~ MY Style is revolutionary and ever changing,No one can question. By Dedicated and the Testify man called Sylvester Lai^
Wednesday, 30 March 2011
Residents to Lynas: Go back to Australia!
A group of Pahang residents has urged Australia's Lynas Corp to "pack up and leave" Malaysia and abandon plans to build a rare earth refinery in Gebeng, near Kuantan.
Vincent Jiam, leader of a group of Pahang residents protesting the Lynas Advanced Materials Plant, said that plant would bring more harm than good.
"Please pack up and leave and go home. Don't leave anything behind... don't even leave your slippers behind," he told reporters at the Parliament lobby today.
霹雳州民主行动党: 拿督T不打自招犯法播色情影带 行动党促警方即刻逮捕维护法治
霹雳州民主行动党: 拿督T不打自招犯法播色情影带 行动党促警方即刻逮捕维护法治: "(图) : 倪可敏吁请警方即刻逮捕不打自招播放色情影带的巫统马六甲前首长阿都拉欣等“拿督T”三人展开调查以维护我国的法律。左起西华、林碧霞及郑福基。 (怡保 23 日讯) 行动党今日要求我国警方马上逮捕现身自招播放色情影带的巫统马六甲前首长阿都拉欣等“拿督T”三人展开调查以维..."
Saturday, 26 March 2011
Che Guevara "Heroic Guerrilla"
Che Guevara was a prominent communist figure in the Cuban Revolution (1956–59) who went on to become a guerrilla leader in South America. Executed by the Bolivian army in 1967, he has since been regarded as a martyred hero by generations of leftists worldwide. Guevara’s image remains a prevalent icon of leftist radicalism and anti-imperialism.
Guevara was the eldest of five children in a middle-class family of Spanish-Irish descent and leftist leanings. Although suffering from asthma, he excelled as an athlete and a scholar, completing his medical studies in 1953. He spent many of his holidays traveling in Latin America, and his observations of the great poverty of the masses convinced him that the only solution lay in violent revolution. He came to look upon Latin America not as a collection of separate nations but as a cultural and economic entity, the liberation of which would require an intercontinental strategy.
In 1953 Guevara went to Guatemala, where Jacobo Arbenzheaded a progressive regime that was attempting to bring about a social revolution. (Around this time Guevara acquired his nickname, from a verbal mannerism of Argentines who punctuate their speech with the interjectionche.) The overthrow of the Arbenz regime in 1954 in a coup supported by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agencypersuaded Guevara that the United States would always oppose progressive leftist governments. This conviction became the cornerstone of his plans to bring about socialism by means of a worldwide revolution.
He left Guatemala for Mexico, where he met the Cuban brothers Fidel and Raúl Castro, political exiles who were preparing an attempt to overthrow the dictatorship ofFulgencio Batista in Cuba. Guevara joined Fidel Castro's force, which landed in the Cuban province of Oriente late in November 1956. Immediately detected by Batista's army, they were almost wiped out; the few survivors, including the wounded Guevara, reached the Sierra Maestra, where they became the nucleus of a guerrilla army. The rebels slowly gained in strength, seizing weapons from Batista's forces and winning support and new recruits, and Guevara became one of Castro's most-trusted aides. Guevara recorded the two years spent overthrowing Batista's government in Pasajes de la guerra revolucionaria (1963;Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War, 1968).
After Castro's victorious troops entered Havana on Jan. 2, 1959, and established a Marxist government, Guevara became a Cuban citizen, as prominent in the new government as he had been in the revolutionary army, representing Cuba on many commercial missions. He also became well known in the West for his opposition to all forms of imperialism and neocolonialism and for his attacks on U.S. foreign policy. He served as chief of the Industrial Department of the National Institute of Agrarian Reform, president of the National Bank of Cuba, and minister of industry.
During the early 1960s, he defined Cuba's policies and his own views in many speeches and writings, notably El socialismo y el hombre en Cuba (1965; Man and Socialism in Cuba, 1967)—an examination of Cuba's new brand of communism—and a highly influential manual, La guerra de guerrillas (1960; Guerrilla Warfare , 1961). After April 1965 Guevara dropped out of public life. His movements and whereabouts for the next two years remained secret; it was later learned that he had spent some time in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo with other Cuban guerrilla fighters, helping to organize the Patrice Lumumba Battalion, which fought in the civil war there.
In the autumn of 1966 Guevara went to Bolivia, incognito, to create and lead a guerrilla group in the region of Santa Cruz. On Oct. 8, 1967, the group was almost annihilated by a special detachment of the Bolivian army. Guevara, who was wounded in the attack, was captured and shot...
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
War in Iraq begins 2003.
~*On march 19 2003, the United States, along with coalition forces primarily from the United Kingdom, initiates war on Iraq. Just after explosions began to rock Baghdad, Iraq's capital, U.S. President George W. Bush announced in a televised address, "At this hour, American and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm Iraq, to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger." President Bush and his advisors built much of their case for war on the idea that Iraq, under dictator Saddam Hussein, possessed or was in the process of building weapons of mass destruction.
Hostilities began about 90 minutes after the U.S.-imposed deadline for Saddam Hussein to leave Iraq or face war passed. The first targets, which Bush said were "of military importance," were hit with Tomahawk cruise missiles from U.S. fighter-bombers and warships stationed in the Persian Gulf. In response to the attacks, Republic of Iraq radio in Baghdad announced, "the evil ones, the enemies of God, the homeland and humanity, have committed the stupidity of aggression against our homeland and people."
Though Saddam Hussein had declared in early March 2003 that, "it is without doubt that the faithful will be victorious against aggression," he went into hiding soon after the American invasion, speaking to his people only through an occasional audiotape. Coalition forces were able to topple his regime and capture Iraq's major cities in just three weeks, sustaining few casualties. President Bush declared the end of major combat operations on May 1, 2003. Despite the defeat of conventional military forces in Iraq, an insurgency has continued an intense guerrilla war in the nation in the years since military victory was announced, resulting in thousands of coalition military, insurgent and civilian deaths.
After an intense manhunt, U.S. soldiers found Saddam Hussein hiding in a six-to-eight-foot deep hole, nine miles outside his hometown of Tikrit. He did not resist and was uninjured during the arrest. A soldier at the scene described him as "a man resigned to his fate." Hussein was arrested and began trial for crimes against his people, including mass killings, in October 2005.
In June 2004, the provisional government in place since soon after Saddam's ouster transferred power to the Iraqi Interim Government. In January 2005, the Iraqi people elected a 275-member Iraqi National Assembly. A new constitution for the country was ratified that October. On November 6, 2006, Saddam Hussein was found guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death by hanging. After an unsuccessful appeal, he was executed on December 30, 2006.
No weapons of mass destruction were found in Iraq..
Sunday, 20 March 2011
Pre-KGB Soviet security services.
Established in 1954, the KGB was the most durable of a series of security agencies starting with the Cheka, which was established in December 1917 in the first days of the Bolshevik government. The Cheka (originally VCHEKA, an acronym derived from the Russian words for All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counterrevolution and Sabotage) was charged with the preliminary investigation of counterrevolution and sabotage, but it quickly assumed responsibility for arresting, imprisoning, and executing “enemies of the state,” which included the former nobility, the bourgeoisie, and the clergy. The Cheka played a prominent role in the Russian Civil War (1918–20) and aided in crushing the anti-Soviet Kronshtadt and Antonov rebellions in 1921. When Soviet archives were opened in the 1990s, it was learned that the Cheka, which in 1921 had a staff of more than 250,000, was responsible for the execution of more than 140,000 people. Feliks Dzerzhinsky, the Cheka's chief during the early years of Soviet power, molded the service into an effective, merciless tool of the ruling Communist Party.
In 1922 the Cheka was supplanted by the GPU (State Political Administration) in an effort by the Communist Party to reduce the scale of the Cheka's terror. A year later the GPU was renamed the OGPU (Unified State Political Administration) and given additional duties, including the administration of “corrective” labour camps and the surveillance of the population. As Joseph Stalinconsolidated his power and directed the modernization of the Soviet Union, the OGPU implemented the forced collectivization of agriculture and the deportation of the kulaks (wealthy peasants) and staged show trials of “enemies of the people.” By the early 1930s the OGPU controlled all Soviet security functions, directing a vast army of informers in factories, government offices, and the Red Army. During this period the OGPU also conducted covert operations on foreign soil to disrupt the activities of the regime's opponents, some of whom it kidnapped and murdered.
In 1934 the OGPU was absorbed into the new NKVD (People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs), which helped Stalin to consolidate his power by carrying out purges. More than 750,000 people were executed in 1937–38 alone, including tens of thousands of party officials and military and security officers. Among the victims were more than half the members of the ruling Central Committee (the Communist Party's highest organ) as well as the NKVD's first two chiefs, Genrikh Yagoda and Nikolay Yezhov. Yezhov was succeeded as head of the NKVD by Lavrenty Beria, who served from 1938 to 1953.
In 1941 responsibility for state security was transferred from the NKVD to the NKGB (People's Commissariat for State Security). Both agencies became ministries—the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) and the Ministry of State Security (MGB)—in 1946. Beria, as a member of the ruling Central Committee, continued to supervise the two ministries while serving as head of the MVD. Beria also was responsible for the Soviet Union's nascent nuclear weapons program and oversaw intelligence operations directed at the U.S. and British atomic bomb projects.
The MGB, directed by V.S. Abakumov under Beria's supervision, played a major role in the Soviet Union's war effort inWorld War II and in the subsequent consolidation of its power in eastern Europe. During the war, the MGB conducted espionage and counterespionage operations, administered prisoner-of-war camps, and ensured the loyalty of the officer corps. It also supervised the deportation to Siberia and Central Asia of groups suspected of disloyalty, including more than one million Volga Germans, Crimean Tatars, Kalmyks, Chechen-Ingush, and other people of the Caucasus.
After the war, the MGB helped to crush all opposition, whether real or suspected, in eastern Europe and the Soviet Union; between 1945 and 1953 more than 750,000 Soviet citizens were arrested and punished for political crimes. Information uncovered in the 1990s indicated that by 1953 some 2,750,00 Soviet citizens were in jail or in forced-labour camps, and approximately the same number were in internal exile.
Soviet foreign intelligence in the last decade of Stalin's life was remarkable in both its scope and success. During World War II the MGB conducted operations in Nazi-occupied Europe. One of its networks, the “Red Orchestra,” comprised several hundred agents and informers, including agents in the German ministries of foreign affairs, labour, propaganda, and economics. Declassified Russian and American documents indicate that the Soviet Union had placed at least five agents in the U.S. nuclear weapons program and possibly as many as 300 agents in the U.S. government by 1945. The British diplomatic and security establishments also had been infiltrated by important agents, including Kim Philby, a senior British intelligence officer. Evidence suggests that Soviet agents in Britain passed 15,000 to 20,000 documents to Moscowbetween 1941 and 1945. British and American agents of Soviet intelligence were for the most part ideological supporters of the regime, and many were members of communist parties.
Immediately following Stalin's death in March 1953, the MGB was merged back into the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD), still under Beria. Before the end of summer, the post-Stalinist leadership under Nikita Khrushchev turned against the power-hungry Beria, and he was deposed and executed. A series of trials and executions continuing into 1956 eliminated a number of his senior associates. In the meantime, millions of political prisoners were released from the MVD's vast system of forced labour camps and from internal exile. The MVD was gradually dismantled and finally abolished in 1960.
USSR established'''
In post-revolutionary Russia, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) is established, comprising a confederation of Russia, Belorussia, Ukraine, and the Transcaucasian Federation (divided in 1936 into the Georgian, Azerbaijan, and Armenian republics). Also known as the Soviet Union, the new communist state was the successor to the Russian Empire and the first country in the world to be based on Marxist socialism.
During the Russian Revolution of 1917 and subsequent three-year Russian Civil War, the Bolshevik Party under Vladimir Lenin dominated the soviet forces, a coalition of workers' and soldiers' committees that called for the establishment of a socialist state in the former Russian Empire. In the USSR, all levels of government were controlled by the Communist Party, and the party's politburo, with its increasingly powerful general secretary, effectively ruled the country. Soviet industry was owned and managed by the state, and agricultural land was divided into state-run collective farms.
In the decades after it was established, the Russian-dominated Soviet Union grew into one of the world's most powerful and influential states and eventually encompassed 15 republics--Russia, Ukraine, Georgia, Belorussia, Uzbekistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. In 1991, the Soviet Union was dissolved following the collapse of its communist government.
Soviet-Leader...Joseph Stalin..
Saturday, 19 March 2011
'''The Bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.''
'''On August 6, 1945, during World War II (1939-45), an American B-29 bomber dropped the world’s first deployed atomic bomb over the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The explosion wiped out 90 percent of the city and immediately killed 80,000 people; tens of thousands more would later die of radiation exposure. Three days later, a second B-29 dropped another A-bomb on Nagasaki, killing an estimated 40,000 people. Japan's Emperor Hirohito announced his country's unconditional surrender in World War II in a radio address on August 15, citing the devastating power of "a new and most cruel bomb."'
据报道,之所以日本偷偷在海底进行核试验引发了地震和海啸。
如此天灾?...是人为?还是真的天灾?各位看了便心中有数!
凤凰卫视的新闻,就日本地震提出几个问题:第一,为何日本能在地震发生前一分钟紧急通知?第二,为何第一时间请求美军援助?第三,为何中国会是国防部长告知援助意愿?
接下来,有观察家指出:日本有这么好的地震预灾系统,那么无论地震的破坏性有多大,都会有相应的处置预案,不应该如此慌张!
dingbangb(834342237) 10:01:20
日本3月11日的9.0级大地震,看是一场大自然的灾难,但从多方面综合分析,可以看出这可能完全是一场人为的大灾难-----人祸!可能是日本自己进行的海底核试验引起的!理由如下:
/来自中华网社区 club.china.com/
一、石原慎太郞前阵子刚刚放言要以核武器对抗中国,3月9日日本就发生了7.4级的地震。这可以推论为石原的狂言只是为日本的核试验放风,而9日的地震其实就是日本进行的核试验。如果不出意外,日本近期还将进行几次核试验,并在不久后在美国的黙许下宣布为有核国家以对抗中国。可惜人算不如天算,想不到引发了世纪大地震而自食恶果。
二、3月11日地震后,海面出现的神秘大漩涡,可能就是日本通向海底核试验场的遂道崩塌,导致海水倒灌引起的。
三、以日本现有的技术,能导致日本用于启动冷却设备的三道保障电网都出现故障,特别是柴油发电机不能发电,这有点太不可思议。合理的解释就是日本是故意让电站爆炸让核外泄,以便掩盖3月9日进行核试验发生的核辐射。
四、美国的航母在100公里外的海面就受到那么强的核辐射,而日本本土却仅仅撤离了核电站周围20公里的人,那么美国航母上的核辐射从哪来?合理解释就是这些核辐射其实就是日本3月9日核爆造成的。
五、日本昨天宣布要自行检测电站核辐射量,不让外国插手,为什么?这是做贼心虚!
事实上,作为一个岛国,倭国有着丰富的潮汐和风力发电资源,同时太阳能也非常先进,但该国对这些视若无物,多年来,全力发展核电。
如果这仅仅是电力需要也就罢了,但是,有多少人知道?在核电技术已经突飞猛进的今天,倭国的核电设施却一律死抱着第一二代技术不放。
福岛核电站采用的是铀钚混合氧化物这种比铀氧原料贵2-3倍,而且危险性高的原料,反应堆用的也是安全性差的快增殖反应堆,而且沸水堆只有一回路,直通涡轮。日本人玩这种手段只要有点脑子的都看得出来他们想要干什么:不就是为了储备制造核弹的那点钚嘛。
现在据报导爆掉的一号堆已经在用硼酸了。一开始不肯用是因为一旦用了硼酸,里面的核燃料就全部报废了。福岛电站用的可是MOX燃料,那可是极重要的战略资源,你们懂的。
现在国际上最新一代的核反应堆是号称出事故紧急停堆后36小时无人看护照样安全的。但日本人就是不用。简单地讲,它们只造最原始最落后的核电站,绝不采用新技术,哪怕是新技术再成熟,再免费。
因为原始的一二代技术最有利于大量提炼核原料。最浪费,最低能,最高消耗,最大成本,最不安全,只为换得核原料。
在地震前不到一个月,倭人已明确表示没有核弹不合理,且举国在为“有核弹化”努力。大家上网查,这几十年来,倭人利用这些原始的电厂,攒了近四千枚核弹的原料。
可惜啊,人算不如天算,倭人为了获得攻击他人的核弹,不顾科技,不顾地理条件,不顾风险,最终引发了今天可能出现的巨大核灾难风险。
是典型的损人不利已变态后果。
海啸过去,倭人早就可以进入灾后重建,但是,天谴啊,一次微不足道的小灾难,恰好击中倭国人修练邪门功夫的命门。当然还有个更小的副作用,就是没电导致的混乱而已,几不足道。
所以,自然界的天灾基本已然过去,现在倭岛上发生的一切,都是人祸,是它们为了杀人放火祸害世界目的积赞了多年的苦果,是引火烧身的自焚行为。
可笑有些人还在装道学家。倭人为你们和你们的子孙准备了四千枚核弹,不想在生产过程中遇到天灾发生事故,你们TMD还想着同情?还想着仁义?还想着捐款救灾?
逆天者,天必诛之!
日本37万平方公里,却变态地修建了57个核电站,发出的电不到全国需求的30%,一个核电站有4-6个反应堆,即全国有三百多个反应堆。37万*30%=11万平方公里,即三百多个反应堆为11万平方公里供电
110000/300=367平方公里
也就是说,日本的一个核反应堆只为367平方公里提供电力。相当于每个县级城市就要配一个核反应堆。这TMD正常吗?
这场核灾难到底会发展到多大,至少还有三个问题没公开,离了这三个问题,谁也无法预测,只有小鬼子心里清楚。
第一个问题:它们造出来的四千枚核弹的原料存放在哪里?是否安全?!
第二个问题:在这些核电站里,到底还有什么秘密,这些以制造核弹原料为目的的核电站里,都有哪些高危和不可告人的东西?!
第三个问题:日本这些年积攒的核废料都放在哪里?在陆地上?还是在海里?还是偷运到哪里去了?会不会产生危害?
这些问题都是潜在的核弹级风险。是对全人类的安全威胁!
最近网上出现很多装13的,这里提醒一下!
1923年日本发生关东大地震,中国也展开援助。
事实证明,中国人无私的援助,在金钱和物资方面,为日本节省了相当大的一笔款项,为日后顺利地发动九一八和七七奠定了坚实的基础。
也就是说,由于有中国人出钱救灾,日本得以省下钱造军火。。。
同胞们,记请楚了,你今天捐出的每一毛钱,都为日本省下了造一枚子弹的费用,最后这一毛钱有可能回到你或者你亲人的身上。
你们捐出的是血汗,小鬼子还回来的是子弹
带来的是刺耳的尖啸,流出的是你和你子孙们的鲜血。。
Friday, 18 March 2011
~*Albert Einstein~***
~'''On March 14, 1879, Albert Einstein is born, the son of a Jewish electrical engineer in Ulm, Germany. Einstein's theories of special and general relativity drastically altered man's view of the universe, and his work in particle and energy theory helped make possible quantum mechanics and, ultimately, the atomic bomb.
After a childhood in Germany and Italy, Einstein studied physics and mathematics at the Federal Polytechnic Academy in Zurich, Switzerland. He became a Swiss citizen and in 1905 was awarded a Ph.D. from the University of Zurich while working at the Swiss patent office in Bern. That year, which historians of Einstein's career call the annus mirabilis--the "miracle year"--he published five theoretical papers that were to have a profound effect on the development of modern physics.
In the first of these, titled "On a Heuristic Viewpoint Concerning the Production and Transformation of Light," Einstein theorized that light is made up of individual quanta (photons) that demonstrate particle-like properties while collectively behaving like a wave. The hypothesis, an important step in the development of quantum theory, was arrived at through Einstein's examination of the photoelectric effect, a phenomenon in which some solids emit electrically charged particles when struck by light. This work would later earn him the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics.
In the second paper, he devised a new method of counting and determining the size of the atoms and molecules in a given space, and in the third he offered a mathematical explanation for the constant erratic movement of particles suspended in a fluid, known as Brownian motion. These two papers provided indisputable evidence of the existence of atoms, which at the time was still disputed by a few scientists.
Einstein's fourth groundbreaking scientific work of 1905 addressed what he termed his special theory of relativity. In special relativity, time and space are not absolute, but relative to the motion of the observer. Thus, two observers traveling at great speeds in regard to each other would not necessarily observe simultaneous events in time at the same moment, nor necessarily agree in their measurements of space. In Einstein's theory, the speed of light, which is the limiting speed of any body having mass, is constant in all frames of reference. In the fifth paper that year, an exploration of the mathematics of special relativity, Einstein announced that mass and energy were equivalent and could be calculated with an equation, E=mc2.
Although the public was not quick to embrace his revolutionary science, Einstein was welcomed into the circle of Europe's most eminent physicists and given professorships in Zýrich, Prague, and Berlin. In 1916, he published "The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity," which proposed that gravity, as well as motion, can affect the intervals of time and of space. According to Einstein, gravitation is not a force, as Isaac Newton had argued, but a curved field in the space-time continuum, created by the presence of mass. An object of very large gravitational mass, such as the sun, would therefore appear to warp space and time around it, which could be demonstrated by observing starlight as it skirted the sun on its way to earth. In 1919, astronomers studying a solar eclipse verified predictions Einstein made in the general theory of relativity, and he became an overnight celebrity. Later, other predictions of general relativity, such as a shift in the orbit of the planet Mercury and the probable existence of black holes, were confirmed by scientists.
During the next decade, Einstein made continued contributions to quantum theory and began work on a unified field theory, which he hoped would encompass quantum mechanics and his own relativity theory as a grand explanation of the workings of the universe. As a world-renowned public figure, he became increasingly political, taking up the cause of Zionism and speaking out against militarism and rearmament. In his native Germany, this made him an unpopular figure, and after Nazi leader Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany in 1933 Einstein renounced his German citizenship and left the country.
He later settled in the United States, where he accepted a post at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. He would remain there for the rest of his life, working on his unified field theory and relaxing by sailing on a local lake or playing his violin. He became an American citizen in 1940.
In 1939, despite his lifelong pacifist beliefs, he agreed to write to President Franklin D. Roosevelt on behalf of a group of scientists who were concerned with American inaction in the field of atomic-weapons research. Like the other scientists, he feared sole German possession of such a weapon. He played no role, however, in the subsequent Manhattan Project and later deplored the use of atomic bombs against Japan. After the war, he called for the establishment of a world government that would control nuclear technology and prevent future armed conflict.
In 1950, he published his unified field theory, which was quietly criticized as a failure. A unified explanation of gravitation, subatomic phenomena, and electromagnetism remains elusive today. Albert Einstein, one of the most creative minds in human history, died in Princeton in 1955.
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