TODAY’S PAPER | February 12, 2026 | EPAPER

The Way I See It

More News

  • Mommy in the boardroom

    Stay-at-Home moms have been something we all grew up with, but according to the numbers, a part time working mother can supplement the household income by an average of 25%

  • Living in Denialistan

    Why on earth do columnists need to criticize the West and its culture when the discussion is about Pakistan? The answer is simple: because the “West” is demonised by many.

  • Rebuttal: Pakistan’s Invisible Soldiers

    Our public does not and cannot differentiate between ‘good Taliban’ and ‘bad Taliban’, no matter how important that distinction might be to the Army and the ISI.

  • Divided we stand

    Sindh has accused the Federal Flood Commission of falsifying losses as provinces compete to qualify for rehabilitation funds. Each tries to prove that it has suffered the most.

  • I am a bunkabab – and proud of it

    Here I stand, an ambassador of the many desis who have been forced to learn your burger ways. As you laugh at our faltering copy-cat English, we look up what falter means.

  • How to fight the Taliban... with Islam

    Islamic education has made it more important for a Muslim to know how to offer his prayers than to know what his prayers mean. This ideological gap is where the Taliban come in.

  • Where art and cinema failed Pakistan

    We do not need to produce art for the sole sake of creating a national image - it is not diplomatic currency but a tool to tell the truth about our culture. Not a fake one.

  • iPod: The next generation

    The must-have music gadget has got yet another make-over. iPods are sleeker, funner and more expensive. So how do the new models measure up to old ones?

  • Cricket saga: What a tangled web we weave

    The general feeling is that Aamir has been led astray by his seniors, specifically captain Salman and fellow fast bowler Asif. Will the PCB be able to discipline these players?

  • Confessions of a flawed feminist

    I recognize that whether we like to admit it or not, there is a deep chasm separating the goals of ‘Eastern’ feminism from those of ‘Western’ feminism.