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Friday, April 25, 2008

aman

Challenge YOUR Space Program?

Posted by: nanoeric

My dear Datuk Sri Najib, can you lay out the concrete plan on Space Program? We as the investors (tax payers) would like to know your concrete plan and implementation if Government would like to proceed to it.
First of all, it is an investment with minimal profit. No other nation in the world will do it, except Malaysia. Malaysia Boleh!

What can our honourable astronault do after his space program? Going around being government ambassador to gain votes, promoting country to foreigners? (Foreigners are laughing at us; we can’t even build a good car, not to mention the hull of airplane) If you want to challenge it, prove it with the abolishment of AP system. See how proton can survive then.

Will he continue the research he had done previously? It seems to me that there are others who are analyzing the results, not him. What can he do next? Going to Mars? What can u do after going to Mars? Do not mention about promoting Malaysia. I was being humiliated by foreign friends now. My Muslim friends even keep no respect to criticize it. (First muslim in outerspace while we are using other ppl’s technology to achieve it?) It’s a shame.

Thirdly, are we expecting to use foreigners’ shuttle forever? How many times you can send them over? Doing research again? Zero-gravity research? Do not bluff those people who are working in scientific field. If we really need zero-gravity research, we can just build the zero-gravity facility in Malaysia and use it as many times as you can. Going to space only allow u to do it once, which is not economically right. The concern is, I doubt do we have the good engineers to maintain the facilities and good physicists to conduct the research. The fact is, we can’t even build a good car, which requires the least quality requirement as compared to space shuttle and high-tech facility.

Buying a used spaceshuttle? Do we have engineers to do the maintenance and stringent check? What’s the progress of training aerospace engineers in Malaysia? I do know most of them end up in sales and other field. What’s the progress of our R&D? Our implementation plan?

I suggest to we should learn how to build an airplane, before going into space industry. Furthermore, we need supporting industries to support the main spine of space industry. Can they all meet the safety requirement? Look at our parliament building. Our ex-architect minister can’t even assure no “bocor” within one year of renovation.

Look at our bio-valley proposal. What’s the progress? How much benefit we have enjoyed so far? There is so much for us to do.

We have been good in coming out with Fool ideas, what we need is to show people we Malaysians are able to execute the idea and implement well. I do support building up our space industry, by helping third world nations to design their satellites, while gaining enough capital for future space development. Concrete plan, Concrete implementation please?

I hope the government learns something from election. We need someone who is good in reasoning and wisdom to run the country.

PS: I was thinking not to write, but i can't resist my irritation over the space program. I do hope Malaysians grow wiser and wiser, more practical and pragmatic in approaches.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

aman

Of pig farms, religion, and the people who are ignorant and stupid....


Posted by: Ahmad Hafidz Baharom

Sometimes I wish we could just look at all of us and say "Can't we all just get along?".

Then I go about and read about how people are protesting pig farms and think that ignorant and stupid people like these don't deserve such treatment.

One such objection to the pig farming project was that it was smelly. Obviously, this individual has never been on the receiving end of a chicken farm, or a cattle farm which are equally stenched up.

Then there was that banner on the news. "Lembu halal babi haram bodoh". Allow me to be equally subtle.

Muslims in Morocco and Tunisia rear pigs to cope with tourist demands in their country. Look it up.

Now while I don't fully understand just why we are building an estimated RM100 million high tech pig farm in our country when we can simply import the meat, I do have a few questions.

And no, I will not agree with Noh Omar's idea of simply putting the farm on Pulau Ketam since it's a non-Muslim area. What the heck was that about?

This is not so much a religious issue, but more of an issue on logistics and environmental impact.

Quoting Agent Smith from the first Matrix trilogy movie, "it's the smell, if there's such a thing. I can taste your stench"

So obviously waste management is an issue. How will the state government address this?

If logistics is the case, then why on the southern tip of Selangor, bordering Negri Sembilan? Why not closer to central Selangor, which is bordering Kuala Lumpur?

What's Jakim's uptake on using pig manure as fertilizer?

While I do agree with the project being a good thing, perhaps the state government would like to meet with the people of Sepang in a town hall gathering to address their worries.

But personally, I don't see this any more "haram" then the chopping down of Bukit Cahaya Seri Alam, the building of Dato' Zak's mansion without a permit, or even the building of the Lebar Daun Exco housing area.

Don't be hypocrites if you want to look at this in a religious perspective.

Source: http://blog.thestar.com.my

Thursday, April 17, 2008

aman

Helping Sufiah Yusof?

The de facto Minister of Religion in the Prime Minister’s department saying that he wants to help Sufiah Yusof.

KUALA LUMPUR: The Prime Minister’s Department and the Malaysian Missionary Foundation (Yadim) will try to assist former child mathematics genius Sufiah Yusof, now aged 23 and fending for herself as a prostitute in Salford, Manchester. Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Dr Zahid Hamidi said they would help the gifted girl return to the right path through the “Save Sufiah Programme”.

“The first thing we should try to do is to contact her mother or arrange a meeting with Sufiah to find out the reason she turned to prostitution, offering her services through the Internet, using the name ‘Shilpa Lee’,” he said.

It was reported in the News of the World that Sufiah is now a $130 (RM821)-an-hour hooker operating from her dingy flat.

The “Save Sufiah Programme” is headed by Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Dr Mashitah Ibrahim who will come up with strategies to assist Sufiah.

This is all fine and dandy but I question the timing. Why only now? Why was no effort made years ago before she denigrated into this state?


When I read the report in The Star regarding her ex-husband’s assessment of Sufiah, I gain a powerful impression of him as a pious and loving husband who only wanted the best for Sufiah, but was unable to do much since Sufiah was going “the other way”, according to him.

In any case, I do find it not only hillarious but also ironic that Dr. Mashitah “Being-A-Whore-Is-Alright-If-You-Are-Desperate” Ibrahim is heading the “Save Sufiah Programme” compaign. What happened to your previous “fatawa” on the matter, dear Dr., or have you forgotten it that easily?

Source: www.ibnjuferi.com

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

aman

Sufiah Yusof or Shilpa Lee - A History ???

The Brightest Family in Britain

Until this week, when her brother started university at the age of 12, Sufiah Yusof was Britain's youngest undergraduate. She is not an easy person to interview.

In a cold, bare kitchen, sitting at the family dining table, with her parents and sister Zuleika, four, she sits very quietly, hands in her lap, making no attempt to communicate.

There is no sign of teenage babble or boisterousness. Neither is there any noise from Zuleika, who is focused on drawing a circle with a compass, dividing it into fractions and carefully rubbing out mistakes with the dexterity of a ten-year-old.

Earlier this week, Sufiah, 14, began her second year at St Hilda's College, Oxford, reading maths. She won the place when she was 12, equalling the feat of child prodigy Ruth Lawrence, who began university life there at the age of 13.

Her brother lskander, who achieved an A in A-level maths when he was ten and a B in further maths a year later, and sister Aisha, 16, who gained top grades at maths when she was14, have just started at Warwick University-the youngest brother and sister to study together at university. Their elder brother Isaac, 17, is deciding between a career as a tennis player and a place at Warwick.

Their parents, Farooq, 40, from Pakistan and Halimahton, 41, from Malaysia, gave up their jobs to devote themselves to their offspring. They are selling their four-bedroom detached house in Northampton to be near their children at college, dividing their time between a rented house in Warwick and the home of Farooq's brother in Oxford. 'We are always present,' says Farooq.

Sufiah is by no means a young student going out in the world for the first time. She is a child who is fulfilling her parents' wishes. 'My first year at Oxford was quite fun,' she says meekly. 'I've joined the Maths, Islamic and Malaysian Societies.'

At 12, she was among the top eight junior tennis players in Britain, but now everything is subordinated to the pursuit of knowledge.

'In the second year at Oxford it is usual to do more sport and join more things,' she says, 'but I want to consolidate my work.'

She breaks off to answer the phone. It is lskander, who wants to know about a book on real numbers and topology.

According to Halimahton, Sufiah and lskander have terrible fights. 'The other night they were screaming at each other,' she says. This was not ordinary sibling rivalry, about which television channel to watch. These children fight about concepts.

'It was about logic,' says Sufiah, coming to life. 'You can't deduce a proof from the evidence he was presenting. We were screaming at each other.'

Most of the time she is silent - smiling while her father talks, endlessly. 'At Oxford, certain learned professors ask questions about children and learning,' he says. 'They seem confused. But to us, the answers are obvious.

'As long as children can sit down, listen and receive, they can be taught. It is not about sending them off to nurseries to learn. It is all done by the parents.

'It is about quiet, patient application and a whole currency of ideas and values which are provided within the home.'

The Yusofs educated their children at home after they looked at British schools and found them desperately wanting.

'There were difficulties about resources,' says Farooq, 'and problems about what the teachers can and cannot do. There were problems about knowledge, too - we believe that new ideas need to be examined at length. There has to be time for consideration and reflection, but there was no provision for this in schools.

'From their earliest years, we do everything to enable the children to learn. We are sensitive to them. We don't let them develop phobias about work.'

Hearing this, Zuleika, who had made no sound except for the scratching of her pencil, volunteers the word 'arachnophobia' and a discussion follows about spiders.

Farooq, who says his children are not gifted, believes he could teach almost any child to be as able as his own, even if they were handicapped or disturbed.

His methods hark back to a previous age. The house is kept cold and quiet, without any distractions. They rise at 7.30am and begin the day with Islamic prayers. He says these help to 'spark in the children the process of inquiry'.

After breakfast there are stretching and breathing exercises. An open window ensures there is plenty of fresh air, because Farooq believes it makes the brain sharper.

When they were educated at home, the elder children studied independent projects such as astronomy or Egyptology until lunch. In the afternoon, there was a walk and rigorous tennis training followed by more study, using rather battered grammar-school textbooks.

An important part of their education is also the 'exchange of ideas'. The children's facility is essentially right-brained, to do with maths and science, not the arts, but because they were literate and numerate by the age of two, they were able to interact in debate very early on.

'They are not passive,' says Farooq, 'they are taught to think. We invite them to put their point of view and always encourage them to be serious, not casual.

'Most people in Britain are sleep-walking,' he says. 'They haven't been taught to think. They don't exercise their critical faculties in any way.'
His methods have been proved right, in that the children excel at academic work. But Farooq and his wife are not just pushy parents.

The Yusofs are probably this country's brightest family, but they reject much of British culture.

Unlike British children, the Yusof offspring are not seen as individuals who can drift along and hopefully fulfil their potential; they are part of a highly organised group - the family - and they represent their father's ideals as a Sufi Moslem.
Followers of the Sufi branch of Islam are politically moderate, but still the Yusofs wanted to 'protect' their children from Western influences.

'We educated them at home because of the prominence of certain ideas in British schools,' he says. 'There is the idea that you can get on in life with no effort. We believe in application, hard work and traditional values.
'In Britain, goals and aims are presented by the pop culture that are dangerous, shallow illusions. Even children's television programmes are poor and propound the pop culture.

'On something such as Newsround they will suddenly advertise the Spice Girls, who represent the idea that you can get fame and money for no effort.

'Everything in this society is to do with immediate success rather than struggles, challenges and sacrifices.

'We felt that the children were growing up in an environment giving them the wrong messages. We have a material culture now, where the public is programmed for disposability, novelty and continual change. They even regard members of their families in this way. The element of sacrifice has gone, even towards their children.'

The Yusofs were very willing to makes sacrifices for their children. Farooq says that living between Oxford and Warwick is 'exhausting', and because he suffered polio as a boy in Pakistan, he has a bad leg, which doesn't help.
Both he and his wife have felt some 'intellectual stagnation' since giving up work (Farooq was an engineer and Halimahton a research chemist at Hull University). They rely on savings.

But willing sacrifice for the family is part of their basic beliefs. Everything is done for the good of the larger group. No part or individual is greater than the whole.

Farooq calls his children's successes 'a parallel learning project'. Except for the youngest, they all bear the academic workload of 18-year-olds. He calls this 'sharing intellectual challenges'.

When Sufiah finishes at Oxford, there are plans to send her to Harvard University in the U.S.. But she will have to wait a year for Iskander and Aisha to catch up.

Zuleika will also have to catch up. She is expected to sit her maths A-level by the age of six.

Farooq does not believe that many Western families could offer each other this level of commitment. Most people's lives are 'shoddy, shifting and unstable'.

'We are shielding our children from Western society,' he says, 'because we are so fearful of the alternative.

'We want their analytical skills to reach full development so that they cannot be exploited by this society.'

The children are fiercely guarded from the fripperies of fashion. 'We are bemused by constant changing fads,' he says.

In the living room there were no toys evident, only books, including a weighty Enid Blyton compendium, being read by Zuleika.

'They do have toys,' he says, 'but not mindless things such as Barbie dolls. Everything we do is for an end. They do not follow fashion for the sake of it.

'There is a sewing kit. Aisha made her little sister a doll. Then Zuleika tried to make one for herself, which was very meaningful. It showed a skill being transmitted to her. We want the children to pass on their creative skills to each other.

'We offer an environment which gives opportunities for self-fulfilment and protection from exploitation.'

This self-development is extended equally to boys and girls. The Sufi do not support the usual Islamic repression of women. But that does not mean the girls are as free as their Western contemporaries. For Sufiah and her sisters, there will be no exploratory relationships at college, even if they can escape the parental eye.

There was a slight hiccup last term when Sufiah was invited to a college reception for Princess Anne. Her personal tutor, Dr Irene Ault, warned her that there would be 'a lot of boozy young men there', so she didn't go.

Dr Ault unfortunately blotted her copy book shortly afterwards, by using an expletive during a lecture. Sufiah reported this to her parents with astonishment. It is not the sort of word ever to be heard around the Yusof dinner table.

Aisha cannot have a boyfriend,' says Farooq. 'That would not be considered as being to her optimal benefit.'

'We wouldn't accept the children having any kind of sexual relations. Of course, all the children know about sex, from a scientific point of view. And we realise that you cannot introduce ideas without experimentation, so we ask, what is going to be important to them - education or sex? Because of the way they have been brought up, the answer will be the former.

'They will not be exposed to U.S. television sitcoms or soaps, which stir up the emotions. They are taught that sex is something sacred, and that there is no value in having several different partners.

'In relationships you have to ask, how much would I sacrifice for this? The object of marriage is families getting together.'

'There is so much strength in the family,' says his wife, who laughs nervously. 'Asian people do well everywhere they go, no matter how poor they start out, because they believe in hard work, application and education. That will always win in the end.'

Sufiah and her sister were still quiet as mice. I wondered if she had any nerves about beginning a new term? 'I am looking forward to it,' she says calmly. 'There were no problems last year.'

'If you go to Oxford,' her father cuts in, 'it is your responsibility to discover the secrets of the universe while you are there. It is quite a holy place. I hope that people who are there do not treat it frivolously.'

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

aman

Criminal Tactic Again

FOR YOUR ATTENTION!!!

If you meet a guy (especially Indian) who rides a motorbike with bloody hand knocking your window demand you to stop and asking for tissue paper to clean the blood when you are driving a car, remember DO NOT stop the car at all. Even how he damages your car or holds the side mirrors tightly also DO NOT stop the car but directly drive to the nearest police station. This kind of criminal tactic had been reported about 40 cases in Seremban police station (actually around the whole country also happen). The guy is mainly Indian, he was dare to commit this criminal even in the crowded area whereby no body will dare to stop the car to help you. The main purpose of this dirty tactic is to rob you and even commit rape if you are female. Please forward this message to the people you care about at your best.