Odysseys of George

As life cruises along; vita non est vivere sed valere

Browsing Posts published in October, 2006

Of Arrogance and Tolerance

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Asians are known to be a tolerant community but arrogance is not part of it. This again has been seen with the recent Klang Municipal Council (MPK) assemblyman Datuk Zainal @ Zakaria Mat Deros, a once railway gate-keeper who rose to become a powerful political leader in the Royal Town. A review of what was expressed by Terrence Fernandez in the Sun on October 26,2006 reveals:

    1. The mansion “Istana Idaman” or “Istana Zakaria” — four storeys, complete with a two-storey watch tower – cost about RM6 million – source of finance? – corruption maybe?

    2. Palatial mansions, not one, not two, but three owned by MPK councillors being built without planning permissions. – so he is not the only one – Faizal Abdullah and Mazlynoor Abdul Latiff

    3. Zakaria is absent without official leave from many committee meetings.

    4. DZ Satay which he owns is illegal. – MPK found it fit to tear down the illegal extensions of a licensed neighbouring stall

    5. Zakaria had not paid his assessment for 12 years. – No wonder he is so rich

    6. The reluctance of the council to take action against one of its own is baffling. – I don’t find it baffling as probably they are all involved in some twisted way

    So where are we now? Finally he paid up his 12 years of assessment. The ACA is investigating him. But still yet the arrogance continues – the Sultan summons him to the palace why exactly I am not sure – but he calls in sick. Sure, he was found having a family retreat in Alor Gajah celebrating Hari Raya.

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    The Star

    Yet again, we tolerate such disrespect. Hang Tuah would have slained him in the good old days. Such attitude the MB acknowledge. Such a leader should not be leaders of the community. His datukship should be stripped and like Terrence Fernandez says “Dropping Zakaria and burying his political career will send the message that leaders who break the law will not be tolerated. Anything to the contrary tells the electorate that abuse of power, favouritism and selective persecution are part and parcel of Malaysian political life.

    But without shame he and his family will still contest for aposition in the MPK and without fail we, Malaysians will forgive and tolerate such arrogance.

Silly season in Bolehland

COMMENT BY ZAHAROM NAIN

AROUND this time, every year for the past few years, two events take place, marking the arrival of “silly season” in Malaysia Bolehland.

The first, of course, is THE HAZE. More accurately, it should be called THE SMOG, but over time we’ve been trained, like obedient mongrels, to accept the more neutral, non-contentious term “haze”. After all, “haze” gives an ambiguous, almost romantic, feel to this lethal environmental hazard.

But make no mistake – smog kills.

Sadly, despite this fact, there seems to be very little political will in the region to prevent this yearly disaster. After all, we know where it’s coming from. We know why it happens. We know it’s hazardous and, indeed, kills. We know it hits various industries, including our much-touted tourism industry.

Yet, we let it happen year in, year out.

And when it repeats itself next year, I’m sure our political masters will, yet again, come up with potential solutions.

On our behalf, they will urge the setting-up of a regional anti-haze fund to put out the fires that often are started by people in the first place.

In our name, they will politely ask Indonesia to ratify and comply with the 2002 Asean Regional Haze Action Plan.

And when the smog clears in a couple of months or due to a fortunate change in wind direction, all will be forgotten – even forgiven – until it happens again the following year.

Daft. But that’s what the silly season is all about.

Which brings us to the second event signifying the season: the release of the annual Times Higher Education Supplement (THES) world university rankings.

Having suffered the acute embarrassment of falling rather far down the rankings last year, our local public universities were a wee bit more relieved this year, crawling up the ladder and not slithering down. With the exception of poor Universiti Malaya (UM), that is.

Not only did our (former) premier university find itself slipping out of the Top 200 international universities, but, to add insult to injury, it found itself being leap-frogged by Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), which made the Top 200 for the first time.

In spite of debates questioning the methodology used by THES and the argument that, despite being lower than UKM, UM is still better in a number of categories, I suspect that local public universities, nonetheless, do take these rankings to heart.

If nothing else, perhaps it will make us stop making wild assertions about some local university or another being (or becoming) the “Harvard of the East”.

Why is it that we love making these embarrassing pronouncements when we know that we are nowhere near achieving what Harvard, Yale, Oxford and Cambridge have taken so long and hard to achieve?

Surely the proper thing to do would be to take cognisance of the circumstances behind the rankings and move on from there, attempting to strengthen the areas we are weak in?

And, to be honest, will we really be strengthening these areas by going on international road shows “selling” our universities and attending (intellectually) obscure exhibitions, winning medals that might boost our egos and do little else?

Or should we really be addressing important questions like why we aren’t getting very far in the Citation Indices, why more than a few local academics’ publications are not good enough to be cited in recognised international journals?

Even before that, perhaps we need to ask why is it that some local academics these days cannot even get published internationally? Granted, many of these publications are in English and standards of English have certainly dropped, even in Malaysian universities. But if a research paper in, say, Malay, were of international standard, surely a good English translator would be able to prime it for publication in an international journal or book?

This aside, I believe one of the lessons we can learn – though we appear reluctant to do so – from all these ranking exercises is that the top universities have built a long history of excellence, stressing meritocracy and academic freedom. For them, standards cannot be compromised.

Can we honestly say the same for our universities? If we can, then how do we explain official figures about rising graduate unemployment and surveys indicating that some of these graduates are not only unemployed but also unemployable?

Of course, we could, on the other hand, rationalise these rankings, as one prominent letter in a Malay daily tried to do recently. The tone of the letter was that we should jaga maruah kita (maintain our dignity) in light of the current standing of our universities.

Basically, the letter writer argued that we should forget the world rankings and, instead, just concentrate on the Asian rankings.

If we then eliminate the 14 Australian and New Zealand universities from this list (since they are not “Asian”, after all), said this brilliant writer, UKM and UM would be high up in the Asian Top 50.

And, if we were to re-categorise this listing to just include Asean countries, “Einstein” concluded, our universities would only be below Singapore and Thailand! Hence, our maruah would be maintained.

Maruah? One wonders what dignity there could be in exalting mediocrity.

Zaharom Nain teaches at Universiti Sains Malaysia, the undisputed No 1 university in the whole of Penang and in the northern region of Peninsular Malaysia.

My Mom’s birthday

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Today is my mother’s birthday. Hey want to make a guess how old is she?

Mrs. Mary George or dearly called by her children as Ammachi or her other “children” as cikgu is a Scorpion like me… OK that explains everything…!No!No! The person extends beyond the zodiac. A peculiar character with the whole spectrum of colour – much like the rainbow a constant one.

She was a teacher in SMK Keat Hwa in Alor Setar teaching Biology to the upper secondary and Form Six students. She was there for most of her teaching carrier and a dedicated one. While walking around in Alor Setar town, there will always be somebody who will suddenly recognize her and call “Cikgu” and the chatting will start.

We share a lot in common apart from the zodiac, we love to travel. I still remember drawing a large flower with many petals for her birthday when I was something like 5 years old. She was so touched by it. I wonder whether she remembers!

So any guess? She is 70.

Happy Birthday Ammachi! I love you!

Michael Schumacher retires

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The legend retires! Schumacher finished his 16-year Formula One career with 91 victories, seven world titles and 68 pole positions. Ferrari fans must be mourning.
7 times world F1 campion. Will any other driver beat this record? Juan Manuel Fangio made to 5 world titles and this was in the 50s. I think it is quite unlikely. Then again is he really that good?

Personally, he is my favourite. But I cannot stop to wonder is he the best driver around?

He dominated the scene from 1994 till 2004 and after the change in F1 regulations by FIA which took effect in 2005, he started to fumble. He had the bestest of machine with the best on-track engineers and crew and Ferrari had the money to do almost anything. Before 2004, it was not the driver but more the machine that made the driver. However, since 2005, the roles have reversed. The performance of those sleek machines have been standardised and the guts of the driver’s proximity to danger and death have now made F1 a truly gripping race to watch. 2005 saw the rise of a new champion Fernando Alonso and Renault keeping the trophy. Fernando again took to the podium the 2006 championship with Renault. However, 2006 proved 2 things – Michael is an excellent driver being able to come so close to Alonso. The other, nothing stops Ferrari. The ability to adapt to the regulations so well and come at second with only 5 points behind Renault shows that Ferrari takes F1 seriously and that their winning is totally dependent on the driver of their posh sleek red “Horse Rampant” logo.

So is he really that good?

Yes I think he is that good and is a legend. It wouldn’t take long before Hollywood makes a movie out of him.

Can the record be broken?
Well, Alonso has made a name for himself and he is young. Renault and Alonso has joined a rather illustrious crowd. Only Michael Schumacher and Ferrari (2000-04), Ayrton Senna and McLaren (1990/1) and Jack Brabham and Cooper (1959/60) have previously achieved back-to-back wins in both drivers’ and constructors’ championships. Well nothing is impossible but it will be difficult. Alas a Spaniard!

Thank you Michael for the great performance. Happy Retirement. Hope the retirement treats you well and won’t make you a sourpuss like an ex-leader I know. Hmm… that would be something to blog!!

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Freedomland

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I saw another Samuel L Jackson movie today on DVD.
The title : Freedomland.
The story: A distressed white woman walks into a hospital with blood on her hands. She claims that a black guy pulled her out of her car and drove the car away with her 4 year old son. The location is at the borders of two Northern New Jersey towns; Dempsy, predominant afro-american poor working class community and Gannon, largely white blue-collared commuinity.
The question or rather the questions: What actually took place? Why?
This thriller acted out very well by Samuel and his costar Julianne Moore brings to mind of what one is capable of.
Apart from the bad language with the f*** word being used ever so often, the movie was an entertaining one. Maybe a 6 or 7 out of 10.
Never realised that it was released in late last year or early this year.

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Burnt

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When I first started work as a houseman, my Obstetrics and Gynae boss who is an Indian, at that time use to be totally against Indian movies. He blame them for the negative influence among the lower and middle income groups of Indians. As always though not a fan, took his sayings with a pinch of salt. “There must be some truth in that after having been in the service for more than 20years” I told myself.

I must say that there are some excellent Indian movies but a few compared to the hundreds produced. So few, that the hundreds that are shown seem to have more impact.

After having worked till date, I have come to agree with my boss. Shockingly, I am not alone. Many other Indians within the fraternity seem to say the same. Some even bar their children and teens from watching them. I have to agree — they tend to portray plenty of negativity for the youth. Obviously, too clean and much positivity is boring and will be a flop in the Indian movie industry.

Now with the introduction of soap operas things have got worse. But the rest of the community, I think do not agree with this view. But what if I were to say that certain acts are in particular almost exclusive among the indian community. Examples of these are drinking of paraquat, self burning, gansterism and many more.

Look at the pictures below:

That is a 17 year old boy who torched himself after pouring petrol over himself and sustained almost a 95% burn sparing only his feet. He feels like thick leather and he is charred. He will most likely succumb to this. How did he learn this and from where? why is it almost always involve an indian?

For me all Indian movies must be viewed with close supervision or barred especially to those below 21 years! What do you think?

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