Whatever it is....it's still an okay night out ....... for the good company. We ended up in Tesco after dinner. The whole place was still swamped with people. Guess the Tesco fever is still there!
A blog about everything that interests me...family, friends, interests, country, world..
Friday, May 30, 2008
Damiral Grill....Makan-Makan in Alor Star
Whatever it is....it's still an okay night out ....... for the good company. We ended up in Tesco after dinner. The whole place was still swamped with people. Guess the Tesco fever is still there!
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Die, Die Must Use Handphone....
So, die-die must use handphone...... really you can die!!
It's how they wear it..
How are we painting the guys, huh? Are we talking about people or animals here? Guys are that 'buyable'? Wah! Like that, then better to let the gals do the running of corporations, companies, even the country since they are 'stronger'.
Don't know how to make sense of things...on one hand, we seem to be progressing ahead. On the other hand, we seem to be stuck in this feudal mindset...
Uniform’s fine but it’s how the girls wear it
By IAN MCINTYRE
KOTA BARU: It is not the school uniform that is an issue but how Muslim schoolgirls wear it, says two PAS state executive councillors.
They claimed that the schoolgirls' transparent tops revealed too much, thus arousing the men.
State Youth committee chairman Abdul Fatah Mahmud said in an interview that schoolgirls must cover their aurat that was the standard of Islamic attire for females besides ensuring clothes were of the proper thickness.
Abdul Fatah expects that in future, attire among Muslim women will no longer be an issue once a wide ranging awareness campaign is launched to instil in them the proper mindset.
“We do not want to force, but to educate, them to meet the obligations of Allah where the central theme is covering their aurat. Proper Islamic attire is one of the demands in the religion,” he added.
Abdul Fatah, whose wife is a teacher, said Muslim girls must understand they were displaying gratefulness to Allah by wearing the required attire.
State Women Affairs committee chairwoman Wan Ubaidah Wan Omar said there was no problem with the baju kurung uniform, but Muslim schoolgirls must wear it according to Islamic teachings.
“Their underwear cannot be visibleand their hair and neck must be covered up by donning a tudung (head wear).”
Proper attire should be compulsory for Muslim woman, and the Education Ministry should monitor it instead of just dismissing the comments by National Islamic Students Association vice-president Munirah Bahari, she said.
Wan Ubaidah said it was “challenging” for schoolboys to sit in the same classroom with schoolgirls who wore revealing school uniforms.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Breakfast and Choices...
Siah's choice. One roti tisu but it had to be served on 2 plates since it is stretched so thin and long. Served with condensed milk, it's actually kinda nice. Actually anything served with condensed milk is nice...try cream crackers with it. Used to be my favourite when I was a kid. My siblings and I would pour lots of it onto the crackers and just savour it.
And where did we get this??? At Nasmir...they have a chain of restaurant up north. They even have a hotel to their name in Autocity. Anyway, where the above food is concerned, they're actually quite nice.
Monday, May 26, 2008
Dumbed Down by Educational Institutions?
So are our kids getting the best instructions in these instituitions now? Are our schools preparing them for life, to be part of the society in a meaningful way? I used to think so but I'm not so sure any more.
Classrooms today are for the most part rather chaotic, unless you are in one of those premier or chosen schools but these schools are not the norm. There are greater numbers of disruptors in the classrooms (problem in the enforcement of discipline??) and they affect majority of the children, indirectly turning them into victims. Kids write off teachers as useless and very often parents and society condone it too. Can't blame them because at one time, majority of those who came into the teaching profession were those who could not find a good positions in the private sector. The best were not encouraged to take up teaching and neither did they want to because of the negative perception. One would be almost ashamed to admit that he/she was a teacher when asked. The failure of our political masters was that they failed to ensure that our institutions be manned by competent and dedicated people.
External rewards and punishment is the order of the day now. Internal acts of conscience is not something that is actively inculcated. We may have more religious classes but for some reasons they don't seem to translate into the expected. How do we know? Social ills involving the young are on the rise.
We push our kids for education excellence. We pump them with knowledge but not bring them up to have wisdom. The goal of education these days seems to be scoring A(s) and not shaping the person holistically...though our National Education Philosophy does espouse that but I think we have fallen short of its ideals. We idealise about JERI (jasmani - emosi - rohani - intelek) or physical, emotional, spiritual and intellectual development but we abandon them in the name of good results. It's all about numbers - the number of passes. Our kids are grilled in school and sent for extra tuitions.....the race for A(s).
There was one year in a rural school in Kedah, the teachers replaced some Standard 6 students with Standard 5 kids to sit for their UPSR. The former were students who were really weak in their subjects. They were quarantined so that no one would know. However, the scam was found out. If that was not a crime, what is? Teachers were the ones who hatched this whole thing out..... Such shame. We were willing to stoop that low. What are we teaching the kids?Then the crunch comes...they have the A(s) but seem to lack that something. And all of us then lament how unready the young people are to face the world, or how they don't seem to meet the market needs...the list goes on. Classroom lessons are more about memorizing facts than actually meaningful learning. Active literacy and writing skills are on the way down. Walk into most classrooms today and you will find that kids can't even string sentences together let alone, speak well. Critical thinking is a rarity. Yet they can still pass....cos they've been groomed from the mill to pass these standardized tests and elastic adjustment of results.
There was another year that I came across a boy who could not read. He could copy words but they made no sense to him. Guess what? When he sat for his PMR, he passed his Maths. Here, you have a boy who cannot even read, let alone count. Yet he passed his Maths in a standardized test. There are many who can attest to such kind of examples. It's easy...if it's an objective exam, all you need to do is just tell the student to shade just one choice. 60 questions of 4 choices...you will get at least 15 answers right. And the passing grade is so shamefully low that in the end the likelihood of passing is very real. Then these people move on to the next level and find that they still cannot cope. Nothing changes for them but for the teachers and school, a new level of indiscipline takes root.I would say our educational system is in a rather critical state. We mass produce without much thought to the uniqueness of each individual. We put everyone through the same mill expecting that every product which comes out will be the same. And that is where we failed. We are forcing those with no academic inclinations to stay in school right up to Form 5. They cannot cope with the subjects and become a liability to the school, themselves and by the time they are out in the world, they are set like concrete already. They are dumbed down by the system because many of them would have done reasonably well had they been given the opportunity to learn a skill that they are passionate about. I truly believe in that. There are vocational subjects such as Domestic Wiring, Landscaping, Catering being offered in normal day schools now and these are meant for those who are not so academically inclined. And these students do perform better in such subjects....but places are limited and there are so many more languishing in the academic stream....this is one of the flickers of hope that I see.
All it takes is just one disruptive student to affect another 29 students. And that is happening! Not too long ago, one Education Minister stripped the vocational schools out of our education system and the normal day schools are now saddled with babysitting these non-academically inclined people. It's nightmarish trying to handle such16/17 year olds misfits. So aren't the generation of today being dumbed down by our educational institutions??? My two sen worth!!!
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Google Sites
This is a screenshot from one of their examples....for families to stay in touch.
Pedra Branca...and Rais says it's a win-win decision
Now Rais, our Foreign Minister says it is a win-win cos our fishermen can now go fishing here.....here as in these few outcrops of rocks. I can't see how this a win-win decision. They got the bigger piece of rock and we got these few batu.
Anyway, our fishing enthusiasts also can now go singgah on this outcrops of rocks and perch themselves there with a couple of fishing rods and pancing ikan also.
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Mergong Tesco...2 weeks later
Some random shots... from the back of Tesco
Before we left, we bought some donuts....got coupon for free donuts mah...see, got caught in the mentality of freebies. Ended up spending more actually! Definitely failed to heed Pak Lah's call to change our lifestyle! But if we don't spend, then how to menjana ekonomi??? Retailers all mah tutup bisnes.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
And they say the problem lies with the uniform...
Go figure what the minuscule brain above is trying to get at.School uniform sexy, says group
KUALA LUMPUR: A Malaysian group condemned the uniform worn by girls at government schools, saying it encouraged rape and pre-marital sex.“The white blouse is too transparent for girls and it becomes a source of attraction,” National Islamic Students Association of Malaysia vice-president Munirah Bahari said in a statement.
“It becomes a distraction to men, who are drawn to it, whether or not they like looking at it,” she said, calling for a review of uniform policy so that it did not violate Islamic ideals.
In multicultural Malaysia, home to majority-Muslim Malays as well as ethnic Chinese and Indians, female students at government schools have a choice of wearing a white blouse with a knee-length skirt or pinafore.
They may also wear a “baju kurung” and a headscarf is optional for Malay students.
Munirah said that “covering up” according to Islamic precepts was important to fend off social ills, including “rape, sexual harassment and even premarital sex.”
“This leads to babies born out of wedlock and, to an extent, even prostitution,” she said.
“Decent clothes which are not revealing can prevent and protect women from any untoward situations,” she said, suggesting that girls wear a blouse of a different colour or with an undergarment.
However, the girls themselves also came in for criticism, with the association saying that some used the white blouse to lure men.
“This is the source of the problem, where we can see that schoolgirls themselves are capable of using this to attract men to them,” Munirah said.
“This could see them getting molested, having premarital sex and all sorts of things.” – AFP
And this by Dina Zaman, an interesting insight.
Product of the system???Today’s men not like our fathers If before divorce was due to infidelity, abuse or disenchantment, nowadays the war cry among young women is that their husbands are lazy and irresponsible. ON MY flight back to Kuala Terengganu last week, I sat next to two young girls who were attending a company seminar. When they heard that I worked for a non-governmental organisation, they said: “Akak, please advise us, we have a problem.”
One of the girls told me her predicament: her husband now uses condoms with her because he’s been sleeping around, and because he didn’t know where the girls have been and because he loves her, the wife, he’s protecting her. From disease.
Wow. Is that love or what?
So I sat there and did an Oprah. When we separated at the airport, I thought to myself: I should have become a Syariah lawyer instead of a writer.
Over the past one year, so many people I knew divorced or were in the act of getting a divorce. If it weren’t the husband catching hold of me at the magazine shop, to ask me to speak to his errant wife, it would be my women friends calling or meeting me to break the news.
Sometimes my readers email me and tell me things. It’s odd, but you never get used to the news of a divorce. To me, it’s heartbreaking to hear of a marriage failing beyond repair.
The perennial question these women ask me, as well as their parents, my parents and aunts and uncles: what has happened to this generation of Malay men? “Why are they not like our fathers?”
My Auntie K’s answer to this was that there was too much MSG in all the food the men ate at the mamaks. My father chuffed up and said, of course no man could be like him; he (my father) was The Original Malay Man. And my mother and some of her friends wonder why, why, why.
If before divorce was due to infidelity, abuse or disenchantment, nowadays the war cry among young women is that their husbands are lazy, irresponsible and just want a flashy lifestyle.
Since their wives are educated and working, duit rokok boleh la tibai kat bini (the wives can support them). And what even boggles the mind is that despite the lack of cash and employment, some of these men actually have girlfriends.
I don’t get it. What kind of woman would want to date a lazy sod? I certainly don’t.
There’s the husband who beats up the wife to the point that her parents have to intervene, as he was starting to abuse his own child.
What does the husband say to the in-laws? If they want him to stop and to divorce the wife, pay him RM1mil. The parents actually do, because they want to save their daughter’s and grandchild’s lives.
Then there’s the harried wife with children who’s been married for over eight years. Every morning, the suami tersayang goes to work in a suit.
One day the ah longs appear at the doorstep and threaten her and the kids and she finds out the truth: the blinkin’ monkey never worked in his life, and had been borrowing money from the sharks. He also had a gambling habit and a “‘lifestyle'.
Then there’s the young cute husband who’s creative. He’s in “media”. Not only does he sleep and eat and live off his in-laws, later on, it is discovered that he bought his foreign degree from the Internet. Yes, he forged it for a few American bucks.
Even stranger, the marriage was not consummated. Last I heard, “I’m still a virgin, Kak Dina.” Aiyoyo. (Why marry-lah if you’re not going to consummate it?) Oh yes, the husband said in a marriage, there’s no sex. Go figure.
He’s too lazy to pray. He doesn’t want to work. He wants to stay home and watch TV. He does not contribute to household expenses. Baru nak apply for tender dah ada GRO. He expects the wife to pay for everything. He expects the father-in-law to pay for everything.
I go to usrahs given by ulamas such as Ustaz Asri, Ustaz Kariman, Ustaz Arifin. You name it.
Even at the usrahs, everyone is asking why divorce is so high and why the current generation of Malay boys are not responsible. Unlike their fathers. And fathers-in-law.
The funny thing is, when the wives give up trying to save their marriages and dive head-on for a divorce, these irresponsible boys suddenly rediscover religion and start behaving like pompous gits.
At the court, one soon to be ex-husband tells the judge the wife is not a good Muslim. Sometimes she does not perform all her five daily prayers.
The soon to be ex-wife then shoots back, if she’s not an isteri mithali what about him? His Friday night out with the boys and coming back reeking of beer and cheap women’s perfume?
He then gets angry and tells her that he is STILL her husband, and he’s a Malay man, a Muslim one, so she better shut up. She tells him to go s***w himself and hopes he gets AIDS.
The judge? Geleng kepala kot.
Just when I, Little Ms D, think it’d be nice to REMARRY, and then my mother can stop pestering me to marry the boyfriend, a story like this crops up and I run off. Marriage is for the brave.
The quality of Malay men can’t have deteriorated that badly, no?
I see an old friend for tea. She looks like a walking aubergine. Brinjal to you. Her husband beats her up for the heck of it and to discipline her. I ask her, why did she marry him?
She tells me: “Dina, I’m like you. Our fathers were diplomats. We had non-Malay boyfriends. But at the end of the day, semoden-moden kita ni, we think of God. So I married him because of bangsa dan ugama. I married a Malay man because I thought of akhirat.”
She weeps and tells me: “Fat lot of good that did me.”
I don’t know why the new generation of Malay men are not like my father and his friends. They are practising Muslims, they’re successful, and they’re monogamous. They don’t beat up their wives. They brought their daughters up to rule the world.
I’d marry someone like my dad and his friends, but that’s disgusting. Can you imagine having a son-in-law the same age as your dad?
So yes. Please. Someone, answer us. Why aren’t Malay men these days like our fathers?
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
What Is Responsible Parenting these days?
- They pursue it unrelentingly.
- They have very little self control.
- The power of peer pressure.
- The raging hormones.
I am grateful to my parents for standing by me all those difficult years. It must taken quite a lot from them to make sure that my siblings and I make it in life. My mom, who had very little education, realised the importance of education and stressed in us its worth. Dad was usually busy working, to make ends meet and to put us through our education. My siblings and I will always be forever grateful for their sacrifice. Our lives are better because of them.
Today's parents are busier and like the kids, they too have many distractions now. Like the kids, they too want their right to their time for various activities.... Therefore, there is always this tendency to take the easy way out. For the younger ones, there are always the maids. For the teenagers, it's easier to just give in to their wants...... why get extra headaches...
Life is getting better with all the conveniences made readily available. Yet moral values are on the decline. Principles! What principles? More babies are abandoned, old folks left to fend for themselves, social problems abound. Take a drive out in Alor Star on Thursday and Friday evenings and very often the main street would be full of Mat Rempits who will be riding their bikes at great speed with no regard to other road users.
It's a vicious cycle. To discipline a child is a painful process for both parties...but it is necessary.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Got tagged...
1. To watch or to participate?
Watch sometimes but will participate if necessary. Life too short to stand as a bystander all the time-lah.
2. Malls, catalogue shopping or the Internet?
Dunno....don't quite trust internet shopping yet, though I think this may be my most favourite form of shopping once I learn to trust it.
3. A bath of a shower?
Yup! Most definitely. In this tropical climate, it'd be crazy not to.
4. To talk to people by telephone, in person or by e-mail?
In person always better but these days, so many people so busy all the time. So have to go ala sms (still telephone, not meh?) Email also will do. Can organize thoughts better.
5. Typing or writing?
Typing...looks neater. Anyway, how to write on a computer, still much faster to type. But still have to write quite a lot. Going paperless is actually a fallacy.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Plants, KFC Containers & Jelly Crystals
Sunday, May 18, 2008
DLink DSL-2650T ADSL2/2+ Router with Modem/Switch
Just bought a new all-in-one Dlink Modem cum router. Have not read many good reviews about it but being in AS does not give you much to choose....... I am replacing my old combo........ a DSL-504T modem & DI-714P+ wireless router.
Installation usually has its hitches..and usually one has to tweak the settings and reset and reboot.....usually a couple of times and this would usually cost you some time. This was one of those days that something would go wrong... and it cost me a lot of time.
well this is the box the router came in... a swanky big box... inside is a tiny little thingy...
First thing you see is a "official looking sticker"
This is how you should go about it.
First point your favorite browser to http://192.168.1.1/, enter your username and password (default: admin | admin)
Under WAN change the VCI value from the default 8 to 0.
The rest is just entering your streamyx username and password.. then save and reboot the router... and you are in!
But not so for mine....my router wireless radio kaputted!!.. signal went dead after it came alive for just a short while! So it was back to the shop and change a new one... aargh! The thought of Tesco and the jam was enough to make me sigh! Called the other branch hoping that they would allow me to take it there to change but no...gal over the phone said boss not in. Cannot! So we had to battle the traffic at Tesco.
Managed to change it but before that, told the boss that if it goes kaput again, to allow us to change at the other shop! The second time was quite painless and now it's running ok!
So bye bye to my two old buddies.. you have served me well.....
Well, maybe you can be of use in my workplace...
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Telematch at Church School
This is the scene at church school today...
Saturday at Mergong Tesco
The little one was obviously excited at the idea of being there as the last 2 attempts to bring her there were not successful as both times, our attempts were thwarted by the long lines of cars.
Anyway, this Tesco is by far the nicest shopping complex in town; partly because it is the newest and also because it really is quite nice inside. Plus point is the food outlets. You have the usual big names like KFC and Pizza Hut. But there were quite a few others to choose from as well as the food court.
Then we finally went shopping for groceries in Tesco. One thing I like about it is finally, I don't have to go to Penang to get all the cold cuts and also the bacon strips; even though Tesco's mainly seem to be of one brand only at the moment, MeaTy. Previously if we want the latter, we had to get it whenever we went to Penang. So, I think this will probably make some people quite happy.
Had lunch at Noodle Station....mee at KL price, that's what probably most the Alor Star folks would say. But for me, at least there are more choices available to people.
Tesco Opening in Alor Star
Coming Up! Mergong Tesco
Big Apple at Mergong Tesco Finally Opened
Mergong Tesco...2 weeks later
Friday, May 16, 2008
Bali Bali Hai...makan-makan
What's left after dinner.
As we drove out, I noticed too that the seafood corner was doing not too badly too. There were actually quite many people tucking in their late dinners outside. Maybe I'll try it my next round there.
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