Sunday, January 31, 2010

Are you a Dreamer, Realist or Critic?

A general question was asked by a friend in FB, 

"Are you a Dreamer, Realist or Critic?"

I answered,

"SUCCESS starts with a dream that becomes modified through harsh realism of externalities, which modifications are in constant critique for the betterment of the process to reach an eventual SUCCESS.

Henceforth, I am a Dreamer who is battered to become a Realist, and in retrospect through critiques, become a dreamer again." 

How about you? How would you reply? 


Daily Choices

You have TWO choices to make when you awaken daily.

Choice 1: To be happy.
Choice 2: To be sad.

Which will you choose? The essence of this exercise is that perhaps, happiness is a choice. I make a conscious effort to choose the former, but sometimes, the choice is hard for the circumstances beset the heart, causing an emotional upheaval. However, it is in these trying times that the former choice OUGHT to be made, amidst with immeasurable impediments. 

My brethens, dismiss sadness and embrace happiness! Such effort will surely be rewarded by an impetus of energy that whether unknowingly or the otherwise, brings smiles upon the saddened countenance.  

Dinner

A duck, pheasants and rabbits hang from a clothes line before being plucked, skinned and frozen near the village of Carnlough in Northern Ireland.

Source: Time

Dilemma

You discover you will die in exactly five years time but if you win a coin toss you can live for another thirty years. If you lose you will die in one months time. Would you take the gamble?

Source: Quose

Vanessa Mae- Toccata & Fugue

Vanessa Mae- Fantasy on a theme from Caravans

English Homework

Valentine's Day card. Have it designed and submitted to me by Monday.

Failure to do any of the ordainment will attract punitive action which shall be revealed on Monday if so needed.  

To the users of SHOUT!

Dear users of SHOUT!

No comments from me will be ensued to those who chose and choose to use pseudonyms such as Show, Monkey and others. This is a place for you to voice your views without prejudice, subject to the laws of this jurisdiction of course. Be bold to have your name published, but do so with integrity and not use the names of those which do not identify you. Action may be taken against those who insist on using pseudonyms by the act of banning such  unidentifiable users from voicing in the C-box. It shall be done, soon.

Mr Nicholas 

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Iraq Inquiry

Iraq Inquiry.
Tony Blair.
What an offensive defence!

Can war ever be justifiable?

Monday, January 25, 2010

Nimble Agencies Sneak News Out of North Korea



Published: January 24, 2010
Source: International Herald Tribune
 
SEOUL — For a journalist who helped break one of the biggest stories out of North Korea in the past year, Mun Seong-hwi keeps an extremely low profile. The name he offers is an alias. He does not reveal what he did in North Korea before his defection in 2006, aside from mention of a “desk job,” in order to protect relatives left behind.


Jean Chung for the International Herald Tribune
Sohn Kwang-joo, chief editor of Daily NK, in his office in Seoul.
Jean Chung for the International Herald Tribune
 
Ha Tae-keung, president of Open Radio for North Korea, talked to a North Korean refugee stringer in China from his office in Seoul.

He also maintains a wall of secrecy around his three “underground stringers” in North Korea, who he says do not know he works for Daily NK, an Internet news service based in Seoul and reviled by Pyongyang.
On Nov. 30, quoting Mr. Mun’s and other anonymous “sources inside North Korea,” Daily NK reported that, starting that day, the North Korean government would radically devalue its currency, requiring people to exchange their old bank notes for new at a rate of 100 to 1. Furthermore, there would be limit on how much of this old money people could turn in for new.

The report, which made headlines around the world and was later confirmed by South Korean officials, had far-reaching implications. It meant, among other things, that the North Korean government was cracking down on the country’s nascent free markets, wiping out much of the wealth private entrepreneurs had accumulated by trading goods at a time when the Communist government’s ration system was failing to meet its people’s basic needs.

“I take pride in my work,” Mr. Mun, a man in his early 40s with brooding eyes and a receding hairline, said in an interview. “I help the outside world see North Korea as it is.”

Daily NK is one of six news outlets that have emerged in recent years specializing in collecting information from North Korea. These Web sites or newsletters hire North Korean defectors and cultivate sources inside a country shrouded in a near-total news blackout.

While North Korea shutters itself from the outside — it blocks the Internet, jams foreign radio broadcasts and monitors international calls — it releases propaganda-filled dispatches through the government’s mouthpiece, the Korean Central News Agency.

But, thanks to Daily NK and the other services, it is also possible now for outsiders to read a dizzying array of “heard-in-North Korea” reports, many on topics off limits for public discussion in the North, like the health of the country’s leader, Kim Jong-il.

The reports are sketchy at best, covering small pockets of North Korea society. Many prove wrong, contradict each other or remain unconfirmed. But they have also produced important scoops, like the currency devaluation and a recent outbreak of swine flu in North Korea. The mainstream media in South Korea now regularly quote these cottage-industry news services.

“Technology made this possible,” said Sohn Kwang-joo, the chief editor of Daily NK. “We infiltrate the wall of North Korea with cellphones.”

Over the past decade, the North’s border with China has grown more porous as famine drove many North Koreans out in search of food and an increasing traffic in goods — and information — developed. A new tribe of North Korean merchants negotiates smuggling deals with Chinese partners, using Chinese cellphones that pick up signals inside the North Korean border.

These phones have become a main tool of communication for many of the 17,000 North Korean defectors living in the South trying to re-establish contact with their families and friends in the North.

Mr. Sohn, a former reporter with the mainstream daily newspaper Dong-A in Seoul, has South Korean “correspondents” near the China-North Korea border.

These volunteers, many of them pro-democracy advocates during their student years, secretly meet North Koreans traveling across the border and recruit underground stringers. The volunteers use business visas, or sometimes pretend to be students or tourists.

“It’s dangerous work, and it takes one or two years to recruit one,” Mr. Sohn said.
 
In the past year, the quality of the information these news services provide has improved as they have hired more North Korean intellectuals and former officials who defected to the South and still have friends in elite circles in the North, said Ha Tae-keung, a former student activist who runs Open Radio for North Korea and a Web site.

“These officials provide news because they feel uncertain about the future of their regime and want to have a link with the outside world, or because of their friendship with the defectors working for us, or because of money,” said Mr. Ha, who also goes by his English name, Young Howard.

All these news outlets pay their informants. Mr. Ha pays a bonus for significant scoops. Daily NK and Open Radio each have 15 staff members, some of them defectors, and receive U.S. congressional funding through the National Endowment for Democracy, as well as support from other public and private sources.

Recently, they have been receiving tips from North Koreans about corrupt officials.

“The fact that news comes out through civic groups like ours means that North Korean society is changing fast,” said Pomnyun Sumin, a Buddhist monk and chairman of Good Friends, a relief group based in Seoul whose newsletter broke the swine flu story last month.

Some informants have become so adept with technology that they send text-messages, audio files and photos to Seoul by cell phone, said Kim Heung-gwang, a former North Korean computer scientist who heads North Korea Intellectuals Solidarity, a group of defectors that runs a news Web site.

Bringing news out of North Korea is risky. Mr. Kim said that one of his informants was stopped last May while trying to smuggle out a video in a small camera hidden in a cosmetics bottle. She is believed to have killed herself in police detention, he said.

“You wonder whether they should let their sources take such risks,” Chang Yong-hoon, who covers North Korea for the mainstream news agency Yonhap, said at a recent forum on the news services. “They’ve produced as many erroneous reports as they have real scoops.”

Kang Chol-hwan, a former North Korean prison camp inmate who now writes for the mainstream daily Chosun, said there are “information brokers” in North Korea who sell exaggerated and fake news to outside media. Lee Chan-ho, a chief analyst at the South Korean government’s Unification Ministry, warned that the “flood of raw, unconfirmed reports” complicates the effort to understand the North.

Mr. Ha, of Open Radio for North Korea, conceded that point: “Because our sources have never been trained in journalism, exaggeration is a problem for us. Some demand more money for information. We try to cross-check our reports as much as possible.”

Mr. Mun of Daily NK sends his stringers 1,000 Chinese renminbi, or about $150, every two or three months. They call him once a week at a designated time. They find a place where they feel safe from the North Korean police patrolling with equipment that detects cell phone users, and dial. In Seoul, Mr. Mun hears the ring tone, then calls back and talks for about half an hour. After the call, his stringers hang up and hide their phones until the next call.

Recently, with so many developments in the North, they have been calling him at unscheduled times, for instance, when he was in the subway.
“I have to rush off and call back quickly,” Mr. Mun said. “If I don’t within five minutes, he’ll turn off and I’ll lose him.”

There is another strict rule.

“We don’t know, and never ask, each other’s real name,” Mr. Mun said. “That’s safer for them. Their safety is my biggest concern.”

Boy, 7, raises $113k for Haiti


From The Straits Times, 25 January 2010

LONDON - A SEVEN-YEAR-OLD British boy told on Sunday how he raised more than 50,000 pounds (S$113,000) in a day for survivors of the Haiti earthquake by doing a sponsored bike ride.
Charlie Simpson set out to collect just 500 pounds for a UN Children's Fund (Unicef) appeal by cycling five miles (eight kilometres) around his local park in London - but his efforts inspired hundreds of people to donate online.

He started his fundraising efforts after seeing shocking images of children being pulled alive from the rubble in the Caribbean nation. 'I just think it was quite sad when I saw the pictures on the TV,' said the youngster.
His mother, Leonora, helped him create a sponsorship form and said the document quickly spread around the Internet and the enormous sum was donated in one day. 'He really felt strongly about this and thought that something had to be done,' she said. 'But what started off as a little cycle round the park with his dad has turned into something a lot bigger than that and we can't believe it.

'I am extremely proud of our Charlie, he's done really well. He's worked hard and he's raised a phenomenal amount of money so we couldn't ask for anything more.' Donations from his JustGiving website go to Unicef, which is leading emergency relief efforts on water, sanitation, education and nutrition as well as supporting child protection.

Unicef said it was the first time anyone had collected 50,000 pounds in one day for the fund and the money would make 'a huge difference'. 'It's always heartwarming when any child starts to respond and there's something quite special about a child in the UK reaching out to the children of Haiti,' said spokesman Michael Newsome. -- AFP

Journal Topic T1W4

When I'm older...

English Literature- Freeze Frame





Group 1:  Kidnapping

 


Group 2: Trouble at School




Group 3: Burglary




Group 4: Car Accident




Group 5: Zoo




Group 6: Rescue Mission




Group 7: Camping




Group 8: Tourists visiting a monument

Sunday, January 24, 2010

The Happy Family



The army of Jordan who guarded him while waiting for his Dad to fetch him home. ;-)

Reflection

An aphorism by Charles Dickens, "Reflect on your present blessings, of which every man has many; not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some."

As I glean from the messages posted by teenagers of today on FB, I cannot help but sigh on how pessimistic life seems to afford them, or at least that is how they perceive it. As chided by Dickens, one really ought to look at the beautiful side of each situation and appreciate what left of her beauty, if one is in a dire situation, for it is when one forces oneself to veer away from the tremendous whirlpool of negative suction, and often indulgence, that one is able to break away from the vicious cycle of melancholy.

Life is good, as I have often reminded myself; yes, I need to remind myself often when situations are not pretty. Life must be good for the 'propaganda' has a magical and magnetic effect of setting one in the direction of goodness, and hopefully, happiness. Looking at the life and death dramatic experience of the Haitians, Iin relativity to our lives in Singapore, I cannot help but unknowingly let out a soft, but convincing, "Life's good".


Ex-Students of 2E2' 2009



Taken them for two years of their impressional years, it brought fond memories to see former students of 2E2 in the previous year donned in long pants, looking at least prima facie, like young adults. What is more endearing is not how much they have matured physically, having spotted a few more red spots on their a-long-while-ago perfect complexion, but how they remain the jovial outspoken selves they have been well known for, vis-a-vis peers in their level. Absence of two months from the holiday nonetheless mattered not for their warmth to people still emanates. To those who greeted with a simple 'Hi', when you see me along your path of traverse, thank you for remembering the one whom you have tormented, tickled, angered, warmed, and showed me your world, for the two growing years of yours.

Let us hope for your continuing growth in physicality, psychology, mental and most importantly, emotionally. By the way, I am still waiting for the class reunion gathering that was proposed but has somehow dropped into a deep empty well, with echos of its fall reverberating its arrival. 2E2'2009, you have been missed.  


Lunch with Jun Hong and Wah Wah in 2010!

Friday, January 22, 2010

1N1 ROCKS??? 1N1 ROCKS!!!

"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly... who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who have never known neither victory nor defeat." ~Anonymous author

Henceforth, I seek the members of 1N1 to step out of the comfort you have long been accustomed to, and venture into the arena of leadership, where opportunities abound for you to realize, develop and hone your currently dormant skills of event organization, unforeseen situational management, and above all else, social emotional learning!

So, come on, 1N1! Be a scholar! Be an officer! And be the ladies and gentlemen of the future. The world awaits your coming of age to make it into the 'Pandora' that we, however unfortunate it is, know only as illusion today.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Journal Topic for T1W3

If my desk could talk, what would it say?

Our lovely class...















On the first day...

Week 1 Day 1 Noise Meter: DEAD silence
Week 1 Day 2 Noise Meter: Silence
Week 1 Day 3 Noise Meter: Remnants of murmur
Week 1 Day 4 Noise Meter: Shhhhh..., I sang.
Week 1 Day 5 Noise Meter: Quiet. I urged.
Week 2 Day 1 Noise Meter: Quiet! I shouted!
Week 2 Day 2 Noise Meter: Shut up! I screamed!
Week 2 Day 3 Noise Meter: ...
Week 2 Day 4 Noise Meter: ...
Week 2 Day 5 Noise Meter: Hello. Hello! Thank God! My voice is still there!




CCA Day!

What a festive day! Cool...