Friday, 21 March 2025

Cracking the Code: Why the U.S. Blindly Supports Israel's War Crimes


Have you ever wondered why the so-called champions of humanity—the United States—unconditionally support Israel’s war crimes? The answer lies deep within the financial and political web controlled by Zionist elites.

It all began in 1913, when the Rothschild family—one of the most powerful Jewish banking dynasties—engineered the creation of the U.S. Federal Reserve. This move transferred financial control from the U.S. government to private banks, forcing America to borrow money rather than issue its own currency. From that moment on, Zionist influence in the U.S. became unstoppable.

Just as they hijacked the American banking system, these elites expanded their grip on global finance. Families like the Rothschilds, Goldman Sachs, and JP Morgan built an empire of economic dominance, ensuring that whoever controls the money controls the world. Their strategy was first tested in the early 1800s, when the Rothschilds gained immense political influence in Britain and France through war profiteering. Today, the world’s largest banking institutions are primarily run by Zionist elites, which explains why the global community remains silent in the face of Israel’s brutal and inhumane actions in Gaza.

The situation worsens when we examine who truly controls the United States. Former President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is not just a Jew—he is a close ally of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The two share deep political and financial ties, reinforcing Israel’s control over U.S. policy. Despite Americans priding themselves as the world’s greatest nation, their government is nothing more than a puppet of the Zionist-controlled Deep State.

The truth is clear: Zionist elites dictate global finance, U.S. foreign policy, and international silence on Israel’s crimes. The question is—how long will the world remain blind to their control?

Friday, 12 July 2024

BACHA BAAZI- THE HIDDEN PREDATORS


 The first time I sold myself, I didn't have money—the words of a boy who sold his body when he was eight and a half years old. According to the first and only national child labor survey in 1996, about 3.3 million Pakistani children are trapped in child labor. This number has been increasing since 1996, and now, according to different surveys, almost 12 million children are involved in child labor in Pakistan (HRCP, 2018). Millions of such children do not have a home to go to, so what happens to them is a horror for mankind.


Pedophilia, commonly known as "Bacha Baazi" in Pakistan, is spread throughout the country, but Peshawar has a deep history. Pakistan not only shares the longest border with Afghanistan but also has a dark history of bacha baazi dating back to the 1700s. There is a boy across the river with a bottom like a peach, but alas! I cannot swim." Khushal Khan Khattak, c. 1700 [Return of a King, p. 17]. Scottish historian William Dalrymple writes in his book 'The Return of a King' how a Pakhtun leader and poet has expressed his desire for a boy. Attributing such an obscene couplet to a leader is challenged by other historians, and it might not be true. The real dilemma is how the original poetry got altered and became one of the most played songs among the Pathan soldiers during the British Raj with extremely obscene lyrics. This song was played on loudspeakers in Afghanistan before partition. This malpractice in Afghanistan and Peshawar is deeply rooted in the culture on both sides of the Durand Line.
Preying on young boys is the biggest entertainment for drivers across Pakistan. According to a local survey that was reported in the documentary "Pakistan's Hidden Shame," 95% of truck drivers

admitted that having sex with boys was their favorite entertainment. As they move from Sindh to Karakoram, the drivers like to keep young boys to accompany them during this journey. A human rights lawyer, Zia Awan said that it is a culture among drivers to keep young boys as sexual partners.

According to the National Commission on the Rights of the Child (NCRC), there are more than 1.5 million street children in Pakistan. These children often hang around the bus terminals, where beds are laid in the open air at night for the drivers to rest. These places at night become a horror for children as these men rape and bribe minor boys for sexual purposes. Sometimes the children have no choice but to accept these offers because of poverty and extreme hunger. 
Discussing this topic is taboo in Pakistan, as people do not want to talk about such matters. The government does not prioritize this as a major issue leading to serious consequences. Sexually abused children face severe psychological problems that lead them towards drug addiction and becoming abusers themselves. According to Sahil's January to June 2023 report, a total of 2,227 cases of child abuse were reported, with more boys (593) than girls (457) being abused between the ages of 6 and 15. Imagine what the future generation will become if such a large percentage of children keep on facing sexual abuse each day.

I never thought that behind the colorful trucks and buses lies such a dark reality. It is to clarify that bacha baazi is not associated with Pashtuns only. It is not the ethnicity of the culprits but the fact that they live in a lawless land where they have the power to use and abuse the vulnerable segment of society. This is a serious issue brought up by foreign researchers and human rights activists. However, the Pakistani people are not yet ready to discuss this sensitive topic openly. As a result, this hidden shame is not openly discussed in the media or newspapers. This writing is to call out all the pedophiles that are freely moving across Pakistan and the people who aid them. 

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Friday, 18 August 2023

Horrors of Domestic Chlid Labor

Photo Credits: DAWN news

To raise our voice against child labour, we should first get clear on what constitutes child labour. The Convention on the Rights of the Child declares that anyone who is under the age of eighteen is a child, and therefore they should be treated like one. Now coming to international laws related to child labour, the International Labour Organisation has many conventions addressing this issue, including ILO's Convention No. 138, which clearly sets the minimum age for labour at these standards: the general minimum age for admission to employment or work at 15 years (13 for light work) and the minimum age for hazardous work at 18 years (16 under certain strict conditions). It provides for the possibility of initially setting the general minimum age at 14 (12 for light work) where the economy and educational facilities are insufficiently developed". According to the above-mentioned convention and the ILO's Convention No. 189 on the Worst Forms of Child Labour, no child is allowed to work in a dangerous work environment anywhere in the world.

Fortunately, Pakistan has ratified this convention and has set the minimum age for employment at 14, but is unfortunately unable to implement it. Article 11.3 of the Constitution of Pakistan says, "No child below the age of fourteen years shall be engaged in any factory, mine, or any other hazardous employment."

picture by DAWN news

Particularly in Pakistan, child labour is increasing rapidly due to many causes, including poverty, unemployment, and inflation. Child labour itself has many types, including children working in factories or kilns, forced child labour, and domestic child labour. There is a perception, specifically in undeveloped countries like India and Pakistan, that domestic child labour is less dangerous and threatening to a child. Parents of children involved in domestic child labour believe that their children are safer at home than working in a factory or kiln. The reality is different; domestic labour can be a far greater threat to a child in some cases because the child is left in someone's private space where there is no accountability. mentioning the horrible housemaid torture by judge's wife case in Islamabad and recently another case in which a woman was arrested from the G-15 sector for allegedly torturing her 13-year-old maid, reported by Dawn News. The question is: how many of these invisible domestic child workers are being employed in Pakistan? The answer is unknown because there are no statistics. Researchers can go to factories and kilns and collect data about children working there, but it is not possible for a researcher to go to every house and check if they are employing a child or not.

Now, what can we do? We can change people's minds. We can change the perception of society through social media. We can look around our neighbourhood and run awareness campaigns against child labour, and we can call out people involved in domestic child labour. We can simply say no to child labour, whether it is happening in factories or at home.

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Tuesday, 8 August 2023

KASUR; The Home of Pedophyles

According to UNICEF, only 34% of children under the age of 5 are registered at birth in Pakistan, and 3.3 million children are trapped in child labour. Moreover, according to the Sahil (an NGO for child rights) report, 55% of girls and 45% of boys are victims of child abuse. These figures are alarming, but why are they increasing? 

In Pakistan, there are a lot of cultural taboos and religious misconceptions that make us keep our mouths shut on such issues, making them discreet. We feel ashamed to talk about child abuse, and we do not discuss these issues with our children. That is where the problem begins. Not knowing their rights makes them vulnerable to pedophyles. Parents have the most important role to play. They are the protectors and should not allow their kids to be alone with anyone, but in a country where there is extreme poverty, which is expected to reach 37% by 2023 (World Bank, 2023), a poor man has no option but to make their children useful and send them to work, where the children see the most cruel face of this world. The Zainab case, the housemaid torture case, and the Kasur child abuse scandal are some of the famous cases in Pakistan, but a lot of cases never get reported due to many reasons.


From Pakistan Observer

Now coming to Kasur, which I would name the home of brutal pedophyles, Although child abuse is widespread in Pakistan, what makes Kasur different is the level of brutality it holds. The most alarming issue emerging from this district is the rise in child pornography. Child pornography is one of the worst emerging issues that humanity faces in the 21st century and is considered the most important issue by the rulers in developed countries, but in countries like Pakistan, it is not given much importance. Many child pornography images were posted on Facebook. In 2010, during the Kasur incident of child abuse, many children were sexually abused, and their videos were sent to their parents to blackmail them. As the victim is being blackmailed by their online footage, this not only takes abuse of their childhood but also their entire life.

The FIA's cybercrime division is in charge of handling cases of digital child exploitation, but the NGOS want the perpetrators to be hanged in public to set an example for others. The pedophyles must be publicly hanged in order to suppress this crime, but what if these organised criminal gangs are backed by powerful and wealthy individuals? Until my next blog, I'll leave this question up to the readers.

 

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Thursday, 18 May 2023

Metaverse and Social Sciences

forbes.com
 

As 6G technology is going to be the predictable future of the world. I would like to dedicate this blog to my fellow Pakistani social sciences students and colleagues. How can we polish our careers and make our place in this technologically advanced world? Well, the answer is that there is a lot of room for us if we want to make it. To work with organisations creating robotics, artificial intelligence, and meta technologies, there are some skills we can acquire. As social sciences students, we are told to enhance our writing skills. You can improve these skills by learning and writing about AI technologies and sustainable development goals that inculcate all kinds of development sectors.

First of all, I would like to explain 6G technology. I belong to Gen Z, and I know that nearly all Gen Z kids are obsessed with Marvel and DC. You might have imagined yourself working in a laboratory along with Iron Man and helping him out in his adventures in the multiverse. Well, that is cool, and you can still connect yourself to the people working in such labs that we watch in Marvel movies, even if you are not a scientist, by providing assistance to technological developers working in the metaverse about the ethical side of what they are launching and about the ethical pros and cons of their technology. Now, coming back to what 6G actually is, it will be like living in a Marvel movie, with a metaverse, automated vehicles, holograms, "intelligent environments," and more. Sounds cool, right? but it can cause a number of ethical problems for humanity, and that's exactly where a social scientist is needed. A number of leading universities in the world are working on the ethical sides and policies of these technologies, thereby providing a lot of employment opportunities for students of the social sciences. So I would say to keep your place in the world updated, know everything about the 6G world, try to acquire relevant skills like behavioural science, data analysis, and ethics in public policy, and also emphasize on enhancing your communication and writing skills.

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