Thursday, May 28, 2009

...fantasy...



come back you

...sexual fantasy


Alex Tan
May 26 at 10:31am
what's your sexual fantasy?


Voulez Voo
May 26 at 11:16am
..what's yours? Ahem, i don't hv any. FYI, most women don't have (sexual fantasies)... well, the women friends i know anyway.Cheers.


Alex Tan
May 26 at 2:08pm
sexual fantasy? a threesome with two ladies...never done it...however exciting as its unexplored territories...do you enjoy long wet passionate kisses?


Voulez Voo
May 27 at 3:16pm
...not wet... long, passionate is delicious tho' Yr 3-some fantasy - better make sure u can last long enuff to please the 2 ladies Mister Stud!


Alex Tan
May 27 at 3:39pm
i enjoy long passionate and wet if possible..its obviously a challenge in threesome...or probably can do it one after another...then sex is communication...its about how to satisfy each others needs...some love doggie...some love missionary...i suppose that's why the world is so exciting...you like it if your breast is sucked licked then sucked again? sometimes hard...sometimes soft...


Voulez Voo
May 27 at 7:05pm
you like it if your breast is sucked licked then sucked again? sometimes hard...sometimes soft...? depends on mood surely? but not too hard till it hurts... n not too wet... yuck.. cuninlingus is preferred... but, again, not too hard on the clitoris tx... lol...


Voulez Voo
May 27 at 7:10pm
aiyaaa... i think it's the same for at least 90% of pussies u ask Alex...


Alex Tan
Today at 12:28pm
you are very detailed in your description on the anotomy...well i like it when its sucked and licked by somebody that i fancy...it s also very tempting when the other person is as beautiful as you...i just wanna say that you are a truly bautiful lady...features that will make the guys queue up for your number and you will probably nee a full time secretary to handle all the requests for dates...have you ever had one night stand?


Voulez Voo
Today at 6:11pm
...nope, never ONS, and will never happen EVER!!last night...truly fooked... wowee... beauty? born with it, so hv to live with it as best as i can... sometimes good, other times bad

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

a reminder...do not be upset over the wrong reasons

The 1-Malaysia in reality
by Raja Petra Kamarudin
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Tuesday, 26 May 2009 03:13


The Indians are upset. And they have every right to be upset. After all, have they not been neglected and marginalised for more than 50 years? I will be very surprised if they are not upset when even I am upset.

But these Indians appear to be upset over the wrong reasons. They are upset because Indians are not given enough posts and positions. They want more representatives here and more representatives there, in every council, committee and what-have-you. And they are upset not because not enough Indians are being given these posts and positions. They are upset because THEY are not being given these posts and positions. It makes you wonder whether they are fighting for their fellow Indians or for themselves.

Why fight for more temples? Are there not enough temples as it is now? Fight for more government land and government funds for expansion purposes for existing temples. After all, are not mosques being built on government land and with government money, which means it is our land and our money -- Malays, Chinese, Indians and ‘others’ included?

In other words, don’t talk about quantity, talk about quality.

Why fight for more Indian schools? Some Indian schools are so dilapidated and don’t even have enough students to qualify as a school. We don’t need more schools. We need to improve the existing schools. Again, quality over quantity!

Fight for the abolishment of race-based quotas in public schools, colleges and universities plus for Tamil to be part of the school curriculum as a second or third language so that Indian students can still learn Tamil if they want to.

The taxpayers are paying for the cost of public institutions of learning -- meaning you and me are paying for it. So why should only one race be allowed places in these institutions such as ITM? The Malays are not paying for these institutions. All Malaysians, non-Malays included and in particular, are paying for it. It is an open secret that the ‘other races’ are paying most of the taxes but they are denied places in public institutions of learning which depends on taxpayers to fund them.

Are posts and positions really that important? Indians have been given posts and positions since over 50 years of Merdeka. But have the lot of the Indians improved? Do these Indians holding all sorts of posts and positions really strive to improve the lot of their fellow Indians?

Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad grumbled that he gave the so-called representatives of the Indian community all sorts of help. They got shares, contracts, land and whatnot. But did it filter down to the grassroots Indians or did those at the top sapu everything for themselves?

Today, the Indians might argue that MIC no longer represents the Indian community and that Mahathir should not have given all this wealth to the MIC leaders because they kept it all for themselves and never passed anything down to the people below them. Maybe, today, you say that. But, until very recently, 90% of the Indian voters voted for Barisan Nasional. The impression the Indians gave was that they regard MIC as their legitimate representative.

There are many things the Indians should fight for other than for more ‘lucrative’ posts and positions. And the fight should not just focus on getting more Indians into committees. This does not work and has been proven so for more than 50 years.

The Indians are being left behind. There are as many, or probably more, poor Indians as there are Malays. But Indians do not get special preferences when buying a home, the most important and fundamental requirement before anything else. A roof over the head is first and foremost. But a rich Malay house-buyer gets special preference because he is Malay while a poor Indian sleeps in a rented slum-house because he is Indian. Is this fair?

I support the Indian cause. But I do not support what they are asking for and the way they are going about doing it. Yes, call for the end of the New Economic Policy in spite of Najib’s warning to HINDRAF to ‘not to go to far’. It should no longer be about Malays first. It should be about poor and needy Malaysians first.

And you can demand this without asking for more places in committees. It is not about posts and positions. It is about getting other non-Indian Malaysians like the Malays and Chinese to join you and to support you in the fight to improve the lot of not only the Indians but the lot of all poor and deserving Malaysians regardless of ethnicity.

Annoucing: the "superior" race.

Wenger,

You inform me that, "As Malays, we are the superior race but only in Malaysia, and this is perhaps what UMNO is all about."

With your pow-der-full England, I assume you must mean Malays are the "superior" race as in innovativeness, in short: superior in brain power not unlike the Americans?

Or do you mean the "majority" race?

If you mean the former, all the school quota will have been un-necessary as being the "superior" race, Malays would be ummm... rather "superior" academically.

So, which is it?

Monday, May 25, 2009

...landing in Malaysia with just a few dollars and a bag of clothes.

SINGAPORE, May 25 — Tan Sri Francis Yeoh, managing director of YTL Corp. Bhd. and one of Malaysia’s most prominent business personalities, is a religious man who makes every effort to practice his Christian values in life and business.

Under his stewardship, the YTL group has grown from a single entity in Malaysia in 1985 to seven listed companies, making it one of Malaysia’s biggest conglomerates, with operations at home and abroad.

Mr. Yeoh’s grandfather left Fujian province in China in 1920 with just a few dollars and a bag of clothes. He landed in Malaysia, worked hard and opened a timber business. His son Yeoh Tiong Lay started a construction company called Yeoh Tiong Lay Building Co. in 1955, later shortened to YTL. Its early construction projects in Malaysia were military garrisons, hospitals and low-cost housing.

At the age of 16, Francis Yeoh was already learning the business at the company’s construction sites on weekends and holidays. As the eldest of seven children, he offered to drop out of school, where he was the head boy, to help his father.

The offer was rejected and Francis went to Kingston Polytechnic (now Kingston University), in London, earning a degree in civil engineering. On his return to Malaysia in 1978, at the age of 24, his father appointed him managing director of YTL.

During the past 30 years, the YTL group, whose principal activities are now in water supply and treatment and power generation, has also moved into other activities such as hotel and resort management, information technology, manufacturing, and cement, with acquisitions such as PowerSeraya Ltd., a major supplier of electricity in Singapore; Wessex Water Ltd. in the UK, and the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Kuala Lumpur.

Yeoh family members continue to dominate the YTL board, holding eight of the 13 seats. The extended Yeoh family’s net worth is estimated at US$1.7 billion (RM5.9 billion), which would make it Malaysia’s sixth richest clan.

Shares of YTL Corp and six other entities in the YTL group are listed in Malaysia, while the parent company is also traded in Tokyo. And a YTL real-estate investment trust trades on the Nasdaq stock exchange in New York.

An avid lover of the arts, Yeoh, 56, is president and patron of the Kuala Lumpur Symphony Orchestra Society and is actively involved in philanthropy. Costas Paris interviewed Yeoh in Singapore.

WSJ: Who gave you the best business advice?
Yeoh: The best business advice I’ve received came from God’s scriptures. I am only a steward of God’s wealth. Knowing this means that there is a lack of personal ego in the approach that YTL takes to business decisions. We practice what we preach and look to develop good ideas so that in every down cycle, such as we are currently seeing in the global economy, we have cash available to be able to expand the company. Now we have reserves to invest in excess of US$3.4 billion.

WSJ: What advice would you give to someone starting out in your field today?
Yeoh: Many CEOs have a short-term, quarterly-results-oriented outlook. At YTL, we have built businesses that on the surface may look diversified. However, linking them all is the central common denominator, which is our engineering skill set. Staying focused and having a long-term view means that we have a balance sheet where more than 70 per cent of our income is recurring, which is one of the reasons I can sleep well at night.

WSJ: Do you have a favorite business book?
Yeoh: I read and enjoy Warren Buffet and the usual collection of business-strategy books. I particularly like W. Chan Kim’s “Blue Ocean Strategy”. But the book I value the most is the Bible. Many of the best business practices we adopt as a (corporate) culture tend to be faith-based, and are found in the Scriptures.

WSJ: What’s the one thing you wish every new hire knew?
Yeoh: New hires must master what we call the three languages: the language of God, the language of man and the language of machines. The language of God means integrating your character with God and being uncorrupted.

The language of man is the language of global business. You have to articulate, especially when you’re a leader and have to motivate your people. It could be Mandarin in China, it could be English in Britain, and it could be Indian in India if you do business there.

Finally you have to master the language of machines, which is computer-based technology or machines that enhance your business productivity. At YTL, we focus on these three characteristics and as a result have very little turnover of senior staff. And we are mindful never to over-hire so as to avoid any retrenchment cycles.

WSJ: Is there a difference between how you work in Asia and the rest of the world?
Yeoh: We tend to do very well in economies that have the rule of law, transparency and a sophisticated regulatory framework. So in that context, Malaysia, Britain, Australia, and Singapore and economies like the US are territories we are very comfortable with.

WSJ: What was the toughest decision you’ve had to make as a manager?
Yeoh: At YTL, any decision is subjected to rigorous scrutiny of the board of directors. If a deal gets through them, it comes to me and I will still approach my father for his counsel. When the company was still young, one director (a Yeoh brother) came to the board with an idea to invest into the latex glove business. Rather than a core business built to last, it was an opportunity to make huge profits – or so we all thought. It very quickly came to nothing [when the over-invested global latex glove industry faltered] and we closed the business.

As a reminder to us all, we still keep the empty tanks [once filled with liquid latex for making gloves] in our (so-called) museum of mistakes. It reinforces the need to stay focused on our skill set, which is based on engineering. The same brother has moved on to build one of the best and profitable cement companies in Asia, YTL Cement.

WSJ: Would you recommend someone starting out in your field obtain an advanced degree, or learn on the job?
Yeoh: I had to set a very high bar for members of our family. I insisted on an honors degree in engineering or similar degrees related to our industry. I didn’t want any molly-coddled sibling coming in. I didn’t want nepotism, cronyism and all that stuff.

So most of them have graduated or are graduating from the best colleges, such as the Imperial College London, the University of Cambridge, the University of Oxford, the University of Nottingham, the London School of Economics. These are good signs. – Wall Street Journal

this so-called KeTuanan Melayu

Hallo Ah Weng J Curry,

I sense you are unclear about Ketuanan Melayu (KM) at worse, or at best, pretend to want to understand it (so that there will never be a 1Malaysia).

All non-Malays have already accepted KM since that 13th day of M. It was a master-stroke. So, wtf, just play along la.

Who has that emergency fund to become citizen of other country? Those that dream of it, eventually got their wish with the 2nd gen.

So, M'sia is stuck with us reluctant migrants. What to do?

Hey, think of the African slaves in America. It took 200+ years to get a president up there.
For a while, they couldn't even share bus seats.


But, here in M'sia, not that bad ya? Just another 150 years of fighting for a lost cause to go.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

The arrogance of secularists

Posted by admin
Wednesday, 20 May 2009 17:13


By batsman

This is not about whether God exists or does not exist. This is not a discussion about whether God exists or not under the guise of whether prayers work or not. This is not about empirical proofs.

Since neither science nor logic can prove whether God exists or not, I think it is a waste of time to discuss this with secularists. What is marginally more fruitful is a discussion on the arrogance of secularists.

Just because scientists discovered some physical laws of the material world and were able not only to repeat their discoveries but also use them to invent new powerful machines (mostly weapons of war, but also efficient industrial machinery), the secularists believe they have the right solutions to everything including their marginalization of Faith. I challenge this arrogance and put it to you that this belief in “almighty secularism” is also based on faith – a faith that is faulty and weak.

I grant that the capitalists with their weapons of war, their industrial and communications machines and their commercial and financial might are indeed powerful. It is precisely this power that they use to marginalize Faith, but this is still not adequate so they have to co-opt science as the new religion of the secularists.

Science is a new religion to some. Just to give a simple example – how many commentators in Malaysia-Today understand the theory of relativity and the maths that go into it? How many truly understand quantum mechanics or string theory? Yet these simpletons, many of whom never pass Form 5 roar mightily about the Theory of Relativity, the absolute truth of science and put up Einstein as their demi-god. Their confidence is based on the understanding of others. If this is not an act of faith, what is?

Even the real men of science admit that about 73% of the universe comprise of an unknown entity or entities which they call vaguely dark matter and dark energy. Yet with only about 27% of the universe that real scientists can see, touch or measure, some arrogant secularists even claim to deny the existence of God. If this is not arrogance, what is?

There was a time when scientists claimed that what cannot be seen measured, felt or detected is not matter or energy and therefore does not exist. The 73% dark matter and dark energy cannot be seen, measured, felt or detected. By right they shouldn’t exist, yet the mathematical calculations go haywire and the numbers cannot be explained without dreaming up something called dark matter and dark energy. One of the holy grails of science is now to be able to detect dark energy. Imagine what can be accomplished if dark energy can not only be detected but harnessed! Energy galore! Great dreams for something which cannot be seen, measured or detected. Is it any different from believing that God exists?

Yet some arrogant secularists go around claiming that science is absolute truth.
There is even dispute about global warming and the dispute is so serious that suppression is used in the form of denial of scientific grants and denial of publishing benefits to those in the “heretical” camp.


They used to say that the melting of the polar ice-caps will flood the world. Now that some of the ice has melted, they say it has been miscalculated and the effect is “not so bad”. Yet some arrogant secularists still go around claiming that science is the absolute truth. If this is not a form of religious fanaticism, what is?

They used to treat the Theory of Evolution as the absolute truth. Those who taught anything else in schools were sacked or forced to resign. Now they are saying that the Theory of Evolution has to be slightly adapted to new findings. After all, natural selection may be influenced by female selection and these days it may even be wholly dependent on viral selection.

Viruses are now said to be necessary for mammalian (and thus also human) birth and that the human genome may just be a compilation of various viral genes (apes have now taken second place). This theory just about gives the classical Theory of Evolution a whack out of alignment, yet some arrogant secularists continue to oppress creationists and treat creationists as heretics who need to be burned at the stake of scientific orthodoxy. If this is not scientific obsession of the religious kind, what is?

Even the much vaunted physical laws of the material world seem to apply only on the earth and thereabouts. In 73% of the unknown universe and especially inside the black holes, physical laws don’t seem to apply. The universe itself is said to begin as a small pea or baseball sized “something” that blew up and became eternal in size. Shades of Gungamesh of Babylonian “scientific” thought? How is this explanation more understandable to the ordinary person than the old one that the universe was created by God? Don’t mention the ordinary person – I think even university graduates have problems with this theory of the Big Bang.

Things have become so bizarre that the newest theory - String Theory, says that reality comprises up to 12 dimensions and our universe is just one of them (comprised of 3 or 4 dimensions). This means that there are other dimensions that we cannot see, cannot measure and cannot detect. With so much at stake, some secularists still have the arrogance to claim definitively that God does not exist.

What can you say about these secularists? In my view, they are just exercising power possessed by capitalist scientific orthodoxy to suppress and marginalize Faith. These people must have the first word and the last word and all the words in between. It has nothing to do with the humility of life and Truth.

http://mt.m2day.org/2008/content/view/22122/84/