>Pakistan is not a developed countr-
Pakistan is not a developed countr-
>one motorway surrounded by slums
(((developed)))
Looks like Southern California
according to that logic, serbia is extremely developed
Is a highway a sign of development in the US?
>implying it isnt
novi pazar pls
lets play spot the carbomb?
it's a sign of development everywhere?
>nieuwe markt
TAKE IT BACK
roads are important, yes
Development is a process. Pakistan is actually growing quickly these days. Karachi alone has dozens of high-rises and skyscrapers under construction, in addition to new motorways and other infrastructure.
Skyscrapers are for rich people
>having a city called "the carriage"
top kek
>cherrypicked from a whole country
>the best you could find still looks worse than Pueblo, CO
All that will do is make the city even more of a smoggy hellhole.
Everything right of the highway looks straight out of Black Hawk Down
>mfw Pakistan becomes a superpower before us
Pakistan is whiter and cleaner than India.
>anywhere in South Asia
>clean
It's like Los Angeles, without the nice parts
The road looks rather empty. Even North Korea have a 300+ building
HAHA WOW IT HAS A HIGHWAY SURELY IT IS TRULY A FIRST-WORLD PARADISE NO OTHER COUNTRIES HAVE SUCH ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES
Why do third world shitholes always flat-roofed boxy houses?
looks like US therefore 3rd world
>implying being whiter is better.
It's not
t. Was there a few months ago. Only the cities have decent a HDI.
>Highways =/= development
Brazil has the 4° biggest highway system and it's still trash
Skyscrapers =/= development
Brazil has 3 city's in the top 12 for the most skyscrapers in the world and it's still trash
In fact they're not, skyscrapers loose value very fast in shit countries like Pakistan and here in Brazil, it takes a lot more money to maintain a skyscraper than to maintain small buildings that house the same amount of people. Here in my city you can buy a 21 square meter flat designed by the most acclaimed architect in the history of Brazil ( Oscar Niemeyer ) in a 130 m tall building for just over 30K USD.