This means every war is selfish in its essence. If we have to paint wars with morality, then every war is wrong, be it in defense or be it for some other purpose. Wars are neither right nor are they wrong. They are in the selfish pursuit of power and survival. We can’t say for sure if the pursuit of power is noble, or even the pursuit of survival at the cost of massive bloodshed is noble or not.
Related: Nuclear Weapons not Shurli Patakhay
One of the main reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire was military overspending. A hidden message for both Pakistan and India, is not it? We also have another example when Halaku khan massacred Baghdad. The reason why Muslims were destroyed was that the Muslim Khalifah at that time build beautiful gardens and libraries but did not spend enough on the Military. Result? The balance of power got unbalanced and Muslims got destroyed. Here is some statistical data on people willing to Fight for their Country (Gallup: March 2016):
- Pakistan 89%
- India 75%
- Kenya 69%
- Russia 59%
- Greece 54%
- Nigeria 50%
- US 44%
- France 29%
- Germany 18%
Pakistan maintains a Progressive Obligation for Balance of Power
It is also interesting to see how the school curriculum twist history to mold young brains in keeping with the ruling party’s ideology. See, how linear it’s far. Its miles are all predicated on the victory in 1965. instead of forcing us to introspect why east Pakistan separated to turn out to be Bangladesh and whether the genuine struggles of human beings of then east Pakistan discover reflection in conflict of present-day ethnic minorities, it’s far all brushed beneath the idea of conspiracy. So, aside from being historically and factually misguided, and morally incorrect, this fantasy is likewise risky for the current as it enables in portray all struggles for an ethnically numerous and a true federation of Pakistan as conspiracies in opposition to the U.S. Create myths for nationhood via all way, in any case, the state also is a large, big fable, however, make certain that the parable isn’t always the foundation for hatred, false superiority, victim-hood, and myopic patriotism.








































