Saturday, July 14, 2012

Is Najib wetting his pants the raise of true Malay against the Celup Malay?




NOW  NAJIB wear diaper 3










 
 Lets see what our agung will do for the poor!!! 
Over 5,000 protesters at the Himpunan Oren have begun their march in Kuala Lumpur this afternoon to hand over a memorandum to the agong on Felda Global Ventures Holdings’ (FGV) controversial listing. Peaceful Protest is always possible if the police to no abuse their powerProven that we can have peaceful gathering provided the PDRM dont run amok ! Isa is giving these people the 1Malaysia middle finger sign to show he cares a damn for this protest. The show will and must go on else no money will line the pockets of the anointed of umno. A few years down the road when the 'windfall' peters out, the curse of the played out settlers will be visited upon those who contrived this scam. Mark my words.A Malay political party demonstrated against a Malay dominated government and a Malay controlled Felda. No tear gas fired, not water cannon shot. What is the message? Malay solidarity, Malays unity.
Najib is wetting his pant the raise of true malay agaist celup malay




What is the meaning of justice in the wake of massive injustices? This question confronts the countries of the Arab Spring, just as it confronted tens of countries emerging from war and dictatorship over the past generation.How the Arab Spring countries address the evils of yesterday affects their prospects for peace and democracy tomorrow. Today only Tunisia is reasonably stable. Egypt has just experienced a polarizing election and faces continued uncertainty whether its military will relinquish power. Libya's national government does not yet control the entire country. Yemen faces a separatist south. Syrian is sundered by civil war. All are rent by the fissures that the past has bequeathed.Thus far, most of these countries have faced the past via the international community's dominant orthodoxy of human rights and judicial punishment. This orthodoxy received a boost this past March when the International Criminal Court, the body in which international lawyers and human rights activists have placed their greatest hopes for global justice, secured its first conviction in 10 years of operation. In April, the Special Court for Sierra Leone convicted arch war criminal Charles Taylor. Turning to the Arab Spring, the ICC has indicted the late Muammar Qaddafi's son, Seif, while Tunisia and Egypt have each tried their erstwhile heads of state and several high-level officials. Yemen has adopted a broad amnesty. Syria will surely face the question of trials at some point.Accountability for arch war criminals is intrinsically just and can fortify the rule of law. But judicial prosecution is not enough. There is little evidence that international tribunals have contributed stability to countries like Rwanda and Yugoslavia whose perpetrators they have tried and sentenced in substantial numbers. The limitation of trials is that they leave untended a wide range of wounds which, like buried landmines, will explode in revenge and retribution if they are not disinterred and defused.More promising for lasting peace is a different paradigm that has emerged though the fitful politics of past evil: reconciliation. The concept finds its oldest and deepest expression in religious traditions. It is religious leaders like Pope John Paul II and Archbishop Desmond Tutu who have done most to bring reconciliation into global politics. Relevant to the Arab Spring, reconciliation is commended by the Quran and is practiced in rich Middle Eastern tribal rituals known as musalaha.In Christianity, Judaism and Islam, reconciliation means the holistic restoration of right relationship. In the political realm reconciliation is advanced through a portfolio of practices that redress the wide range of wounds that political injustices inflict. These practices of reconciliation aim at wider transformative restorations than do rights or judicial punishment.Truth commissions, for instance -- more than 40 of which have taken place over the past three decades -- confer far more than a right to truth but also acknowledgment of the suffering of victims on the part of public authorities, fellow onlookers and even sometimes perpetrators. When truth commissions are at their best, victims are restored through recognition and often drop their demands for revenge.Even punishment can be practiced restoratively. Following Timor Leste's war of the final quarter of the 20th century, village forums were held in which perpetrators of crimes, victims and community members would gather before tribal elders, tell how the crimes affected them, and exchange apology and forgiveness, upon which elders would prescribe a reintegrative form of punishment like community service. Although such forums are inadequate to try perpetrators of the worst crimes, they can redress thousands of lesser crimes in restorative fashion.The most distinct practice of reconciliation is forgiveness. It involves no right but is rather an act of good will on the part of a victim. In most religions forgiveness is no mere dismissal of charges but rather an act that constructs right relationship. Passages in the Quran teach that even in the case of murder, while a victim's relative may demand death as retribution, it is even better for him to forgive the murderer while receiving diya, or compensation. In the wake of political injustices, forgiveness has been practiced widely in Uganda, South Africa and Sierra Leone, among other places.Working together, practices of reconciliation can help overcome the divisions that endanger the Arab Spring. As of now, only Tunisia -- where democratic stability is greatest -- speaks of robust reconciliation. Its Ministry of Human Rights and Transitional Justice has proposed a holistic plan involving truth telling, apologies and reparations. Even here, progress has been mixed, while other countries have proposed far less. Talk of forgiveness is altogether rare. But lest the Arab Spring revert to wintry bedlam, a politics of reconciliation is needed.
   Is the news report “Tunisians not afraid to speak up now and determine their future” in the Star newspaper on 14 March, a hidden message or a rare accident in which a credible portrayal of the recent people’s uprising there actually managed to find expression.




Many people are aware that the main stream media papers like ‘The Star’ or ‘The New Straits Times’ act as mouthpieces for the BN government. Therefore the piece’s main message about liberated Tunisians is a powerful piece to mock the newspaper owners and the BN government.
The journalists and editors involved are not at fault – perhaps they were moved by events in the middle-east and north Africa that they felt the need to express what has been left unsaid by millions of Malaysians.
Make no mistake there’s a battle raging for the soul of new media. Not the clichéd war between print and Web or between Silicon Valley and New York, but rather a series of internal battles being fought within nearly every publication. It’s the battle between  journalism and churnalism.
On on side are things like Demand MediaThe Aol Way and the seduction of cheap hackery that is designed simply to generate easy page views and to help investors to sleep at night. On the other side is stodgy, snobby, old-school journalism which needs to find a new online home if it’s to survive the decade. The latter carries with it the seduction of everything Woodward and Bernstein – and is the only way to really build a media franchise that stands for something and can demand Vanity Fair-like ad premiums.
No company represents this tug of war more ably than our overlords at Aol, to the point where sometimes the battle rages within a single soldier. No sooner had ad sales guru turned CEO Tim Armstrong laid out his SEO-centric “Way”, and renamed the company’s media properties as “towns” ruled by “mayors” than he pulled an apparent 180, acquiring the Huffington Post and naming its founder Arianna Huffington as head of all content.readmoreBattle Rages On Journalism vs Assholism Chaunistic Malay Prostitute vs Chaunistic Chinese Prostitute for we the Suckers the Customer

This not a political blog. I understand that politics pervades everything, but I’m not pushing a political agenda. I’m pushing a human agenda.
As a journalist for decades, I avoided making political statements at all costs. Back then you lost your job for it. Today, it’s nearly a prerequisite for employment in mainstream media.I avoid stories that make blatant political statements because they only diminish the potential impact. Improving your health, chasing your dreams and improving your community shouldn’t be about politics. Of course, the current battle over  ANWAR IBRAHIM is highly politicized. My goal is to simply relay a perspective about  Dysfunctional Fame Whores from my very specific vantage point.Our that encourages people of all ages, all colors and every socioeconomic status to become all that they can by pursuing their passions, improving their well-being and helping others. Malaysia Insider  Star ,Sun Utusan NST clogged with contrived formulaic writting. Give dysfunctional fame whores national exposure and the very clear understanding that only outlandish behavior ends up on

has dealt with numerous difficult personalities, but she may have just taken on his most challenging client yet: Satan. The Devil has just hired Joceline Tan the Prostitue to improve their image! “The Prince of Darkness has been misunderstood,” claims Joceline Tan the Prostitue. “I find them  to be quite a charming and charismatic individuals with many positive qualities. And I’m not just saying that because I’m extremely well paid to say nice things about them.”Levine and his staff are currently developing a sophisticated global media campaign with the goal of promoting Beelzebub’s admirable strengths. “Satan is powerful, handsome, wealthy, creative, resourceful, and successful,” states Levine. “He’s basically Donald Trump with better hair.”
Inside sources reveal that for her publicity services,Tan the Prostitue  is receiving a compensation package which includes $10 million, eternal life, and a no-holds-barred weekend with both ummi and paris hilton . “By the time I’m through with Satan’s campaign,  new image will make the Pope, in comparison, seem like a sleazy, murdering pimp.”
Asked why Satan is so interested in being perceived in such a positive light, Joceline Tan the Prostitue speculates,”I think they getting older, maturing, and feeling that maybe their life can have more substantial meaning beyond simply being the source of all evil.” But a Catholic Church official responds, “Hogwash! Satan’s up to something; I wouldn’t trust them as far as I could throw them!” This one is dedicated to all those nutcases who continue to think that Tun Daim Zainuddin was a cool dude, and  honour some of the other `dudes’ like child rapist , or PENISCHIK the Ripper, or perhaps the mythological Womaniser Nazri the Raavan? OR ANCHOR BEER Hisapmuddin HI Well,so keep on naming schools, cafes and pool parlours after the crazy  leader. The latest `memorial’ being the UMNO Witness Protection house complete with young Malay girls for them to Fuck around them Dump the by Product at the umno staircase to fuck  Insignia like the Trademark 1 Malaysia in there


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