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Friday, 19 October 2018

Blog and Tweet 19/10/2018 默默的守护者?


Blog and Tweet 19/10/2014  默默的守护者?
      有人推鉴[默默的守护者] 这本书。这本书我不知道的真正内容。但是我知道这本书是以这大贪官为中心的有关的书。他82岁生日庆典是在Sibu举办。他的从政事迹在Sibu Islam Centre展览。 我猜89不离10是以这大贪官为中心的一跟砂拉越历史进展有关的本书。我猜是一本有很多粉饰和加工的的记录他从政过程。有人很寄望这大贪官许给砂拉越独立。 很看好他会支持砂独实现。 我不认为这大贪官会有什么作为。在我心目中,这大贪官除了自己,家人和朋党利益摆中间以外,以一小错人的利益为利益外,其余的人都不存在。
所以,他33+当砂拉越首席部长/CM,他没有对砂拉越人或国有任何值得人们赞赏的贡献。全都是以他霸权喜好来决定一切。 所以砂拉越整体的发展是很怪异grosteque的。今天,大家见证的道路系统是非常残缺的情形跟他带领的33+政府息息相关。我不知道他当砂首长讲过多少次砂拉越土地太大了,所以道路尤其是走向乡间不能不能发展的很快。劝人民耐心的[等等等等。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。]。就这么样推搪掉道路发展。他在位时,一年只允许20Km (如果我没有错的话)。 他根本没有心发展砂拉越。 他的[联邦奴才心超重] 所以砂拉越现在的状况,是有根据的。
而他自己就以最快的速度捞取掠夺砂的资源。他现在所拥有的庞大财富跟他一直以来收入完全不能成对比。 这大家公认的[土皇帝 ]过去33+是无法无天的任意随心所欲掠夺剥削砂人的。 UMNO-BN 在背后支撑。
有人说,他对砂拉越唯一的贡献是不让巫统进来砂国。我说嘿嘿嘿嘿。。他就利用砂人的无知对巫统的恐惧让自己稳坐首长宝座33+ 这个人把其他人的福祉都[鲸吞]掉。
AbangJohari现在要赶工建沿海大道,改善乡间道路,水电设备,网络衔接。。。等等等等。。509,高官们才真正看到人民的力量可以有多大。所以509后,这些高高在位的大官们不得不把[人民的需求做考量]挂在口中。有多看重,就得看他们如何行动了。 时代不一样了,AbangJohari不能像Taib Mahmud 那么所心所欲鲸吞砂拉越资源[自肥]了。不容易了。 这是网络时代。这也是很竞争的时代。 
[沉默是金]吗?默默的守护者? 不好意思。该你发言时,你沉默,真的不是件好事。所以,砂国被贬成州;砂拉越沿海严重被侵略从12海里被削减剩3海里。属于砂的税收被抢走;砂拉越被殖民,砂拉越石油和天然气的资源被马来亚霸权每年掠夺至少RM550亿。马来亚霸权还要向砂课种种税务。每年从砂税收至少RM2000亿。税收后,没心发展砂拉越才是人民怨恨痛苦的根源。所以,砂人才这么坚决[脱马无罪,独立有理]。肯定没有回头路。势在必行。
        砂拉越本身资源这么丰富却过得这么贫穷。这是默默守护者的功劳吧!
还有人称赞这大鲨鱼呢。有人说至少他守护了[移民法令]坚决不让UMNO-BN进来,嗯嗯。。嗯嗯,不好意思。他也守护被殖民的砂国国旗,还有什么? 默默的守护者?  不够搞笑吗?
        我也常常在想如果换另一高尚和100%爱砂拉越国的个体做33+年,砂国是否不一样呢? 文莱国和新加坡是我们很好的参考。所以,这[默默守护者]别玩高尚了。弄巧反拙哦! 人民是有没经过粉饰和煤加工的读本哦

Sunday, 14 October 2018

Blog and Tweet 15/10/2018 Autocratic Review on MA63


Blog and Tweet 15/10/2018    Autocratic Review on MA63
        The 16-membered committee headed by Mahathir, Prime Minister, the evil-minded devil and autocrat is going to review on MA63 soon.   None of my friends from various Wechat groups think the review on MA63 positively.  Lina Soo, the social activitist, the chairperson of the party Star or .. analogise the 16-membered committee to be like trusting a troop of monkeys to manage a banana farm.  She sees it a really bad joke in every sense.
        Well, I see it like a fox inviting a stork to his house for a feast but serves the soup in shallow dishes which the stork can take none.  We are in the year of 2018, not in 1990s and this evil-minded devil has to face all the Sarawak adult voters.  Abang Johari, our Chief Minister, is expected to be responsible and firm in protecting the rights of Sarawak. 
        I sees the 16-membered committee to review on MA63 as breaches upon breaches going to happen so much to the rage of Sarawakians and Sabahans. 
        The evil-minded devil and autocrat, who is the arch breacher of MA63 in his tenure as Prime Minister in 1990s, heads this 16-membered committee to review MA63 now.  The committee is so lopesided to autocrat-favour and federal-centric that Sarawak will be at the mercy of it.  But it is just not easy for this evil-minded devil and autocrat to gain any inroad to plunder, exploit and rob us at will anymore as the will to decolonisation is just too strong for the imperialists to suppress and oppress Sarawakians anymore. 
        We are fighting for Independent Sarawak or Sarawak Independence.  We have set our minds and our wills have conglomerated in a stronghold of defence.   Sarawakians will determine the fate of Sarawak, our motherland and her future.  We reject outsiders meddling in the affairs of Sarawak.  Yes, we see Malayans with strong detest whenever they come to Sarawak to boss over us. 
        Everything that passes through the hands of X-BN crowned political thugs and now PH-crowned is all messed up.  There is nothing from education to medical service that we can behold with respect.  Sarawak and Sabah have been tricked and trapped and colonised in the name of Malaysia under MA63.
        If you are wrong, you are wrong.  Now you want to right your wrong in the Review on MA63 headed by the evil-minded devil, autocrat and breacher.  Who will believe him anymore?   The Sarawakians whom I have the chance to communicate with despise and hate him to the core.  In Chinese term, the hatred and grudges we bore are penetrating inside the bone.  (恨之入骨).  Many Sarawakians, I believe, were like me with tears in our eyes or streaming to vote for PH on 509 as the evil-minded devil was promised to be Prime Minister if winning the election.  Many Sarawakians knew what would happen if this evil-minded devil to wield the power once again.  Yes, it is exactly as what they have expected. 
        Now, we have many, many and many well-versed professionals line-up in laws or Sarawak affairs to be cheated, tricked and trapped anymore.  We all shun this 16-membered committee to Review MA63 as we really see it “a bad joke” and so ridiculous in every sense. 
        We all hope that our Chief Minister, Abang Johari and Sabah Chief Minister, Salfie Apdal will play their roles well and are determined to undo all the breaches to MA63 and restore the original terms and conditions stipulated in it.
        Sarawak and Sabah are nations.  Sarawak was a country long before Peninsular Malaya.  In 1881 world map, you can find Sarawak, a sovereign country when Peninsular Malaya is nowhere in sight.  It was recognised by the USA in 18.. and about 10 years later the United Kingdom as a sovereign country.
        Who says that it was not a sovereign country? 

Saturday, 13 October 2018

Blog and Tweet 14/10/2018 Floods to tackle



Blog and Tweet 14/10/2018  Floods to tackle
Inspirations from farmers generating own electricity from El Salvador
        The rainy season has started in Sarawak and so the floods of any kinds and scales will happen at any place highland or lowland at any time.  To prevent your houses, sties, coops, cars, schools, farms, fish ponds or whatever to become the temporary reservoirs for the excess water from the so many dams nearby especially, it is advisable for the locals to think fast and act now how to dig tube wells, create ponds, reservoirs, or … to collect excess from the dams or elsewhere.  As you know that water forever flows to the place where it can stay. 
Don’t wait for the PH-crowned so called federal government or GPS-crowned Sarawak government to solve the problems timely.  For the late 20 years or so, how much have the government, be it federal or Sarawak government has done to improve the flood situations which are getting worse and worse in every passing days.   People especially in the rural areas should take the initiative to solve this problem yourselves first.  But you should be determined and united enough to ask for the payment for all the expenses incurred.  Bear in mind that each Sarawak Assembly member has been allocated RM5 million for Rural Transformation Projects and RM4 million for Minor Rural Project.  (Am I right each Sarawak Assembly member is allocated funds of 9 million for each constituency?)  Ask daringly for the funds.
To make Democracy works in your community, you should work collaborately and co-operatively for everybody’s good and welfare.  Democracy fails in many aspects just because many people take Democracy passively.  You rely on your leaders too much.  You should know the leaders are nothing with your support.  When they are elected as your representatives, they should play their roles well.
Floods just hit Bintulu and inundated some places and water even entered quite a number of houses.   You may get some flood compensation.  But is it enough to cover the losses?   Floods, big, medium or small come repeat so ofen.  The ministers are always as helpless as babies.  All they can do is those idiotic words of advice to tell you to move things to higher places!  
The flash floods Bintulu experienced not long ago after some downpour.  Many attributed the cause to be the blocked or narrow drains.  Nobody seemed to lift up their heads to think if the dams nearby were the main cause.
It is understood that when the water level of the dam has come to a certain level, water needs to be discharged or the dam will burst. 
        For those living in urban areas, we should think of tanks to collect rain water to prevent floods as well.
        So, again, I say, Democracy is the business of everybody.  So help each other to solve the problems before it is too late.  The losses in the flood is the losses of everybody.  I repeat, not to wait for the government to solve the woes of floods. 

Farmers generate own electricity in El Salvador


PressReader.com - Connecting People Through News
The Borneo Post11 Oct 2018
Farmers generate own electricity in El Salvador


— IPS photo by Edgardo Ayala
Juan Benítez, pres­i­dent of the Nuevos Hor­i­zontes As­so­ci­a­tion of Joya de Talchiga, rests on the edge of the dike built as part of the El Calam­bre mini-hy­dro­elec­tric dam. The 40 plus fam­i­lies in the vil­lage have had elec­tric­ity since 2012, thanks to the project they built them­selves, in the moun­tains of eastern El Sal­vador.
       Elec­tric­ity ar­rived when they de­cided to build their own hy­dro­elec­tric dam to­gether, not only to light up the night, but also to take small steps to­wards un­der­tak­ings that help im­prove liv­ing con­di­tions in the vil­lage.
        JOYA DE TALCHIGA, El Sal­vador: In Lil­ian Gomez’s house, nes­tled in the moun­tains of eastern El Sal­vador, the dark­ness of the night was barely re­lieved by the faint, trem­bling flames of a pair of can­dles, just like in the houses of her neigh­bours. Un­til now.
        Now she uses a re­frig­er­a­tor to make “chara­mus­cas” – ice cream made from nat­u­ral bev­er­ages, which she sells to gen­er­ate a small in­come.
“With the money from the chara­mus­cas I pay for elec­tric­ity, food and other things,” the 64year- old Gomez, head of one of the 40 fam­i­lies ben­e­fit­ing from the El Calam­bre mini­hy­dro­elec­tric plant project, told IPS.
This is a com­mu­nity ini­tia­tive that sup­plies en­ergy to La Joya de Talchiga, one of the 29 vil­lages in the ru­ral mu­nic­i­pal­ity of Perquin, with some 4,000 in­hab­i­tants, in the eastern de­part­ment of Mo­razan, which bor­ders to the north with Hon­duras.
Dur­ing the 1980-1992 civil war, this re­gion was the scene of fierce bat­tles be­tween the army and the then- guer­rilla Farabundo Marti Na­tional Lib­er­a­tion Front (FMLN), now a po­lit­i­cal party, in power since 2009 af­ter win­ning two con­sec­u­tive pres­i­den­tial elec­tions.
When the war ended, the largest towns in the area were re­vived thanks to eco­tourism and his­tor­i­cal tourism, where vis­i­tors learn about bat­tles and mas­sacres in the area. But the most re­mote vil­lages lack ba­sic ser­vices, which keeps them from do­ing the same.
The El Calam­bre mini­hy­dro­elec­tric power plant takes its name from the river with cold turquoise wa­ter that emerges in Hon­duras and winds through the moun­tains un­til it crosses the area where La Joya is lo­cated, ded­i­cated to sub­sis­tence agri­cul­ture, es­pe­cially corn and beans.
A small dike dams the wa­ter in a seg­ment of the river, and part of the flow is di­rected through un­der­ground pipes to the en­gine house, 900 me­tres be­low, in­side which a tur­bine makes a 58-kW gen­er­a­tor roar.
La Joya is an ex­am­ple of how lo­cal in­hab­i­tants, mostly poor peas­ant farm­ers, didn’t stand idly by wait­ing for the com­pany that dis­trib­utes elec­tric­ity in the area to bring them elec­tric power.
La Joya is an ex­am­ple of how lo­cal in­hab­i­tants, mostly poor peas­ant farm­ers, didn’t stand idly by wait­ing for the com­pany that dis­trib­utes elec­tric­ity in the area to bring them elec­tric power.
The dis­tri­bu­tion of en­ergy in this Cen­tral Amer­i­can coun­try of 6.5 mil­lion peo­ple has been in the hands of sev­eral pri­vate com­pa­nies since it was pri­va­tised in the late 1990s.
Dur­ing the days IPS spent in La Joya, lo­cals said they own the land where they live, but they lack for­mal doc­u­ments, and with­out them the com­pany that op­er­ates in the re­gion doesn’t sup­ply elec­tric­ity.  It only brought power to a cou­ple of fam­i­lies who do have all their pa­per­work in order.
In this Cen­tral Amer­i­can na­tion, house­holds with elec­tric­ity rep­re­sent 92 per cent of the to­tal in ur­ban ar­eas, but only 77 per cent in ru­ral ar­eas, ac­cord­ing to of­fi­cial data re­leased in May.
With­out much hope that the com­pany would sup­ply power, the res­i­dents of La Joya set out to ob­tain it by their own means and re­sources, with the tech­ni­cal and fi­nan­cial sup­port of na­tional and in­ter­na­tional or­gan­i­sa­tions.
One of these was the as­so­ci­a­tion Ba­sic San­i­ta­tion, Health Ed­u­ca­tion and Al­ter­na­tive En­er­gies ( SABES El Sal­vador), which played a key role in bring­ing the ini­tia­tive to La Joya, where it was ini­tially met with reser­va­tions.
“Peo­ple still doubted when they came to talk to us about the project in 2005, and even I doubted, it was hard for us to be­lieve that it could hap­pen. We knew how a dam works, the wa­ter that moves a tur­bine, but we didn’t know that it could be done on a small river,” said Juan Benítez, pres­i­dent of Nuevos Hor­i­zontes, the com­mu­nity de­vel­op­ment or­gan­i­sa­tion of La Joya. —