hosts in the wake of the NRO
judgment that has dealt the PPP government a severe blow. In fact, we can
almost see these people salivating at the prospect of more political
upheaval.
Like children with a short attention span, we get bored with the same
ministers saying the same thing after a year or so. We just cannot
understand that above all, we need a period of political stability and
tranquillity.. And we desperately need a consensus to fight the jihadis who
are threatening to tear down the foundations of our state. Despite these
dangers, we continue to squabble like kids; far from developing a common
front, we are doing everything we can to destroy our political rivals,
destabilising the entire system in the process.
Faced with harsh reality, many kids escape into fantasy. We, too, continue
nursing dreams of a united Muslim ummah that would be able to take on the
hated West. In Pakistan, various extremist groups are committed to restoring
Muslim rule over the entire subcontinent.
But while individuals can indulge in daydreams, nations do so at their own
peril. So wake up and smell the coffee. Above all, let’s please try and grow
up.

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