Categories
Environment Science & technology

[990] Of incorporating wildlife-friendly designs into our highway system

If a person is a member of the Malaysian Nature Society — any green for that matter — this piece of news is especially depressing:

SHAH ALAM: A tapir was killed and two cars were badly damaged in an accident in Puncak Alam early yesterday.

The adult female tapir was crossing the road about 6am when it was hit by a Proton Wira driven by an army personnel.

The impact caused the animal to be flung to the opposite side of the road where it was hit by another car.

Below is the tapir in question:

Fair use. By New Straits Times, December 6 2006.

The Malayan tapir is the icon of MNS.

Construction of highways across biologically diverse ecologies disrupts wildlife movement. It effectively divides a single ecology into two, much like how the Berlin Wall once divided Germany into two. The division is unnatural and adversely affects wildlife. For any pragmatic nature lover that seeks to conform to both modernity and conservation, any freeway crossing through natural wildlife habitat should have barriers to prevent “jaywalking” and special underpasses or over-crossings specially built to allow animals to cross such highway safely.

The idea of constructing crossings for animals in the wild is not new. It has been tested in North America. An MSNBC article, More wildlife getting helped across the highway, shows how such crossings enables the free flow of human and wildlife alike, while guaranteeing the safety of both. Below is a visual example of such crossings:

Fair use. By Anthony P. Clevenger, Western Transportation Institute

As mentioned in the MSNBC article, the picture was taken at Banff National Park, Canada.

It’s time we incorporate green designs into our highways and prevent future accident, in memory of the tapir. Life, regardless of species, is too precious to waste.

Categories
Photography

[989] Of Kuala Lumpur from Brickfields

My current office, well, one of my two current offices, is located at the top floor of a building in Kuala Lumpur. The view is lovely. I could see the Parliament, the Tugu Negara, Bangsar, Genting Highlands and the city itself, among other things, from the office.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

The sun was setting when I took the shot.

Categories
Conflict & disaster Sports

[988] Of who’s up against Ohio State now?

The Trojans lost to the Bruins. I didn’t expect that:

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — Southern California’s dejected players trudged off the Rose Bowl field, oblivious to the celebration going on around them.

Their national championship hopes had just ended with the biggest upset of the season.

UCLA knocked No. 2 USC out of the Bowl Championship Series title game with a stunning 13-9 victory over its crosstown rival Saturday. The Bruins did it with a vastly improved defense and a quarterback starting on three days’ notice.

With the Trojans completely out of the picture as far as national championship is concerned, we have only two teams to pick and match against Ohio State: Florida and Michigan.

I obviously prefer Michigan but let Michigan and Florida duke ’em out! Let’s have a playoff just to determine who should be up against the Fuckeyes.

And at the NYT:

The Bruins won despite just 235 yards of total offense and not completing a pass of more than 21 yards.

“I’m not going to sleep tonight,” Markey [Bruins tailback] said, smiling. “I’m not going to sleep for days.”

Much like folks in Ann Arbor, Mich., and Gainesville, Fla., but for very different reasons.

Word.

p/s – this is tragic:

BEIT HANOUN, Gaza (Reuters) – Hussein Kafarneh is a muezzin without a mosque.

For nearly 30 years he led the traditional call to prayer at Beit Hanoun’s al-Nasser shrine, one of the oldest mosques in Gaza, climbing the twisting steps to the top of the white stone minaret five times a day.

His father did the same for 40 years before him.

Then, on November 3 this year, as Israeli forces pursued an offensive in Gaza, they clashed with Palestinian militants holed up inside and nearby the mosque, using it as cover.

A dramatic stand-off ensued, with Israeli tanks aiming their barrels toward the shrine and around 60 well-armed militants firing rounds back toward the Israelis.

I blame both sides.

Categories
Liberty Personal Photography Politics & government Pop culture Society

[987] Of satire at Istana Seri Menanti

It’s 2 AM on a Sunday. I just got back from a dinner event at Istana Seri Menanti.

To those that organized the sketch, I salute thee. It takes courage to stage it in front of the King and the Chief Minister of Negeri Sembilan. Thanks goodness that we still have some freedom of expression in this country, despite daily erosion.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

If this is the kind of quality play held at every annual MCOBA dinner, I wouldn’t mind attending the next edition. And the next too. Great job guys.

And, haha, thanks to Project Sayong for sponsoring my ticket. But I wonder, would this play hurt the project? LOL!

p/s – Nik Nazmi describes the play.

Categories
Politics & government This blog

[986] Of green here doesn’t refer to Islam

I have a feeling that some people think I’m a Liberal Islam because I call myself a green libertarian. Allow me to reiterate, I’m not part of Liberal Islam school of thought. I would like to clarify that the green in “green libertarian” is environmentalism. One way or another, typically, it’s free market environmentalism.

I hope that clears the air up.