Question: what do you think???
i know sailing sounds boring but watch these videos on youtube first the first is called “everybody” and has a boat as the pic and the next is “this is yacht racing” and the final one is “volvo extreme 40 racing”
let me know what you think of sailing now!
Answer:
Answer by just me
HAHAH u seem so mad!!!
chill a little!! it seems pretty cool
Question: What Do You Think About the Taxi Mafia to Media Mafia?
What Do You Think About the Taxi Mafia to Media Mafia?
http://taximafiatomediamafia.blogspot.com/2010/04/taxi-mafia-to-media-mafia.html
Taxi Mafia to Media Mafia
For more: Komolarani Site, Komolarani Doc
Further to Do We Need a Barrel of a Gun or A Royal Commission? below, the “anti-Faruque Religion” is getting stronger in Australia. Taxi mafia inspired taxi activists blame Mr. Ahmed for everything. However, they do not have any plan of action for the taxi drivers or the industry in general! Most importantly, none of them got any courage or capability to expose taxi industry corruption in the media or elsewhere!
Recently at a few “anti-Faruque Sessions” Mike Hatrick interjected by saying, “hang on, whatever you say, Faruque is the mover and shaker …. “ and poor Ernie nodded with agreement. As a result the orgy stopped temporarily! Although, it does not means that the orgy won’t start again. It will start, stop and continue as usual. But, what about the media?! Specifically talk back radios? Is there a concerted effort going on to silence dedicated community activist like Faruque Ahmed? Else, why did they murder popular David Oldfield and replacing him with unpopular and vitriolic Jim Ball?
Do We Need a Barrel of a Gun or A Royal Commission?
Australian values, culture and tradition gave us Australia, Australian values and Psyche! To complicate the situation further, the fear of invasion was very strong in Australia since day one! That’s why most Australian media outlets are far too busy with `boat people’ and they failed to pay attention to the NSW Upper House Inquiry re Taxi Industry and many other important issues affecting this land. Even the so called intelligent taxi driver’s discussion forums like ozcabs have been dedicating their life to incite racism and sectarianism like Peer Lindholdt of Promiscuity for Virginity.
Anyway, the NSW Labor Party basically owns workers! They can parachute themselves to any union movements. They are also free to take bribes and sell out workers rights as identified in Ghost and Gas – No Conspiracies. They have done so many times before.
Taxi Driver Entitlement under the Law was demolished due to The NSW TWU’s Crime against Taxi Drivers! It was a taxi driver sell-out by the NSW TWU leaders like Harry Quinn and his gangs. They did so in pursuit of financial gains and according to the news reports of that time, Mr. Quinn had deposited a large amount of cash at the Commonwealth Bank, Eastwood Branch. When he was questioned, “Mr. Quinn, how did you get this money”? His reply was, “winning from the races”.
Yesterday, Ms. Lee Rhiannon MLC went on to ask a few questions of Reg Kermode regarding Labor Party President Steve Hutchins Bribe Affairs, but, she was stopped by the Labor Party MLC!
Taxi Drivers’ Cry for Justice was decimated by the Demolition Team of Attorney General Jeff Shaw earlier! We have much documentation of this kind of behaviour. Today, even in the Parliament of NSW, no one can ask any question about bribe takings and wrong doings of the Labor Party identities!
Faruque Ahmed Requests Attorney General to Intervene. However, Attorney General Refuses to Intervene to Protect Labor Party Stooges.
Recently Faruque Ahmed Called Attorney General to stop TWU (Labor Party) Crime and the NSW Attorney General’s Response to Faruque Ahmed is more than tragic!
Now, the question is, “Do We Need a Barrel of Gun or A Royal Commission?”
Faruque Ahmed
Friday, April 02, 2010
Tomorrow, Mr. Faruque Ahmed is going to fight about many of these issues at the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal. A public exposure of this nature would be helpful to al of us.
Answer:
Answer by USALickIsraeliBoot
I think both of them should be prosecuted. Faruque Ahmed is a good person.
Question: Does anyone think this book is pathetic?
ALICE Pung’s Unpolished Gem is the story of a family rebuilding their lives after Cambodia’s appalling Pol Pot years. Pung was conceived in a Thai refugee camp and born after her Chinese-Cambodian parents, her paternal grandmother and an aunt arrived in Melbourne.
In naming Alice, her father invoked a Western story about a girl: “This new daughter of his will grow up in this Wonder Land and take for granted things like security, abundance, democracy and the little green man on the traffic lights.”
“This story does not begin on a boat,” Pung writes, partly to dash stereotypes, but partly because she is partial to a terrific sentence. She goes on to enliven, complicate, contradict and sometimes even confirm wider community perceptions of Indochinese Australians.
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Somehow Pung achieves a tone both lush and raw. For a book so preoccupied with fraught emotions — both exposed and hidden, and including Pung’s own crises — Unpolished Gem possesses the steadiest of heartbeats.
Her descriptions of Melbourne life, of her mother the outworking jewellery-maker, her father the Retravision franchisee, the birth of her three siblings, the death of her beloved grandmother, her double life of home and school, are interspersed with tales, brief but not perfunctory, of her elders’ pre-Australian lives.
“We are trying to assimilate, to not stand out from the neighbours, to not bring shame to our whole race by carrying over certain habits from the old country, such as growing chickens in the backyard or keeping goats as pets.”
In the portrait of her mother, Pung reveals the complexity of assimilation (and the term’s revelatory inadequacies). Although strong-willed, opinionated, intelligent and astonishingly hardworking, “She was loud because she could not read or speak the secret talk we knew.
“She could not read because she had been housebound for two decades. And now, over the dinner table, she would watch as my father and his children littered their language with English terms, until every second word was in a foreign tongue”. Her emergence from depression and isolation as a salesperson at Retravision is a triumph of persistence and courage. The whole episode is recounted by Pung with an assured mix of bluntness, sensitivity and humour.
Storytelling is at the heart of Unpolished Gem but this, too, exposes tensions. Pung’s grandmother and mother frequently clashed. Both employed four-year-old Alice as ally and spy, leading her to “discover that being good means just being good to the person who is telling you to be good”. Her account of this childhood predicament is unsettling, especially when her mother angrily questions her loyalties. But her conclusion is compelling:
I was doomed, early on, to be a word-spreader. To tell these stories that the women of my family made me promise never to tell a soul. Perhaps they told me because they really did want the other camp to hear. Or perhaps my word-spreading is also the only way to see that there was once flesh attached to these bones, that there was once something living and breathing, something that inhaled and exhaled; something that slept and woke up every morning with the past effaced, if only for a moment. That was a good beginning, and in this good beginning the stories would come like slow trickles of truth, like blood coursing through the veins.
Pung’s portrait of her grandmother, herself a “magical” storyteller, reveals only snippets of an extraordinary life: a committed communist, she left China for Cambodia under a political cloud; she once tried to swap her baby son for a girl; her first two daughters died in Phnom Penh, from illness and accident; she was the second wife of a man who stole their fifth son for his first wife; she had healing powers; she survived the Pol Pot years. While Pung weaves these stories seamlessly into her narrative I wanted more — a whole other book — about her grandmother.
Cambodia remains distant in Pung’s narrative: for her it is a foreign country. Pol Pot, too, hovers like a shadow. Pung’s focus is elsewhere, and the story would be burdened by descriptions of killing fields and refugee camps.
And there are many ways to write about the consequences of war and crimes against humanity. Still, one time, at a family gathering at a restaurant, Alice’s father said:
This fish reminds me of the Pol Pot years when the starved, dead bodies floated up the river during the flood. I got the job of dragging them to higher, dryer land. We wrapped them up in a dry blanket and me and my mate grabbed on to each end. Every time we tripped, the blanket would get water-soaked and even heavier. Hah hah, so funny! And listen to this — my mate turns to me and says, “Hope you’re not going to be this heavy when it’s time
Answer:
Answer by Emmz
I seriously thought that you were about to say the twilight series. lol.
But to answer your question, no.. it does not sound pathetic. It sounds quite interesting(=
Question: What do Canadians think about Sarah Palin for president?
Sarah Palin resigned from being Governor of Alaska because she wants to free up time to run for USA President in 2012 and compete with Barack Obama.
Sarah Palin is disappointed Obama is cutting out of the Iraq War and if she ran for 2012 President, she would restore US troops into Iraq as a mission from God to spread USA freedom around the globe using the might of US military power.
From this little bit of info, I can’t see why any Canadian would endorse Sarah Palin, BUT……..
1) Alaska is very close to Canada. You can see Alaska from Beaver Creek, Yukon and also from Freiser, British Columbia and elswhere
2) In Canada the word “about” sounds closer to “a boat” but in Alaska the word “no” sounds like “neww” and therefore if Sarah Palin spent time in Canada she’d go to saying “a boot” in trying to say “a boat”. Saying “a boot” she would be inherently describing the shape of Italy and that would get her the Italian vote. Italy is a popular tourist destination for many Canadians, this I know. Hence, this “a boot” thing would give Sarah Palin support in Canada.
3) Sarah Palin is a “hockey mom” and she eats “moose burgers” and that sounds very Canadian.
so do these points make Canadians support Sarah Palin for President that Harper or Ignetieff could come to for a helping hand?
and I think cancer deaths have gone up in the USA just as much. We have bad habits that attribute to it.
“Oh The Humanity”, your cbc link provides barely any support to your argument. So cancer deaths have increased, cardiovascular deaths decreased. So you can blindly assume Canada’s healthcare system works, but needs to put more national funding into researching cancer treatment and less into cardiovascular.
There is NOTHING in this article that implies this problem is tied to Nationalized Healthcare, which has been working for Canadians well before 1979 when Tommy Douglas proposed it.
Answer:
Answer by thinkingtime
No thank you, we don’t use presidents here.
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