SJ

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SJ

@sjk_57

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Katılım Ağustos 2020
187 Takip Edilen26 Takipçiler
QCAlgorithm
QCAlgorithm@Anthony_Nigeria·
@ReddCinema So why do they gag and restrict their media so Much? Let them allow the good people of China to tell us how great the CCP is. Instead they rather pay self-hating Western influencers to do that job.
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Redd
Redd@ReddCinema·
90% of the people in China now own their own households.
Redd tweet mediaRedd tweet media
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Usama
Usama@BadshaahSalamat·
Just landed at an airport in Italy. Handed over my Pakistani passport for immigration and the officer smiled warmly, looked at me and said, “You’re a global peacemaker. We’re proud of you.” He then asked me to marry his daughter because he would like his grandchildren to have Pakistani peacemaking blood in them. Made my day 🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰
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Omer Azhar
Omer Azhar@OmerAzhar96·
At Rs.458/litre, Pakistan now has the 2nd most unaffordable petrol on earth relative to income. Only Ethiopia — with a $1.50 daily wage and $1.30/litre fuel — ranks worse. Every other country, including the poorest in Asia and Africa, is behind Pakistan on this measure.
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UFO Hunter
UFO Hunter@iamufohunter·
🚨 A Palestinian mom was shot point blank in her head by IDF soldiers while she was carrying her child. Retweet and expose Israel if you have a little Humanity left in you.
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roman roy apologist
roman roy apologist@ro3ver·
I think paki govt consistently fails to realize that for nationalism to work u actually have to build the nation too
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Mustafa
Mustafa@oprydai·
i have never talked about this before, but here we go. building in my country (pakistan) is playing on "insane" difficulty. the friction is systemic: • importing a 3d printer takes 6-8 months of bureaucracy. they fear you’ll print a weapon. then you pay 70-100% tax. prototyping is dead before it even starts. or you pay 300-400% to local importers. • aerial robotics r&d is effectively illegal. drones are banned for civilians. you cannot test flight controllers or autonomy without risking arrest. • lithium-ion cells, high-torque servos, and advanced mcus are treated as "luxury items." or "commercial goods." valuation loops at the port kill the supply chain. • no seamless international payment gateways (paypal/stripe). scaling a global hardware/software brand requires "hacking" the system through offshore entities. • you don't just pay for electricity; you pay for the solar and ups systems required to keep sensitive cnc and server hardware from being fried by the grid. the cost of innovation isn't the components. it's the mental and financial tax paid to a system that views engineers as a threat. i am struggling with the system more than the laws of physics. "how much would i have achieved if the system was supportive?" is a bitter question. but i know im smart, and i'll figure my way around it. i always have. but this is the story of how the potential of millions is wasted because there is no functional architecture for them.
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Mohammed
Mohammed@m_naif80·
Europeans were unbearably foul-smelling due to extreme filth. The envoy of Tsarist Russia even described the King of France, Louis XIV, saying: “His smell was worse than that of a wild animal.” One of his mistresses, Madame de Montespan, would soak herself in perfume so she would not have to smell the king. The Russians themselves were described by the traveler Ahmad ibn Fadlan as “the filthiest of God’s creation; they do not cleanse themselves after urinating or defecating.” It is also said that Tsar Peter would urinate against the palace wall in front of people. Queen Isabella I, who killed Muslims in Al-Andalus, reportedly bathed only twice in her life and destroyed the Andalusian bathhouses. King Philip II of Spain allegedly banned bathing altogether in his country, and his daughter Isabella II swore not to change her undergarments until the end of a city’s siege, which lasted three years — and she died because of it. This is about the kings — not to mention the common people. The famous French perfumes for which Paris became known were invented to overpower the stench. Because of this filth, diseases spread among them, and the plague would come and wipe out half or a third of them periodically. The largest European cities such as Paris and London, at most, reached populations of 30 or 40 thousand according to the highest estimates, while Islamic cities exceeded one million inhabitants. The French historian Dribar says: “We Europeans owe the Arabs (meaning the Muslims) for the comforts of our public life. The Muslims taught us how to maintain bodily cleanliness. They were the opposite of Europeans, who did not change their clothes until they became dirty and foul-smelling. We began to imitate them in removing and washing our garments. Muslims wore clean, bright clothes, and some even adorned them with precious stones such as emeralds, rubies, and coral. Cordoba was known to have three hundred bathhouses, while European churches regarded bathing as an act of disbelief and sin.” Credit goes to Muslim travelers and expatriates. The term “bathroom” in English is said to commemorate Muhammad Bath, the Indian Muslim who taught them in his time how to bathe and maintain cleanliness. Source: Memoirs of the writer Sandor Marai Official Spanish documents between 1561 and 1761 We can only say: Praise be to God for the blessing of Islam — and sufficient is it as a blessing.
Joey Mannarino@JoeyMannarino

Can anyone imagine the smell?

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nai ★
nai ★@naii9x·
nai ★ tweet media
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SJ
SJ@sjk_57·
People don't steal chaplein from masjid like they used to
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Zohaib Ahmed 🇵🇰🇵🇸
Zohaib Ahmed 🇵🇰🇵🇸@Zohaib_Author·
When Telenor entered Pakistan in 2005, it was a major foreign investment win. The company brought more than 2.4 billion dollars in total investment over the next decade, added over 45 million subscribers at peak scale, and introduced services that reshaped the market. I was one of millions who connected emotionally with that early branding. Easyload expanded prepaid accessibility across more than 150,000 retailers, and Easypaisa built the country’s first large-scale mobile wallet system, crossing 30 million users and handling daily transaction volumes worth billions of rupees. Under the leadership of Jon Eddy Abdullah’s successor, Michael Foley, who served as CEO of Telenor Pakistan, the company operated with a clear vision. The Islamabad office had a reputation for transparency, teamwork, and data-backed planning, and the results showed in subscriber growth, ARPU stability, and nationwide coverage expansion. Once top-level discipline exited the system, the decline began. The local management that later took over treated scale as a substitute for strategy. Spending increased without KPIs. Resources went into needless luxuries such as a high-cost corporate office instead of network improvement. Selling Easypaisa at a time when fintech valuations were climbing was a strategic error that forfeited long-term dominance. Packages deteriorated, call quality dropped, complaint volumes rose, and fraud incidents increased. This was not a market failure, it was a leadership failure. For someone who bought their first SIM after watching that iconic ad in 2005, and still use it today, the fall of Telenor feels personal. The merger with Ufone may make commercial sense on paper, but it signals the end of an era. Telenor did not lose to competition. It lost because those entrusted with the brand’s future forgot the values that once inspired millions like me.
Startup Pakistan@PakStartup

The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has approved PTCL’s $400 million acquisition of Telenor Pakistan, giving the company a formal NOC to move forward. The deal will merge PTCL’s mobile service Ufone with Telenor Pakistan, creating the country’s second-largest mobile operator. PTA said it reviewed the transaction’s impact on competition and consumer interests, stressing that both companies must maintain service quality and fulfill all licensing obligations throughout the merger. The regulator will monitor the process closely. PTCL earlier said the acquisition will enhance customer experience, network quality, and overall efficiency in a telecom sector facing heavy costs and regulatory pressure. Image is Ai generated and is just for reference #PTCL #TelenorPakistan #TelecomNews #PakistanTech #PTA #Ufone #IndustryUpdate

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Yipeng Ge 葛义朋
Yipeng Ge 葛义朋@yipengGe·
Exactly two years ago, the University of Ottawa suspended me from my medical residency training in public health because of social media posts in support of Palestinian human rights. They framed my social media posts as “unprofessional”. The irony being that I studied the impacts of settler colonialism on health in Palestine during my public health training. They messed with the wrong person. They later reinstated me, without any apology, so I left their racist institution to put my time and energy to places and people who actually deserve it. It’s been a year since I filed a human rights complaint against the university, and they continue to try to dismiss the case with frivolous motions with factual inaccuracies, but the court seems to acknowledge the value in hearing the case. It is blatant discrimination on basis of anti-Palestinian racism. I’m taking them (and the faculty member who doxxed me) to a provincial human rights tribunal to seek accountability and justice. To anyone else who is facing similar forms of repression for solidarity with Palestine - remember you are on the right side of history. To stand against genocide is the most decent and moral position to take. To oppose genocide as a healthcare worker is the most professional position to take. Keep your head held high. The institutions will come around when there is no political or economic cost to oppose genocide. Until then, we will keep persisting and pushing back against bullies and racist institutions. Free Palestine, from the river to the sea.
Yipeng Ge 葛义朋 tweet media
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🧜🏾‍♀️
🧜🏾‍♀️@cecesinterludee·
The fake moral shit people do when evil people die <<<<<<
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blkmessiah
blkmessiah@ghostofkurta·
Motherfuckers that scroll past videos of dead Palestinian babies daily and justify snipers shooting Palestinian youths in the head are about to tell you you shouldn’t be celebrating death right now lmao FUCK EM
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TIMES OF GAZA
TIMES OF GAZA@Timesofgaza·
Gaza this night.
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Jimmy
Jimmy@FCBJimmy_·
Greatest sportsman of all time having a posture like this is so funny
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