Saturday, February 13, 2010

SCANDALS Galore!




PROTON seems to have an inexhaustible urge to take Malaysia to the pinnacle of humanity's attainment. That's natural. Every one has a "want" though not everybody gets what he needs. Every Malaysian feeds on rice. Not so the people in PROTON or for that matter the BN. They feed on thin air. With Toyata and Honda buckling under the throngs of greed, no one in PROTON appears to be bothered.

PROTON is oblivious. But this sheer madness is cushioned by the comfort that PETRONAS will bail them out. Right now PETRONAS will need to answer for the Formula 1 motorbike scandal.

RM12 million is nothing to PETRONAS but 150 of these stupid bikes are stashed somewhere in the UK and seems to be hoarded away. For whose rainy day?

The news item was earlier picked up by the Malaysian Mirror.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

We are Sunk! Our new submarine won't sink!


We had Fighter Jets whose engines only, flew off to South America with some help of our Ministry of Defence people. Now the honcho mermaid of our Royal Navy says our new sub won't sink!

Earlier in the week, the BN sunk Perak after our judges ruled it's OK for Perak Sultan to sack the legal Chief Minister. He bouys the hope of BN now with the Gambir Chief Minister, Zambry.

Perhaps, some people might find it creepy that new subs won't sink. Perhaps, some ghost of a pretty mermaid might be haunting it - like the poor soul of, Altantuya?

In the days of glorious old, it needed just some "ikan todak" to take Singapore, which really is the only country we should quarell with. They took so much of our country. There was Pulau Batu, then sand from Tun Razak's State of Pahang.

I've always believed we bought some silly "tongkang from the French




Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Interesting! Could the Agong sack the PM?



The precedent set by the Federal Court's decision in the Perak constitutional crisis has created a binding effect on the prime minister and federal government, lawyers said.

The apex court today affirmed Barisan Nasional's (BN) Datuk Seri Dr Zambry Abdul Kadir as the rightful menteri besar of Perak, dismissing the appeal brought by former Perak menteri besar Datuk Seri Mohammad Nizar Jamaluddin in a year-long tussle for the state government.

Zambry's counsel Datuk Mohd Hafarizam Harun and Nizar's counsel Edmund Bon both agreed that the Federal Court's decision applied to the prime minister's position with regards to the Federal Constitution and its provisions on the Yang di-Pertuan Agong's role in appointing and dismissing the country's chief executive.

Applying the Perak precedent, Hafarizam said the prime minister similarly must tender his resignation if an opposition leader claimed to command the majority in the Dewan Rakyat and if the King did not consent to the prime minister's request to dissolve parliament.

"(If that should happen), if the Agong does not consent to the prime minister's request to dissolve parliament, the prime minister must resign or his seat will be deemed vacant.

"If you have to wait for parliament to be in session to determine whether the prime minister has majority confidence, some representatives might have defected and parliament would be hung and there would be no government (until parliament can resume sitting or be called)," said the Umno legal adviser in a telephone interview.

Article 43(4) of the Federal Constitution states: "If the prime minister ceases to command the confidence of the majority of the members of the House of Representatives, then, unless at his request the Yang di-Pertuan Agong dissolves parliament, the prime minister shall tender the resignation of the cabinet."

That provision is similar to Article 16(6) of the Perak Constitution, which was referred to for the Federal Court's interpretation in Nizar's suit against Zambry. - The precedent set by the Federal Court's decision in the Perak constitutional crisis has created a binding effect on the prime minister and federal government, lawyers said.

The apex court today affirmed Barisan Nasional's (BN) Datuk Seri Dr Zambry Abdul Kadir as the rightful menteri besar of Perak, dismissing the appeal brought by former Perak menteri besar Datuk Seri Mohammad Nizar Jamaluddin in a year-long tussle for the state government.

Zambry's counsel Datuk Mohd Hafarizam Harun and Nizar's counsel Edmund Bon both agreed that the Federal Court's decision applied to the prime minister's position with regards to the Federal Constitution and its provisions on the Yang di-Pertuan Agong's role in appointing and dismissing the country's chief executive.

Applying the Perak precedent, Hafarizam said the prime minister similarly must tender his resignation if an opposition leader claimed to command the majority in the Dewan Rakyat and if the King did not consent to the prime minister's request to dissolve parliament.

"(If that should happen), if the Agong does not consent to the prime minister's request to dissolve parliament, the prime minister must resign or his seat will be deemed vacant.

"If you have to wait for parliament to be in session to determine whether the prime minister has majority confidence, some representatives might have defected and parliament would be hung and there would be no government (until parliament can resume sitting or be called)," said the Umno legal adviser in a telephone interview.

Article 43(4) of the Federal Constitution states: "If the prime minister ceases to command the confidence of the majority of the members of the House of Representatives, then, unless at his request the Yang di-Pertuan Agong dissolves parliament, the prime minister shall tender the resignation of the cabinet."

That provision is similar to Article 16(6) of the Perak Constitution, which was referred to for the Federal Court's interpretation in Nizar's suit against Zambry.

- The Edge Malaysia


Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Tragedy for 1Malaysia - Perak Sultan sacked Chief Minister


Feb 9, 10 11:10am - Malaysiakini

The Federal Court, the highest court in the country, has delivered a unanimous decision in declaring that Zambry Abd Kadir of BN is the rightful Perak menteri besar.

In doing so at 11am, it also dimissed the application by Pakatan Rakyat's Mohd Nizar Jamaluddin.

It is also the end of the road for Mohd Nizar's claim to the post. His lawyer Leong Cheok Keng said a review of the decision would not be sought.


Justice Arifin who read the judgment ruled that it is not necessary for a vote of confidence to be done in the state assembly, and that the sultan can sack the MB (Menteri Besar/Chief Minister). Zambry therefore commands support in the House with 31 seats.

http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/124000
Feb 9, 10 11:10am

Sunday, February 7, 2010

RERUN | 1Malaysia is playing garbage again










Scandal, Sodomy and Murder - Part 2(L) and 3(R)

30,000 illegal Indian nationals are in the country. The Immigration and the Police don't know where they are exactly - except that they are in the country. There are others - another 60,000 shouldn't surprise you. Published news of sons killing their fathers in the last 3 weeks have hit the TV airwaves, killings with the trademark of "Ah Long" involvement - debtors who can't pay have to be punished, kill their parents or be killed. Either way, there's killings.

If that's not enough, Zahid Hamidi, tried to scare the shit out of ordinary Malaysians saying our Military is leaking national secrets to foreign embassies.

Instead of functioning like a government, 1Malaysia is, what it's really all about, repressing the opposition and all other means to cling to power!

A huge chunk of Malaysia's business sector is full of GLCs, a trait somewhat very similar to what Gorbachev was facing as he was firing up perestroika, except that in USSR they were government agencies. The Malaysian government beaucracy is sticking their fingers in everybody's pockets, which should include whatever foreign investors there are who are still around.

Any honest Malaysian should tell its ruling government to have a general national election. The opposition may win and it will be a herculean task to get the country back on its feet considering the mess that's been strewn across the countryside. Whoever is calling the shots in UMNO/BN should, if there's any ernestness and honesty to reform, can then purge the party of all its damnation and return in 10 years. Pakatan Rakyat may still be struggling and quarelling but after 10 years, BN can sure come back slim and trim and give us all a second chance. Even if the PR can win again, it just proves we can plot our destiny --- Malaysians, not just UMNO!

Only corrupt silly elite Malay leaders can tell you it's the end of the world if UMNO/BN don't rule. There are two prospects that's both not nice - like the US, and Malaysia is err...not like the US, China will own us. The other is we will go the Greek's way.

If you still believe in Hercules, you can then plead with him to hold up the crashing sky!