My body, all the men who are bubbling over the slogan of my will, see whose will is on the body of a woman? Those who took to the field against this slogan must have been very satisfied and happy with the scenes of Minar-e-Pakistan, how their followers threw bhangras of their own accord on the bodies of women, how they trampled on souls in celebration of independence.
We waited for the muftis to issue fatwas on these blasphemous, scratching human-like animals, criticizing the obscene advertisements, red powder billboards, dance and anthem parties, but this time the accusation was tucked away in full clothes. Because it was the fault of the one who went under the shadow of Minar Pakistan only to celebrate a few breaths of freedom in the Pakistan of men.
The fault lies with the girls in the Chung Chi rickshaw who were traveling in the state of Madinah to protect the chador and the four walls when their freedom was trampled on and their faces were stamped with masculinity. The culprit is the burqa-clad girl on a motorcycle who was stabbed in the presence of her caregiver.
It was also the fault of the mother and daughter who went out on a rickshaw to go home but became victims of brutality on the way because they do not have the will to control their body. The fault lies with the 16-year-old girl who considered the Mufti to be the watchdog of Islam and became the target of lust.
The culprit is a three-month-old girl in a frock and the culprit is a woman lying in the grave who has been protecting her chastity all her life but did not know that there are wolves roaring her cold flesh in the dust of the grave.
Why not write in the constitution of Pakistan that this country has been acquired only for the freedom of men? Why not include clauses in the constitution of Pakistan that women will be responsible for the consequences if they go out? Why not punish women for stoning to death?
Why not ban women's names from grave books, ban them from talking on social media, on TV, going to offices, getting an education, now After all, after the Tuck Tucker girl incident, there will be a ban on making tuck tucks and going to parks.
Why not change the name of the beloved homeland from Pakistan to Mardanistan?
Believe me, even after nine days, the soul trembles at the thought of what would have happened to the girl who was being tossed like a football from one to the other and from the other to the third.
Proudly made videos of hosnaki and masculinity should show that women have no right to live in society.
The thing to think about is that the way women are being blamed after these incidents, the jails across the country should not be filled with women because they and only that invitation is a manifestation of sin. The time is not far away when there will be a separate department for the guards of women's graves and instead of writing women's names on books, only signs will be written.
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