30 June, 2009

Meet A Speaker


Very recently I met Dr Shukri Abdullah from Amalan Belajar Sdn Bhd, who's came to met my father and mother specifically to dig any secrets for upbringing 17 childrens with both hand and without proper educations.

Dr Shukri is a well-known motivational speaker and could be reach by:
web; www.seminardrshukri.com.my
blog; http://drshukri.wordpress.com/
email: seminardrshukri@yahoo.com

Please feel free to contact him if anyone interested to know a ScoreA programme...

27 June, 2009

Maid Saga


Who's afraid of Indonesian maids?

MAIDS are people too. But you would not think so judging from the shockingly negative response from employers of domestic helpers to government legislation making one day of leave per week mandatory. Opposition to this law has laid bare the knee-jerk tendencies and racism of certain segments of Malaysian society, despite transparent attempts by employers to couch their disapproval in minarchist, or limited-government, terms.

MCA deputy president Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek fired the first high-profile salvo on behalf of the naysayers when he wrote a blog entry questioning the wisdom of such legislation. He opined that the congregation of maids on leave could potentially make parts of the city feel "un-Malaysian", and suggested that they would be susceptible to being hoodwinked by other foreigners into committing crimes that could possibly endanger their employers' lives.

Let's ignore for the moment that these comments were primarily targeted at Indonesian domestic helpers. After all, the Filipino government, through various alphabet soup organisations, has been largely successful in enforcing the one-day leave minimum for its nationals working overseas. Instead, let us first look at our legal responsibility to provide fair working conditions for domestic helpers in general.

Legal imperatives
Article 2.2(j) of the recently ratified Asean Charter proclaims that member states will "[uphold] the United Nations Charter and international law, including international humanitarian law, subscribed to by Asean Member States". This includes Article 24 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) which reads: "Everyone has the right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours and periodic holidays with pay."

While it is true that the UDHR is not a treaty, it was formulated to define the terms "fundamental freedoms" and "human rights" as used in the United Nations Charter. The UN Charter is binding on all member states and, as has already been shown above, is a charter Asean claims to endorse. This would seem to indicate that we have an obligation from the point of view of international law, if not sheer decency, to ensure that domestic workers enjoy full labour rights, regardless of the impetus that first got the ball rolling.

Written by Yow Hong Chieh of The Nut Graph
Friday, 26 June 2009 12:25

26 June, 2009

Feel Betrayed...?


Suddenly.. and suddenly I am not feeling very well about human relationship.

Shortly, it appear and exposed how vulnerable are humanbeing... pull by greed and greedy, nobody care about oldfrens and good loughs..

But, anyway fren go fren come.. and live must goes on. Surely, sometimes we confuse where to choose or what to choose...

16 June, 2009

TAKE NOTE LADIES!!


HANDBAGS

Have you ever noticed girls who set their handbags on public toilet floors, then go directly to their dining tables and set it on the table?
Happens a lot! It's not always the 'restaurant food' that causes stomach distress.. Sometimes 'what you don't know will hurt you'!

Read on.......... ...
Mum got so upset when guests came in the door and plopped their handbags down on the counter where she was cooking or setting up food. She always said that handbags are really dirty, because of where they have been.

It's something just about every woman carries with them. While we may know what's inside our handbags, do you have any idea what's on the outside? Women carry handbags everywhere; from the office to public toilets to the floor of the car. Most women won't be caught without their handbags, but did you ever stop to think about where your handbag goes during the day.

'I drive a school bus, so my handbag has been on the floor of the bus a lot,' says one woman. 'On! The floor of my car, and in toilets.'
'I put my handbag in grocery shopping carts and on the floor of the toilet,' says another woman 'and of course in my home which should be clean.'

We decided to find out if handbags harbour a lot of bacteria. We learned how to test them at Nelson Laboratories in Salt Lake , and then we set out to test the average woman's handbag..

Most women told us they didn't stop to think about what was on the bottom of their handbag. Most said at home they usually set their handbags on top of kitchen tables and counters where food is prepared.
Most of the ladies we talked to told us they wouldn't be surprised if their handbags were at least a little bit dirty.

It turns out handbags are so surprisingly dirty, even the microbiologist who tested them was shocked.

Microbiologist Amy Karen of Nelson Labs says nearly all of the handbags tested were not only high in bacteria, but high in harmful kinds of bacteria. Pseudomonas can cause eye infections, staphylococcus aurous can cause serious skin infections, and salmonella and e-coli found on the handbags could make people very sick.

In one sampling, four of five handbags tested positive for salmonella, and that's not the worst of it. 'There is faecal contamination on the handbags' says Amy. Leather or vinyl handbags tended to be cleaner than cloth handbags, and lifestyle seemed to play a role. People with kids tended to have dirtier handbags than those without, with one exception.

The handbag of one single woman who frequented nightclubs had one of the worst contaminations of all. 'Some type of faeces, or possibly vomit' says Amy.

So the moral of this story is that your handbag won't kill you, but it does have the potential to make you very sick if you keep it on places where you eat. Use hooks to hang your handbag at home and in toilets, and don't put it on your desk, a restaurant table, or on your kitchen countertop.

Experts say you should think of your handbag the same way you would a pair of shoes. 'If you think about putting a pair of shoes on your countertops, that's the same thing you're doing when you put your handbag on the countertops.'
Your handbag has gone where individuals before you have walked, sat, sneezed, coughed, spat, urinated, emptied bowels, etc!

Do you really want to bring that home with you?
The microbiologists at Nelson also said cleaning a handbag will help. Wash cloth handbags and use leather cleaner to clean the bottom of leather handbags..

Fwd by Lyn Hamdan on 15/6/09...

13 June, 2009

Crises Learnt


Learnt anything from the food, fuel and financial crises?

Here are some of the insights gained from the few shocks the world has gone through over the last two years.

THE world has gone through quite a few shocks over the last two years. First, it was high food prices. Then, record oil prices. Next came the global financial crisis and, to top it all off, we're dealing with a global recession now, the first worldwide slump since the 1940s.

So, what have we learnt so far? Here are some of the insights gained.

1. Our central bank has done a pretty good job.

When commodity prices shot through the roof and prices of goods and services were jumping in the first half of 2008, Bank Negara Malaysia did not bow to peer pressure.
Other central banks made the wrong call when they raised interest rates to fight inflation. The problem was that making money more expensive would probably work if the rise in prices was caused by people spending too much. We would think twice about buying that new iPhone if, suddenly, the monthly housing loan payments went up.

But Bank Negara recognised that inflation was caused by a shortage of supply and decided not to raise interest rates. Doing so would have probably hurt consumer spending, a major economic driver.

2. In the corporate "greed is good" world, the authorities are there for a reason.

Financial companies are slightly different from others because, more often than not, they are afflicted with moral hazard. This happens when a company takes excessive risk, secure in the knowledge that they will be rescued if anything goes wrong.

Take, for example, AIG - the insurance giant that had to be bailed out by the US government. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke said it found a gap in the rules, made irresponsible bets and took huge losses.

"This was a hedge fund, basically, that was attached to a large and stable insurance company."

But in Asia and, especially Malaysia, regulators take great pains to ensure the stability of the financial system and to protect investors. The Asian financial crisis was a good experience.

That's why, when AIG had troubles in the US, its Asian units were humming along nicely and customers did not rush to cancel their policies.

3. Even the smart ones are not that smart.

What does Europe's biggest bank HSBC, The Royal Bank of Scotland, and Japan's largest stockbroker Nomura have in common?

All of them were duped by Bernard Madoff's investment scam. So, don't fret if you think you're losing out on better returns from the stock market or some other fancy financial instrument that you do not understand. Some people are just born to be risk-averse, preferring to play it safe and be content with low but stable returns.

4. We need to produce enough food for ourselves.

The food crisis was a good reminder of what can happen if we continue to be dependent on others. Malaysia still imports part of its rice needs.

We must make sure that the plan to make Malaysia self-sufficient is a success. The crisis has shown the worst-case scenario whereby major food exporters can suddenly choose to restrict their overseas shipments.

Interestingly, a direct result of the food crisis is how rich countries are leasing land in poorer nations to ensure their food supply. Kuwait, for instance, is leasing land in Cambodia to produce rice.

5. Going green won't make you a hippie.

We need to realise that taking care of the environment is crucial for our future generation.

Keep on littering our beaches, towns and cities and our tourism industry will suffer. Keep on driving like a maniac and you'll spend more on petrol, a precious by-product of crude oil, which is getting harder to find.

Keep those five air-conditioners running and you not only get a hefty power bill but also waste precious subsidised gas, the main fuel for electricity generation. Petronas has already warned that gas for the power sector may run out after 2019.

Shahriman Johari of Business TImes
Saturday, June 13, 2009, 09.18 AM

11 June, 2009

SIS in Trouble - Not Islamic at All

Even though I am not in active local politics, I believe the article belows worth to be read as a good sample how muslim in Malaysia should take coordinated action and act to right the wrongdoings..

Thursday June 11, 2009
Zulkifli takes a dig at SIS
By IZATUN SHARI


PETALING JAYA: PKR MP Zulkifli Noordin wants the Companies Commission to stop Sisters in Islam (SIS) from using the word “Islam” in its title.

The Kulim-Bandar Baru MP has instead proposed in his blog that SIS change its name to Ikatan Wanita Kosmopolitan (Cosmopolitan Wo-men’s Alliance) – IWK being a reference to the sewerage treatment company – as “most of its members do not wear the tudung” and “are unmarried”.

Zulkifli said the word “Islam” in SIS also gave the perception that the group was speaking on behalf of or representing the voice of Islam.

“How are they going to talk about women’s rights and Muslim marriages when they themselves do not adhere to and practise the basic Islamic rule?” asked Zulkifli, who last year had aggressively tried to storm a Bar Council forum on religious conversion.

Although the PKR subsequently issued him a show-cause letter, he refused to apologise and the matter was resolved internally with no action taken against him.

Zulkifli claimed that SIS had confused the public because it was misusing the word “Islam” when it had not registered itself as such.

“This group is not a non-governmental organisation registered under the Societies Act. It is registered as Sis Forum Sdn Bhd under the Companies Act, which is not related to Islam, but it promotes itself worldwide as Sisters in Islam,” he said.

However, Zulkifli, who is a lawyer, said banning SIS would only evoke sympathy and be exploited by narrow-minded people to ridicule Islam.

He also urged the authorities to probe the group, adding that the National Fatwa Council should organise a muzakarah (discussion) on SIS and demand an explanation if it was deemed to be deviating.

Meanwhile, DAP chairman Karpal Singh said PAS’ open attack on SIS would not endear itself to its supporters in the next general election.

“Neither does PAS’ insistence at its assembly recently that female journalists covering the event be properly dressed,” he said.

“Then again, the insistence by PAS leaders for Malaysia to be turned into an Islamic state should it come to power is a flagrant and outrageous affront to the Federal Constitution, which specifically proclaims the country as a secular state, with Islam as the official religion.”

10 June, 2009

Hot Hot Hot


Northern Region esp Kedah had experience a very hot weather up to 42 oC for the past one week.

Those who go outside are advise to bring along drinking water or drink a lot of plain water to avoid dehydration... The weather are expected to last for few weeks if no rain...

Do self punch like the right side photo if you forgot to bring along a bottle of mineral water..

04 June, 2009

Food For Thought

"Whatever we think, whatever we know or believe is not so important as to what we do"

"Apa yang kita fikir, apa yang kita tahu atau apa yang kita percaya sebenarnya tidaklah begitu penting kerana yang lebih penting ialah apa yang kita lakukan"

Happy School Holiday... Malaysia!