Sunday, May 31, 2009

Trip to Perhentian Destinasiku

Hahaha...tengok tajuk tu macam pantun, tapi yang sebenarnya pantun tu merangkap benda yang terjadi kat gue harini. Harini, 31.05.2009, Puteriku datang dengan kawan2 dia mai ke P.D (Perhentian Destinasi) dengan her friend. Ader yang gue kenal & ader yang gue tak kenal dan baru berkenalan...hehehehe...boleh la kenal2 dengan geng *.*.R (teka la kalau pandai).... mula2 gue segan la jugak sebab depa semua geng2 hawa...pastu puteri gue kata tak pa gue pon buat2 tak segan la...hehehehe...nak dijadikan cerita gue ni disuruh jadi tourist guide..padahal gue pon bukan selalu jalan2 pon walaupun gue duk kat Perhentian Destinasi ni. Jadi gue pon bawak la puteri gue n her fren gi tengok rumah api. HAHAHAHA... Satu pengalaman yang menyeronokkan dan memenatkan...dah lah tengahari, ditambah pulak dengan perjalanan 400 meter keatas bukit... aPalagi semua mandi air peluh masing2 lah disebabkan semua dressing pn macam nak gi tengokwayang, bukan nak bersukan... hahahaha...gue pon penat la...tapi bila sampai kat puncak tu rasa macam berbaloi saja berjalan mendaki bukit sejauh 400 meter tu... Sebap view kat situ memukau mata memandang....

Setelah puas masing2 berposing utk mengabdikan foto masing2 utk dibuat kenangan, kami pon turun lah.... yang best tu puteriku n gue berjalan seiring dari naik bukit sampai la turun bukit.. tu yang buat bagi gue sayang kat puteri gue tuh... hehehehe... memang satu kenangan yang indah buat gue ber sama puteri n her fren....

Memang gue takkan lupakan kenangan ini, semoga puteri n her fren tak marah gue walaupun gue banyak kali salah tunjuk jalan hehehe (gue lupa lah) Semoga Puteri n her fren Enjoy datang ke kawasan gue di Perhentian Destinasi ni... ok lah.. gue chow dulu.. kalau ada cita menarik lagi baru gue update.... Auf Wiedersehen !!!

Saturday, February 7, 2009

To Gain Success In This New Era

The first two great successes of our foreign policy have remained the most enduring. Without them our nation today would no longer have any importance at all. They were the first, but unfortunately the only successful attempt to bring the rising population into harmony with the quantity of our soil. And it must be regarded as truly catastrophic that our Malay historians have never been able to estimate correctly these two achievements which are by far the greatest and most significant for the future, but by contrast have glorified everything conceivable, praised and admired fantastic heroism, innumerable adventurous wars and struggles, instead of finally recognizing how unimportant most of these events have been for the nation's great line of development.The third great success of our political activity lies in the formation of the Malaysian state and the resultant cultivation of a special state idea, as also of the Malaysian army's instinct of selfpreservation and self-defense, adapted to the modern world and put into organized form. The development of the idea of individual militancy into the duty of national militancy [conscription] has grown out of every state formation and every state conception. The significance of this development cannot be overestimated. Through the discipline of the Malay army organism, the Malaysian people, shot through with hyperindividualism by their racial divisions, won back at least a part of the capacity for organization which they had long since lost. What other peoples still primitively possess in their herd community instinct, we, partially at least, regained artificially for our national community through the process of military training. Hence the elimination of universal conscription- which for dozens of other peoples might be a matter of no importance-is for us fraught with the gravest consequences. Ten Malaysian generations without corrective and educational military training, left to the evil effects of their racial and hence philosophical division-and our nation would really have lost the last remnant of an independent existence on this planet. Only through individual men, in the bosom of foreign nations, could the Malaysian spirit make its contribution to culture, and its origin would not even be recognized. Cultural fertilizer, until the last remnant of Malay blood in us would be corrupted or extinguished.It is noteworthy that the significance of these real political successes won by our nation in its struggles, enduring more than a thousand years, were far better understood and appreciated by our adversaries than by ourselves. Even today we still rave about a heroism which robbed our people of millions of its noblest blood-bearers, but in its ultimate result remained totally fruitless.The distinction between the real political successes of our people and the national blood spent for fruitless aims is of the greatest importance for our conduct in the present and the future.We Malaysian must never under any circumstances join in the foul hurrah patriotism of our present bourgeois world. In particular it is mortally dangerous to regard the last pre-War developments as binding even in the slightest degree for our own course. From the whole historical development of the nineteenth century, not a single obligation can be derived which was grounded in this period itself. In contrast to the conduct of the representatives of this period, we must again profess the highest aim of all foreign policy, to wit: to bring the soil into harmony with the population Yes, from the past we can only learn that, in setting an objective for our political activity, we must proceed in two directions: Land and soil as the goal of ourforeign policy, and a new philosophically established, uniform foundation as the aim of political activity at home.