There are three types of people; one who you advise with hard evidence and objective Divine Truth, he takes it and follows – that is a man who’s modest and trustworthy and you go easy on him; another who seemingly accepts but keeps oscillating between right and wrong – for he’s a borderline hypocrite; the third type rejects the truth and looks down on others – because he’s either an arrogant or an ignorant – you leave him to his state of misery because you’re not his manager or a judge and because there is no compulsion in the matters that Muslim scholars have already reached their consensus or ijma. Our job is to just inform them of what’s right and that which is wrong precisely according to the Scripture and the Prophetic ways.
Is Syed Muzammil Hasan Zaidi considered elite?
Lastly, the middle-class topic that has gone viral is often overrated in every story. The definition of the middle class is subjective and can vary from person to person, and nobody has the right to question anyone else’s class status. The transition from middle class to upper class is a journey that can be a significant achievement for the person experiencing it, but this topic has been diluted so much that if anyone genuinely talks about this transition, it is often considered underrated or a “topi-drama” (not targeting anyone specifically). In conclusion, we should accept these types of conversations and society needs to hear both sides (unfiltered) so that we can make our own judgments about what is correct.



































