The Curse of ANWAR’S sodomy trial UMNO will vanish from the face of this earth – Sex and Power Rape ADULTERY
The Curse of Macbeth
If you believe in curses, this one was actually pretty spooky for a while. When William Henry Harrison was elected US President in 1840, he succumbed to pneumonia within three months of his term. The real reason, naturally, was a Native American curse, placed on him for his role in the Battle of Tippencanoe. The curse was that every President elected in a year divisible by 20 would die in office. For 120 years, this held true. 1860: Lincoln, assassinated. 1880: Garfield, assassinated. 1900: McKinley, assassinated. 1920: Harding, died of natural causes (or possibly murdered, which had become quite natural). 1940: Franklin Roosevelt, died of natural causes. 1960: Kennedy, assassinated. OK, you had to admit that was eerie (especially as no other presidents had died in office). But then, Reagan was elected in 1980. Not only was he the oldest new President-elect in history, but he was shot within months of taking office. Yet he survived for two terms – as did George W Bush, 20 years later. What is this? A curse with a use-by date? Did someone in the Republican Party strike a deal? What kind of wimpy curse is this?

Actors are notoriously superstitious – as witness this slideshow. As everyone in the theatrical business known, productions of Shakespeare’sMacbeth have suffered from so much misfortune and calamity over the centuries that it’s a wonder anyone still performs it. Then again, the words “self-fulfilling prophecy” come to mind, as everyone worries so much about the curse. If someone injures themselves during a rehearsal for Hamlet or You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown, nobody will make a link. But if anything happens during a Macbeth rehearsal, people will shriek, “Ah, it’s the curse of Macbeth!” Indeed, as anyone in the theater can tell you, it’s bad luck to recite lines from Macbeth (or even say “Macbeth”) before performing any play. What happens if someone is crazy enough to do that? From what I can tell, everyone is too scared to find out.
Amy Winehouse’s death at age 27 was tragedy, but not inevitable. Despite what she sang, she actually had gone to rehab, so many of us hoped that she would pull through. What was inevitable is that her death would be followed by reports that she had joined The 27 Club. Earlier pop stars – Johnny Kidd, Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, Kurt Cobain – had also died at 27. A curse? Some have said so – and others would say that it’s an ideal time for a rock star: too young to die, but old enough to have a substantial body of work. But then again, in a job where too many people die young, many have died at 21 (Sid Vicious), 22 (Buddy Holly), 23 (Ian Curtis), 24 (Notorious BIG), 25 (Tupac Shakur) and 26 (Gram Parsons). Moreover, a great majority of rock stars actually live to be really old, like over 30. Many tragedies, many near-misses, but a “curse”? Like so much in rock music, it’s a myth
The Curse of Superman
Another Hollywood curse. According to legend, the stars of Superman films and television shows are doomed to a terrible fate. George Reeves, who played Superman in the original TV series, took up drinking. In 1959, he either killed himself (the official story) or was murdered. Christopher Reeve, who starred in four Superman movies in the 1970s and 1980s, was left quadriplegic in a 1995 horse-riding accident, and died of a heart attack at age 52. Margot Kidder, who played his girlfriend Lois Lane, was herself confined to a wheelchair (albeit temporarily) after a 1990 car accident, went bankrupt, suffered from depression, and was found living with the homeless (again, temporarily) in 1996. Most Superman actors, however, did not suffer such misfortune. They usually go on to obscurity, but that might not mean that they are “cursed”. Kirk Alyn, the original movie Superman, lived to be 88. Teri Hatcher, who played Lois in Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, went on to star in the mega-hit Desperate Housewives. The evil spirit responsible must have been feeling generous that day.

One month is the ideal duration for judges to write and deliver their judgments, said former High Court judge Datuk Syed Ahmad Idid.
He said judges should gather and write down the points immediately, upon completion of hearing their cases. A delay, he said, would cause the mind to be disorganised since they would have other cases to manage.
“Very much better, you finish your case, you gather the points together and draw up…and from there, you already have an idea and know the main crux and what to concentrate (on),” he said.
He said judges should take two weeks to write the draft, and another week or two, to rethink what they had written before making some adjustments to their judgment.
Syed Ahmad said judgments must be clear, adding that the importance of writing a judgment was for people who were affected by the judgment.
Syed Ahmad, who is also Kuala Lumpur Regional Centre for Arbitration director, was speaking at a media conference after the launch of his book, ‘Writing of Judgments: A Practical Guide for Courts and Tribunals’.
The book was launched by Chief Justice Tun Zaki Azmi at the Conference Hall in the Palace of Justice here.
In his speech, Zaki reminded judges that their judgments should be written in a concise, clear and succinct manner to make it easy for parties in a court case to understand the judge’s grounds of judgment, as well as for the appellate court to understand the rationale of their decision.
Meanwhile, Syed Ahmad said the book was intended to give judges, particularly the younger ones, guidance and equip them with knowledge and ability to write judgments.
On some judges who delayed writing judgments by between two and eight years, Syed Ahmad said the chief justice was concerned over the matter.
NAJIB “CAUGHT IN THE ACT OF ADULTERY” WITH ZAINA ZAIN IN PORT DICKSON,FORBIDDEN PLEASURES! BERSIH RALLY (RAHSIA) THE FATHER OF ALTANTUYA’S SON
“He’s like the kid at the playground, who decides to take the ball, call it his, and go home when things aren’t going his way. If he can’t win, no one can play.”
- The Congolese government, military and the international community must take immediate action to ensure that those responsible for these rapes are caught, tried, and prosecuted.
- Sentences in those trials must be enforced.
- Those civilians that testify must be protected.
- The FARDC must not accept Col. Kifaru or any of his men back into the regimentation process.
In 1961 the communist government of East Germany constructed a barrier that completely cut off West Berlin from East Berlin to stop citizens from the Communist Bloc fleeing to the West. The 103 miles wall bristling with lethal weapons was a huge construction feat that showcased the engineering capability of the Soviet Union but it was also a monument to the failure of Communism.
Apparently the “workers’ paradise” could only be built in a workers’ prison. If anything the Berlin wall was an ominous signal that Communism was doomed. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990, this farsighted prophesy proved to be true. The Communist ideology has been abandoned all over the world except in a few select countries and even China is Communist only in the sense that it doesn’t hold elections.
Closer to home we can clearly see the signs of a doomed Umno grasping for survival in a political environment which has completely changed since the heady years of post-independence. When a party starts manufacturing sex scandals against the opposition and when even innocent minors are targeted it is only a matter of time before the party is flushed down the drain into the moral cesspool of its own creation by a disgusted electorate.
Umno seems to exist in a time warp, clinging to ways and means that are outdated and no longer works. Meanwhile the population has become more educated, more matured, more connected through social media and more exposed to the world community. They are more demanding of good governance, less tolerant to abuses and loathed to be talked down to by a paternalistic govt which tries to portray that it knows best.
Stuck in the Past
There are many examples to show Umno’s ossified mentality but a few will suffice. Most glaring is the persistent use of race and religion to divide and rule which Umno has elevated to a fine art. There is practically no issue which Umno cannot turn into a racial or religious issue in an attempt to pit ethnic communities against each other. The recent Himpunan rally was yet another odious attempt to pit Muslims against Christians and raise ethnic tension.
Peddling old fears of Hudud laws and May 13 were Umno and BN staples and they have never grown out of it despite the changed socio-economic and political environment. MCA continues to flog the dead horse of Islamic state while the Umno endorsed Perkasa loses no opportunity to issue naked threats to other races over imaginary provocations. Backhanded comments like “We do not want another May 13 to happen again” are subtle threats beloved of Umno leaders like Mahathir.
Disinformation, deceit and vile propaganda using the tightly leashed state controlled media is another of Umno’s outdated tricks. This is despite the fact that the state no longer monopolizes the flow of information and the penetration of the online world has punched holes in Umno’s ability to manipulate the truth to its liking. The Umno owned Utusan Malaysia continues to spew racial diatribe, rabble rouse the Malays and fabricate lies to an audience who no longer listens.
Of course the use of gutter politics instead of fair democratic competition is the hallmark of Umno. Fabricated sex scandals is the weapon of choice by a corrupt regime and their use have transcended opposition leaders like Anwar Ibrahim to citizen irritants like customs officer Ahmad Sarbaini who was found death in the custody of MACC under suspicious circumstances. But when Lim Guan Eng’s teenage son was scandalized with a fake molest case, Umno’s gutter politics has sunk to new lows.
Death Throes of a Dying Regime
The regime’s ossified mentality and obsolete methods can be seen in its outlandish actions that stumps and stupefies civil society. A peaceful rally for free and fair elections was declared illegal and forcibly oppressed with all the apparatus of state while a tension raising anti-apostasy rally over imaginary conversion of Muslims was endorsed. A group of socialists were rounded up and incarcerated without trial under fanciful accusations of promoting Communism and waging war against the King. A professor of Constitutional law was harassed by the authorities and suspended for giving a legal opinion that the regime finds disagreeable. Let’s not forget the most audacious insult to our intelligence, Sodomy II after the disreputable circus of Sodomy I.
Civil society is frustrated and infuriated with being treated like idiots. The antics and shenanigans of BN leaders, the unending corruption, the abuse of the civil service, the police oppression and the constant use of race and religion to divide and rule have caused the public to lose faith in public institutions and confidence in our leaders. A matured Malaysian civil society is agitating for better governance but the reality disconnect between the BN government and the society only grows wider.
Umno is trapped in its old ways, rooted to its old culture of feudalistic patronage, unable to reform or rejuvenate itself. The bedrock of Umno’s power was the unequal treatment of races and still is although modern Malaysia demands a cohesive and harmonious society to move forward instead of a progress sapping cauldron of ethnic and religious tension. In fact the whole system of racial politics that Umno is part and parcel of is itself an anachronism that no longer fits Malaysia.
Umno is a historical artefact, a dinosaur from the age of Malay nationalism. It is like an animal which cannot adapt to a changing climate and so must go extinct. In a world where people are intimately networked and even street sweepers carry cellphones, this hideously outmoded party cannot survive against the tides of civil society aspiring to greater heights.

