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The “D” Word

Aisha Farooqui January 18, 2005

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#187 Posted by ZahraJ on January 24, 2005 3:21:44 pm
Re: # 177

Sajal: I am glad that you are out of the messy relationship. Just to let you know the Working Mother of the Year`s award was granted to a Pakistani American Scientist a few years back. Her story was published in all the leading magazines and she was interviewed on Good Morning America. Her husband walked out on her because she gave birth to a baby girl - he was a pakistani musalman as well. She is a Phd and has secured her own place in the corporate sector in America. By the way, her husband also came to the United States through her. She was a scholarship holder whereas that leech just tagged along. Most of my cousins(both male and female) and friends (female) are far happier in their relationships with people outside of their culture. The ones who have opted for men from the Pakistani Culture are leading an average life with both average and below average chaps.

If a man is not capable of standing on his own two feet on his own then he is not worth a glance - that`s my mantra. Educated and accomplished women have to set some standards.

I have seen a few very close friends go through terrible time in their relationships(both pre and post). Both of them opted to dump the piece of garbage men in the picture and moved on. One went through an ugly divorce within the 1st year of her marraige and her parents asked her to get out of it within the first few months. She prolonged but eventually gave in. She got remarried in the following year and is quite happily married with a 3-4 year old son. She moved to the US and has been pursuing her higher studies and just started her new job. Interestingly, her first marriage was also to someone in the US who was psychologically unstable.

There are several pleasant cases of remarriage. In my opinion, that is only doable, if a woman knows her value and who she is, only then the husband values her identity. In many cases, where women were remarried, the guys were never married before. In my experience, all those marriages were love marriages. None of them were arranged. So, there are some positive episodes as well.
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#186 Posted by DrDr on January 24, 2005 3:07:07 pm
Saminasha, I have many relatives - male & female - in their 30s who as far as we can tell have no intention of marrying much to the chagrin of their old-fashioned parents. Some have live-in friends. But acc. 2 law, they r common-law couple. If they separate in some cases it would be as severe as divorce & in other cases it would be no big deal. The variable I think is the length of time they have been together.
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#185 Posted by sattar2 on January 24, 2005 3:07:04 pm

Urstruly,

Your post #146 contains the usual errors. You are a sick individual with neither self-esteem nor regard for human life.

Blasphemy: Quran prescribes that only social ties etc. be severed with those who blaspheme. Ignoring this and insisting on killing blasphemers has nothing to do with Islam or civility.

Apostasy: You are wrong once again. Quran does not prescribe any punishment for apostasy and it leaves the matter between Almighty and the individual. Your position is to kill apostates … which is why you are a sick animal.

“Last prophet”: Nowhere does Quran declare the Prophet (pbuh) the last prophet (I am delighted that you accept this … and stay away from Quran as a consequence). In the past you’ve misquoted hadith to support your views. When I proved you wrong by merely quoting the full hadith, you did not have an answer (I am sure Malik`s now curious ...).


Are you really that stupid … or do you just like to play dumb? Kindly clarify ...
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#184 Posted by DrDr on January 24, 2005 3:01:51 pm
Romair,
Point taken. Divorce in many states in the US entails qually dividing property and savings, and deciding on the custody of children. Where no children are involved and the couple has not been married for long, divorce can be relatively painless. For older couple, especially older women who may not be independently wealthy, divorce may mean a life of poverty. Therefore, stress induced by divorce is largely dependent on age, financial status, length of marriage and whether children are involved. The answer to whether divorce is the most traumatic event is - it depends.
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#183 Posted by Saminasha on January 24, 2005 2:43:49 pm
Re: # 176

Romair,

Not all people WANT to get married...except for gays and lesbians-and you dont want them to, even tho their marriages are much more successful than het marriages in the Bible Belt. And even then, some of our gay brethren and sistren feel the same way many of us feel...if you want the benefits, you`ve got to play along...

What you might be confusing marriage with is a desire for a soul mate. As some of us are lucky to discover, your spouse may be it-even with years of work and communication-. Most of us find out that our spouses arent or may never be our soul mates....or worse, not even our friends.

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#182 Posted by malik99 on January 24, 2005 2:40:14 pm
romair - you gloat ``Malik99 may have had the complete foundations of his religious thought process shaken. ``

romair sahib, that is bound to happen when one meets a person who has the PERFECT understanding of a religion. so yeah, pleased to meet you.

but unfortunately, the way you floated about and separated ``interpretations`` of Quran and life and teachings of Prophet (saw), it almost comes out that Islam is whatever you want it to be - depending on how one interprets. You pick what you like from ``Islam``. You leave what you dislike. Context does not matter.

Of the five pillars of Islam, you have already ``re-interpreted`` 3 of them into oblivion. Daily Salaat - a pillar of Islam, is no longer the way Prophet (saw) prescribed it. Haj is not how Prophet (saw) taught us. You are already upset that Qadiyanis are declared non-muslims. So there goes the kalima too. Of the five pillars of Islam you have re-engineered 3. Not sure what your ``intrepretation`` is about zakat and siyaam, but I can make an educated guess :)

Its a happy happy joy joy world.
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#181 Posted by Romair on January 24, 2005 2:37:28 pm
Re: # 172

soysauce mian: ``Romair.......Divorce is a psychologically traumatic experience besides death? Where are you getting that from? Losing a job is traumatic, living in the street is traumatic, falling ill is traumatic. How did you do your ranking?``

This has been ranked by eminent psychologists (of which I am not one). Following is a ranking from the University of Texas Medical Branch website, which ranks the most stressful life events, based on a social readjustment scale, from most stressful to least. Following are the top ten:

``Holmes Social Readjustment Rating Scale

Rank Life Event LCU Value

1 Death of spouse 100
2 Divorce 73
3 Marital separation 65
4 Jail term 63
5 Death of close family member 63
6 Personal injury or illness 53
7 Marriage 50
8 Fired from job 47
9 Marital reconciliation 45
10 Retirement 45``

https://www.utmb.edu/psychology/holmes_social_readjustment_ratin.htm

As you can see, the top three are all related to marriage. An unwanted separation (death of a spouse) is the the most stressful. Followed by a voluntary divorce and separation. They are more stressful than going to jail or even death of some other family member. And mind you, this is for goras, whom everyone considers independent, liberated etc. For desis, it is bound to be higher.

Ironically, getting married is 7th most stressful. And marital reconciliaiton is 9th. 5 out of the top ten most stressful events are related to marriage!!

This is why I say, if you are not sure about getting married and/or are already planning to get a divorce, even before you have gotten married, then don`t get married to begin with. Not getting married would be better, for such a person, than getting married and then going through a divorce.....
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#180 Posted by amit on January 24, 2005 2:23:13 pm
Re:sajal#177

Men who hit women are the scum of the earth, real sadistic vermin who should be in jail. They are basically cowards with low self-esteem, who cannot succeed in the outside world. Hence they take out their frustration on women, whom they consider to be weaker. I hope you filed criminal charges and got your ex arrested. My sympathies with you. Hope you can pull yourself together.

As far as your friend is concerned who got her sister hitched to your ex, she must be insane. She has single handedly ruined her sister`s life by pushing her into this living hell. Jeez, what is this world coming to?
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#179 Posted by sajal on January 24, 2005 1:44:58 pm
Aisha and Farzana !

I applaud you for sharing your life with us.

Farzana,

I have just disclosed my life history on chowk, but I am still perplexed as to what women are in our society. Our parents raise us with dignity and respect and then our husbands take it all away so easily and make us feel worthless. This society tells you to suffer in silence and looks down upon you if u decide to stand up to it. I recently took divorce from my ex too and like you I am finally free. I may not have the married word next to me but i do have my respect with me.
It takes courage to do that and believe me I know and I applaud you for standing up for your rights.
sincerely
sajal
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#178 Posted by Urstruly on January 24, 2005 1:29:54 pm
Re: # 176

henry kessinger is the great saviour of all scoundrels for he coined the eternal ``declare victory and get out``.
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#177 Posted by sajal on January 24, 2005 1:22:06 pm
I just want to say to the women :

If you want to change your life you have to take a step to change it. I am new to this site and I don’t know if I am sharing my thoughts appropriately but I do know I speak with sincerity.
I got divorced last year after a long 8 yr marriage . I was unhappy and miserable but didn’t show it because of course I had to suffer in silence as I was brought up to understand divorce was the that should never be in my dictionary. So there goes long, miserable years of my life trying to salvage a failing marriage for the sake of people and society. Then one day when my ex hit me infront of my one and only daughter and I saw her cowering in the corner it hit me what was I trying to save? A daughter who will grow up with no respect and dignity so I moved out with the only clothes on my back. The funny thing is this is America but all the Pakistanis in my city boycotted me because for them physical abuse was not a good enough reason to divorce..not good enough and I was told I am being a selfish woman!!!
hell who were they to judge but they did but did I care, no! because it was a question of my life , my kid and my dignity. I stood up for my rights, fought the ex and the society with no money. I am living my life with peace and for the first time in 9 yrs I know my worth. I am an educated woman so why did I take his crap for all these years because I didn’t want to be called a divorced woman with a little girl as I know well the stigma attached to it.
The kicker is my best friend for 8 yrs in the US took his side and for the life of me I would not understand why as she knew about everything and he even told her yes he was guilty of the above crimes. So 3 months after my divorce my ex tells me well I am getting married to your supposed best friend`s younger sister. and lo and behold! here was the missing link and why ? because of the green card I gave him!!!
she thought her sister would come to the US so even though she knew everything they still married her sister why because she has 6 unmarried sisters in Pakistan and they belong to a lower middle class family.
I wonder after this true life episode what are the women really worth in our society?
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#176 Posted by Romair on January 24, 2005 1:19:24 pm
hamidm mian #175: “........... what bothered me about your discussion with urstruly is that it was the usual muslim reaction of men throwing the book (books in urstruly`s case) at women ............ the women deserve better than dragging god into their very real issues ..........”

As I said earlier, there are certain people, at whom one should throw the book, and there are others at whom one should throw George Carlin. Urstruly in now (almost) convinced that much of his legitimacy of his arguments may be illegitimate. Malik99 may have had the complete foundations of his religious thought process shaken. In the end, both are at least, convinced that a majority of women aren’t going to hell. Which was my aim of the whole discussion, with them. Throwing George Carlin at them would be about as useless as throwing the book at you……………

“....... you are right about me - of course i am concerned about who my daughters end up marrying, even though it is a few years away ................ .. look, based on my personal experience i don`t have a lot of faith in the desi male”

I am not the dad of adult, or even teenager daughter(s), yet. So I don’t have first hand experience. But I have observed certain things:

I think there is an in-built desire amongst girls/women to get married. It is in their genes. Not just the desire of having a husband, but the desire of marriage and a wedding, itself. This is why, despite all the statistics you have presented, marriages continue to take place, in all societies, at all levels, amongst, ``liberated`` and, ``un-liberated`` women.

I can hardly remember anything about my wedding, valima etc. I don’t recall what I was wearing, what the arrangements were, who laughed and who cried. I can barely remember the name of the hotel, where it took place. Howeever, my wife can recall each and every detail: her clothes, who stitched them, the food, the arrangements, the jewelry, who attended and who did not. I gave away the suits I wore at my wedding years ago, when I went from a size 31 to a size 33. I don’t even remember the color. My wife has each and every single piece of her wedding clothes stored in safekeeping. Even though I could have worn the suits to work and she cannot wear the elaborate desi wedding dress anywhere. Yet we have three full suitcases of clothes occupying precious storage space, where I want to put my newly purchased bicycle. My dad told me he found my wedding ring in his bottom drawer. I had been searching for it for years. My wife has each and every piece of jewelry locked in a bank. She has left the car and house open on occasions, where we could have been robbed, but never once has the jewelry been left unlocked. This is despite the fact that the clothes and jewelry have never been worn in a decade. And the fact that we had an arranged marriage, and obviously didn’t know too much about each other, much less be in love, at the time of marriage.

Whenever new married desi couples come over, the first things they are shown are our wedding pictures; as much as I try hard to make sure they don’t see my pimple-faced early 20s, lack of color-coordinated appearance. And when we make a return visit, the wife on that side, bores us with her wedding pictures; as her husband and I try to sneak away to the local sports bar.

For a long time, I justified this by convincing myself that I am just a great catch and my wife thanks the Lord, once at Fajr and twice at Isha, for placing me in her life. However, over time, I have realized this may not be the case. It is not me, who is the important entity. It is the whole concept of marriage and a wedding that is important. I just happened to have been in the picture. It could well have been anyone else and the pictures would remain just as important.

Surprisingly, this is not only true for desi women. It is true for goris also. I have not seen any wedding magazine, specifically for men, in North America. Yet there are tons of them for women. Some which just have pictures of wedding dresses. Even Jennifer Aniston and Julia Roberts et al – women who could have an army of men – want to get married. They will get divorced and then immediately want a wedding again. And will talk about their newly minted husband (who makes 1/50th of their salary and maybe living off them) like a college girl talking about her first boyfriend…….again and again and again….

My wife’s old college roommates come and stay with us, now and then. One or two of them are unmarried gori ladies. They have been there and done that: slept with half the guys in San Francisco (and perhaps even some of the girls), partied till they dropped, drugs, climbing the corporate ladder (not to mention also climbing every good-looking guy they can get their hands on). Yet what is it that they admire about us desi simpletons: Not the new CD player that I keep trying to show them. Nor the fact that we can speak two languages better than them. But the fact that we are married, and still married. For all their careers and independence and, ``liberation,`` and what not, her marraige is one thing my wife holds over them as her trump card……..

So, while I try not to comment on family members of repliers on this site, I will make an exception in this case, since you sound like a genuinely concerned desi dad of two growing girls. Girls, at least in my opinion, have this in-built desire to get married, programmed into their DNA. I don’t know why. But it is there. Despite the fact that the dice is loaded against them. Girls want to fall in love in their sparkling wedding dress and be swept off their feet by their Prince Charming. Even the ones in an arranged marriage, who have never met their husbands-to-be, turn their pictures into an imaginary Prince Charming. This includes all the girls from Kasur to Hollywood.

So my guess is that while you are busy trying to run FBI and NAB checks on every boy/guy (desi or otherwise) your daughter(s) may look at. And while you are busy cautioning them about the abusive male (desi or otherwise), from whom they should never be afraid to get a divorce, they will busy thinking about their wedding dresses, their flower arrangements and the details of decorating their new house. And about their Prince Charming or Ranjha/Majnu-to-be, even if there is every indication in your evaluation that he won’t be one……..

This is why the institution of marriage chugs along, in every country, every religion and even amongst atheists, despite all its in-built problems………
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#175 Posted by hamidm2 on January 24, 2005 11:47:17 am
romair mian,

....... you are right about me - of course i am concerned about who my daughters end up marrying, even though it is a few years away ...........

..... .. look, based on my personal experience i don`t have a lot of faith in the desi male - one out of four weddings i have attended in the last few years have either ended in divorce or i am constantly hearing horror stories about the girls being abused by their husbands and their families (and this is right here, in good old us of a and all the parties involved are ``educated`` professionals) ........ and being a man i fully agree with mrs hamidm`s keen observation that ``aadmi ki zaat ka koi bharosa nahin``..........

........... what bothered me about your discussion with urstruly is that it was the usual muslim reaction of men throwing the book (books in urstruly`s case) at women ............ the women deserve better than dragging god into their very real issues ..........
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#174 Posted by hamidm2 on January 24, 2005 11:03:34 am
romair mian (and you can call me mian if you want to ),

...... marriage is a man-made institution and there is really nothing sacred about it ...... people in scandinavian countries and other parts of europe seem to be doing just fine - actually, since their crime rate is really low, the kids seem to be okay inspite of being bast@rds.........sure it is a traumatic experience for people when they split, but they do seem to get over it rather quickly, especially if young children are not involved ...............

....... in our grandfather`s generation women also put up with multiple wives (both my grandfathers had two apiece) but can you imagine your wife putting up with it ? .........

...........if you look into it, i am sure you will find that most pakistani women who initiate divorce are those who can take care of themselves financially and do not fear being ostracized by society ......... the rest of them don`t really have a choice and will suffer all kinds of abuse in silence ............ of course if you wait long enough things can change - after years and years of abusive behavior some men do have a change of heart or the mother-in-law simply passes away ............... but is it really worth the wait ?
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#173 Posted by Romair on January 24, 2005 10:49:58 am
hamdim mian/ZahraJ mian: I am going to go out on a limb on comment on something personal, which I think maybe on both of yours mind. Considering the fact that both of you have commented on areas, people or groups that I am a part of, in same manner, I think I can take such liberty, also...........

My guess is that both of you are in a stage where something related to women`s marriage is on your respective minds. This is why you are both quite defensive and just seeing the worse in desi males.

I would say, ZahraJ is in her twenties and single, and maybe looking for a husband. And she keeps getting disappointed with all the one`s that are prospects. In addition, she has heard horror stories about what desi husbands do to their wives. So she is letting loose on desi guys, for not coming up to her standard of being an eligible suitor, i.e she wants to (or may want to) get married, but she just wishes the desi males would fix themsleves up, so that they can be considered eligible......

Hamidm mian, I would say, has daughter(s) whom he knows are getting close to the marriage age. If not close, then at least where he (or they) has to start thinking about that. He, being a desi male, knows the thought process of desi males, and how they treat their wives. But now he is a dad. And he does not, obviously like all fathers, want his daughters to end up like that in a marriage where they are not treated well.

So he is now shifted from being a desi husband to being a desi dad. And wants to ensure that a mechanism is in place, where daughters can get out of a marriage quite comfortably if they have to. Hence he is pushing a mechanism in which divorce is normal, common and easy..........

I think, women, Western and Eastern, for whatever reason, despite all the marriage horror stories they discuss, do want to get married. I don`t know why. But they do. They will complain about men (desi or otherwise) but they want one as a husband. They just get frustrated when they cannot find the right one, or end up with the wrong one.

Men, on the other hand, are not as frustrated by not finding the right woman. Nor do they want to get married as much as women do. However, when the become dads of daughter, they become holier than the pope and start worrying about, ``the right guy,`` even more than their daughters do. This is specially true for desi men........
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#172 Posted by soysauce on January 24, 2005 10:45:46 am
#170 Romair
Divorce is a psychologically traumatic experience besides death? Where are you getting that from? Losing a job is traumatic, living in the street is traumatic, falling ill is traumatic. How did you do your ranking?
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listing 48-64   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

Interact Index

    #235 sajal
    #234 ZahraJ
    #233 ShoreSahib
    #232 malik99
    #231 Romair
    #230 ShoreSahib
    #229 soysauce
    #228 ShoreSahib
    #227 malik99
    #226 Romair
    #225 ShoreSahib
    #224 malik99
    #223 soysauce
    #222 amit
    #221 SR
    #220 Romair
    #219 Romair
    #218 ZahraJ
    #217 ZahraJ
    #216 hamidm2
    #215 Romair
    #214 sattar2
    #213 Romair
    #212 SR
    #211 SR
    #210 amrita
    #209 Saminasha
    #208 amrita
    #207 DrDr
    #206 mohar11
    #205 Saminasha
    #204 Saminasha
    #203 Saminasha
    #202 Aisha_Sarwari
    #201 FarzanaVersey
    #200 FarzanaVersey
    #199 amit
    #198 hamzaad
    #197 MQMPower
    #196 jay
    #195 ZahraJ
    #194 Romair
    #193 ShoreSahib
    #192 sattar2
    #191 ZahraJ
    #190 hamidm2
    #189 sajal
    #188 hamzaad
    #187 ZahraJ
    #186 DrDr
    #185 sattar2
    #184 DrDr
    #183 Saminasha
    #182 malik99
    #181 Romair
    #180 amit
    #179 sajal
    #178 Urstruly
    #177 sajal
    #176 Romair
    #175 hamidm2
    #174 hamidm2
    #173 Romair
    #172 soysauce
    #171 soysauce
    #170 Romair
    #169 Urstruly
    #168 hamidm2
    #167 Urstruly
    #166 Urstruly
    #165 Romair
    #164 hamidm2
    #163 Urstruly
    #162 Saminasha
    #161 Furheen
    #160 Furheen
    #159 Furheen
    #158 amit
    #157 ZahraJ
    #156 ShoreSahib
    #155 FarzanaVersey
    #154 ZahraJ
    #153 MQMPower
    #152 ZahraJ
    #151 UmerMurtaza
    #150 Romair
    #149 ana
    #148 hamidm2
    #147 ShoreSahib
    #146 Urstruly
    #145 echoboom
    #144 Urstruly
    #143 ZahraJ
    #142 Crashfruity
    #141 MQMPower
    #140 UmerMurtaza
    #139 hamidm2
    #138 Romair
    #137 teshah
    #136 ZahraJ
    #135 Urstruly
    #134 Romair
    #133 Romair
    #132 Romair
    #131 ZahraJ
    #130 echoboom
    #129 malik99
    #128 malik99
    #127 baal
    #126 hamidm2
    #125 echoboom
    #124 Urstruly
    #123 Saminasha
    #122 echoboom
    #121 ShoreSahib
    #120 baal
    #119 ShoreSahib
    #118 Saminasha
    #117 Romair
    #116 DrDr
    #115 Urstruly
    #114 amit
    #113 ThothoEwing
    #112 hamidm2
    #111 ZahraJ
    #110 ZahraJ
    #109 SR
    #108 scout
    #107 ThothoEwing
    #106 ThothoEwing
    #105 sajal
    #104 Romair
    #103 Romair
    #102 Urstruly
    #101 Saminasha
    #100 rahul_capri
    #99 ZahraJ
    #98 DrDr
    #97 soysauce
    #96 sajal
    #95 hamidm2
    #94 ZahraJ
    #93 ZahraJ
    #92 Waraich
    #91 sattar2
    #90 sajal
    #89 Romair
    #88 soysauce
    #87 ShoreSahib
    #86 sajal
    #85 Romair
    #84 Romair
    #83 malik99
    #82 soysauce
    #81 nazarhayatkhan
    #80 hamidm2
    #79 Urstruly
    #78 ShoreSahib
    #77 ShoreSahib
    #76 ShoreSahib
    #75 ShoreSahib
    #74 ZahraJ
    #73 ZahraJ
    #72 hamidm2
    #71 echoboom
    #70 hamidm2
    #69 malik99
    #68 Urstruly
    #67 Urstruly
    #66 Urstruly
    #65 rahul_capri
    #64 vertex
    #63 Romair
    #62 jay
    #61 sattar2
    #60 ShoreSahib
    #59 Urstruly
    #58 Urstruly
    #57 ShoreSahib
    #56 ShoreSahib
    #55 soysauce
    #54 soysauce
    #53 soysauce
    #52 Romair
    #51 Urstruly
    #50 hush
    #49 irfanhamid
    #48 hamidm2
    #47 malik99
    #46 Urstruly
    #45 echoboom
    #44 ZahraJ
    #43 hamidm2
    #42 Romair
    #41 rahul_capri
    #40 dL
    #39 sajal
    #38 sajal
    #37 ZahraJ
    #36 xeneb
    #35 malik99
    #34 DoubleC
    #33 baal
    #32 sajal
    #31 ShoreSahib
    #30 jay
    #29 vertex
    #28 oblivious
    #27 vertex
    #26 soysauce
    #25 Romair
    #24 amit
    #23 Urstruly
    #22 storyteller
    #21 warpster
    #20 amit
    #19 nb
    #18 ShoreSahib
    #17 ShoreSahib
    #16 sattar2
    #15 teshah
    #14 rahul_capri
    #13 sharpster
    #12 vertex
    #11 Nadia_Zehra
    #10 MQMPower
    #9 jay
    #8 fnahmad
    #7 ZahraJ
    #6 Saminasha
    #5 SaimaShah
    #4 amit
    #3 hamidm2
    #2 temporal
    #1 Saminasha

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