Khamis, 1 Ogos 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Researchers to debut lab-grown beef burger to the world

Posted: 01 Aug 2013 05:33 PM PDT

August 02, 2013

After years of research and much anticipation, a Dutch scientist will finally unveil his lab-grown, artificial meat to the world, created in a petri dish from the stem cells of a cow.

Next week, at a secret location in London, the synthetic meat will be served to a select group of guests in London as a mundane beef burger.

But at £250,000 ($380,500 USD), the 5 oz patty - also described as the most expensive burger in the world - will be anything but, as diners take a bite out of meat made from 3,000 strips of artificial beef, each the size of a grain of rice, reports The Independent.

Moreover, guests will also take what creator medical physiologist Mark Post hopes, to be a bite out of history as the answer to the world's food woes.

It's been years since Post, from the Maastricht University in the Netherlands, has been alerting the world to his pending "test-tube" meat, a project created to help offset climate change and provide a healthier, safer alternative to conventional meat production.

According to some estimates, meat production is responsible for nearly 20 percent of the world's total greenhouse gas emissions.

Burgeoning middle classes and rising incomes around the world are also pushing up global meat demand, particularly in China, where meat consumption has increased 165 percent since 1990.

And the water footprint to produce 1 kg of beef is a whopping 154,000 liters of water, mainly due to the amount required for animal feed.

But according to The Independent, in theory, stem cells from just one animal could be used to make a million times more meat than can be butchered from a single beef carcass, slashing the need for land use, water, feed and greenhouse gases.

Meanwhile, guests at the London event will watch a live demo as their dinner is cooked in front of them before tucking into their synthetic beef burger.

Researchers hope to see artificial beef sold commercially in grocery stores and restaurants within the next five to 10 years. - AFP/Relaxnews, 2 August, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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IOC to introduce entourage doping sanctions

Posted: 01 Aug 2013 05:35 AM PDT

August 01, 2013
Latest Update: August 02, 2013 04:35 am

International Olympic Committee presidential candidate Sergei Bubka expects the body to approve sanctions for doping offences by athletes' entourages at a meeting of their executive board this month.

Ukrainian Bubka, who is one of six candidates in the running to replace current IOC president Jacques Rogge, is chairman of their Entourage Commission which has been set up because of concerns that athletes are being led astray by those working for them.

"It is clear, I am chair of the Entourage Commission and we are working right now for entourage sanctions," the former Olympic pole vault gold medallist and six-time world champion told reporters yesterday.

"We have already done our work and the final stage, Aug 9, the executive board of IOC will approve this and this we will presented to sports institutions to implement."

A recent spate of positive dope tests have provoked debate about the role of coaches and managers in an athlete's regime.

Former double world sprint champion Tyson Gay recently failed an out-of-competition dope test and said: "I don't have a sabotage story. I don't have lies...I basically put my trust in someone and I was let down."

Jamaica's former world 100 metres record holder Asafa Powell and Olympic 4x100 metres relay silver medallist Sherone Simpson also tested positive and both said they had never knowingly taken any substances.

Their trainer, Chris Xuereb, has denied providing them performance-enhancing drugs and said the sprinters should take responsibility for their failed dope tests.

Bubka, who won gold at the Seoul 1988 Olympics and is a member of the powerful IOC executive board as well as a senior vice-president of the International Association of Athletics Federations, said the recent spate of positive tests showed the system was working.

"Of course there are some positive cases that are unpleasant, we don't like them but in some way we must see it as positive," he said.

"The system works...you will pay the price if you go the wrong way, this is a very important message."

He warned athletes to steer clear of supplements that could leave them vulnerable to positive tests and gave his support to increased bans for convicted dopers from two to four years.

"I think we need to go this way," he said. "We need to protect honest athletes, we must eliminate the cheaters. This is very important for sport, for youth, for credibility of sport."

The 49-year-old, who broke the world record 35 times, is joined by Germany's Thomas Bach, Singapore's Ng Ser Miang, C.K. Wu of Taiwan, Puerto Rican Richard Carrion and Swiss Denis Oswald in a six-way contest for the most influential post in world sport.

Bach, an Olympic fencing champion in 1976, is the favourite to be elected on Sept 10 when Rogge, in charge since 2001, steps down when his two-term rule comes to a mandatory end. - Reuters, August 1, 2013

Spurs seal Soldado signing

Posted: 01 Aug 2013 03:15 AM PDT

August 01, 2013
Latest Update: August 02, 2013 02:15 am

Tottenham Hotspur have reached an agreement with Valencia for striker Roberto Soldado, the Premier League club said today.

The La Liga club's president, Amadeo Salvo, had said yesterday that the deal would be held up until a problem with the player's agents had been resolved.

"We are delighted to announce that we have reached agreement with Valencia for the transfer of Roberto Soldado subject to a medical," Tottenham said on the club website (www.tottenhamhotspur.com).

Media reports put the transfer fee at 30 million euros (about RM120 million) for Soldado, who scored 30 goals in 46 appearances for Valencia last season. - Reuters, August 1, 2013

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Egyptian revolution derailed, contained

Posted: 31 Jul 2013 11:18 PM PDT

BY NICOLA NASSER
August 01, 2013
Latest Update: August 01, 2013 05:47 pm

A fourth wave of the Egyptian revolution seems inevitable, until the revolution changes the regime or the regime emerges victorious, pending another revolution.

The January 25 revolution in Egypt, which removed the former president Hosni Mubarak from power in 2011 and, in its second wave, overwhelmed the first anniversary of his elected successor Mohammad Morsi on June 30, 2013 with millions over millions of anti - Muslim Brotherhood protesters until the military intervened to remove him in turn three days later, is now entering its third stage without yet being completed, fulfilled or finished.

In a statement issued on July 27, 2013, US Secretary of State John Kerry grasped the fact that the Egyptian revolution has not yet run its course; "Its final verdict is not yet decided," he said, "but it will be forever impacted by what happens right now." He described the situation prevailing "now" as a "pivotal moment for Egypt."

Years ago, John C. Campbel, in "Foreign Policy," had described the Middle East as "a house of containment built on shifting sands," from the perspective of the United States, and his description still applies today, no better than to the current state of affairs in Egypt, where the state has become more like a house of cards.

So far, Egypt's revolution was more a "regime exchange" than a "regime change." The old pro – US market economy centers of power had merely rotated power among the liberal "remnants" of the Mubarak regime and the conservatives of his opposition led by the Muslim Brotherhood, with the military playing the role of the arbiter. For example, the Sawiris family billionaires who were milking them are coming back now after they were replaced by the billionaire and MB leader Khairat al-Shater and his ilks during the Morsi era. They were thus far successful in derailing and containing the revolution, which has changed nothing of the old regime, neither internally nor externally.

This rotation of power has so far proved an effective mechanism in containing the revolution and derailing it away from evolving into a new order. The political polarization along these lines is another mechanism; Mazda Majidi on July 20 wrote on the Web site of the US Party of Socialism and Liberation: "A long confrontation with the military on one side and Brotherhood supporters on the other could yield a situation where the people in the streets right now will be sidelined," and consequently their revolution aborted.

Washington D.C. is adapting to this "regime exchange" in order to prevent a "change in the regime," which the successive US administrations have nurtured as a strategic asset to both the United States and its Israeli regional ally since the Camp David accords of 1979.

Answering his question whether the removal of Morsi was a US-engineered coup, Majidi wrote that "Washington would have had no incentive to orchestrate a military coup to overthrow the Muslim Brotherhood (MB);" Morsi "worked well with the US," "played a key role" in brokering a truce between Israel and Hamas in late 2012," and in the conflict in Syria, he and the MB "were solidly behind the US effort to overthrow the Syrian state;" accordingly, "Washington could live with Morsi, but it obviously has no problems with Egypt's military," who are the most committed to the strategic ties with the US and the best guardians of the peace treaty with Israel.

Maintaining or discarding those ties and that treaty will undoubtedly be the most vital dividing line externally between fulfilling the Egyptian revolution and derailing it away from disturbing the regional balance of power and status quo, which both the U.S and the Israeli beneficiaries thereof have nurtured during the past more than three decades as their "holy cow."

No surprise, therefore, that the internal threats to this status quo have become the concern of the US and Israeli allies, but Israel in particular. Israeli leaders seemed on alert to preempt this threat. On July 26, President Shimon Peres said in an Al-Hurra TV channel: "What is politics if it can't provide people with bread?" Backed by US Republican Senator Rand Paul, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is now urging the West to adopt a new "Marshall Plan" for the Egyptian economy.

Within this context monitors could interpret the US refusal to label the Egyptian military latest intervention on July 3 as a coup, lest the Barak Obama administration become obliged by law to cut the US aid to Egypt. Similarly Qatar, which had sponsored the Morsi –led MB government, would not withdraw its ($7b) support to Egypt. The same applies to the ($12b) prompt financial support extended by Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait within (48) hours of the latest "exchange" of power in Egypt, which, in view of the US strategic alliance with the three countries, could not have been promptly forthcoming without a US "green light," according to anti – American analysts.

Any US Israeli "Marshall Plan," however, will only be another mechanism to maintain and reinforce the status quo and will not change the regime in Egypt, let alone bringing in a new regime.

Beneficiaries of the status quo are keen to prove to the revolting masses that their revolution has thus far made their bad situation worse: Economically, significant capital fled abroad, Egypt's debt is a staggering 88 percent of its GDP, tourism collapsed, agriculture hit hard, foreign investment declined, labor unrest spread, unemployment on the rise, inflation soars, economic growth plunged, public finances deteriorated, value of Egyptian pound fell, purchase power of salaries eroded, half of Egyptians live at or below poverty line, etc., and personal safety and public security have become a daily headache, with the harassment of women becoming a social phenomenon.

And in the name of democracy, according to Jon Lee Anderson, writing in The New Yorker on July 5, "the devils long contained in Egypt's national Pandora's box having been loosened from their chains," so "as if everything in Egypt must now be performed by the mob, for the mob, in full view of everyone."

* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories. nassernicola@ymail.com

Egyptian revolution derailed, contained - Nicola Nasser

Posted: 31 Jul 2013 11:18 PM PDT

BY NICOLA NASSER
August 01, 2013
Latest Update: August 01, 2013 05:47 pm

A fourth wave of the Egyptian revolution seems inevitable, until the revolution changes the regime or the regime emerges victorious, pending another revolution.

The January 25 revolution in Egypt, which removed the former president Hosni Mubarak from power in 2011 and, in its second wave, overwhelmed the first anniversary of his elected successor Mohammad Morsi on June 30, 2013 with millions over millions of anti - Muslim Brotherhood protesters until the military intervened to remove him in turn three days later, is now entering its third stage without yet being completed, fulfilled or finished.

In a statement issued on July 27, 2013, US Secretary of State John Kerry grasped the fact that the Egyptian revolution has not yet run its course; "Its final verdict is not yet decided," he said, "but it will be forever impacted by what happens right now." He described the situation prevailing "now" as a "pivotal moment for Egypt."

Years ago, John C. Campbel, in "Foreign Policy," had described the Middle East as "a house of containment built on shifting sands," from the perspective of the United States, and his description still applies today, no better than to the current state of affairs in Egypt, where the state has become more like a house of cards.

So far, Egypt's revolution was more a "regime exchange" than a "regime change." The old pro – US market economy centers of power had merely rotated power among the liberal "remnants" of the Mubarak regime and the conservatives of his opposition led by the Muslim Brotherhood, with the military playing the role of the arbiter. For example, the Sawiris family billionaires who were milking them are coming back now after they were replaced by the billionaire and MB leader Khairat al-Shater and his ilks during the Morsi era. They were thus far successful in derailing and containing the revolution, which has changed nothing of the old regime, neither internally nor externally.

This rotation of power has so far proved an effective mechanism in containing the revolution and derailing it away from evolving into a new order. The political polarization along these lines is another mechanism; Mazda Majidi on July 20 wrote on the Web site of the US Party of Socialism and Liberation: "A long confrontation with the military on one side and Brotherhood supporters on the other could yield a situation where the people in the streets right now will be sidelined," and consequently their revolution aborted.

Washington D.C. is adapting to this "regime exchange" in order to prevent a "change in the regime," which the successive US administrations have nurtured as a strategic asset to both the United States and its Israeli regional ally since the Camp David accords of 1979.

Answering his question whether the removal of Morsi was a US-engineered coup, Majidi wrote that "Washington would have had no incentive to orchestrate a military coup to overthrow the Muslim Brotherhood (MB);" Morsi "worked well with the US," "played a key role" in brokering a truce between Israel and Hamas in late 2012," and in the conflict in Syria, he and the MB "were solidly behind the US effort to overthrow the Syrian state;" accordingly, "Washington could live with Morsi, but it obviously has no problems with Egypt's military," who are the most committed to the strategic ties with the US and the best guardians of the peace treaty with Israel.

Maintaining or discarding those ties and that treaty will undoubtedly be the most vital dividing line externally between fulfilling the Egyptian revolution and derailing it away from disturbing the regional balance of power and status quo, which both the U.S and the Israeli beneficiaries thereof have nurtured during the past more than three decades as their "holy cow."

No surprise, therefore, that the internal threats to this status quo have become the concern of the US and Israeli allies, but Israel in particular. Israeli leaders seemed on alert to preempt this threat. On July 26, President Shimon Peres said in an Al-Hurra TV channel: "What is politics if it can't provide people with bread?" Backed by US Republican Senator Rand Paul, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is now urging the West to adopt a new "Marshall Plan" for the Egyptian economy.

Within this context monitors could interpret the US refusal to label the Egyptian military latest intervention on July 3 as a coup, lest the Barak Obama administration become obliged by law to cut the US aid to Egypt. Similarly Qatar, which had sponsored the Morsi –led MB government, would not withdraw its ($7b) support to Egypt. The same applies to the ($12b) prompt financial support extended by Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait within (48) hours of the latest "exchange" of power in Egypt, which, in view of the US strategic alliance with the three countries, could not have been promptly forthcoming without a US "green light," according to anti – American analysts.

Any US Israeli "Marshall Plan," however, will only be another mechanism to maintain and reinforce the status quo and will not change the regime in Egypt, let alone bringing in a new regime.

Beneficiaries of the status quo are keen to prove to the revolting masses that their revolution has thus far made their bad situation worse: Economically, significant capital fled abroad, Egypt's debt is a staggering 88 percent of its GDP, tourism collapsed, agriculture hit hard, foreign investment declined, labor unrest spread, unemployment on the rise, inflation soars, economic growth plunged, public finances deteriorated, value of Egyptian pound fell, purchase power of salaries eroded, half of Egyptians live at or below poverty line, etc., and personal safety and public security have become a daily headache, with the harassment of women becoming a social phenomenon.

And in the name of democracy, according to Jon Lee Anderson, writing in The New Yorker on July 5, "the devils long contained in Egypt's national Pandora's box having been loosened from their chains," so "as if everything in Egypt must now be performed by the mob, for the mob, in full view of everyone."

* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories. nassernicola@ymail.com

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Blanchett the star as Woody Allen returns to form

Posted: 31 Jul 2013 08:13 PM PDT

August 01, 2013
Latest Update: August 01, 2013 07:13 pm

US film director Woody Allen plays clarinet with the New Orleans jazz band on July 21, 2013 in Antibes, southeastern France. - AFP pic, July 21, 2013.US film director Woody Allen plays clarinet with the New Orleans jazz band on July 21, 2013 in Antibes, southeastern France. - AFP pic, July 21, 2013.She might be one of the finest actresses of her generation but Cate Blanchett believed she might never have the chance to work with Woody Allen.

So when the Oscar-winning Australian star was presented with the chance to become the latest in Allen's long line of iconic leading ladies, Blanchett did not hesitate for a second.

"We're all the same, when you get Woody's call, you take it and you've already said yes before you know what it is. You just hope it's a good one," Blanchett recalled.

"I had given up hope of ever working with him, I thought he wasn't interested."

Any possible uncertainty about the quality of the remarkably prolific Allen's latest effort, "Blue Jasmine," evaporated immediately however.

The film, which stars Blanchett as a wealthy New York socialite desperately struggling to adjust to new circumstances after her husband (Alec Baldwin) is mired in a financial scandal, has been talked about as one of Allen's best in years.

Blanchett's towering performance has already seen her installed as early front-runner to add a best actress Academy Award to the Oscar she picked up for her portrayal of Katharine Hepburn in Martin Scorsese's 2004 Howard Hughes biopic "The Aviator."

"No one has started 2013 Oscar talk quite like Cate Blanchett's unanimously acclaimed performance in Blue Jasmine," was the verdict of respected Hollywood industry blog Deadline.com.

Blanchett, who would join the likes of Diane Keaton, Dianne Wiest, Mira Sorvino and Penelope Cruz as actresses who Allen has helped to win an Oscar, said she was mesmerized by "Blue Jasmine" immediately.

"The minute I read the script it was fantastic," Blanchett recalled at a press conference in Beverly Hills.

"It's impeccably structured, it's absurd and tragic, often simultaneously."

But for all the Oscar buzz, the opportunity of working with Allen - in what is his 43rd film - was reward in itself, according to Blanchett.

"I feel privileged to be playing the title role in a Woody Allen film," she says. "He's influenced the popular culture in ways that we can't even know."

Allen - who once confided in an interview that "My heart is in it more when I'm writing for women" - has delivered another superb female character study in "Blue Jasmine" according to Blanchett.

"If you think about all of those extraordinary female creations he's drawn with such wonderful actresses, he's fascinated and loves women - their exuberance, their intelligence, their fears, their phobias," Blanchett said.

Blanchett's own character, a woman set adrift from her privileged moorings, is a case in point.

"I think he (Allen) despised and revered Jasmine and I think he was fascinated by her," Blanchett says.

Blanchett, no stranger to working with A-list directors such as Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, Peter Jackson and David Fincher, admits she wasn't sure what to expect on set with the 77-year-old auteur.

"I had heard that he was monosyllabic, at best, in relation to the directions he gives to actors but I found that if I asked him questions he thought were interesting, he responded," Blanchett said.

"If he didn't, he would just wave me off and would go back to his Blackberry."

With America emerging from the wreckage of one of the most brutal recessions in the country's history, Blanchett says her character in the film is very much a product of her times.

"I think it's happening all over America and all over the world, when people's sense of self is being bound up in (A) a relationship and (B) a financial status, the social circle," she explains.

"When all of that is ripped away, you have, often at mid-life, to look at yourself and say 'Who the hell am I?".

"And if you don't have financial security, a support structure, then madness can pretty quickly set in." - AFP, August 1, 2013.

3D’s terrible summer continues as ‘The Wolverine,’ ‘Turbo’ hit new lows

Posted: 31 Jul 2013 05:10 PM PDT

August 01, 2013

Americans are putting down their tinted 3D glasses and choosing to see more films in old-fashioned, cheaper two dimensions this summer, according to a report by B. Riley & Co analyst Eric Wold. Ticket sales for 3D versions of films including last weekend's "The Wolverine" and the recent animated offering "Turbo" hit new lows for the format over the last two weekends, Wold reports, dipping to just 25 percent of the total box office in the case of "Turbo."

"We have become increasingly concerned that these lower levels will actually represent the norm going forward versus a recent exception as consumers are likely to remain increasingly choosy with 3D premiums," Wold wrote in a note to investors.

3D showings of "Turbo" accounted for just 25 percent of its total box office, which represents the format's worst showing yet. "The Wolverine" fared only slightly better, with 3D screenings contributing 30 percent of its $53.1 million opening weekend. That represents a new low point for 3D action releases.

Both breakdowns were substantially worse than this summer's previous worst showings for 3D, when only 31 percent of "Monsters University"'s $82 million debut came from 3D screenings, while roughly 34 percent of "World War Z"s' $66 million bow came from the format.

Prior to that, the lowest-grossing 3D action movie was "Captain America: The First Avenger," which took 40 percent of its opening grosses from screenings in that format, while the worst showing for an animated film was "Brave," which earned 34 percent of its domestic opening from 3D.

3D is more popular with foreign audiences, where it routinely contributes between 80 percent to 90 percent of a film's box office take in places like Russia and China.

Domestically, it had been expected to produce upwards of 40 percent of a film's box office gross, but that appears to be shifting as U.S. moviegoers are growing more selective about what films they see in the format. It could be the expense. After all, those pictures carry with them a $2 to $3 surcharge.

"3D attach rates in the 30-35 percent range that were previously reserved only for the animated genre have now become more of the norm for action/superhero movies - which indicates that the 3D choosiness of consumers has become increasingly pervasive throughout more genres," Wold wrote.

Wold used evidence of this new "norm" to downgrade his valuation for 3D technology maker RealD. He predicted that other 3D releases this quarter, such as "Percy Jackson Sea of Monsters" and "One Direction: This is Us" will not fare much better. - Reuters, August 1, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


How to win friends and influence people

Posted: 01 Aug 2013 01:49 AM PDT

August 01, 2013
Latest Update: August 01, 2013 05:14 pm

Datuk Zaid Ibrahim founded Malaysia's largest law partnership before focusing on politics. He was a minister in the Abdullah administration, was in Umno, PKR and last in KITA as its president.

In his speech at the breaking of fast in Bukit Antarabangsa yesterday, the Prime Minister spoke of the need to win back the hearts of urban dwellers. He talked about curbing corruption, reducing crime and providing better facilities like urban transport to the people. He also acknowledged past mistakes and had the rare humility and courage to identify the weaknesses in his party. It was, in short, the speech of a leader.

In contrast, a day earlier the Deputy Prime Minister spoke of Muslims needing to be ever vigilant as those insulting Islam were getting increasingly brazen. When referring to a three-year-old video clip showing a Muslim woman celebrating Hari Raya with her dogs, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin warned that "the callousness of some towards Islam and Muslim sensitivities could spark disharmony." He then baited Muslims by asking, "Is this a manifestation of the assumption that we (the Muslims) are weak, and that they (the non-Muslims) can walk all over us? Or that we are afraid to react when they insult the sanctity of Islam?"

Leaders must be guided by reason and facts. Especially in this day and age of the Internet and YouTube, we will come across recordings of statements or conduct which are reflective of the different kinds of human beings who live in Malaysia. These statements are not meant to insult anyone, let alone a religion. UMNO leaders must realise that there is no need to make a quantum leap in interpretation and start a religious war over a relatively small matter that would only bother the smallest of minds.

When I was young there were Malay civil servants and even Malay Rulers who kept dogs as pets. If YouTube had been around then, many people would have seen how these owners caressed and even bathed their dogs with loving care. Would the Deputy Prime Minister have dared say that they were insulting Islam?

When he alleges that many non-Muslims are insulting Islam, he must give us the statistics to back such a claim. He must define what constitutes "insulting" Islam; otherwise, every action he disapproves of can be construed as a huge political attack on Islam. I know many Muslims like to buy lottery tickets, although the religious authorities think they have made all Muslims comply with their ban against participating in such activities.

Suppose someone were to post a YouTube video showing these wayward Muslims coming out of the Big Sweep shops—would the Deputy Prime Minister also say that people out there (in his mind it would be the non-Muslims of course) were insulting Islam?

UMNO must have leaders who use reason, not wild emotions. At the moment, every voice of reason we hear threatens to be drowned out by others who seem to have abandoned logic and measured thinking altogether. If the Prime Minister wants to win back urban voters, he must have a new deputy who is more sophisticated.

Urban voters like to hear consistent messages from their leaders.  Urban voters want the Prime Minister and his deputy singing the same tune.  In fact, it's unprecedented that in this great country, the Deputy Prime Minister always seems to sing a different tune from his boss.

He has forgotten that he is in the Cabinet because the Prime Minister selected him. It is clearly time for UMNO to choose one from the other. The two men of different political beliefs and styles of leadership must come head-to-head for the sake of urban voters. Living together when there is no longer any love is painful not just for the parties concerned, but for the people.

Who could be a good party deputy to Dato' Sri Najib? Datuk Seri Hishamnuddin Hussein is one possible candidate, but he is not colourful enough to push Muhyiddin out. Hishammuddin might also not want to risk everything on a single roll of the dice. Datuk Abdul Ghani Othman would come under "the reasonable man" category but he will not be strong enough to garner support after losing to Lim Kit Siang in Gelang Patah in GE13.

I like Tan Sri Isa Samad, who is popular, likable and a veteran despite being still quite young. He has nothing to lose but a lot to gain if he were to try. He could be a good Deputy President for UMNO. Of course, he was found guilty of money politics but that is par for the course in that party, and it shouldn't shape perception of him as being any less desirable as a candidate for the post. When you are found guilty of money politics in UMNO it means that you are enough of a threat to make some higher-ups want to slow you down. No moral stigma is attached to you at all.

What I like about Isa is that he is not a demagogue and will not start a civil war. Najib should encourage him to go for the party post of Deputy President and give Muhyiddin a run. Najib could always appoint someone else as Deputy Prime Minister if necessary. Then we can see a good fight, as I am sure there are others like Dato' Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi who think he  should be Deputy President of UMNO.

Khairy Jamaluddin is the preferred choice for  me as Deputy President and would make a good Deputy Prime Minister to Najib. He is young and a liberal (at least by UMNO standards). He has the resources to go for the party's second highest spot, and his victory would signal to the world that UMNO is a progressive party and that Najib is trying to bring about change by introducing a young leader to help helm the nation.

Although Khairy thinks he is God's gift to Malaysia, he is, in fact, a capable leader and more importantly, a reasonable man—a rare thing indeed in UMNO. Since Datuk Mukhriz Mahathir is going for one of the vice-president posts, it would be remiss of Khairy not to go above him. Sons ( or son in law) of former prime ministers always do well in a feudal  political party.

We could say it's their business to decide which of these men they want as leaders, except that if the demagogues win the day the country will be in even greater peril than it already is.

Although many Opposition leaders say UMNO will not be governing the country soon, I am not so sure. The machinery is strong and in the eyes of many voters the Government is synonymous with the party. If they are to continue to rule, then we might as well hope that they get enough decent leaders to lead.

Whatever they decide to do; one thing is sure; they will not win back the urban voters unless they use the proven and tested formula of how to win friends and influence people!

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

How to win friends and influence people

Posted: 01 Aug 2013 01:49 AM PDT

August 01, 2013
Latest Update: August 01, 2013 05:14 pm

Datuk Zaid Ibrahim founded Malaysia's largest law partnership before focusing on politics. He was a minister in the Abdullah administration, was in Umno, PKR and last in KITA as its president.

In his speech at the breaking of fast in Bukit Antarabangsa yesterday, the Prime Minister spoke of the need to win back the hearts of urban dwellers. He talked about curbing corruption, reducing crime and providing better facilities like urban transport to the people. He also acknowledged past mistakes and had the rare humility and courage to identify the weaknesses in his party. It was, in short, the speech of a leader.

In contrast, a day earlier the Deputy Prime Minister spoke of Muslims needing to be ever vigilant as those insulting Islam were getting increasingly brazen. When referring to a three-year-old video clip showing a Muslim woman celebrating Hari Raya with her dogs, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin warned that "the callousness of some towards Islam and Muslim sensitivities could spark disharmony." He then baited Muslims by asking, "Is this a manifestation of the assumption that we (the Muslims) are weak, and that they (the non-Muslims) can walk all over us? Or that we are afraid to react when they insult the sanctity of Islam?"

Leaders must be guided by reason and facts. Especially in this day and age of the Internet and YouTube, we will come across recordings of statements or conduct which are reflective of the different kinds of human beings who live in Malaysia. These statements are not meant to insult anyone, let alone a religion. UMNO leaders must realise that there is no need to make a quantum leap in interpretation and start a religious war over a relatively small matter that would only bother the smallest of minds.

When I was young there were Malay civil servants and even Malay Rulers who kept dogs as pets. If YouTube had been around then, many people would have seen how these owners caressed and even bathed their dogs with loving care. Would the Deputy Prime Minister have dared say that they were insulting Islam?

When he alleges that many non-Muslims are insulting Islam, he must give us the statistics to back such a claim. He must define what constitutes "insulting" Islam; otherwise, every action he disapproves of can be construed as a huge political attack on Islam. I know many Muslims like to buy lottery tickets, although the religious authorities think they have made all Muslims comply with their ban against participating in such activities.

Suppose someone were to post a YouTube video showing these wayward Muslims coming out of the Big Sweep shops—would the Deputy Prime Minister also say that people out there (in his mind it would be the non-Muslims of course) were insulting Islam?

UMNO must have leaders who use reason, not wild emotions. At the moment, every voice of reason we hear threatens to be drowned out by others who seem to have abandoned logic and measured thinking altogether. If the Prime Minister wants to win back urban voters, he must have a new deputy who is more sophisticated.

Urban voters like to hear consistent messages from their leaders.  Urban voters want the Prime Minister and his deputy singing the same tune.  In fact, it's unprecedented that in this great country, the Deputy Prime Minister always seems to sing a different tune from his boss.

He has forgotten that he is in the Cabinet because the Prime Minister selected him. It is clearly time for UMNO to choose one from the other. The two men of different political beliefs and styles of leadership must come head-to-head for the sake of urban voters. Living together when there is no longer any love is painful not just for the parties concerned, but for the people.

Who could be a good party deputy to Dato' Sri Najib? Datuk Seri Hishamnuddin Hussein is one possible candidate, but he is not colourful enough to push Muhyiddin out. Hishammuddin might also not want to risk everything on a single roll of the dice. Datuk Abdul Ghani Othman would come under "the reasonable man" category but he will not be strong enough to garner support after losing to Lim Kit Siang in Gelang Patah in GE13.

I like Tan Sri Isa Samad, who is popular, likable and a veteran despite being still quite young. He has nothing to lose but a lot to gain if he were to try. He could be a good Deputy President for UMNO. Of course, he was found guilty of money politics but that is par for the course in that party, and it shouldn't shape perception of him as being any less desirable as a candidate for the post. When you are found guilty of money politics in UMNO it means that you are enough of a threat to make some higher-ups want to slow you down. No moral stigma is attached to you at all.

What I like about Isa is that he is not a demagogue and will not start a civil war. Najib should encourage him to go for the party post of Deputy President and give Muhyiddin a run. Najib could always appoint someone else as Deputy Prime Minister if necessary. Then we can see a good fight, as I am sure there are others like Dato' Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi who think he  should be Deputy President of UMNO.

Khairy Jamaluddin is the preferred choice for  me as Deputy President and would make a good Deputy Prime Minister to Najib. He is young and a liberal (at least by UMNO standards). He has the resources to go for the party's second highest spot, and his victory would signal to the world that UMNO is a progressive party and that Najib is trying to bring about change by introducing a young leader to help helm the nation.

Although Khairy thinks he is God's gift to Malaysia, he is, in fact, a capable leader and more importantly, a reasonable man—a rare thing indeed in UMNO. Since Datuk Mukhriz Mahathir is going for one of the vice-president posts, it would be remiss of Khairy not to go above him. Sons ( or son in law) of former prime ministers always do well in a feudal  political party.

We could say it's their business to decide which of these men they want as leaders, except that if the demagogues win the day the country will be in even greater peril than it already is.

Although many Opposition leaders say UMNO will not be governing the country soon, I am not so sure. The machinery is strong and in the eyes of many voters the Government is synonymous with the party. If they are to continue to rule, then we might as well hope that they get enough decent leaders to lead.

Whatever they decide to do; one thing is sure; they will not win back the urban voters unless they use the proven and tested formula of how to win friends and influence people!

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Parti komponen BN Selangor, MCA MIC dan Gerakan, perlu tetap pendirian, tinggal parti, kata Guan Eng

Posted: 01 Aug 2013 02:50 AM PDT

OLEH MOHD FARHAN DARWIS
August 01, 2013
Latest Update: August 01, 2013 05:55 pm

Parti komponen Barisan Nasional (BN) Selangor seharusnya berpendirian tegas dengan meninggalkan gabungan berkenaan supaya dapat mengelak daripada dikaitkan dengan "pemimpin gila" seperti Datuk Seri Noh Omar kerana mahu ibu pelajar yang membuat pendedahan kantin di bilik persalinan ditahan di bawah Akta Hasutan, kata Lim Guan Eng.

Setiausaha Agung DAP itu mengulas kenyataan  Pengerusi Umno Selangor itu yang mahu pendedah maklumat kes SK Sri Pristina dikenakan akta kolonial itu.

"Jelas tidak wujud keyakinan dalam kenyataan Presiden MCA, Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek yang memanggil Noh Omar 'gila' kerana mahu Gunewari disiasat di bawah Akta Hasutan kerana mendedahkan gambar kantin sementara di bilik mandi tersebut, apabila MCA masih lagi bekerjasama dengan Umno di Selangor," kata Lim dalam satu kenyataannya hari ini.

Pemimpin DAP itu menegaskan, selagi MCA, Gerakan dan MIC tetap bekerjasama dengan Umno dalam BN Selangor dengan diketuai Noh Omar sebagai Pengerusi Badan Perhubungan Umno Selangor, sebarang kritikan terhadap pemimpin Umno itu dengan  mengatakannya "gila" hanyalah satu lagi pementasan drama atau wayang kulit yang akan dilupakan dalam masa seminggu.

"Ini hanya memperlihatkan hakikat bahawa parti komponen BN tidak berkongsi sebarang nilai kerana mereka adalah parti politik perkauman yang mewakili satu kaum sahaja.

"Namun parti politik perkauman mono-etnik yang mengasingkan kaum lain masih boleh bekerja bersama-sama dalam BN kerana mereka mempunyai objektif yang sama dalam membiarkan rasuah, salahguna kuasa dan kapitalisme kroni," tegasnya lagi.

Lim menegaskan, MCA, Gerakan dan MIC patut keluar daripada BN Selangor bagi membuktikan keikhlasan mereka untuk tidak dikaitkan dengan Noh Omar.

Isu melibatkan pengetua sekolah semakin menjadi perhatian apabila isu pelajar menjadikan bilik persalinan sebagai kantin sementara di SK Seri Pristina didedahkan kepada umum.

Selain itu, isu pengetua sekolah yang memarahi pelajarnya kerana tidak menghormati lagu Negaraku dengan menyuruh mereka "Balik India, China, Indonesia" juga menerima perhatian banyak pihak.

Justeru, Ahli Parlimen Bagan itu meletakkan kegagalan Kementerian Pendidikan untuk bertindak terhadap pengetua-pengetua yang bersifat perkauman sejak dahulu sebaliknya hanya membenarkan tabiat yang tidak sihat untuk terus berleluasa.

"Di mana semangat 1Malaysia di sekolah-sekolah, dan kenapa pula ibu bapa bukan Melayu mahu dipersalahkan apabila mereka tidak mahu menghantar anak mereka ke sekolah menengah kerajaan?

"Malahan apabila masih wujud golongan pendidik yang bersifat perkauman," katanya. - 1 Ogos, 2013. Parti komponen Barisan Nasional (BN) Selangor seharusnya berpendirian tegas dengan meninggalkan gabungan berkenaan supaya dapat mengelak daripada dikaitkan dengan "pemimpin gila" seperti Datuk Seri Noh Omar kerana mahu ibu pelajar yang membuat pendedahan kantin di bilik persalinan ditahan di bawah Akta Hasutan, kata Lim Guan Eng.

Setiausaha Agung DAP itu mengulas kenyataan  Pengerusi Umno Selangor itu yang mahu pendedah maklumat kes SK Sri Pristina dikenakan akta kolonial itu.

"Jelas tidak wujud keyakinan dalam kenyataan Presiden MCA, Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek yang memanggil Noh Omar 'gila' kerana mahu Gunewari disiasat di bawah Akta Hasutan kerana mendedahkan gambar kantin sementara di bilik mandi tersebut, apabila MCA masih lagi bekerjasama dengan Umno di Selangor," kata Lim dalam satu kenyataannya hari ini.

Pemimpin DAP itu menegaskan, selagi MCA, Gerakan dan MIC tetap bekerjasama dengan Umno dalam BN Selangor dengan diketuai Noh Omar sebagai Pengerusi Badan Perhubungan Umno Selangor, sebarang kritikan terhadap pemimpin Umno itu dengan  mengatakannya "gila" hanyalah satu lagi pementasan drama atau wayang kulit yang akan dilupakan dalam masa seminggu.

"Ini hanya memperlihatkan hakikat bahawa parti komponen BN tidak berkongsi sebarang nilai kerana mereka adalah parti politik perkauman yang mewakili satu kaum sahaja.

"Namun parti politik perkauman mono-etnik yang mengasingkan kaum lain masih boleh bekerja bersama-sama dalam BN kerana mereka mempunyai objektif yang sama dalam membiarkan rasuah, salahguna kuasa dan kapitalisme kroni," tegasnya lagi.

Lim menegaskan, MCA, Gerakan dan MIC patut keluar daripada BN Selangor bagi membuktikan keikhlasan mereka untuk tidak dikaitkan dengan Noh Omar.

Isu melibatkan pengetua sekolah semakin menjadi perhatian apabila isu pelajar menjadikan bilik persalinan sebagai kantin sementara di SK Seri Pristina didedahkan kepada umum.

Selain itu, isu pengetua sekolah yang memarahi pelajarnya kerana tidak menghormati lagu Negaraku dengan menyuruh mereka "Balik India, China, Indonesia" juga menerima perhatian banyak pihak.

Justeru, Ahli Parlimen Bagan itu meletakkan kegagalan Kementerian Pendidikan untuk bertindak terhadap pengetua-pengetua yang bersifat perkauman sejak dahulu sebaliknya hanya membenarkan tabiat yang tidak sihat untuk terus berleluasa.

"Di mana semangat 1Malaysia di sekolah-sekolah, dan kenapa pula ibu bapa bukan Melayu mahu dipersalahkan apabila mereka tidak mahu menghantar anak mereka ke sekolah menengah kerajaan?

"Malahan apabila masih wujud golongan pendidik yang bersifat perkauman," katanya. - 1 Ogos, 2013.

Artikel ‘Chinese Dilemma’ Tun M digugur dari Facebook

Posted: 01 Aug 2013 01:54 AM PDT

Oleh Mohd Farhan Darwis

August 01, 2013

Facebook Dr Mahathir.Facebook Dr Mahathir.Artikel yang ditulis bekas Perdana Menteri Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad digugurkan daripada laman sosial Facebook atas dakwaan menyalahi standard komuniti.

Artikel bertajuk "The Chinese Dilemma" itu digugurkan selepas pentadbir laman Facebook Dr Mahathir memuat naik artikel berkenaan yang juga boleh didapati dalam akhbar berbahasa Inggeris New Straits Times (NST).

"Kelmarin pentadbir (admin) meletakkan satu rencana yang ditulis oleh mantan Perdana Menteri kita ini bertajuk The Chinese Dillema.  Artikel itu dibuang kerana melanggar community standard, kononnya. Ini bermakna ramai tersentuh dan menentang serta komplen apa yang ditulis oleh YAB Tun kepada Facebook," kata admin Facebook milik Dr Mahathir yang hanya dikenali sebagai "KN".

KN juga turut menyeru orang ramai membaca artikel berkenaan yang boleh didapati di laman web NST dan menilai sama ada artikel berkenaan benar-benar menyentuh standard komuniti atau sebaliknya.

"Anda baca sendiri di New Straits Times web edition dan tentukan sendiri sama ada ia melanggar community standard Facebook atau lebih menyerlah apa yang dipanggil "unpleasant truth," kata admin Facebook berkenaan.

Dipercayai artikel Dr Mahathir itu digugurkan setelah menerima banyak aduan menyalahi standard komuniti.

Malah, ia berkemungkinan dipercayai menimbulkan ucapan berunsur kebencian, yang mana menurut laman sosial berkenaan "menyerang individu berdasarkan kaum, etnik, asal usul, agama, seks, jantina, orientasi seksual, kurang upaya, atau penyakit."

Dr Mahathir dalam ruangan artikel beliau itu menulis komuniti China memperolehi hasilnya melalui perkongsian kuasa dalam kerajaan Barisan Nasional (BN).

Beliau berkata, taraf kehidupan mereka juga lebih baik berbanding zaman sebelum Kemerdekaan yang ketika itu Malaysia ditadbir oleh British.

Masyarakat Cina membentuk 30 peratus daripada 28 juta populasi di negara ini.

Serangan dan kritikan terhadap sesetengah bangsa mula terbit apabila keputusan Pilihan Raya 2013 menunjukkan BN kehilangan sokongan pengundi Cina.

Akhbar Umno, Utusan Malaysia kemudiannya memaparkan tajuk muka hadapan "Apa Lagi Cina Mahu" yang mencetuskan kontroversi dan kritikan banyak pihak. - 1 Ogos, 2013.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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