Spirit Of Islam: Shahid Afridi Beat Crazy Fans On Karachi Airport - Spirit Of Islam

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Shahid Afridi Beat Crazy Fans On Karachi Airport

Posted 24 March 2012 - 08:20 AM (#21) User is offline   Aljannah 

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View Postarzooemadinah, on 24 March 2012 - 07:45 AM, said:

Yes we can give him break and let all players and politicians show there anger and break peoples legs and slap there faces because they are humans at the end of the day .Who are the others (lunatics you call them are they animasl ?

The rule there apply only might is right.



There are differences between poor people in Pakistan. One is poor who accepts his situation from Allah swt and lives his life. Second he Greedy Poor, who robs cheats steals his way through life. Doesn't care whats right or wrong.

I'm putting that fan on the second 'poor' category. He sounds like a selfish twisted guy. Who don't give a dam about noone except himself.

And Stop putting Afridi in the same category as the Homo politicians. Those Homo politicians need to be taken down yesterday. Can't you see what the Arabs are doing in their countries? That's right they are having a spring clean. Khair we can only afford the true people among us now to lead us. The donkeys have lead the lions long enough!

May Allah swt bring peace to the middle east soon, and let ye all live this life according to how He swt is best pleased with Ameen
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Posted 24 March 2012 - 12:48 PM (#22) User is offline   Khalid_the_Warrior 

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View PostAljannah, on 24 March 2012 - 08:20 AM, said:

There are differences between poor people in Pakistan. One is poor who accepts his situation from Allah swt and lives his life. Second he Greedy Poor, who robs cheats steals his way through life. Doesn't care whats right or wrong.

I'm putting that fan on the second 'poor' category. He sounds like a selfish twisted guy. Who don't give a dam about noone except himself.

And Stop putting Afridi in the same category as the Homo politicians. Those Homo politicians need to be taken down yesterday. Can't you see what the Arabs are doing in their countries? That's right they are having a spring clean. Khair we can only afford the true people among us now to lead us. The donkeys have lead the lions long enough!

May Allah swt bring peace to the middle east soon, and let ye all live this life according to how He swt is best pleased with Ameen


Spot on!

Com'n guys, Its not about if he was a celeberity or not, he was a father first. Any father would have reacted like that in this suiation.

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Posted 24 March 2012 - 01:19 PM (#23) User is offline   Know-the-Ledge 

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People who are justifying Afridi's despicable behaviour for which he should be locked up (because they fancy him) should be ashamed. It is this same malaised attitude that allows corruption and cronism to flourish in Pakistan and amongst Pakistanis. The youtube comments just show the extent of the idolism that has entered the hearts of Pakistanis.

This post has been edited by Know-The-Ledge: 24 March 2012 - 01:24 PM

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Posted 24 March 2012 - 01:59 PM (#24) User is offline   Fekay 

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Bro KTL, an average person can't get out of pakistani airport without being harassed for money. NOW times that by million for afridi and his family surrounded by strangers, and in a society where god knows what can happen; you think he was overreacting? He's a responsible dad first, a crickter second and celebrity third.
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Posted 24 March 2012 - 02:02 PM (#25) User is offline   arzooemadinah 

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View PostKhalid_the_Warrior, on 24 March 2012 - 12:48 PM, said:


Spot on!

Com'n guys, Its not about if he was a celeberity or not, he was a father first. Any father would have reacted like that in this suiation.




If a father allowed to do that then why object let politicians rob pakistan and bring wahida shah back and let the other mpa break legs to the poors etc because they all fathers and mothers too and whatever they doing they doing for the sake of there kids .

Why not you treat all same.

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Posted 24 March 2012 - 02:21 PM (#26) User is offline   Know-the-Ledge 

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Sometimes there's no good way of bringing bad news to good people, so i'll try to weave some comedy into it, to soften the blow, but seriously i'm feeling very sharmeela at all these ickle 'hot-spots' trying to 'strike-it-lucky'. You wanna bank or play on? Riiiiggghhhhht as Michael Barrymore would say, since when did it become o.k for this kind of smut to be publically shared?

Posted Image



Fekay, we all know what kind of chaotic scenes were going to be seen at the airport, meausres should've been taken to factor all the melee into the equation, ragardless of all the excuses, you can't violently assault someone, even if you feel justified, you must still pay the debt of beating someone up; as Arzoo says there's millions of pernickety reasons for assaulting people, no one does it without some reasoning, Afridi is a criminal as can be clearly seen, at the very least it is AFFRAY, if nothing else, how can he be allowed to get away with this, shame on the (in)justice system that protects the rich and famous; RasoolAllah said that this was one of the hallmarks of the jahil arabs, selective implementation of law depending on who the culprit is.

This post has been edited by Know-The-Ledge: 24 March 2012 - 02:24 PM

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Posted 24 March 2012 - 02:41 PM (#27) User is offline   Fekay 

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@KTL, I can't disagree with what you said since overall It makes sense. But from individual's perspective, actions had reactions. I think that's about it. Regarding being above the law, the individual, indian fan forgave afridi as being his brother and filed no charges.
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Posted 24 March 2012 - 04:08 PM (#28) User is offline   Fatema-the-resplendent 

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@Fekay

The Indian Fan is a greater Man than Afridi. The Pashtuns and Punjabi's can't control their tempers :angry:

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Posted 24 March 2012 - 04:26 PM (#29) User is offline   Fekay 

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View PostFatema-the-resplendent, on 24 March 2012 - 04:08 PM, said:

@Fekay

The Indian Fan is a greater Man than Afridi. The Pashtuns and Punjabi's can't control their tempers :angry:



I can't disagree with that, it certaintly takes a greater man to control and forgive, the forgiving fan! But collectively the crowd did behave inappropriately therefore reaction.

Overall, an unfortunate incident on both sides.
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Posted 24 March 2012 - 04:31 PM (#30) User is offline   Know-the-Ledge 

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Because the fan really had a choice? Pakistan is full of cronyism and injustice, how could an average dude take on an idolised sports star? Afridi should be done in the public interest, he's a danger to the public.
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Posted 24 March 2012 - 04:48 PM (#31) User is offline   Fatema-the-resplendent 

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View PostKnow-The-Ledge, on 24 March 2012 - 04:31 PM, said:

Because the fan really had a choice? Pakistan is full of cronyism and injustice, how could an average dude take on an idolised sports star? Afridi should be done in the public interest, he's a danger to the public.


Agreed.

He thinks because he is famous and rich he can go around hitting people. People have come to the Airport to celebrate a Pakistani victory, and great to see how Pakistanies damage their own reputation by turning a postive into a negative.

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Posted 24 March 2012 - 04:55 PM (#32) User is offline   qalam 

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salam

the mans an animal - thats why i said at the start i was the only sane voice in an ocean of decrepit outbursts.


This man is on a low - leave your family at home and meet them there joker





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Posted 24 March 2012 - 05:39 PM (#33) User is offline   Know-the-Ledge 

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View Postqalam, on 24 March 2012 - 04:55 PM, said:

salam

the mans an animal - thats why i said at the start i was the only sane voice in an ocean of decrepit outbursts.


This man is on a low - leave your family at home and meet them there joker





dr aq



They will stop at nothing to defend the abhorence of their idol, it is nothing but blind emotions and hormones. This is symptomatic of the deep seated problems in the Pakistani/muslim psyche. One rule for the rich and another for the poor. It's disgusting.
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Posted 24 March 2012 - 06:19 PM (#34) User is offline   qalam 

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Salam

Finally the hypocrisy of the nationalistic approach oozes out of people like odorous sweat after a friday night hitting the dance floor!!!



Why willpeople not realise that their demi gods are nothing but selfish self exhuberant self satisfying devils......




sometimes i feel that ktl and i are the only voices of reason in this ocean of depravity


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Posted 24 March 2012 - 10:30 PM (#35) User is offline   Desert-Sheikh 

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View PostThe-Mughal-Sister, on 23 March 2012 - 11:50 PM, said:

Afridi is a sporting hero these jungless will of course jump on him and try to pull a strand of his soft, wavy bouncy hair, to show everyone they were close to him.[/size][/color][/font]


Fans make or break a celebrity, its these fans who elevate commoners among others to celebrity status, and Fans from all over the world are 'jungless'. It's celebrities or stars who need to 'learn' manners and maintain their personal security.

This guy is not only a STAR (an international cricket player) but a full time Mullah who advertise tablighi jamaat and deliver sermons in the Masjids. Fans might be jungless but he's not less than taliban.

Enough has been said, topic lcoked!

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Posted 25 March 2012 - 12:24 AM (#36) User is offline   Desert-Sheikh 

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Please keep in mind that good manners and etiquette are essential to continue posting on this forum.
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Posted 25 March 2012 - 12:59 AM (#37) User is offline   Desert-Sheikh 

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View PostKhalid_the_Warrior, on 24 March 2012 - 12:48 PM, said:


Com'n guys, Its not about if he was a celeberity or not, he was a father first. Any father would have reacted like that in this suiation.



What father?



I watched that video twice but couldn't find his daughter being pushed or even in the scene. Where's she, can anyone spot her?

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Posted 25 March 2012 - 01:19 AM (#38) User is offline   Khalid_the_Warrior 

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View PostDesert-Sheikh, on 25 March 2012 - 12:59 AM, said:



What father?


I watched that video twice but couldn't find his daughter being pushed or even in the scene. Where's she, can anyone spot her?



Bro DS, you are right. We can't see her daughter in the video but may be the media is only showing one side of the story. My only question is; what any father would have done that in this suiation ? And I believe most of them would have reacted like this. That is if the guy did pushed her and hurt her.

It's not about right or wrong, of course he did wrong and nobody can take law into their own hands, be it Afridi or any Joe.

I'm just looking at a father and not a celeberty!!!

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Posted 25 March 2012 - 01:56 AM (#39) User is offline   Know-the-Ledge 

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To me the issue is of the depraved psyche of Pakistanis and then they carp on about activism and justice yet they quickly befall to the same skulduggery that we're sick of seeing with our elders.

Qalam summed it up in a deleted post, yet some just can't see beyond their emotions; there is a culture of favouritism and a divide between how the crimes of the rich and famous are viewed and their poorer countrymen. Allah kusse ghareeb na kareh. Never mind discuss the issue of law, it's a carnival atmosphere of increasing Afridis legend, this is how deeply we are entrenched with the jahliya of extreme nationalism; 10p says no one would be defending him had Pk lost the cup, despicable attitudes of volitional fans.

How are we going to straighten that nation out when the rich are pardoned for being famous and hot-looking and the poor are scorned with our moral indignation and ire, we all become morally muslamic when it's some common criminal, but abit of wavy hair and a few sixers and all is overlooked.

Imagine if that was Wayne Rooney, he'd be facing police proceedings, that's what I love about the British - justice for all!
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Posted 25 March 2012 - 02:25 AM (#40) User is offline   Fekay 

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Interview with gul rahman, the guy slapped by afridi.


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