By Syed Shamsuddin “The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to make a difference.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson This profound reflection by Emerson redirects human attention from the fleeting pursuit of personal pleasure toward the enduring pursuit of meaningful existence. Happiness, though desirable, is often transient and dependent upon circumstances; but usefulness, honor, compassion, and positive influence leave behind an imperishable legacy. Emerson therefore elevates life from mere self-indulgence to moral and social responsibility. To be useful is to become a source of benefit for others. A life devoted solely to personal comfort soon fades into insignificance, whereas a person who alleviates suffering, imparts knowledge, or contributes to society continues to live in the gratitude and memory of mankind. The value of a tree lies not in its appearance alone but in the shade ...
By Syed Shamsuddin The following exposition seeks to draw urgent national attention to the growing sense of deprivation, exclusion, and institutional inequity increasingly experienced by the educated youth of Gilgit-Baltistan as a consequence of the flawed restructuring of the federal quota regime introduced in 2020 — a policy alteration whose discriminatory repercussions are now manifesting with alarming clarity in the allocation pattern of Pakistan’s Civil Services. The quota system in Pakistan’s Civil Services has never been a mere bureaucratic mechanism for numerical distribution of vacancies; rather, it constitutes an essential constitutional instrument designed to preserve the principles of inclusive federation, balanced representation, and participatory governance among historically underrepresented regions of the country. The philosophical foundation of the quota framework was to compensate for structural disparities and to en...