Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Social Political Buzz & Bulls

One million page views

One million page views

On Wednesday August 17th, this blog recorded one million page views, achieved in just over two years since we began in May 2009. Many thanks to Malaysia Today and blobfish; MalaysiaKini; Malaysiakita; Free Malaysia Today; bloggers Anil, Antares, Crankshaft, Rocky, Sakmongkol, Walski, Zorro, and others in the blogging fraternity; Uncle Yap and YW Loke of the BeritaMalaysia mailing list at Yahoo Groups; and media friends and others on Facebook and Twitter and email for all the referrals, and all commenters for sharing your views. Its not a million unique visitors, merely page views. But a million is a million, and a nice enough milestone any how, I figger. Hope its been worth your visits.

Terima kasih



Filed under: Journalism < img alt="" border="0" src="http://feeds.wordpress.com/1.0/digg/uppercaise.wordpress.com/13198/" />

Rocky to lead media onslaught against Najib?

Word has been going around about what Rocky of Rockys Bru (Datuk Ahiruddin Atan) would do next, after leaving Redberry group at the end of his contract in May. Speculation was that that he would once again be involved in media as point man for a new political campaign.

Hes planning a new blog hes planning a new web site

Now a new blog fingers Rocky as leading an online media onslaught against Najib Tun Razak, the Umno president, whose precarious hold on the prime ministership looks even more tenuous day by day.

Rocky had risen to prominence by using his blog and his network of blogger and journalist friends to campaign against the Abdullah Ahmad Badawi government and the New Straits Times.

When Abdullah was ousted and Najib took over a year later Rocky appeared to have become the voice of the new power establishment, with close ties to the new Najib appointees at the NSTP group.

He made a loudly proclaimed return to the Malay Mail where he had once worked (and supervised its collapse as a free afternoon paper) before being pushed upstairs as editorial adviser after Redberry, primarily an outdoor advertising company, took control of the Malay Mail, Malaysian Reserve, a financial daily, and Bernama TV media sales.

Now Rockys out on the loose and some say hes gunning for Najib.

The latest is this posting at a new blog, Cat Out Of the Bag

Ada Batu (Rocky) DalamSelimut
Posted onAugust 20, 2011bycatoutofbag

Some people in PMO have been wondering why PM has been acting weird lately. Is it because of pressure from Bersih? Is he worried about elections?

Maybe. But the real reasons are that history has a way of repeating itself.

In 2006 and 2007 a certain Batu by the name of Rocky aka Datuk Ahirudin Atan made his move against th! at sleep yhead PM Pak Lah. Being asleep Pak Lah had no idea what was happening.

Rockybru, the self-proclaimed tai ko of SoPo bloggers organised a full on assault against sleepyhead. Backed by Dr M, Rocky influenced public opinion against Pak Lah, and helped oust the sleeping PM.

In stepped our current PM Datuk Seri Najib.

Heres where it gets interesting. Rocky is doing the same thing again. But this time against our current PM.

By next month Rocky will have his new news blog set up. Operating from an office in a nice KL suburb, Rocky will be ably assisted by his side kick Shamsul Akmar Musa Kamal.

Notice how Rocky in his blog has already been laying the groundwork on his blog by attacking certain deals.

Well wait for his new venture.

But the really interesting thing is who is backing his new venture financially.

If you were to find out you would think these were some of Najibs closest allies.

After all it includes people linked to, wait for it . Hishammuddin Hussein and Muhyiddin Yassin the two men who have been pushing Najib to the right, cornering the PM, and basically trapping the PM.

Oh, and if you want to know more about the Hisham-Muhyiddin alliance read Biometric Scandal

Next instalment I will let you guys know about the plot to control the media a la Mat King Leather style.

The games afoot and Najib is the prey

And who is Cat Out of the Bag? In his own words:

As Malaysia heads towards the next general elections, I find myself in a privileged position to, well, let the cat out of the bag when it comes to the political comings and goings of Putrajaya and those hoping to get control of our countrys seat of power.

Who am I?

I am the civil servant in Putrajaya, the consultant in PMO, the fly on the wall everywhereyou did not really think I would tell you who I am, right?


Filed under: Journalism

End the charade, revoke the ban on Bersih 2.0 and drop all charges against the 1,600 Bersih demonstrators and others related to wearing Bersih T-shirt


End the charade, revoke the ban on Bersih 2.0 and drop all charges against the 1,600 Bersih demonstrators and others related to wearing Bersih T-shirts or yellow

By Lim Kit Siang

On the occasion of the sixth yellow Saturday, I call on the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib Razak to end the Barisan Nasional government charade for the past two months, revoke the ban on Bersih 2.0 and drop all charges against the 1,600 Malaysians arrested for taking part in the peaceful Bersih 2.0 rally for free and fair elections on July 9 and all others related to Bersih 2.0 rally, including those for wearing Bersih T-shirts or just wearing yellow.

Let the Prime Minister and all Barisan Nasional Ministers come out openly to admit that they had gravely mishandled the Bersih 2.0 rally for free and fair elections, which are the most pertinent, legitimate and democratic aspirations of right-thinking Malaysians so that the Malaysian electoral process can win the support, confidence and legitimacy of Malaysian voters.

It is no answer to the Bersih 2.0 rally for the Barisan Nasional Ministers and the Election Commission to counter that if the electoral system is as flawed as alleged by Bersih 2.0, Pakatan Rakyat and the civil society, then Pakatan Rakyat would not have won in five states or denied the Barisan Nasional two-thirds parliamentary majority in the 2008 general elections.

The sim! ple and truthful response to such an argument is that if not for the flawed electoral system, more than five states would have fallen to the Pakatan Rakyat parties and at the national level, the Pakatan Rakyat parties might even be within distance of replacing the Barisan Nasional government in Putrajaya.

Whether such a scenario would have taken place is highly debatable and one could argue until the cows come home without a conclusion but what is undoubtedly beyond dispute is that the Pakatan Rakyat parties would definitely have made more electoral gains whether at the state or parliamentary levels in the 2008 general elections if the flaws in the electoral system had not been present.

The high-handed government and police action on Bersih 2.0 rally have brought the worst publicity and image to Malaysia during Najibs short tenure as Prime Minister.

The Prime Minister and the Barisan Nasional Ministers should make immediate amends for their gross misjudgement and mishandling of the Bersih 2.0 rally and show respect for their peaceful and patriotic expression by Malaysians regardless of race and religion who had courageously supported the Bersih 2.0 rally despite most unjustified and horrendous threats and intimidations by the various apparatus of government and their proxies.

In fact, the Prime Minister should show appreciation that the Bersih 2.0 peaceful rally of some 50,000 Malaysians, regardless of race, religion, age and gender is so far the best and most outstanding demonstration of the true 1Malaysia concept which he had promoted but not gone much beyond sloganeering since acceding the highest office of the land.

Mentega "Golden Churn" Disahkan Halal oleh 3 Negara

Dokumen ini saya dapati dari laman web Ballantyne, syarikat yang memproduksi serta mengedar mentega "Golden Churn". Baru2 ini, mentega ini telah diisytihar "Tidak Halal" di Malaysia. Akibatnya, banyak perniagaan kuih milik orang Islam mengalami kerugian yang berjuta. Kesian mereka ni, tak beraya la jawabnya mereka ni.

Maka, dibawah saya perturunkan beberapa sijil halal yang diberikan kepada mentega ini, seprti yang terkandung dalam laman web Ballantyne itu:






Tulang Besi





A Belated Introduction to E.F. Schumacher (one of the few economists I respect)















Ernst Friedrich "Fritz" Schumacher (16 August 1911 4 September 1977) was an internationally influential economic thinker, statistician and economist in Britain, serving as Chief Economic Advisor to the UK National Coal Board for two decades.

His ideas became popularized in much of the English-speaking world during the 1970s. He is best known for his critique of Western economies and his proposals for human-scale, decentralized and appropriate technologies. According to The Times Literary Supplement, his 1973 book Small Is Beautiful: a study of economics as if people mattered is among the 100 most influential books published since World War II and was soon translated into many languages, bringing him international fame.

Schumacher's basic development theories have been summed up in the catch-phrases Intermediate Size and Intermediate Technology. In 1977 he published A Guide For The Perplexed as a critique of materialist scientism and as an exploration of the nature and organization of knowledge. Together with long-time friends and associates like Professor Mansur Hoda, Schumacher founded the Intermediate Technology Development Group (now Practical Action) in 1966.

[Source: Wikipedia]


Some rights reserved Antares/Magick RiverYou may borrow and/or modify content for your own blog but please credit and backlink, thanks.

How tough guy Kit Siang made Gerakans gentleman Koh look like a wimp

WikiLeaks: What
a US diplomat
said about Tsu Koon

Koh Tsu Koon is an intellectual [whose] technocratic style makes him popular with corporate leaders, who appreciate his business friendly approach but is ill-suited to the cut-and-thrust of party politics. Mark Clark,
leaked US Embassy cable

Truculent, pugnacious, ever-combativethere are lots of he-man words that come to mind for Mr DAP, Lim Kit Siang. On the other side, gentlemanly and wimp are about the strongest terms used for Koh Tsu Koon, the fallen chief minister of Penang and current Gerakan leader.

How did Koh Tsu Koon end up having a seedless (boh hood) durian named after him in street language?

Blame tough guy Kit Siang. So says Penang Gerakans Teng Hock Nam, in a report by Hawkeye, the correspondent for Free Malaysia Today

It began after the 1990 general election in which Kit Siang defeated Gerakan founder Lim Chong Eu in Pengkalan Kota, and the Gerakan almost lost the state to DAP.

Kit Siang launched a broadside against Koh, the protege of Lim Chong Eu and incoming chief minister, branding him a chief minister with no power because Gerakan was forced to appoint Ibrahim Saad of Umno as deputy chief minister.

Teng Hock Name recalls state assembly meetings when Kit Siang would not allow Koh to clarify issues.

He would ask Koh to sit down by shouting that he was a chief minister with no power. He would pit Koh against Ibrahim Saad by portraying Koh as too weak to handle Umnos demands, Teng said. Over the past decade, the taint took hold.

(Kit Siang had aims on winning Penang state for the DAP, and launched three campaigns, untimately unsuccessful, to wrest the state. He then moved to Ipoh to contest a parliamentary seat there. It was not until 2008 that the DAP, in partnership with Parti Keadilan Nasional and PAS swept in on a wave of popu! lar disc ontent.

Teng said Kohs family background compounded the image problem. Koh hails from a typically close-knit Chinese family and was taught to respect his elders, to be pious, tolerant, accommodating and humble.

Teng said he was worried when his chief refused to counter-attack Kit Siang. I told him that his humble demeanour may come back to haunt him. Now Kit Siangs son (chief minister) Lim Guan Eng is also applying the same tactic to bury Kohs career, Teng said.

The Stars Joceline Tan attacks Koh Tsu Koon
What next for softly softly Koh?

Still riding on anti-Koh wave


Filed under: Journalism

Will the PSC on electoral reforms be stillborn with another Najib flip flop

By Lim Kit Siang

In just four days, the Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak has done a full flip-flop, reneging on his implicit undertaking on Monday night that the next general elections would not be held until the Parliamentary Select Committee on electoral reforms has reached a national consensus on electoral reforms.

Let me quote from Bernama on Najibs announcement on Monday night:
KUALA LUMPUR: Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak announced Monday, Aug 15 the setting up of a parliamentary select committee on electoral reforms to put to rest any suspicion that there is manipulation by the government in the countrys electoral process.

The prime minister said the committee, comprising government and opposition members, would have its first meeting on Wednesday and would discuss everything that needs to be done and reach a consensus on the matter.

This is so that we can reach a consensus in facing the next election without any suspicion about any manipulation by the government.

That is why when the issue of free and fair elections was raised recently, the governments response was for us to tackle the issue which has spawned numerous views, and to a certain extent, disputes, he said in his speech at the breaking-of-the-fast with the media hosted by Bernama at Wisma Bernama, here.

He said the move was to dispel any misconception that the government was against a clean electoral process.

Najib said the government was committed to continuing the parliamentary democracy tradition that was started by the nations forefathers.

I have said it before and I say it again, that the cabinet members and I do not want to become ministers and prime minister without the support of the people. We will only form the government if it is proven that the people truly choose the Barisan Nasional as their gove! rnment.< br>
Let no one misconstrue and say that we do not want a clean process to elect the government, he said.

Last night, Najib reneged on his commitment on the formation of the parliamentary select committee to reach a consensus in facing the next election without any suspicion about any manipulation by the government when he stated that the next general election can be held anytime and is not bound by the work of the parliamentary select committee.

In declaring that the next general election can be held anytime and is not bound by the work of the parliamentary select committee on electoral reforms, Najib is in effect saying that the Barisan Nasional government is now prepared to go ahead with the next general election although it has failed to put to rest suspicions of manipulation by the government in the countrys electoral process.

This has vindicated the intense questioning and doubts about the true intentions of the parliamentary select committee proposal, whether it is a genuine and sincere attempt to address and resolve the many flaws in the electoral system or just a gimmick to sidetrack legitimate and growing public demands for electoral reforms.

This is why so much questions have been raised about the Parliamentary Select Committee proposal, in particular why Pakatan Rakyat parties had not been consulted and agreement sought on the formation of the parliamentary select committee, its membership, terms of reference, time-line and other aspects and whether the Prime Minister could give an iron-clad guarantee that the next general elections would not be held until the recommendations of the parliamentary select committee have been fully implemented.

Malaysians are asking whether Najib has backed down in four days from his implicit undertaking that the parliamentary select committee would be a meaningful exercise and that general elections would only be held after electoral reforms had been effected because of the hardline pressures such as those emana! ting fro m the Deputy Prime Minister, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin who had denied that there is any real problem with the electoral system and that only some minor tweaks are required.

Be that as it may, it is now in the court of the Prime Minister as to whether his proposal of a parliamentary select committee will be stillborn because of his refusal to fully consult with and seek the agreement of Pakatan Rakyat on various important aspects of the committee as well to assure all Malaysians that it will be a meaningful exercise and not a political ploy to avoid electoral reforms.

As talents fly home, Penangs fortunes rise


By Debra Chong | The Malaysian Insider

GEORGE TOWN, Aug 20 Six months ago Dr William Khor quit his London flat in affluent Kensington to fly home to Penang with little more than a rough plan to build a boutique health resort by the sea.

The former student of St Xaviers Institution had jetted to the UK near a decade ago in pursuit of a medical degree and initially planned to head home immediately after graduating in 2007.

The prospects then were not good, the 28-year-old said, explaining the change in his plan.

He decided to stay on another year and complete his housemanship there to qualify as a doctor while reconsidering his options.

It was during that time that he was scouted by the Singapore General Hospital, which offered him a monthly salary of S$7,000 (about RM17,326) to serve as a general practitioner; he accepted and moved to the Lion City to be closer to his family.

He left after two years, to travel and think over his options for a way he could move home permanently to be a support to his grieving father, alone after Dr Khors mother died of cancer.

The UK was his base during that period.

Dr Khor said his homecoming in February was spurred by Penangs rapid economic growth in the last few years as foreign investors pumped more money in the state than any other in the country and boosted business opportunities.

Dr Khor is not the only one.

Former banker Goh Soo Sing is excited by the property boom going on full throttle in space-s! trapped Penang.

The 27-year-old had been away since his secondary school years, and is looking forward to putting to work the knowledge and strategies gained through stints with various corporations in his family-owned property development firm.

The eldest in his family, and one groomed to inherit the family business, Goh said business today had gone global and a broader perspective was needed to tackle the challenges ahead.

If I had entered the family business straight from school, my views would have been limited. I had a choice and I chose to come back. Theres no lack of business opportunities on the island, said the lanky property developer whose previous experiences included the 1 Malaysia Development Berhad in Kuala Lumpur.

Both Dr Khor and Goh are leading the charge of young, educated professionals heading back to the northern state in what appears to be a reversal of the brain drain malaise afflicting Malaysia.

In January, the Najib administration had set up Talent Corporation to revive to revive the nations stagnating economy.

A brain drain is depriving Malaysia of talent, and accounts for a third of the countrys one-million strong diaspora, according to the World Bank Economic Monitor.

Singapore alone has absorbed 57per cent of these departing educated workers.

Only 23 per cent of Malaysias current work force is highly skilled and Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak said this number must rise to 37 per cent by 2015 if it is to become a developed nation by 2020.

To Goh, there is ample room to grow in the property sector including on the island.

He is relishing translating architectural designs from paper to stone, steel and glass to draw out Penangs full potential as the first custom-made city of globalisation as dubbed by influential international weekly The Economist in its August 13 issue. He noted with delight the increased value and heightened interest to acquire Penang properties among outsiders, especially those based in the ! Klang Va lley, to expand their operations.

And as these talents return, Penangs fortunes have been rising.

Shophouses within the George Town heritage enclave today easily fetch RM2 million, minimum, a five-fold rise from two years ago; yet many have not hesitated to fork over the astronomical amount to transform the units some in highly decrepit states into attractive boutique inns offering both global and domestic visitors a comfy, clean and calm place to lay their heads at night.

Among them is Penang-born director and performer Chee Sek Thim who managed to purchase property on Malay Street, on the outskirts of the enclave at a reasonable RM400,000, before the market went crazy.

Chee has spent the better part of his three years since moving back applying for all sorts of development permits to renovate his double-storey unit into a bed-and-breakfast-slash-performance-gallery downstairs.

The 48-year-old, whose Petaling Jaya art gallery shuttered in the late noughties, is now running his performance outfit Pocketsize Productions from the turtle-shaped island and said the proceeds from the business will be channelled to pursue his real love performance art.

Despite the exceptional number of creative- and artistic-minded talents who hail from this Pearl of the Orient, example dancer extraordinaire Aida Redza and world-famous visual artist-turned-social activist Wong Hoy Cheong, Chee lamented the lack of a vibrant arts scene.

There is no arts scene to speak of, he insisted when met recently, explaining the lack of systematic efforts to build up infrastructure and train as well as manage local talent.

But he is optimistic there can be one, saying the arts was growing albeit in bursts and spurts, and hoped to play a key role in cultivating that creation.

The personable artist had recently directed River Meets Light, a mixed media performance as part of the George Town Festival 2011, a month-long celebration commemorating the citys listing as a Unesco Wor! ld Herit age Site July 7, 2008.

The 2011 festival, into its second year, had coincided with the bigger Penang Arts festival to showcase over 80 programmes on the arts, ranging from film to food and music, even opera and was estimated to have drawn one million visitors this year.

For returnees like Dr Khor, this mix of cultures is what flavours Penangs lifestyle and cannot be found anywhere else, not in cosmopolitan London or Singapore.

Penangs got soul, he said proudly.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...