Quote:
Originally Posted by Faisal86
And your comments are too good to instigate the feelings of antagonism and hatred between the two otherwise friendly communities living together for centuries.
I strictly adhere to the view that the demand for the retention of quota system (district-wise) on the part of Baloch students is fully justified. They possess all the rights to get equal opportunities at all levels. The issue of open-merit should be raised only when the level-playing field, in all respects, has been provided to all the stake-holders. Moreover, it is not at all an injustice with the pashtoons in any sense. They (Pashtuns) are getting more than what they deserve owing to the myseries the state has inflicted upon Baloch youth, eversince the inception of Pakistan, and the indifference on the part of establishment-backed Baloch leaders who reach the corridors of power just to accumulate wealth in their personal bank accounts.
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You shouldn't be a chauvinist, you have to bear it as a glaring reality that Pashtoons are equally share holders in this Pashtoon/Baloch province. I would again say, it is the age of reasoning. What ever may the causes of weakness of Baloch belt students be, it never means to deprive Pashtoons or other capable people of their rights. Instead of punishing your own corrupt people, the talented youth of the province is victimized under the notoriously wicked quota system (which really is condemnable). I would really accuse Baloch leadership for crippling Baloch youth for providing them weak educationists (those weak teachers, lecturers appointed under quota system) for a couple of decades. Had they appointed talented teachers and lecturers on pure merit, Baloch belt students would have come at par of the Punjab students even, just within a decade, but they crippled the Baloch youth. It is the age of competition, and our Baloch brothers must equip them selves with talent (which I think is present in them more than others) and they must abandon the ferocious walking stick of quota system.