ini blog aku yang punya...suka hati aku lah apa aku nak kata....maki hamun ke...carut ke...kata nista ....aku punya suka...tak suka....please get out dari sini....ada faham....


saje nak bagi tau....blog ini bukan pro pakatan rakyat...dan jauh panggang dari api....penyokong parti kongkek negara ( BN ) ...dan tiada kena mengena dengan mereka yang dah mampos......muakakakaka!!!
SOKONG HIMPUNAN BLACKOUT 505.......JOM LIKE DI SINI

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terNOW...!!!!

SPR semakin merapu dengan menghalalkan pengundi hantu....bermakna mengalakkan pilihanraya yang kotor....apakah tindakan anda semua ?

petisyen melalui blog ini : jika perhimpunan aman blackout 505 dan petisyen pilihanraya masih gagal untuk mengalahkan penipuan yang di lakukan oleh SPR dan UMNO - BN...wajar kita sebagai rakyat lancarkan BERSIH 4.0 dan turun ke jalanraya..!!

02 December 2009

Blacklist kot...????....Najib, Che Det, Pak Lah, Nor Yaakob, Husni...di maklumkan tiada dalam list ini....















Anwar Ibrahim telah tersenarai sebagai orang yang ke 32 Pemikir Terbaik Dunia. Majalah Foreign Policy yang berpusat di Washington DC telah menyenaraikan 100 individu yang telah menyumbangkan buah fikiran terbaik mereka untuk kemakmuran masyarakat dunia.

Ben Bernanke tercatat sebagai orang pertama. Dick Cheney tercatat pemikir yang ke 13. Manakala Paul Kennedy, seorang sejarawan di Universiti Yale adalah pemikir yang ke 100.

Setelah disemak keseluruhan 100 nama pemikir terbaik dunia, saya tidak terjumpa nama Najib Razak, Mahathir apa tah lagi Abdullah Badawi.

Tahniah kepada Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim dan tahniah juga kepada Pakatan Rakyat kerana mempunyai pemimpin yang ideanya diakui memberi manfaat kepada masyarakat sejagat.

Apalah nak jadi dengan Datuk Seri Najib ni. Satu apa pengiktirafan yang positif pun dia tidak dapat.

32. Anwar Ibrahim

for challenging the Muslim world to embrace democracy.

Opposition leader | People's Justice Party | Malaysia

Two decades ago, it would have been impossible to imagine Anwar pulling together rural Malays, ethnic Indians and Chinese, and Islamists into a coherent political bloc. Back then, Anwar was deputy prime minister in a de facto single-party state that espoused preferential treatment for ethnic Malays. It was a policy that Anwar had pushed from his days as a youth leader right up until 1997, when he denounced his patron, then-Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, for corruption. He would spend the next six years in solitary confinement on trumped-up charges for that political betrayal. And he would leave jail in 2004 with a bold message for change in a country now at the forefront of the struggle for democracy in the Muslim world. Today, Anwar's political career is blossoming, despite a new, politically motivated indictment. Abroad, he has become an outspoken advocate of religious tolerance.

He sat down with Foreign Policy to talk about his big ideas:

On Muslim countries and the West: You can't just erase a period of imperialism and colonialism. You can't erase the fault lines, the bad policies, the failed policies, the war in Iraq, and support for dictators. That to me is the reality. But what is the problem? When you … apportion the blame only to the West or the United States. They want to deflect from the issue of repression, endemic corruption, and destruction of the institutions of governance.

On his time in prison: I spent a lot of time reading. I decided to focus on the great works and the classics. Friends from around the world were sending books, but it takes months for [the prison] to vet them. There came a book on the Green Revolution at that time. The officer said, "Anything revolution -- out!" even though it was about agriculture. But the books kept coming. The officers were not even graduates, and [the books] were in English. They would say, "Anwar, out of 10 books, can you send back one?" So I would select something I had already read or something I was not interested in and say, "We should reject this."

On politics: Of course, you simplify the arguments [for politics], but the central thesis remains constant. People say, "Anwar, you are opportunistic. How can you talk about Islam and the Quran here, and then you talk about Shakespeare and quote Jefferson or Edmund Burke?" I say, it depends on the audience. You can't talk about Edmund Burke in some remote village in Afghanistan. Then you go to Kuala Lumpur and you quote T.S. Eliot. If I quote the Quran all the time to a group of lawyers, [they will think] I am a mullah from somewhere!

- Foreign Policy

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