Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Cheeky Malaysia first lady secret weapon giving Malaysians dirty thoughts


Najib I am thinking of you right now"
Close your eyes and imagine that your guy is right there with you, visualise his every move and do it to yourself. You have to feel aroused and in the moment to be able to stimulate any erotic emotion in him. Touch yourself in the most sensuous way you can imagine and just pretend it's him. Have a little fun with your body to get you in the mood — just remember to verbalise every little thing you're doing to yourself. Don't worry if you feel a little tongue-tied, as you get into the mood, the words will start flowing.

"I wish we were together..."
Think of those erotic sexual encounters you have had together in the past and draw inspiration from them. Tell him how desperately you want to hold him close to you and how you cannot wait for the time you'll be together again. The feeling of longing and desperation is what's going to intensify this experience and help exceed your expectations.

"I love the way you're making me feel"
Tell him you are hot for him right now — nothing boosts a man's confidence more than knowing the effect he's having on you. Let him know how the thought of him touching you is driving you crazy with desire. A little moaning and grunting should help up the ante. However, don't focus on being too creative with your words. Simply go with the flow and enjoy the lascivious state you are in.

"How does that make you feel?"
Gauge if your partner is suddenly too quiet for your liking. If so, get him back in on the action by asking him what he is doing or feeling at the moment. Ask him exactly what he'd do to you if you were with him right now. If he is a little too on the coy side, ask him simple questions with 'yes' or 'no' answers to get the ball rolling and help him shed his inhibitions.

"Are you ready for me now?"


Don't hold back if you've reached climax as that is what takes it to the point of eargasm. Give him everything he wants to hear — the groans, the sighs and the heavy breathing — to leave him hanging till he spills. In the end, tell him how good it felt and how you simply want to cuddle up with him.could easily have spurred the shameless Rosmah out of his perennial inertia 




The benefits of being in love with a sexual partner are more than just emotional.
Most of the women in the study said that love made sex physically more pleasurable.

Women who loved their sexual partners also said they felt less inhibited to explore their sexuality.

"When women feel love, they may feel greater sexual agency because they not only trust their partners but because they feel that it is OK to have sex when love is present," Montemurro noted.

Only 18 women unequivocally believed that love was unnecessary in a sexual relationship.

"The connection between love and sex may show how women are socialized to see sex as an expression of love," Montemurro maintained in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association Tuesday.

"For the women I interviewed, they seemed to say you need love in sex and you need sex in marriage," Montemurro concluded.

They are not doing business which involves profit and loss, they simply grab and spend. This “gold rush” still continues until today albeit at a slower pace and fewer gold deposits.

Those who have lost their fortune and those who have not got enough will find ways to ensure that they will get their share, too. They are competing with the new prospectors.

Thus with fewer deposits, the in-fighting has become fiercer and now it seems that they have started to point their guns at each other with their safety latches removed. Everyone is ready to pull the trigger on a slight instigation.

Some have given up their efforts but never let go of their hopes. They are like hungry wolves ready to pounce given the opportunity.

When these gangs go on a rampage in prospecting for gold, they simply forget about their responsibilities to their supporters, the people who voted for them and the rest of the people in the country. They are preoccupied with holding onto their stakes on the gold deposits and hoarding as much as possible.

Thus the ones they entrusted to take care of the security for their continuous digging are their miserly paid supporters, the Election Commission, Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, Customs, police, courts, mainstream media and cyber troopers and to make up all the good feelings in the air.

With some subsidies and BR1M this will create some impression that everyone is getting their share of the gold. The meagre amount of that share is, therefore, hyped and blown out of proportions so that the people will be fooled to be grateful to Umno.

Unfortunately for Umno, some people who have been ensuring their security and safety while Umno gold prospectors are busy fulfilling their greed finally realised that they, too, have been fooled just like the ordinary people.



They are the most unhappy and an angry lot. They are bringing in their own guns now, to join the possible mayhem.

What about Pakatan Rakyat? They may inherit a disused and an empty gold mine, with perhaps some tailings.

In a rare display of defiance, an Umno man today demanded that party president Datuk Seri Najib Razak should step down before the next general election to rejuvenate and give new life to the party. that Umno grassroots no longer required Najib's services and wanted the prime minister to voluntarily resign if he still loves Umno and Barisan Nasional.
Najib’s fall from grace appears to now be complete. Relegated to snippets in the back-pages of newspapers and after a near blackout from primetime
 ran away from responsibility, he merely asks for votes but doesn’t perform.)
 has now taken to getting clicked with pictures of garbage, in an obviously desperate bid to remain relevant. The cruel irony in this is hard to miss. With even his beloved Rosmah having been swept from under his nose by a deft UMNO  the party is now faced with a cruel but unavoidable existential dilemma – what and whom do Rosmah stand for?

 more as an irritating sideshow than a viable political alternative. Cruelly, most news-items about him these days are also satirical pieces which merely underscores his irrelevance in Malay’s political circuit.  Apart from the cult of yes-men that Najib has surrounded himself with, most of his original supporters have deserted him. The reasons vary. Some claim that his larger than justified ego has clouded his perception of reality, while others point to his more human foibles

mahathir-siti-hasmah-umno
With the filing of a police report late last week by a member of Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s own political party, the long knives have appeared in Malaysia, seeking the premier’s scalp over the scandal-ridden state investment fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd.
1MDB is said to be seeking permission for an extension from Bank Negara, the country’s central bank, on nonperforming loans from the country’s Tier 1 banks out a concern that if no extension is granted, the banks could be forced to make major provisions.
Although he has made only oblique comments publicly, the man behind the move to oust Najib is former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who publicly withdrew his support for the Prime Minister via his blog, Che Det, in August.
Khairuddin Abu Hassan, a Penang-based United Malays National Organization Deputy District Chief, filed the request for a “detailed and comprehensive” investigation including the interrogation of 1MDB’s board of directors and representatives of any companies that might be implicated.
While the Penang UMNO branch distanced itself from Khairuddin’s actions and threatened to bounce him out of the party, there can be little doubt that forces aligned with Mahathir have seriously increased the pressure. Over the weekend, the 700,000-member Perkasa NGO, a Malay supremacy organization closely allied with Mahathir, denounced the Prime Minister, saying he had lost the confidence of the country.
“Realistically Najib’s situation is untenable,” a member of the Mahathir faction said. “Certainly he will fight back but whether he resigns or not point is he is he cannot function as PM.”
When Mahathir began his campaign against Najib more than a year and a half ago, it was given little chance. The former Prime Minister had been out of office for more than a decade and was regarded as a loud but irrelevant force. But political analysts in Kuala Lumpur say his campaign has been gaining traction over the 1MDB issue.
Even at 89, and reportedly seeing a physician for various ailments, Mahathir remains a formidable if flawed figure who during his 22 year reign as Prime Minister forcefully led an industrialization drive to move the county out of its plantation mentality, at the same time resulting in as much as US$100 billion in bad investments..  He forced the departure of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, the successor he hand-picked in 2003 as premier in 2009, and set his sights on Najib in the runup to the 2013 General Election, charging behind the scenes that Najib hadn’t adequately represented the interests of the Malays.
The vehicle for his surrogates’ attack on Najib is 1MDB, the five-year-old state investment fund which as of March had amassed debts of RM49.1 billion (US$14.04 billion) against assets of RM51.4 billion, registering losses of Malaysian ringgit 63.5 billion at the end of the quarter, mainly on huge finance costs.
Mahathir and his allies have been dissatisfied with Najib’s performance for more than two years over a wide range of other issues as well, however. The 1MDB issue, described as “the mother of the mother of the mother of all scandals” by Democratic Action Party MP Tony Pua in an Asia Sentinel article on December 8, has become the vehicle with which the octogenarian hopes to skewer the Prime Minister.
It has gained additional momentum because of allegations that Jho Low Taek, a hard-partying young friend of the Najib family, may have used Malaysian government guarantees to back the making of The Wolf of Wall Street, a hit movie starring Leonardo di Caprio, and to fund his attempt to take over three of London’s most prestigious hotels.
Najib and 1MDB
Najib is the chairman of the 1MBD advisory board and the motivating force, apparently on the advice of Jho Low, as he is known, a putative whiz kid who is alleged to have steered the fund first into a disastrous alliance on oil exploration on the advice of a Saudi prince he went to school with in London.
When the exploration failed, opposition figures alleged, the money was invested in forex trades in yen. The trades were not successful and, opposition lawmakers alleged, the money disappeared. That was the first of a long string of financial disasters that put 1MDB deep in the red without adequate capital to meet obligations.
Mahathir, who rarely attacks frontally, sought to use his allies to put pressure on Najib at the UMNO Annual General Assembly in Kuala Lumpur in late November, in particular seeking to bring a vote to the floor of the body rejecting Najib’s stated plans to international leaders to dump the country’s imprecise, often-abused colonial era Sedition Act.
Najib short-stopped the plan by announcing in advance that he would not only not discard the Sedition Act, he would strengthen it “to defend Islam” and other religions. Any attempt to bring the disaster surrounding 1MDB was also turned back.
Nonetheless, despite having quelled open rebellion, the widespread feeling is that Najib emerged from the UMNO convention weakened.  A number of political observers including those inside UMNO have suggested that he will be replaced by Muhyiddin Yassin, the Deputy Prime Minister and UMNO Deputy President, sometime later this year.
Following Khairuddin’s filing of the complaint last Friday, allegingAK Jasin “questionable” business, investment and fund-raising transactions and decisions, A. Kadir Jasin, the former Editor in Chief of the New Straits Times and one of Mahathir’s closest allies, wrote on his blog that an additional report may be filed with the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, a notoriously political body – ostensibly modeled on Hong Kong’s vaunted Independent Commission Against Corruption —  that tends to shovel corruption complaints under the carpet unless there is a political motivation to push them along.
The MACC, as it is known, has a long record of refusing reports of corruption or finding no cause of action after reports have actually been filed. If the MACC takes up the report filed by Mahathir’s allies, it raises very interesting questions.
1MDB, in a statement, said “We are aware that a police report concerning 1MDB was filed by a politician in Penang. We have not seen any documentation related to this, so are unaware of the nature of the complaint. However, we are confident that it will have no legal basis. We welcome any investigation into our affairs and the opportunity to rebut malicious allegations.”
lodin-wok-kamaruddinA delegation led by the 1MDB Chairman, Lodin Wok Kamaruddin, along with two other board members, met with Mahathir to vainly attempt to assuage his concerns. Apparently they didn’t deliver the answers Mahathir wanted.
In a thinly veiled entry on his blog, Kadir quoted a source – probably Mahathir himself – saying the former Prime Minister feels obliged to take up the matter and to speak openly because many parties had come to see him to inform him about the goings-on in the company and that he was disappointed that issues surrounding 1MDB weren’t seriously discussed by delegates at the UMNO General Assembly.

No comments: