Categories
Humor Society Sports

[794] Of Pope and birth rate

The Pope yesterday cites secularism as the reason why Canada is having a low birth rate. More:

VATICAN CITY – Pope Benedict XVI said Saturday that low birth rates in Canada are the result of the “pervasive effects of secularism” and asked the country’s bishops to counter the trend by preaching the truth of Christ.

Benedict, who has spoken out several times in favor of large families, blamed Canada’s low birth rate on social ills and moral ambiguities that result from secular ideology.

Heh. And I blame the Pope (well, Vatican to be precise) for causing overpopulation and hence, shortage of food in Africa.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

p/s – Haha! Just discovered that Scott Adams blogs! Adams is the author of Dilbert but who doesn’t know that?

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

pp/s – sucks. MSU gets on front page today at Wikipedia. I won’t bother linking to our intrastate rival.

Categories
Environment Society Sports

[792] Of An Inconvenient Truth

Two summers ago, a movie created a debate on climate change. It was The Day After Tomorrow. The movie was fun, Emma Rossum was great (I’m falling in love LOL!) and there was a Michigan t-shirt in the movie (Go Blue!). However, the movie exaggerated the effect of climate change. This May, comes another movie that will rock the greens’ world. It isn’t an exaggeration and it’s called An Inconvenient Truth.

An Inconvenient Truth isn’t a movie like The Day After Tomorrow. It’s a kind of documentary, with Al Gore in it. RealClimate.org calls the documentary as Al Gore’s movie.

I first heard about An Inconvenient Truth at WorldChanging.com. It will hit cinemas in the US on May 24 but I don’t know if it would ever reach Malaysian shore. Instead of Mission Impossible or The Da Vinci’s Code, I want to catch this film. This should be better than Fahrenheit 9/11. But for me to be able to watch it at the Malaysians cinemas, those in the US have to ensure the film receives good returns – the film has to get a good ticket collection. Why? At WorldChanging, in the same entry:

This movie will change the American debate on climate, if people get a chance to see it. But in order for them to see it, it needs to do well its first weekend. If you are an American and read this site, it is your duty to go see this film the weekend it opens.

Else, in absence of the legal version, as much as I hate to say it, I’d have to resort to piracy. So, those in the US, please watch it, so I could too!

See the trailer at Google Video.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

p/s – Henk ten Cate joins Ajax Amsterdam as the new head coach. Until today, ten Cate was Frank Rijkaard’s assistant as Barca, this season European champion.

Categories
Politics & government Pop culture Society

[788] Of Sepet, Gubra and Marock

When Sepet came out, some people called the film as un-Malaysian. When Gubra came out, the same some people called it “pencemar budaya“. Pencemar budaya basically means culture polluter, whatever that is supposed to mean.

Well, about eight hours behind Malaysia, in Morocco, a film known as Marock is receiving similar hostile remarks.

In a report by Associated Press:

Acclaimed Moroccan director Mohamed Asli said “Marock” did not deserve inclusion in the festivals because it was “not a real Moroccan film,” although he subsequently told a magazine that he welcomed the public release because it would open debate. Some critics claimed to detect sinister Zionist propaganda in the depicted Jewish-Muslim romance.

By Morocco Times:

Laila Marrakchi’s new film Marock has received harsh criticism in Morocco during its screening at the National Film Festival held last week in Tangiers.

Several film directors and critics have attacked Marock and even went further to question Marrakchi’s nationality as a Moroccan.

Mohammed Asli, director of “In Casablanca, Angels don’t fly”, started a ferocious campaign against the young director, saying that her film “should not have been screened in the festival.”

Malaysian films Sepet and its sequel Gubra’s storyline sound similar to Marock’s in principle; it’s about cross cultural relationship. But in both Malaysia and Morocco, conservatives’ are having problem accepting the films’ premise.

Sepet and Gubra of course aren’t a love story involving a Muslim and a Jew but it’s about a Malay and a Chinese teenagers. If I may be a little bit politically incorrect, Chinese are the Jews of Southeast Asia. Even if you couldn’t accept that statement, don’t worry. To Malaysian conservatives, those on the extreme rights of political spectrum, all non-Muslims are Jewish. And all Malays are Muslims, at least constitutionally. So, the two counterparts actually concern one issue – intimate relationship between a Muslim and a Jew.

Well, now I know that Morocco and Malaysia have at least one thing in common; narrow-minded conservatives in both countries hate films on cross cultural relationship.

I highly advise all cultural conservative people to not live in a cosmopolitan society. It might be bad for your health.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

p/s – Whoa. Is Karl Rove being indicted? Rumors abound!

The source of this rumor seems to have originated from Jason Leopold at truthout.org. If true, cool!

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

pp/s – well, that indictment thing is false.

Categories
Society

[781] Of P. Ramlee and moving forward

Last week, Fenomena Seni – a program on Radio Televisyen Malaysia (RTM) that discusses the state of the arts in Malaysia – created a considerable buzz in the Malaysian blogosphere. I missed the excitement but this week, I caught it on TV and it didn’t disappoint me. The program is rich in vigor and probably, along with Debat Perdana, might herald RTM’s renaissance. Anyway, the topic for this week is about P. Ramlee; the program raises the question, are Malaysians giving P. Ramlee too much credit?

The question was raised in Malay and given that I have problem recalling the exact phrase, I might be guilty of mistranslating the question. But within context, I’m confident that it’s accurate.

For the uninitiated, P. Ramlee is considered by many Malaysians as the greatest actor, director and songwriter Malaysia has ever produced. I don’t want to go too much into why P. Ramlee is great. So, I’ll leave you with an article from the trusty ol’ Wikipedia.

The general sentiment of the show was that P. Ramlee is great and nobody should question that. While the show was running, a survey was conducted and the result was announced at the end. The proposition of the survey is similar to the topic and a little over 80% of the survey correspondents answered no. Though the survey wasn’t scientific, if a scientific survey were conducted instead, I doubt the yield would differ by much.

There were three guests on the show. One of them, Member of Parliament from Sri Gading, Mohamed Aziz, repeatedly said that nobody will be able to match P. Ramlee, reinforcing the 80% opinion. I feel that is an unfortunate conclusion that bares dim future for the Malaysian song and film industry.

If this is the case, then nobody would be able to challenge P. Ramlee’s greatness. Nowhere in the future will Malaysia be able to produce an artist better than P. Ramlee because a majority thinks nobody could match P. Ramlee. Because of this, I feel we are looking too much into the past. We grant P. Ramlee the status of god that today, many of us would feel offended by the slightest suggestion that somebody might be better than P. Ramlee. This is no right mindset to move forward.

If P. Ramlee must be left unchallenged, I fear the Malaysian song and film industry will never improve. All of us are too scared to be better than our predecessors, much less a god. After all, challenging a god is an unthinkable blasphemous act, isn’t it?

Such fear is unfounded and an obstacle to a better Malaysia. That god is the creation of our mind. For each that we created, we could uncreate. It’s important for us to take back the godlike status we have conferred to P. Ramlee, if P. Ramlee is preventing us from moving forward.

Categories
Liberty Politics & government Society

[757] Of Jill Carroll is free

Yes, she is. I saw a report on Bloomberg just now and Bloomberg says Al-Jazeera and Reuters have confirmed the news. I however have yet to see an online report. Should be up soon, I presume. She’s from Ann Arbor and would probably be on her way to Ann Arbor soon.

Jill Carroll was kidnapped sometimes ago in Iraq and was feared dead earlier.

p/s – remember my post entitled [754] Of the strengthening role of religion within the government?

Well, in that entry, I wrote in jest that “through extrapolation, maybe, the government would send Muslims to jail for missing prayers in the future.” I didn’t quite believe it was possible. Apparently, I was wrong.

There is already such provision in Kelantan. It’s Section 101 of the Kelantan Islamic Council and Malay Customs Enactment 1986 (Amendment 1994). More:

In a rare case, a 68-year-old man was fined RM300 or one month’s jail for not attending Friday prayers in his mukim (sub-district).

Mohamad Taib, from Kedepal here, pleaded guilty to not attending Friday prayers at a mosque in his area three consecutive times, an offence which in Kelantan carries a maximum RM1,000 fine or a six-month jail term.

Religious prosecution is not all. Civil liberty was also threatened; privacy intruded:

The labourer was caught by Pasir Mas Religious Affairs Department officers after two months of surveillance at the mosque.

Pasir Mas Lower Syariah Court prosecutor Rohani Kadir said the officers and mosque officials found that Mohamad had not attended Friday prayers at the mosque between June and July last year.

And I thought the presence of CCTVs in Kuala Lumpur is already bad. Thank goodness, Kelantan is not my home. In a way, I’m grateful that Malaysia is a federation. If it were a unitary state, it would get really ugly to have such law.

If there a similar federal clause on that, those green cards would start to be overly attractive. Imagine the reason to emigrate: escaping religious prosecution. LOL!

Or maybe, it’s not so funny after all.

pp/s – two hours to the tabling of the Ninth Malaysian Plan and what am I doing? Trying to convince my mom into buying equities of major Malaysian construction-based firms. Well, correction – a buying frenzy.

ppp/s – alright. Not A2 but Boston.