Monday, November 21, 2022

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Jr wins hearts at Sindh Moorat March for saying Sindh belongs to the people, not his family

PUBLISHED Nov 20,2022
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The artist and rights activist asked people to chant long live the people, instead of long live Bhutto.



Photo: Zulfikar Ali Bhutto /Instagram

The Sindh Moorat March, which was held at Karachi’s Frere Hall on Sunday as part of a global march being observed by transpersons, was attended by politicians, lawyers and human rights activists, including artist Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Jr, who won hearts for telling people not to cheer for his family.

The event saw hundreds of people carrying placards and chanting slogans calling for the rights of the transgender community. Shehzadi Rai, a protest march organiser, told Dawn.com that the main aim of the march was the implementation of the trans rights law. “This year, we have adopted the slogan of ‘Zan, Zindagi and Azad’ (woman, life and free) to show solidarity with women in Iran,” she added.

There were also several speeches on stage. When someone began chanting “Jeay Bhutto”, Zulfikar made his way to the front of the stage and countered, “Jeay Bhutto choro, jeay awaam, sada jeay awaam, jeay khwajasira, jeay aurat [forget ‘long live Bhutto’, long live the people, long live the transgender community and love live women].”

Zulfikar, the only son of the late Murtaza Bhutto and the only grandson of former prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who carries the Bhutto name, said that Sindh belongs to the people. “Sindh is yours. It does belong to my family, it belongs to you,” he told the crowd. “You’re the heirs of Sindh, khwajasira are the heirs of Sindh. I’m the only heir of my grandfather but you all are the heirs of Sindh,” he said.

One Twitter user called him “a genuine human being” and a “pure soul”.

Another admired his resolve and how he encouraged people to “realise their worth.”

Respect and love was also sent his way.

This user was glad to find that Zulfikar “doesn’t consider himself to be a ruler”.

He found some fans online.

He also won some hearts.

For some, Zulfikar gives off “positive and genuine vibes”.

Zulfikar has never really shown an interest in politics. This year, he and his sister, author Fatima Bhutto, set up multi-event series called The Indus Relief 2022 with Menaal Munshey to raise funds for flood affectees in Sindh. It auctioned experiences to raise money for flood victims in Pakistan.

Among the many experiences auctioned was a private screening of Jemima Khan’s new film What’s Love Got To Do With It and an hour in the studio with British musician and producer Nitin Sawhney.

Photographs of Zulfikar walking in floodwater in Sindh went viral online in August and was instantly compared to the way mainstream politicians were handling the floods and meeting flood victims.

PAKISTAN
THE SAD STORY OF THE REJECTION OF SCIENCE
President Ayub Khan looking at the glow of the nuclear reactor at PINSTECH through a special viewer in a water pool in the mid-1960s. 
(Courtesy: Ayub Khan Archives/ Tahir Ayub)

SCIENCE matters. Many yearn for science-free times when wars were fought with swords by valiant Ertugrul-like horsemen. Quite a few want still earlier riyasats. But I have yet to meet a fellow Pakistani willing to have a bad tooth pulled out without anaesthesia or who sends emissaries instead of using a cellphone.

These days, electricity and gas loadshedding have triggered a collective nervous breakdown, while the price of petrol is all that people talk about. All of this would be utterly incomprehensible to those who lived a mere hundred years ago. Ancient civilisations had nothing even remotely similar to the science that exists today.

Like it or not, all modern science — that which is rapidly changing our world on a day-to-day basis — is the 400-year-old child of European modernity. Although many civilisations — Egyptian, Babylonian, Chinese, Indian, Greek and Arabian (chronologically ordered) — helped create that science, not enough was known earlier to create an overarching picture of a universe run by physical law. Nor did earlier civilisations use science to create functional technologies like we do today. Instead, significant advances in ancient science came from men of genius following scholarly interests rather than economic ends.

But now that civilisation on earth has become science-based, the pursuit of science is systematic and relentless. Every country is rushing to acquire mastery over it and, even more, to use it to create technologies to fulfil social desires. Although science and technology (S&T) are two different worlds, the boundary between them has blurred with time. For example, learning how cells divide was considered pure science in the 1800s. Today, it is crucial to discovering cures for cancer.

There is little appreciation in Pakistan for the centrality of science in every modern economic pursuit. Pervez Hoodbhoy deplores the degradation of our scientific capabilities and wonders whether we can change our worldview.

An attempt to situate Pakistan’s S&T may be made using two different lenses; to compare today’s situation with what existed in 1947 (and even earlier); and to draw parallels between Pakistan and other countries in the region. As a starting point, I will take the advent of modern education in India (as opposed to traditional education) because that is where the bifurcation between modern and conventional ways of life began.

Pre-partition situation


India during the Mughal rule saw spectacular achievements in architecture, art and administrative matters. But there was little curiosity in matters of the intellect, particularly science and philosophy. As a result, no university was built in those three centuries of otherwise brilliant rule. Although internal feuds and succession issues were doubtless a significant cause of decline, this lack of interest in intellectual pursuits eventually led to 40-50,000 Englishmen, armed with technology and the scientific method, overpowering and crushing what had been a magnificent empire. Few understood the secret source of English power better than Mirza Ghalib. Differing from those who craved a return to past glories or who suggested picking up arms against the firangis, his thinking was quintessentially modern:





Go, look at the sahibs of England; Go learn from them their skills and ways; From their hands have sprung wonders and wonders; Go try and see if you can excel them.

Science education in British India was spread by three principal agents: British government, Christian missionaries, and education reformers from both Hindu and Muslim communities. Whereas the Hindus had many well-known reformers, among the Muslims the only well-known one was Sir Syed Ahmad Khan. His vigorous advocacy of science and modernity as a means of uplifting Indian Muslims differed sharply from those who feared learning English and science would diminish their religious faith. He had disagreed with Ghalib earlier, but, upon reflection, he became convinced that India’s Muslims must abandon conservatism and travel new paths.

Sir Syed’s heroic efforts notwithstanding, Muslim enrolment in schools remained low. The University of Calcutta was the first secular Western-style university in India, and set standards as far away as Punjab. The requirements being rigorous by the standards of the time, only a few Muslims applied or qualified for admission. Although the populations in Bengal were proportional in size, hundreds of Hindus but just two Muslims passed the first BA examination in 1858.

Early years

Let us fast-forward to 1947. Of the 16 universities in British India, Pakistan inherited only one teaching university, i.e. the Punjab University in Lahore. Additionally, there were some 25-30 colleges in the areas that are now Pakistan. Most were in Punjab; Balochistan had none. Because Muslims had entered academia late and in fewer numbers, the senior faculty in almost all institutions of higher learning was predominantly Hindu at the time of partition. Once rioting began, they fled to India and Muslims from lower ranks filled their positions. Academic quality plummeted.

With time, education numbers slowly increased. By 1969 there were a total of eight universities in united Pakistan. The breakup and subsequent emergence of Bangladesh in 1971 temporarily froze further development. However, the quick post-partition promotions of junior faculty had profoundly debilitating consequences in terms of teaching quality. Mediocres rose to become department heads, deans, and vice-chancellors. They blocked bright young entrants lest their authority was challenged. As a result, rote learning became almost as common in universities and colleges as in schools and seminaries.

Nevertheless, in Pakistan’s early years, there were pockets of excellence in some S&T fields. I will mention only four.

Pakistan’s space programme began in 1961 with the launch of meteorological rockets provided by the United States. Initiated and headed by Professor Abdus Salam, the Space & Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (Suparco) grew rapidly in the 1960s and was more advanced than the Indian programme at the time.

Dr Abdus Salam, the 1979 Nobel Laureate in Physics,
 led the establishment of the Nuclear Institute PINSTECH
 in Islamabad in 1965. 
- Photo: Dawn Archives



Pakistan’s nuclear programme was set in place with the assistance of the US and, until 1972, had been directed towards nuclear power production and basic research. Personnel in the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) were sent abroad in the 1960s for training. Canada provided Pakistan’s first nuclear reactor, the Karachi nuclear power plant (Kanupp). The returnees successfully maintained and operated the reactor even after the withdrawal of Canadian fuel and technical support. India’s 1974 nuclear test led to Pakistan’s open desire to match the Indian bomb, causing the reversal of the West’s nuclear assistance.

In industrial engineering, there was one outstanding institution, the Batala Engineering Company. Founded by entrepreneur C.M. Latif, Beco had relocated itself to Lahore from Batala (in what is now Indian Punjab) after partition. Beco produced a diverse range of heavy and light engineering products, such as diesel engines, machine tools and lathes. Like India’s Tata Industries, it was well set on the path of high growth, but was killed by the wave of nationalisation in 1972.

The creation of Islamabad University in 1967, and in particular the Institute of Physics associated with it, was the high point of academic research in Pakistan. Founded by Riazuddin, a student of Professor Salam, the institute maintained high-quality research in the frontier area of particle physics until its decline in the mid-1970s. At its peak, it compared favourably against a mid-quality physics department in the US.

Assessing the present

Pakistan does not need any more bricks and mortar for the promotion of science because there is plenty of that around already, like the PINSTECH building seen above.
 - Photo: Dawn Archives

Globalisation means no country produces more than a fraction of what it needs and consumes. The more vibrant ones produce relatively more, have higher living standards for more citizens, are better organised, and have cleaner environments. Pakistan also has these aspirations, but is far more reliant on technologies developed elsewhere, such as automobiles, locomotives, aircraft, pharmaceuticals, computers, medical instrumentation, etc.

In principle, a small ecosystem could have developed around imported technologies, but there has been insufficient improvisation and innovation. For example, the once flourishing domestic electric fan industry has been pushed out by cleverer Chinese products. The small domestic output of finished products has led to a staggering trade imbalance that has compounded over time, leading to the current economic crisis.

I have attempted to compare Pakistan’s S&T in 2022 with other countries in the region based on performance in various domains of science, but the attempt admittedly is qualitative and subjective because a proper methodical study does not exist (Table 1).

Agri-sciences: These aim at raising yields of sugar, cotton, wheat, rice, and other crops by adapting and promoting standard techniques of pesticide use, plantation patterns, sowing methods, etc. As highly practical and relatively simple sciences, they are offshoots of the 1960s Green Revolution and are crucial for feeding Pakistan’s rapidly expanding population.

Dr Salimuzzaman Siddiqui was a leading organic scientist, who established the Pakistan National Science Council and later the Hussain Ebrahim Jamal Research Institute of Chemistry. - Photo: Dawn Archives


Nearly a dozen Pakistani institutions, such as National Institute for Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering (NIBGE), seem to have significantly improved local production and have reportedly developed better varieties of cotton, wheat, rice, tea and various fruits. Drip irrigation, food processing, and scientific livestock management are low-cost, but high-return investments.



Defence technology: Pakistan manufactures fission nuclear weapons and intermediate-range missiles. For both, the basic templates were provided by China, but local manufacturing capabilities had to be developed. The JF-17 fighter and Al-Khalid tank, produced with Chinese collaboration, are now force mainstays. In the 1980s, France provided three Agosta-90B submarines that were serviced locally. Over time a burgeoning Pakistani arms industry developed that now turns out a range of weapons from grenades to tanks, night vision devices to laser-guided weapons. However, the website of the Defence Export Promotion Organisation reveals little of what is being offered for sale. Pakistani arms exports have reportedly stalled in recent years. Poor quality control and lack of innovation are said to be responsible.

Space programme: Suparco has had six decades to mature, but as far as space exploration goes, it has practically folded up. The official website shows no future plans. Instead, it seems to have settled for routine testing of variants of missile series acquired from China. India, on the other hand, has clocked several major achievements, such as two successful orbiter missions to the Moon (2008) and one mission to Mars (2013). In 2017, India launched a record 100 satellites into orbit from the Indian Polar Space Launch Vehicle.

Civilian technology: Pakistan’s top 10 exports in 2021 were textiles, cotton, cereals, copper, fruits, minerals, sports goods, leather goods, software, and medical instruments. Only the last two items rely on S&T. As of 2020, the last year for which data is available, Pakistan’s hi-tech exports were 70 times lower than India’s and 2,523 times lower than China’s (Table 2; the last entry is from the Mundi Index, which defines hi-tech exports as products with high research and development [R&D] intensity, such as in aerospace, computers, pharmaceuticals, scientific instruments and electrical machinery).

The above, however, understates the use of S&T in Pakistan’s domestic industrial production, which hinges critically upon imported machinery. This is used to produce textiles, Pakistan’s most important export, as well as cement, vegetable oil, fertiliser, sugar, steel, machinery, tobacco, paper, chemicals and food processing. Imported machinery has created an industrial ecosystem, but finished goods imported from China have adversely impacted many small industries.

Academic research: In developed countries, universities are the engines of scientific progress. Working in tandem with the industry, they help create new products and processes. On the other hand, in developing countries with small industrial bases, universities and colleges are primarily useful in creating a large pool of skilled people who can be gainfully employed in various sectors of the economy.



Irrespective of what area of science a student chooses, the key point that can make a graduate valuable is adaptability. A broad range of interests and knowledge — and a good understanding of subject basics — enables the students to be useful in different kinds of jobs.

Very few Pakistan institutions have done well at this. Hence, employers in the Middle East generally hire Pakistanis at lower levels relative to Indians, Iranians and Bangladeshis. Leaving aside the imported Cambridge system, rote-centred learning has discouraged students from logical thinking and stunted their cognitive capacities. The mathematical abilities of students and their teachers are generally poor. The only exceptions in the indigenous education system are exceptionally bright students at the right end of the Bell curve.

The poor quality of graduates emerging from Pakistani universities has caused employers to lose trust in grades and degrees. Many with PhDs are all but illiterate in their fields and unable to answer simple questions. At the same time, the number of publications produced by students has skyrocketed. Towards the end of studentship, many are credited with more papers than professors in the 1970s would have published over their lifetimes.

Professors and their students, encouraged by a disastrous policy by the Higher Education Commission (HEC) to reward publication numbers, have created a system where at least 90 per cent of so-called research papers are faulty, trivial or plagiarised. Whereas Chinese, Indian and Iranian speakers are invited to deliver lectures at top US campuses, Pakistan’s hyper-productive professors are nowhere to be seen there. Still, international university ranking organisations pick up numerical data and use their computers to create misleading rankings.

What not to do

The degradation in Pakistan’s scientific capabilities is alarming. Just how far Pakistan has fallen into the pit of ignorance and self-delusion was illustrated by a self-styled engineer trained in Khairpur’s polytechnic institute who claimed to have invented a ‘water kit’ that would extract energy from water. Never mind that this violated the rules of thermodynamics, and the rest of the world couldn’t do it. He promised a new Pakistan with limitless energy, no need for petrol or gas, and no more loadshedding.

Politicians and media stars can perhaps be excused for being jubilant. But even our famed scientists fell for it and praised the ‘water car’ publically. No practical joker could have demonstrated more dramatically the true state of science in Pakistan.

In this situation, one needs to carefully think about what to do, and, even more importantly, what not to do.

First, Pakistan does not need any more bricks and mortar for science; there is plenty of that around. A drive along Islamabad’s Constitution Avenue is lined with Pakistan’s most important buildings: Presidency, Prime Minister’s House, Supreme Court, National Library, etc. On the other side of the road stand science buildings bearing names such as Pakistan Academy of Sciences, Pakistan Science Foundation, Islamic Academy of Sciences, Pakistan Council for Science and Technology, Committee on S&T of Organisation of Islamic Countries (Comstech), Commission on S&T for Sustainable Development in the South (Comsats) and others. A short distance from the Presidency is the head office of the PAEC, the largest single science-based institution in the country. About two miles away, on the campus of Quaid-i-Azam University is the National Centre for Physics (NCP).

Were any or all of these grand buildings to vanish suddenly into thin air, the world of science would simply shrug its shoulders. Shiny new cars parked in their driveways radiate opulence — a tragic waste of resources. So-called science ‘incubators’ in various cities have also proved ineffective. These were supposed to create new products for industry and business as well as new ideas for the world of academia. Nothing is visible. Do we need to spend more money doing this? Can we not understand that chickens may need incubators, but ideas hatch inside the head?

Second, we need to see through the numbers game that was started by the HEC in 2002, and immediately dispense with it. This game had deceived Pakistanis into believing that scientific research had increased when, in fact, the opposite happened.

More ‘research’ papers and PhDs, and more universities and institutes do not at all translate into actual progress unless certain requirements are met. The most important of these are academic integrity and accurate assessment of scientific worth. As a result of incentivising corruption through cash rewards for papers and grants of PhD degrees, integrity has precipitously declined.

The way forward

The state of science in Pakistan, 75 years down the line, is visibly poor. There is little public understanding of science, our exports are largely low-tech textiles and raw materials, all significant weapons systems are imported, the space programme has almost ceased to exist, and scientific research carried out in universities and institutes carries little credibility or usefulness.

It is futile to blame a particular government; between one government and another, there has been little difference. The collective worldview, or weltanschauung, is at the core of the failure. This grim situation should energise us to drastically change our course. This must begin with changing the content and quality of education, beginning at the school level and then upward.

Instead of stuffing minds with propaganda, the goal must be to enhance cognitive capacity and creativity. How this can be done is well known: we can simply copy one of many successful countries. Attitudes acquired in school carry over to all higher levels — colleges, universities, research institutes, and every other organisation. Good education encourages questioning and seeking answers. Traditional education, on the other hand, lulls the mind into passivity by endless memorisation and repetition.

As they say, to make an omelette, you must first break an egg. That egg, in Pakistan’s context, is the traditional value system that clashes with the value system of modernity and science. Pakistan hungers for the fruits of science, but a massive upsurge of zealotry has rendered it attitudinally unfit for nurturing science. Unlike its products, science cannot be acquired without accepting the fundamental premise of strict objectivity and, above all, the scientific method. Yes, it is as plain as that — take it or leave it.

The author is an Islamabad-based physicist and writer.

NYU's Scott Galloway: Russian Intelligence Responsible For Trump Winning Elon Musk's Poll To Reinstate Him To Twitter



NYU professor Scott Galloway on Sunday's 'Face The Nation' said that the Russian intelligence arm GRU was behind Trump's victory in Elon Musk's poll asking Twitter users if former President Donald Trump should be allowed to return to the platform.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, he's also, Scott, a presidential candidate as we learned just a few days ago. He was kicked off of Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, after January 6. Do you think this, this opens the floodgates? Or is this just a gimmick by Elon Musk for PR?

SCOTT GALLOWAY: I think it's mostly the latter. I think if- if Elon is out of the news for more than 48 hours, he'll decide to kick him off again. He said that the people had spoken in Latin. I found that this poll- you know Elon Musk polls on Twitter are more for support than illumination. He ran a similar poll to see whether or not he should sell Tesla stock, and it ended up he'd already filed to sell those shares. So I think these polls are mostly a gimmick. And I would argue the people haven't spoken the GRU has spoken these, Twitter--

MARGARET BRENNAN: Russian intelligence, you mean?

SCOTT GALLOWAY: Hundred percent. Twitter has become a playground for bad actors and fake bots. This poll is meaningless. This decision is meaningless.

The tweet poll:

Warriors face second lawsuit in wake of FTX collapse

This is the second lawsuit that names the Golden State Warriors as a defendent amid the fallout of the collapse of cryptocurrency firm FTX.

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 9: View of the court before the Golden State Warriors vs. Los Angeles Lakers preseason NBA game at the Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 9, 2022. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)


By MADELINE KENNEY | mkenney@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group
PUBLISHED: November 21, 2022 

The Golden State Warriors are facing a second lawsuit amid the fallout of FTX, formerly one of the world’s largest digital currency exchange firms that is now in shambles.

An FTX customer has accused the reigning champions of fraudulently promoting the failed cryptocurrency company that filed for bankruptcy earlier this month in a proposed class-action lawsuit filed Monday in San Francisco federal court.

The 25-page suit, obtained by the Bay Area News Group, also names FTX founder and former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and Caroline Ellison, who led Bankman-Fried’s trading firm Alameda Research, as defendants.

Elliott Lam, a Canadian citizen and Hong Kong resident who reportedly lost $750,000 in the collapse of FTX, alleged defendants incorrectly depicted FTX as being a “viable and safe way to invest crypto.” If he would’ve known of its unregistered securities, Lam suggests he wouldn’t have done business with FTX, according to the suit.


The suit also alleged the Warriors had knowledge of FTX’s wrongdoings and that the defending champions “knew or should have known” that their partnership with the now-embattled company was “deceitful and fradulent.”

A Warriors spokesperson said the organization doesn’t comment on pending litigation.

The US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York opened an investigation into FTX months before its epic collapse that left investors and customers facing losses that could total in the billions of dollars, according to Bloomberg.

Reuters first reported on the suit.

Golden State was also named alongside several other high-profile backers, including Stephen Curry, Tom Brady and Shaquille O’Neal, in a separate class-action lawsuit filed last week. The suit accused FTX and its former CEO, Sam Bankman-Fried, of using celebrity endorsers to funnel “unsophisticated investors” into a Ponzi scheme and to promote its unregistered securities.


The Warriors previously showed in-arena and digital ads during TV broadcasts as part of their partnership with FTX launched last year. The reigning champs paused all FTX-related promotional assets last week after the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Nov. 11. A Jordan Poole bobblehead giveaway Nov. 14, planned months in advance, was the final FTX-partnered promotion.



University of California student academic workers continue strike for higher wages

The biggest stalemate remains over baseline wages, which union organizers demand start at $54,000

Picketers march through Sproul Plaza on the campus of the University of California on Monday, Nov. 14, 2022, in Berkeley, Calif. About 48,000 union workers from 10 campuses walked off the job Monday morning, asking for better pay and benefits. 
(Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group)

By KATIE LAUER | klauer@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group
PUBLISHED: November 21, 2022

BERKELEY — Striking University of California academic student workers have entered the second week of their open-ended work stoppage, holding picket lines and protest signs aplenty across all 10 campuses.

Believed to be one of the largest higher-education strikes in U.S. history, more than 48,000 graduate instructors, teacher’s assistants, student researchers and sympathetic senior faculty walked off the job Nov. 14, demanding higher living wages, better child care benefits, increased access to transit and greater job security.

Without a deal in sight, hundreds of classes and lectures have been pushed online while negotiations are ongoing between administrators and representatives from the students’ union, United Auto Workers.

In a rare glimpse of solidarity between rivals, the Stanford University marching band spelled out “UAW” in line formations while performing at California Memorial Stadium during the two universities’ football “Big Game” on Saturday.

Union organizers are holding steadfast that the strike will not end until UC’s contract proposals adequately address California’s staggering cost of living for its intellectual workforce, which is largely in charge of teaching classes, drafting research papers and grading final exams.

Proposals have included improvements to health benefits, annual child care stipends and paid time off, but the biggest stalemate remains over wages.

Union officials say some UC part-time teacher assistants make as little as $24,000 annually, and they are holding steadfast with the insistence that UC establish a baseline salary of $54,000. UAW reps argue that more than 90% of its workers are rent-burdened — paying 30% to 50% of their income on housing costs.

However, UC has proposed increasing first-year pay by 3% to 10% for each of its different academic worker positions, but it has pushed for 3% annual raises, rather than any increase tied to inflation rates.

UC has said its proposal “would be among the top of the pay scale among the top public research universities, and more comparable to private universities such as Harvard, MIT and USC.”

Solidarity spread beyond university campuses in the first week of the strike.

Delivery drivers represented by the Teamsters Union have refused to drop off packages to UC, some construction crews have delayed work in support of strikers, faculty associations have joined picket lines and a fund to support academic workers who may lose pay during the strike has raised 54% of its $500,000 goal.

Additionally, dozens of elected officials have openly called for UC to take better care of its workers.

On Monday, Rafael Jaime, president of UAW 2865, which represents 19,000 striking workers, shared that 18 of California’s congressional representatives added their names to the ever-growing list of people calling on UC President Michael Drake to resolve the strike with fair contracts.

“It is unconscionable that the people who do the majority of teaching and research at UC are expected to survive on poverty wages,” Jaime said in a statement Monday. “We’re hopeful that UC will listen to Congress, to the community and to the tens of thousands of workers who are asking to be treated fairly.

“And we will be on the picket lines until they do.”