Showing posts with label SOCIAL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SOCIAL. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2009

A thought for Iraqi Women on International Women’s Day

A thought for Iraqi Women on International Women’s Day

March 8, 2009 at 11:52 am | In Turkmens | 
Tags: 

On International Women’s Day,  a thought for all theIraqi women and young girls who are victims of bad treatments, rape, trafficking and exploitation as the consequence of the invasion, destruction and occupation of their country by the U.S. and its accomplices.
No room for taboos!!!

The facts are there, in the name of “Justice” and “Honour” the Iraqi decision makers must act immediately to stop these crimes against Iraqi women.


See the following article:

 

Iraq’s Unspeakable Crime: Mothers Pimping Daughters

By Rania Abouzeid / Baghdad

Saturday, Mar. 07, 2009

 

She goes by “Hinda,” but that’s not her real name. `


That’s what she’s called by the many Iraqi sex traffickers and pimps who contact her several times a week from across the country. 

They think she is one of them, a peddler of sexual slaves. Little do they know that the stocky, auburn-haired woman is an undercover human rights activist who has been quietly mapping out their murky underworld since 2006.

 

That underworld is a place where nefarious female pimps hold sway, where impoverished mothers sell their teenage daughters into a sex market that believes females who reach the age of 20 are too old to fetch a good price. 

The youngest victims, some just 11 and 12, are sold for as much as $30,000, others for as little as $2,000. “The buying and selling of girls in Iraq, it’s like the trade in cattle,” Hinda says. 

“I’ve seen mothers haggle with agents over the price of their daughters.” (See pictures of Iraq since the fall of Saddam.)

 

The trafficking routes are both local and international, most often to Syria, Jordan and the Gulf (primarily the United Arab Emirates). The victims are trafficked illegally on forged passports, or “legally” through forced marriages. A married female, even one as young as 14, raises few suspicions if she’s travelling with her “husband.” The girls are then divorced upon arrival and put to work. (See Iraq’s return to “normalcy”.)

 

Nobody knows exactly how many Iraqi women and children have been sold into sexual slavery since the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime in 2003, and there are no official numbers because of the shadowy nature of the business. Baghdad-based activists like Hinda and others put the number in the tens of thousands. Still, it remains a hidden crime; one that the 2008 US State Department’s Trafficking in Persons Report says the Iraqi government is not combating. Baghdad, the report says, “offers no protection services to victims of trafficking, reported no efforts to prevent trafficking in persons and does not acknowledge trafficking to be a problem in the country.”

 

While sexual violence has accompanied warfare for millennia and insecurity always provides opportunities for criminal elements to profit, what is happening in Iraq today reveals how far a once progressive country (relative to its neighbors) has regressed on the issue of women’s rights and how ferociously the seams of a traditional Arab society that values female virginity have been ripped apart. Last month Baghdad’s minister of women’s affairs, Dr. Nawal al-Samarraie, resigned in protest at the lack of resources provided to her office by the government. “The ministry is just an empty post,” she told TIME. “Why do I come to the office every day if I don’t have any resources?” Yet even Samarraie didn’t think sex trafficking was an issue. “It’s limited,” she says, adding that she believed the girls involved chose to engage in prostitution.

 That’s a view that infuriates activists like Yanar Mohammed, who heads the Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq. “Let me take her to the nightclubs of Damascus and show her [trafficked] women by the thousands,” she says. To date, the government has not prosecuted any traffickers. For the past year it has also prevented groups like Mohammed’s from visiting women’s prisons, where they have previously identified victims, many of whom are jailed for acts committed as a result of being trafficked, such as prostitution or possessing forged documents.

 


Sunday, March 1, 2009

WHAT IS THE PRICE OF SUPPRESSION?

In Boleh-land everyone knows the price ,or rather, the price to pay for freedom of speech,expression and dissent, which is intimidation,law suits,criminal charges,physical molestation,pyschological abuse,detention and even the full measure of the I.S.A.

But what is the price for suppression ? It is a glaring question that begs to be answered by those who has turned suppression into a fine art . For surely, the suppressors  among us must be aware of the consequences of their acts or are they in the perpetual state of denial ,not unlike the proverbial ostrich with its head stuck in the sand, thinking that all is fine !

For how long more will our suppresors continue to think ,falsely, that as long as they stick their air heads in, all will be well ? Or perhaps, the more pertinent question should be,for how long more do they think they can get away with that notion ?

Is it wrongful of the rakyat to  exercise their rights as rightful and righteous citizens to question and to expect more  accountability from the government  they have elected, and to express their concern about the mismanagement of country ? 

Will the absence of dissent eliminates what ills our nation?  Will  a doctor be able to cure his sick patient without the disclosure of the patient's symptoms and prognosis ? 

When we feel unwell, when something feels not right within us, is it not healthier to address the symptoms rather than to ignore it and think that everything is well when it is not, when something is actually festering  within  !?!

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

THE TIMES THEY ARE A-CHANGIN BY BOB DYLAN

I am in the mood for bob dylan ,today. I think the nation is in the mood for it as well!



I dedicate this timely and prophetic song by Bob Dylan to Raja Petra and my fellow Malaysians.
Below is the lyrics to the song. Please repost it in your blogs and celebrate the truth of Bob Dylan's words ! (I tried to upload the vidclip to post it without success)  :-)


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9vou4qUu5YY


"The Times They Are A-Changin'"

Come gather 'round people
Wherever you roam
And admit that the waters
Around you have grown
And accept it that soon
You'll be drenched to the bone
If your time to you
Is worth savin'
Then you better start swimmin'
Or you'll sink like a stone
For the times they are a-changin'.

Come writers and critics
Who prophesize with your pen
And keep your eyes wide
The chance won't come again
And don't speak too soon
For the wheel's still in spin
And there's no tellin' who
That it's namin'
For the loser now
Will be later to win
For the times they are a-changin'.

Come senators, congressmen
Please heed the call
Don't stand in the doorway
Don't block up the hall
For he that gets hurt
Will be he who has stalled
There's a battle outside
And it is ragin'
It'll soon shake your windows
And rattle your walls
For the times they are a-changin'.

Come mothers and fathers
Throughout the land
And don't criticize
What you can't understand
Your sons and your daughters
Are beyond your command
Your old road is
Rapidly agin'
Please get out of the new one
If you can't lend your hand
For the times they are a-changin'.

The line it is drawn
The curse it is cast
The slow one now
Will later be fast
As the present now
Will later be past
The order is
Rapidly fadin'
And the first one now
Will later be last
For the times they are a-changin'.



Tuesday, February 17, 2009

URGENT APPEAL FOR RAJA PETRA KAMARUDDIN

NO!NO!NO!NO!NO!NO!NO!NO!NO!NO!NO!NO!NO! NO! ISA !

Message from Dr. Lim Teck Ghee and Dr. Azly Rahman
(Directors, Center for Policy Initiatives)

Announcement

Written by Centre for Policy Initiatives 

Monday, 16 February 2009 13:37


We are posting here RPK's message to Malaysians. 

We appeal to the Government not to use the ISA again on RPK. 

We appeal to all fair minded Malaysians - especially those members of our elites - to urgently raise their voices and concern so that RPK is not deprived of his freedom and the tragic outcome predicted below does not come about.

We appeal to the international community to express their solidarity with the country's foremost dissident and to ensure that he is not incarcerated once more on political grounds.

Please disseminate RPK's letter as widely as possible.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Written by Raja Petra Kamarudin

16th February 2009

Tomorrow, I will probably be detained under the Internal Security Act. Anyhow, before we talk about that, let me start by giving you my prediction for the two by-elections scheduled for early April.


In 2004, BN won the Bukit Selambau state seat with a majority of 7,695 votes and in 2008 they lost it with a majority of 2,362 votes. (See the chart below). In the coming by-election, I forecast a voter turnout of around 26,000 and a majority of 3,500-4,500 for the opposition.

For the Bukit Gantang parliament seat, in 2004 Barisan Nasional won with a majority of 8,888 and in 2008 it lost with a majority of 1,566. (See chart below). This time around, the voter turnout will be roughly 42,000 and the opposition will win that seat with a majority of 5,000-8,000 votes.

Okay, I am forecasting this even before I know who the candidates are. Well, I have no choice. On Tuesday, 17 February 2009, the Federal Court is due to hear the appeal against my release from Internal Security Act detention and I really do not know what the outcome is going to be. Chances are, I have but 24 hours left as a free man and if I do not write this article today I never will.

On 7 November 2008, the Shah Alam High Court ordered my release from detention. The government has appealed this decision although it did not see the need to appeal the decision of the Shah Alam High Court acquitting Abdul Razak Baginda of the charge of murder without his defence being called.

I was in court last week to witness the performance of the three judges and what I saw did not give me much confidence. First of all, we asked for a quorum of seven judges, or at least five. But the court turned us down and fixed a quorum of only three judges. And two of the three judges appear to be hostile towards us from the word ‘go’. It looks like my fate has been sealed even before the case goes to court.

Anyway, I know for a fact that it was not Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi who ordered my detention. He was not even aware I had been detained. The order came from Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak and since I am bent on making sure he never becomes Prime Minister on 1 April 2009 I really do not blame him for wanting to get me out of the way.

My friends and family want me to leave the country and to seek political asylum in another country. They feel I can still continue with the struggle in a foreign land. But I am against that as much as my wife pleads that I consider this. I am no quitter and I do not run. I shall stay and fight till the very end even if that is the last thing I do.

If I have to lose my freedom so be it. That is the price we pay for opposing the powers-that-be. But I shall not go quietly or make any deals to secure my release with those who walk in the corridors of power.

I was given an option. Take the money and become rich or go to jail. I refused the money and instead chose jail. This is my choice and no one can convince me to do otherwise. No doubt I will have to pay for this and it will be a heavy price that I shall have to pay. But this is the price of the struggle and the price does not come cheap.

I shall not submit. I shall resist till the end. I stand on right and I oppose what is wrong. Amar makruf, nahi munkar, as Islam would say. We must uphold right and oppose wrong. That is not only the Islamic way but also the way of all religions. And even atheists believe in this, so you need not believe in God to subscribe to the concept of amar makruf, nahi munkar.

Over thousands of years countless people have met their deaths just because they stood on the side of right. What I have chosen to do has been done by so many who are now nameless and faceless. So it is nothing so special that I do which has not been done before.

My resistance will continue. But I will have to continue my resistance behind the barbwire fences of the Kamunting Detention Centre. It will now be up to you, those who are free, to continue where I left off.

My resistance, however, will have to take on a new form. I will no longer be able to write or speak at ceramahs. My voice has now been silenced. But I can still speak the words of silence, which will be my new form of resistance.

I shall no longer open my mouth or utter one word during my detention. I shall maintain the silence of a mute person. I shall not sign any documents of the so many documents that they make you sign when under detention. My signature is not going to be placed on a single shred of paper.

By doing so would mean none of my family members or lawyers would have access to me. Yes, that is the price I shall pay for ‘not cooperating’. I know this and I am prepared for it.

I shall refuse all medical treatment and visits to the hospital. I shall refuse to accept any food and water supplied by the Kamunting authorities. I shall refuse to leave my cell or to meet any of the prison authorities. In short, I shall shut myself out from the world and keep to my own world of my eight feet square cell.

This action will mean I shall survive at the most seven to eight days. By the end of that period I shall be dead. I am prepared for that. They plan to imprison my body for the rest of my life. But I shall release my spirit from my body and will again be free. They can keep my body and they can do whatever they want with it. But they will never be able to keep my spirit. I shall separate my spirit from my body and deny them the pleasure of incarcerating me.

This is a decision I have taken and no one can make me change my mind. And this is probably the last article of mine that you shall read if they send me to Kamunting tomorrow. Keep the struggle going. I shall no longer be able to join you in that struggle. The work is far from finished. This country needs major political, economic and social reforms. The next two years are going to be most trying years indeed. And expect a snap general election within 18 months of Najib taking over if he does take over on 1 April 2009.

I lay down my life for this nation of ours called Malaysia. I will sacrifice myself for the sake of the struggle. There is very little left I can give at this point of time other than my life. For those who stood by me all these years, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. I go with a heavy heart. But my heart is heavy only because I have but one life to give.

Death is not the end. Death is but the beginning. It is the beginning of a new journey that none of us can escape and will one day embark upon. It is not something to be sad about. It is something to rejoice.

Please continue your struggle to make Malaysia a better place for our future generation. This country belongs to them and it is for them that we struggle. For some of us, our time is already almost up. We do not have many years left. Many have gone before us. Many friends who started out with us in 1998 are no longer around. But they left this world in the hope that one day Malaysia will be the country that we dream it would be. And that, too, must be our dream.

I pray and hope that the Putrajaya Federal Court will uphold the decision of the Shah Alam High Court to free me from ISA detention. But if it reverses that decision then we must be prepared for that as well. And if the Federal Court does what I fear it will do, goodbye Malaysians, my comrade-in-arms.

We shall meet again, one day, although not in this world but the next.

Monday, February 16, 2009

ANOTHER SAD DAY IN BOLEH-LAND !




O my fellow Malaysians ! In Europe, this whole episode would have been stale news by now! Remember Carla Bruni, the wife of President Sarkozy ? She was also put in a similar spot,but then, I forgot that this is Boleh-land ! :-)

It will be interesting if the whole thing ends up in court because it is obviously an intrusion of privacy and even public servants and celebrities are entitled to privacy rights because surely Elizabeth did not give permission for her images to be splashed to the world at large !!!

So, it will be interesting to see how noble our courts are in its pursuit of truth and justice !!!
Whatever the outcome of the court’s decision, should the case ends up there, is immaterial because at the end of the day , Justice if not common sense will prevail and the people’s court will adjudge that Elizabeth Wong has been a victim of low life political intent which further underscores the erosion of morals and ethics in our political landscape !!!

I am quite sure that this is another dirty political ploy to distract the nation's attention away from the political crisis in Perak !

Monday, February 9, 2009

A SCENE WE HOPE NOT TO SEE IN MALAYSIA!

At least 28 dead in Madagascan political protest

Youths carry an injured man after security forces opened fire, killing at least 28 people, on an anti-government protest in Antananarivo, Madagascar
Youths carry an injured man after security forces opened fire, killing at least 28 people, on an anti-government protest in Antananarivo, Madagascar    


By Alain Iloniaina in Antananarivo

Monday February 09 2009

Madagascar's opposition will stage more protests against President Marc Ravalomananadespite the killing of at least 28 anti-government demonstrators, its leader said yesterday.

Security forces patrolled the streets around the presidential palace where thousands of demonstrators clashed with riot police on Saturday.

The main hospital in Antananarivo, capital of theIndian Ocean island, was crowded with hundreds of wounded supporters of opposition leader Andry Rajoelina, who was sacked as the capital's mayor five days ago.

"I condemn you Mr Ravalomanana. Was there a life in the palace to protect? Did the defence of these offices require the spilling of all this blood?" Mr Rajoelina said in a statement aired on his private television station yesterday.

He said the fight would continue until the "final victory" and called for those responsible for the shootings to be arrested.

Michelle Ratsivalaka, named by the opposition as mayor after Mr Rajoelina's sacking, said the bodies of those killed on Saturday would be taken to a gymnasium for a mass service.

The government has also appointed a caretaker administration at city hall.

"Up to now we count 28 dead and 212 injured in the capital's three main hospitals," police commander Lala Rakotonirina said.

Some 128 people have died in two weeks of civil unrest stoked by a power struggle between Mr Ravalomanana and Mr Rajoelina.

The president blamed the opposition for Saturday's deaths and described the events as scandalous and intolerable.

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon said those responsible for the violence should be brought to justice.

"He deplores the violence and lack of restraint on all sides that led to this tragedy," a UN statement said.

Mr Ban urged all the involved parties to resolve their differences through peaceful and democratic means and said the UN was ready to help.

Mr Ravalomanana denies opposition accusations that he is a dictator.

- Alain Iloniaina in Antananarivo

Sunday, February 8, 2009

HAVE THE VOICES OF THE RAKYAT GONE TO DEAF EARS ?

And the plot thickens as the political drama in Perak unfolds.

How the story ends is entirely in the hands of the people of Perak. They are the only ones who can solve their problem and for that matter,  Malaysians are quite capable of solving their own affairs.
Forget about foreign intervention or even divine intervention. God only helps those who help themselves !
We can only help ourselves if we awaken ourselves from our induced comatose and begin not only to realize what is happening to us but to accept that we have a problem and that we will not be able to solve our problem if we are constantly in denial !

So, what is our problem ?
What is wrong with UMNO/BN is what is wrong with Malaysia, at the moment.
We need new blood infused into our chronicly anaemic system - new ideas,new perspectives,new solutions to solve new problems - to replace an antiquated and dysfunctional regime that has been bleeding the system to its premature death.
And if UMNO/BN cannot provide the new blood to revive itself to function properly,then it should make way for another party with viable alternative solutions to run the show .

As much as I want PR to take over,because BN has lost its moral right to govern, I do however, love Malaysia more. I feel that the two Party system is the best option and the sooner the system kicks in, the better it is for Malaysia.

So, both BN and PR had better make full use of the precious time they have, between now and the next General Elections, to get their acts together and stop the ridiculous political bickering going on at the moment and focus their attentions instead in the efficient running of the states that they are now governing .  

BN, being the ruling Party and the incumbent government should instead,be concentrating and spending the nation's resources on how to solve the economic crisis the nation is now facing  and finding solutions and means to cushion the consequent effects of the impending losses in jobs,earnings and savings of the people !

PR needs to consolidate and change its mindset to stop thinking like they are still in opposition and start acting responsibly and start taking seriously, the running of their governing states because they will be held accountable by the voters, the way the BN is held accountable and they will be judged by their results and not by their rhetorics, at the next General Elections!

Coming back to the drama in Perak. A lot of attention is now understandably focused on the Perak royalty and the way H.R.H. Sultan Azlan Shah has handled the ensuing political impasse.
There has been a lot of speculation among the rakyat as to what actually transpired between Najib and H.R.H. ? Did their own self preservations win the day at the expense of the well being of the nation and country to ensure that it will be "business as usual" and that they can continue to validate their positions and existence ? And, how is H.R.H. Sultan Azlan Shah's decision to sack his erstwhile legimate M.B. and to give in to Najib's demands, connected to the earlier appointment of an UMNO man as C.J. and a yet earlier incident regarding a court case involving the Regent of Negri Sembilan ?

The rakyat wonders if H.R.H. was put by Najib between a rock and a hard place, where by he had no choice but to give in to Najib's assurance that only the Umno putras alone will protect the monarchical institution ?

That could have been a posible scenario because there is no other way to justify or to explain how an esteemed and admired monarch ,learned in the laws, could have acted the way H.R.H. did. And if that was the case, it is indeed a sad day for Malaysia.

Sad because, whether we embrace it or reject it, the monarchy is here to stay. It is an institution 
protected and entrenched within our constitution. It will take only a revolution to change our constitution to change the status quo. And there will never be a people's revolution in a democracy unless there is a break down of the democratic system itself whereby wannabe dictators remove, forcibly or otherwise, the democratic process,avenues and rights of the nation to act, to question and to correct what ails the nation, as rightful and righteous citizens.   

Friday, February 6, 2009

HAMLET is alive in Perak !

HAMLET is alive in Perak !

QUOTES from 
Shakespeare's
Hamlet - Prince of Denmark


Tis a fault to Heaven
A fault against the dead
A fault to Nature
To reason most absurd


That it should come to this !


My father's brother
but no more like my father
than I to Hercules


All is not well
I doubt some foul play



Foul deeds will rise
Though all the earth o'oerwhelm
them to men's eyes


Something is rotten in the state of Denmark ( Perak)

ARE THERE NO MORE CHEERS BUT TEARS?


This is a poem I wrote many moons ago when I was struggling through life as an overseas student! 
I dedicate it to the people of Perak who are now going through a period of dark uncertainty and also to the man who holds the power to make a positive difference!






THE FLY


A fly, I am, I fly
Buzzingly high afloat the suburbian sky
A telling speck among shades of hue
Hello Life, what else is new !

Free me from this subliming haze
Feel me, the anger welling deep in me
Away from this maddening daze
Tell me,how do you want it to be!

Are you a friend
Different, a helping hand over my stumbling fence
Or just a common flan
Indifferent,engorged by the lack of common sense?

A fly, I am, I must fly
Lost in such a dark unfriendly sky
Plain, lame, more refuse for an old game
Pain, flame, has revisited us ,just the same !



Sunday, February 1, 2009

ARE THESE NGO'S TRULY DOING ANYONE A BIG FAVOUR?

Sunday February 1, 2009

17 NGOs come forward to support cops in Kugan case


PETALING JAYA: At a time when the police have been heavily criticised by certain individuals and politicians over detainee A. Kugan’s death while in police custody, 17 non-govermental organisations (NGOs) have come forward to give their full support to the men in blue.

The NGOs, mainly from Puchong, have reiterated that they trust that the police would handle the case fairly and openly.

The NGOs’ legal adviser, Datuk Theng Book, said that the public should refrain from speculating on Kugan’s death as it could create unrest.

“Politicians also should stop exaggerating the issue as it may give the impression that crime suspects are above the law,” he said at the press conference.

Kugan, 22, who was held under a two-weeks remand order for investigations into several luxury car theft cases, collapsed and died at the Taipan police station in Subang Jaya on Tuesday.

Theng urged the public to be calm and respect the Attorney General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail’s assurance that this case would be handled in a unbiased manner.

THERE ARE NO WINNERS ONLY VICTIMS IN GAZA AND THE SUFFERING CONTINUES









WHAT'S GOING ON ?

WHAT'S GOING ON, UMNO ? ARE YOU OFFERING BOTH THE CARROT AS WELL AS THE STICK ? WHY SO GENEROUS?


Police report to be lodged over missing PKR men (updated)


IPOH: Perak Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Mohammad Nizar Jamaluddin confirmed that neither the state nor family members have been able to reach the two Perak state executive councillors who have gone missing.

The state government will lodge a police report after consulting with their families, he told a press conference here Sunday.

Nizar urged the two PKR men -- Behrang assemblyman Jamaluddin Mat Radzi and Changkat Jering assemblyman Mohd Osman Jailu -- to come forward even if they have defected to another political party.

Jamaluddin, 52, is the Perak Entrepreneur Development and Cooperatives Committee chairman while Mohd Osman, 57, heads the State Tourism and NGO Committee.

They were charged in a Sessions Court on Aug 25 last year with allegedly receiving bribes over the application for a RM180mil housing project in Sri Iskandar in Perak Tengah. Their case comes up for hearing on Feb 10.

State PKR chief Osman Abdul Rahman accused Umno and Barisan Nasional of trying to lure the exco duo, saying their disappearance had something to do with it.

After Umno’s Bota assemblyman Datuk Nasarudin Hashim crossed over to PKR last week, PKR and Umno have been involved in a psychological war, with both accusing each other of trying to pinch their assemblymen.

Jamaluddin and Mohd Osman have not been seen in public since Nasarudin crossed over to PKR last Sunday, with the media also failing to reach them for comments.

Speculation had been rife in Perak that the exco duo were going to resign from PKR and become Independents before joining Umno later.

Pakatan Rakyat currently holds 32 state seats against Barisan’s 27 in the 59-seat State Assembly.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Comments on "Truth" and "putting food on the table "

““But if you do not let people seek the truth, what is the point of having an academic system? If we feed our students lies, how can we hope to succeed when the international benchmark is one of truth?” Johnleemk

"What is the point of the search for the truth if it does not further the collective good? Just what is the ‘truth’??” Mr.Bean

Both your points are valid. So what is Truth ? There are scientific and non scientific truths. It all boils down to perception and acceptance.
Can truth be logical and logic be true? If you tell an audience who believes that the earth is square, that it is indeed round, will you be telling a lie?

The point i am making is that Truth is paramount but you get squat if there is no acceptance and consensus. A glaring example is Anwars’s case. Regardless of whether the allegations made against him are true or false, what is material is the public perception of him that will make him the next PM.
Do not be fooled that this is not all about perception , public relations and spin doctoring! Truth is secondary when it comes to politics. Truth can be manipulated. Shakespeare, if he can get off his grave,will tell you that nothing is good nor bad but thinking makes it so.
“Malaysia is nowhere near being a ghost of the western style democracy today. It is nearer to being a socialist state with emphasis on wealth redistribution – robbing Ah Chong to give to Ahmad. John McCain the U.S. Presidential candidate is today accusing Barack Obama of wealth distribution. That’s stupid because it is nothing even close to that.” JohnLeemk
There is no perfect system - idea, thought or opinion. If there is one it will not last. Everything is subjective and relative to time and what surrounds us. What works yesterday may work today and tomorrow only we all live in a time warp where nothing changes.
PR is moving at the right direction for I humbly think that they have the right balance - the idealism of PKR, the pragmatism of DAP and the moralism of PAS.
You can articulate as much in fanciful philosophical semantics but you will never reach the masses unless your words bear realism and carry some moralistic weight as well.
“This climate of fear we live in is not something we can tolerate just because we can still put food on the table and send the kids to school. It cuts to something fundamental about us as human beings. We have a right to know, and a right to believe.
When you reject the notion that people have the right to seek the truth, you are not just rejecting some artsy-fartsy Western liberal ideas. You are rejecting the enrichment of human life, the spirit which has governed the growth of both religion and science over the millenia. You are rejecting economic development, because you have rejected the exposure of lies and corruption, because you have rejected the growth of human knowledge”JohnLeemk
This is hardly new script! The writing has been on the wall for years but the powers that be chose to ignore it.
The fact remains that the common aspirations of the common man on the streets are still paramount and it is also a fact that it is only because the government of the day has not delivered and meet these aspirations like”food on the table,etc….” that the freedom to question, to dissent ,etc.. which was and is non existent, resurges into the common man’s consciousness.
This reminds me of a conversation I had with my European friends who had visited Malaysia and they wanted my opinion why there are so many stray dogs and cats on our streets and why unlike here , why don’t the Malaysians just take them home and care for them? I answered that we do have the RSPCA but there is only so much they can do but we are not in Europe, the people here cannot afford the luxury they do because we have to first put food on our table before we can start to care for the strays.
I don’t know if that is the right answer, not humane but not unreal either, I think.

You are right, Mr.Bean, we do have a steep hill to climb still ,to reach “2020″ or at least till we can be proud to say that e are a civil society. In the meanwhile, we need honest people like Johnlee to remind us to keep our resolve for change. The only constant in life is change. :-) :-)

ocho-onda - October 24, 2008 a