Political Science, asked by shamshermalik81, 2 months ago

Imagine yourself as a policymaker in the Government sector of Pakistan. As a young, energetic
leader, how would you address potential consequences of having an outdated policy?​

Answers

Answered by IamSuraJ
0

Explanation:

Imagine yourself as a policymaker in the Government sector of Pakistan. As a young, energetic leader, how would you address potential consequences of having an outdated policy? (200 words)

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In my humble opinion, having never visited Pakistan —

The history of Pakistan is that it was founded in the 20th century by Nehru in order to stop the continual warfare between Muslims and Hindus. Given this, the fundamental patriotic tradition of Pakistan is a defensive variety of Islam.

Given this, if I imagine myself as a policymaker in the Government sector of Pakistan as a young, energetic leader — I would beware — I would be extremely cautious and gentle about criticizing government policy.

I would always propose a dialectical compromise to a policy — i.e. always keeping the spirit of the policy, the intent, while gently relaxing its strident quality, and obtaining an immediate reward for the nation in that compromise.

“Dialectical compromise” means taking a thesis (existing policy) and then taking an antithesis (better policy) and making a genuine synthesis (a compromise) so that each policy remains largely intact. There is a true art and science to this.

That’s what I’d do. I’d be very careful — because Pakistan is only 80 years old, and still very close to her roots.

Answered by atul2881
1

Explanation:

sorry , I can't say anything for Pakistan or Pakistani .

I don't accept Pakistan as a nation except - Atankistan !

jai Hind ki Sena !

जय भवानी !!

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