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Somethin' To Share
11.14.07 (10:28 am)   [edit]
F A M I L Y

I ran into a stranger as he passed by,
"Oh excuse me please" was my reply.

He said, "Please excuse me too;
I wasn't watching for you."

We were very polite, this stranger and I.
We went on our way and we said goodbye.

But at home a different story is told,
How we treat our loved ones, young and old.

Later that day, cooking the evening meal,
My son stood beside me very still.

When I turned, I nearly knocked him down.
"Move out of the way," I said with a frown.

He walked away, his little heart broken.
I didn't realize how harshly I'd spoken.

While I lay awake in bed, God's still small voice came to me and said,

"While dealing with a stranger,
common courtesy you use,
but the family you love, you seem to abuse.

Go and look on the kitchen floor,
You'll find some flowers there by the door.

Those are the flowers he brought for you.
He picked them himself: pink, yellow and blue.

He stood very quietly not to spoil the surprise,
you never saw the tears that filled his little eyes."

By this time, I felt very small,
And now my tears began to fall.

I quietly went and knelt by his bed;
"Wake up, little one, wake up," I said.

"Are these the flowers you picked for me?"
He smiled, "I found 'em, out by the tree.

I picked 'em because they're pretty like you.
I knew you'd like 'em, especially the blue."

I said, "Son, I'm v ery sorry for the way I acted today;
I shouldn't have yelled at you that way."
He said, "Oh, Mom, that's okay.
I love you anyway."

I said, "Son, I love you too,
and I do like the flowers, especially the blue."

FAMILY
Are you aware that if we died tomorrow, the company
that we are working for could easily replace us in
a matter of days.

But the family we left behind will feel the loss
for the rest of their lives.

And come to think of it, we pour ourselves more
into work than into our own family,
an unwise investment indeed,
don't you think?
So what is behind the story?

Do you know what the word FAMILY means?
FAMILY = (F)ATHER (A)ND (M)OTHER (I) (L)OVE (Y)OU

 
Saturday 10 Nov 2007
11.10.07 (10:26 am)   [edit]
Today is the forth time my pc crash... dont blame me okey... lol. its my wife who's love to download things on the net and suddenly hang and crash.... System 32 lost. I'm using Window Vista... i think this window is not stable... better do something Microsoft :-)

Hi all...
i'm working today, i have to go to work as i dont have any leave left for this year. i need one day leave so that i can have a great vacation on december. 4 hours working today entitled for one day leave... yahooo

hmmm... last night i went for massage, really nice. Dont think wrong okey... my neighbor's uncle is pretty expert in tradisonal massage... he charge about RM 500.00 per person if outsiders. Men and women always went to see him if they got THAT PROBLEM (errr... sex problem lol). Me... i went to see him for my regular service. If you can service your car 4 times a year, you should service your body at least 3 times a year... :0

Today is Nov 10... its suppose to be a mass gathering for all NGO, people around Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. They come to Kuala Lumpur to ask the government for a better election. This article is from Harakahdaily.net

Malaysia: Allow rally for electoral reform

NEW YORK, Nov 9 - Police in Kuala Lumpur should permit a public rally and march organized by the Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections (known as Bersih) to proceed as planned on Saturday November 10, Human Rights Watch said today. New elections, although not mandated before May 2009, are expected to take place early in 2008.

"The grounds for refusing the rally are nonsense," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "If Malaysia wants to count itself a democracy, it can begin by upholding constitutional guarantees of free speech and assembly. The way the system works now, only the ruling coalition can get its messages out."

Current Malaysian law bans public gatherings of more than five persons without a permit. Kuala Lumpur's police chief has warned the public that they risk arrest, fines and jail if they participate in the Bersih rally and march, adding that roadblocks and road closures would be in place.

Police plans also include the deployment of some 4,000 officers and checks on all cars coming in from outside Kuala Lumpur. Malaysia's inspector-general of police took the unusual step of reiterating the warnings.

"Organizers of the Bersih rally only want to create a level playing field for all in the coming elections, yet they are being denied the basic right of expressing their concerns in a peaceful demonstration," said Adams. "Prime Minister Badawi claims to be a reformer, but when it comes to holding onto power, he and his party make one set of rules for themselves and another for everyone else."

Approximately 70 nongovernmental organizations and opposition political parties have asked the government to implement a series of reforms to address widespread election irregularities.

Bersih's initial request to assemble in Merdeka Square in downtown Kuala Lumpur to march to the national palace to deliver a memorandum to the king was denied on the grounds that the organization was not a registered body, that City Hall had not approved use of the square, that the square would be otherwise occupied, that the march would inconvenience drivers, and that the march could affect public order.

The organizers disputed each of these points. Although Bersih is not a registered organization, the participating groups are registered. Organizers have pledged that Merdeka Square would be cleared in plenty of time for the subsequent event, and said that they chose this long holiday weekend to inconvenience as few drivers as possible.

To address public safety concerns, organizers have asked participants to refrain from carrying anything that could compromise the organizers' peaceful intent and have assured the police that 600 volunteers in addition to those from participating political parties would be on hand to ensure a nonviolent and safe event. Observers from neutral organizations have also been recruited.

Malaysia's parliamentary elections have been characterized by vote buying, the use of public resources by the ruling parties, and gerrymandering. The Election Commission has been accused of bias.

Bersih has asked that indelible ink be used to prevent voters from casting more than one vote, removal of alleged phantom voters from the electoral rolls, elimination of the widespread use of absentee ballots by government workers, and access to state-controlled media by all political parties. To date, the Election Commission has only agreed to using indelible ink.

"The government should not be afraid to allow Malaysians to raise very basic issues about the fundamental right to vote in Merdeka Square," said Adams. "What is a democracy without public rallies by all involved, including civil society and opposition parties?"


For more information, please contact:

In New York, Mickey Spiegel: +1-212-216-1229; or +1-917-968-9937 (mobile)
In Washington, DC, Sophie Richardson: +1-202-612-4341; or +1-917-721-7473 (mobile)
In London, Brad Adams: +44-20-7713-2767; or +44-79-0872-8333 (mobile)

 
Cruel and Abusive Guy
11.02.07 (3:36 pm)   [edit]
What would you do? This is a real life situation.

Almost every morning, while you are preparing to go to work, you hear a young kid (your neighbor) screaming, yelling and crying, banging, kicking the toilet door. “Daddy open this door! Open this door daddy!” sometimes you heard it in the evening and sometimes at night.

ALMOST EVERYDAY
Are you going to the cop?
Are you going to report it to welfare service?
Or are you going to talk to that neighbor?

Sometimes you hear a belt smashing the wall and the kids screaming “please daddy no, please no”

WHAT SHALL YOU DO?

Your same neighbor, with his family, entering a restaurant. The father, the mother, 3 kids and a baby sits next to your table. Ordering food for dinner. All you hear is no and no and no, just eat what I order.

3 plate of rice, a bow of vegetable sup, fried beef and fried eggs. If you look at how they order, you are going to feel really pity to the kids and the mother, what a stingy father he is. You gonna feel really sad when the kids keep on asking, when they gonna serve foods, I am hungry daddy, I am hungry!

That father doesn’t know how to treat their family? They are starving, asking for food.

LadyG, Auntconi, Mimi, Inkspector, Pastor Dave… and all my friends in tblog… is this neighbor is really cruel? Is he a mad guy, abusive and better put him in the jail?

ANSWER ME please?
ANSWER ME?


Now the problem is that the neighbor is my family and I. Am I cruel and abusive? Judging from the above story, yes I am cruel and abusive.

Something to share with you. I did not lock my kids (never in my life) inside the toilet. I am the one is inside the toilet, taking bath or pee or doing what normal human do. My kids is outside the toilet LOVES to disturbed me while I was in the toilet.

Thousands of times I told them not to disturbed me while I’m busy in the toilet but still till now they keep on banging the door hysterically. The whole neighborhood heard them screaming and thought that it was I who locked them. Imagine your neighbor stare at you with anger.

Second situation. I know my kids, they want this and that but they cannot even finish it. Waste of foods and drinks. Put everything on the table and people will say “ what a waste, you can feed ten family with what you order”. Divide and put a simple meals then they will say “ what a stingy guy, just give the kids food to eat”

Life is already hard but it’s become harder when you are in my shoes. Sorry because you have to share my real facts of life.



 



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