Sunday 30 November 2008

The Terror that Shocked The Planet

I was in Ipoh when i heard the news.

It was about 8.02pm.


And obviously from Buletin Utama in TV3.


The moment when I saw the building covered fire,ashes all over just like mist,people screaming for help,blood,pain.......sorry to say that I am ashamed to live here.




I mean we are people,rite?

We should be living in fear for all those thing that might come;aliens and world's end.



Not our own kind.

These heartless,brainless,soulless human beings that did such a terrible and devastating attack to not only the Taj Mahal Hotel,Mumbai but I'm referring to all the attackers whom did and going to do any shocking attacks in any corner of the planet have to realize and give a damn to your own kind.


Think again.People against People.Why?




Why,when we can live in a peaceful memoirs in the earth.



These are some pictures of the latest attack that happened:








A reporter talks on her phone as smoke is seen coming from Taj Hotel in Mumbai November 27, 2008. Large plumes of smoke were seen rising from the top of the landmark Taj Hotel in Mumbai on Thursday and heavy firing could be heard, a Reuters witness said.

Armed gunmen are seen in the Chatrapathi Sivaji Terminal railway station in Mumbai, India, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2008. Teams of gunmen stormed luxury hotels, a popular restaurant, hospitals and a crowded train station in coordinated attacks across India's financial capital, killing people, taking Westerners hostage and leaving parts of the city under siege Thursday, police said.

Injured Indian security personnel lie at the Chatrapathi Sivaji Terminal railway station in Mumbai, India, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2008. The two men later died from their wounds.

People's belongings are seen lying on the floor amongst streaked pools of blood at the shooting site in Chattrapati Shivaji Railway terminus in Mumbai on November 26, 2008.

The bodies of at least six victims of Wednesday's shootings lie on the floor of the Chattrapati Shivaji Terminus railway station in Mumbai November 26, 2008.

Employees and guests of the Taj Mahal hotel, site of one of the shootouts with terrorists, are recued by firefighters as fire engulfs the top floor on late November 26, 2008.


More pictures at http://boston.com/bigpicture/2008/11/mumbai_under_attack.html.


So the ending words for today's post is I'm not sorry for the ones who have gone through all this horrifying attack but..


To whom did this attack.. because these are the people are the one who is going to miss the great oppurtunity to live in the great blue-green planet,to experience the love that God gifted us.Love and Cherish the mother nature while you can.Don't waste time.




Your sincerely,

Your Addicted Coffee-Drinker










Friday 28 November 2008

The 15th Gena.

Finally at 5.53 pm,22nd November 2008 I am fifteen.
I have been waiting for like million,zillion,trillion seconds for this.. : )


And I would love to credit all those meaningful peeps who wished me Happy Birthday.




A Big,Warm,Cozy hug and kisses to:

Mum

Dad

Nisha

Kumarisha

Durgesh

Kakak Siti

Cousin Selvi

Michelle

Ben

Chelle's maid

Crystal

Jie Ying

Joon Kit

Wai Min

Fatimah

Wai Yan

Juliana

Amanda

Shareni

DIGI

Dinnish

Lilian

Mark Aherns

Pamela

And I am very,deeply,truly sorry if i ACCIDENTLY forgot anyone's name.. : (


By the way,an extra credit for the pressie's I've recieved from family and friends.



Michelle,Jie Ying,Joon Kit,Wai Min:




Crystal

Well sorry Crystal,I got trouble finding your pressie in the web cause my phone got problem with photos.But I'll post from where did the it came from..Michelle again.. : )





Sorry same problem.. o_O

The Family





Finally a Swatch!!!

Eventhough I didn't get a lot of pressie's,but I am grateful on what I've recieved on my meaningful birthday.




Thank You,human beings!!!

Your Coffee-ingly,

An Addicted Coffee-Drinker





Wednesday 19 November 2008

Orang Asli Trip

Today since we had nothing to do,my family (except my father) went to this Orang Asli Museum which i dun even know where.That why they had Google Maps.Hehe.So we took off about 11am.

And on..on..until we reached the place.It was free-admission btw.So it was particular helpful when my mum forgot her wallet in the car which was down the hill and had to walk about...u don't wanna know how far it is..The people there were actually friendly.

They showed us there and here..And I think it was like 11 degree there when we had to open our shoes in and can feel the chilling-ness of the marble floor..HOOOH..

So,these are the pictures.Actually there are more.But i got something wrong with my uploader and its like taking forever to upload..So there just limited photos..Hehe..SORRY..

The population of them in Peninsular Malaysia.

Clothes that are made from tree bark.How cool is that?

The ceremony of Orang Asli's wedding..


How they in the kampung catch fishes..

Can you find something odd about this picture?


Things are used to get across the river

Can you recognize this in our library?


This is where they bury dead people..CREEPY


I didn't know "damar" look like this..

Pos Brooke.This was buildt during the Brooke's family ruling time.

Wireless phone.

A Orang Asli soldier

Cool badges..



That's all for now..Sorry if this was a short post..Really tired..

Your genuinely,

The Addicted Coffee-Drinker






































































































































































Monday 10 November 2008

Wednesday 5 November 2008

Coffee-Chart

Black Power

I'm telling you that i had to salute that great man for his hardwork to be the 44th President Of The United States.He had gone through some hard times of coarse when his grandmother died on the eve of election day which was on 4th November 2008.Young generations should actually look up after that man since..I mean you guys must have known how black people got tortured in the past times,how they have been treated as slaves.

And imagine all those people who are really riskin' their lives (those time people) to protect their race like Martin Luther King Jr. for example.


He was a great man whom were fighting for the African-American Civil Rights Movement and Peace movement.But he was assassinated on 3rd April 1968.


Then here comes Nelson Mandela as the first President of South Africa to be elected in fully representative democratic elections, serving from 1994–1999.He was convicted for crimes that occurred while he was spearheading the struggle against apartheid. He spent 27 years in prison for this, with many of those years being spent on Robben Island.



In South Africa and internationally, Mandela became a symbol of freedom and equality for his opposition to apartheid, while the apartheid government and nations sympathetic to it condemned him and the ANC as communists and terrorists.

In the 20th century come from norwhere Barack Obama.




Obama is the first African-American to be elected President of the United States, and was also the first African-American to be nominated for President by a major U.S. political party.
A graduate of Columbia University and Harvard Law School, where he became the first black person to serve as president of the Harvard Law Review, Obama worked as a community organizer and practiced as a civil rights attorney before serving three terms in the Illinois Senate from 1997 to 2004. He taught constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School from 1992 to 2004.
Following an unsuccessful bid for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2000, he announced his campaign for the U.S. Senate in January 2003.
Special report:
12:14 a.m. – Obama then honors a woman named Anne Nixon Cooper, who is 106 years old and lives in Georgia, who voted today. She had been in Selma. She has heard the Rev.Marthin Luther King Jr.Yes we can,she says
“This is our moment, this is our time."
12:11 a.m. – Obama speaks to those who did not vote for him, saying he hears their concerns. “I will be your president too,” he says. And he speaks to the world: “Our stories are singular but our destiny is shared.” And he declares
A new dawn of American leadership is at hand.”
As the extraordinary spectacle of the first African-American winning the presidency was taking place on stage, something extraordinary was taking place offstage:
Obama was racking up a stunning 338 electoral votes, at least so far. McCain was left with 156. Race, it seemed, had melted away as an issue.
Something else was happening too. While the whole world was standing back in amazement that America had elected its first black president, Obama asked not to be seen as a black man. As in his acceptance speech at the Democratic convention in Denver, he did not mention the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. by name.
Yes, he told a gripping story. But it was not his story. He framed the journey of the civil rights struggle through the person of a 106-year-old woman in Georgia, Ann Nixon Cooper, who voted today.
She was “born just a generation past slavery” but for many years couldn’t vote for two reasons, he said, shifting the attention slightly off the matter of race: “because she was a woman and because of the color of her skin.”
The vivid historic symbols were hers: “She was there for the buses in Montgomery, the hoses in Birmingham, a bridge in Selma, and a preacher from Atlanta who told a people that We shall overcome. Yes we can.”
He shifted the focus again so that her story was not solely about race.
A man touched down on the Moon, a wall came down in Berlin, a world was connected by our own science and imagination,'' Obama said, conveying the passage of time. And then this: “And this year, in this election, she touched her finger to a screen and cast her vote, because after 106 years in America, through the best of times and the darkest of hours, she knows how America can change.”
It was arguably the most stirring part of an otherwise unremarkable speech. And it came at the end. The occasion called for more grandeur than Obama seemed to allow himself. His muting of the racial component perhaps signaled the way he intends to govern, not as the black president but, as he said, the president of the whole country.