Itu Ini Semua Naek!
Friday June 27th 2008, 1:16 pm
Filed under: Current Affairs

Can A Family Man With Salary RM3,000 Survive In Malaysia ??!

Let’s do some simple calculations here.

In Malaysia , the average family income isRM3,000 /month
(where father works, mother doesn’t).

I understand there are many families whose
monthly income does not reach RM3,000,
but, to make things simple,
let’s take RM3,000as the figure. Ok lah, right?

Okay, let’s start rolling with a family which has
Papa, Mama, 1 daughter and 1 son. Ngam-ngam ….

Calculation starts…

Electricity and water bill:    RM100
(No air-con, No home theatre, No water heater … ok?)

Phone bill ( Telekom):          RM100
(Internet streamxy RM68 + land line RM25 = RM93, round-up to RM100 la)

Meals for a happy family:    RM775
(3 meals on RM25/day 4 persons.  Forget about makan in restaurant ya)

Papa makan / teh-tarik during working hrs:  RM155
(RM5/day, RM5 … can eat what?)

Car repayment: RM400
(A proton saga aeroback, 7 yrs repayment)

Petrol (living in city, traffic-jam) :RM300
(go to work, bring son to school, only can afford one car running. NO YET CONSIDER PETROL INCREASE 40.8%)

Insurance:          RM650
(Kids, wife and self. Forget about insurance la..no money to pay, lets drop it)

House repayment:      RM750
(low cost housing repayment for 30 yrs, retired still have to work to pay!)

Tuition:      RM80
(got that cheap meh? i don’t think so)

Older children pocket money @ school:      RM20
(RM1/day, eat bread?)

School fees:                           RM30
(enough ah?) BR>
School books and etc:                   RM100
(always got extra to pay in school)

Younger children milk powder:                                RM50
(cannot have the DHA, BHA, PHA one, expensive)

Miscellaneous:                                                                      RM100
(shampoo, rice, sauce, toilet paper, saman, etc)

Oh wait!!! I have to stop here, so…
No Astro,
no movie @ cinema,
no DVD,
no CD,
no toys
no computer,
no KFC, no McDonald,
no insurance
no jalan-jalan makan angin (vacation)
no chit chat on phone with grandparents, and etc…
nothing breaks down for repair
Let’s use a calculator to total up… WALAO EH! Shit!RM2,960already…

EPF belum potong, income tax lagi…….. oledi RM2,960 ….

How to survive lah tuan-tuan dan puan-puan sekalian ???

Our Deputy Prime Minister asked us to change lifestyle?

How to change? Don’t eat? Don’t work? Don’t send children to school and study?
Besides that, I believe in Malaysia population, there are millions of rakyat Malaysia which still don’t earn RM3,000/month! !!
What is this? Inilah Malaysia Boleh…Sorry… it should beMalaysians Boleh, because we’re still alive and kicking!!

~1 lagi projek kerajaan babi negara!

Souce : forwarded e-mail



Spain deserving of shoot-out reward
Monday June 23rd 2008, 8:48 am
Filed under: Sports


Sometimes, not always, the victors on penalties
are the better team. Spain can claim that their shoot-out triumph over
the world champions was deserved, not only because they scored four
spot-kicks to two, but also because of their general domination of play
during the preceding 120 minutes.

Rearguard victory
Italy
defended supremely well. What many Azzurri fans were calling a
makeshift back four gave Spain’s vaunted two-man strike force of David
Villa and Fernando Torres very little time and space in which to weave
their magic. The occasional jinking run aside, the two forwards were
repeatedly ensnared, with every slight miscontrol seized upon
voraciously by one or sometimes two or even three white shirts.
Torres’s second-half substitution was a little victory for the Italian
rearguard.

Sterile encounter
Roberto
Donadoni, the Italy coach, countered the loss of chief playmaker Andrea
Pirlo through suspension by packing his midfield with players of
industry and endeavour. The plan, it seemed, was to cut the supply to
the front two at source. Indeed, the tone for a match of relative
sterility was set in the opening minutes when the Azzurri parked
everyone defiantly in their own half and invited Spain to come on to
them in the hope that one loose pass might lead to a counterattacking
opportunity.

Low-risk policy
Spain had as
much as 70 per cent of the ball for the first dozen minutes, but were
in no hurry to try anything fancy and cede possession unnecessarily.
Indeed, Marcos Senna, La Roja’s midfield linchpin, ended the first half
with the perfect statistic of 100 per cent pass completion. By the end
of the two hours that figure had been cut to 91 per cent, but while the
Brazilian-born anchorman was undoubtedly one of the best players on
show, his extraordinarily high percentage rating was indicative of the
low-risk policy adopted by both teams.


Disappointing ratio
Senna
fired in four shots, all from distance, getting two on target, one of
which forced Gianluigi Buffon into a rare fumble, spilling it against
the post. The Villarreal CF midfielder’s success ratio was considerably
above average for both his side and the game in general, with Spain
having 26 attempts on goal but only working Buffon six times. Italy,
less willing to shoot on sight, disappointingly managed just three on
target from 12 efforts.

Incontestable win
Spain
also had the edge in terms of overall possession (57 per cent to 43)
and corners won (eight to three). Most importantly of all, though, they
put the ball in the net twice as many times as their opponents during
the penalty shoot-out, with Iker Casillas also proving twice as
successful as his Italian counterpart, in terms of spot-kick saves.
Italy might bemoan their misfortune but, as the statistics show,
Spain’s victory was incontestable.



Classy Russia leave Oranje crushed
Saturday June 21st 2008, 10:06 pm
Filed under: Sports

Russia celebrate in BaselDmitri Torbinski and Andrei Arshavin struck in
the last eight minutes of extra time to take Russia into the UEFA EURO
2008™ semi-finals at the expense of the Netherlands as Guus Hiddink
eliminated the nation of his birth.

Roman Pavlyuchenko celebrates scoring Russia`s winnerRussia dominance
From
the off, Russia never allowed Marco van Basten’s previously imperious
side space and they attacked with vigour. Roman Pavlyuchenko’s
56th-minute volley seemed to have won the game but with four minutes
remaining Ruud van Nistelrooy headed an equaliser. However, Russia
dominated the additional half-hour and the tireless Arshavin set up
substitute Torbinski to restore the advantage from close range in the
112th minute. The No10 added another himself to
book a semi-final against Spain or Italy in Vienna on Thursday,
although Torbinski and Denis Kolodin will miss that match through
suspension.

Ruud van Nistelrooy heads in the 86th-minute equaliserRobben ruled out
Having rested
most of his first-choice lineup in Tuesday’s win against Romania, Van
Basten returned to the selection that started the impressive defeats of
Italy and France, Arjen Robben’s hopes scuppered by continuing groin
problems. It was Russia, beginning as positively as Hiddink had
promised, who had the first chance when Yuri Zhirkov’s free-kick forced
Edwin van der Sar into a diving save and Igor Semshov then crossed from
the right for Pavlyuchenko to head over. Russia’s outnumbered fans made
most of the early noise as the Netherlands took time to get to grips
with their opponents’ pressing game, although Van Nistelrooy did nearly
get a decisive touch on Rafael van der Vaart’s free-kick.

The Netherlands striker enjoys his goalKolodin denied
Suddenly
the Netherlands started to produce the flowing football that lit up
their group games in Berne, and their supporters responded accordingly.
But if many Dutch players were fresh after sitting out the Romania
match, Arshavin was also relatively rested having been suspended for
the first two games and from a solo run he forced Van der Sar to save.
The goalkeeper then tipped over Kolodin’s ferocious shot before the
Netherlands attacked again at the other end as Khalid Boulahrouz, whose
late baby daughter was remembered by his team-mates’ black armbands,
sent Van Nistelrooy through for an effort that Igor Akinfeev blocked.

Russia celebrate in BaselPavlyuchenko finish
Russia looked
sharper as the second half got under way, Arshavin nearly scoring with
a swerving free-kick, and a minute later Sergei Semak sent in a cross
from the left that Pavlyuchenko gleefully turned in. Russia were
allowing the Netherlands little of the ball and attacking at pace, Van
der Sar using instinct and one hand to keep out an Aleksandr Anyukov
strike. The goalkeeper also saved when Pavlyuchenko was put through
while Torbinski was unfortunate not to turn the ball in soon after. It
seemed the Oranje’s campaign was over but with four minutes left Wesley
Sneijder curled in a free-kick for Van Nistelrooy to head in and force
an extra half-hour.

Russia celebrate victory in BaselExtra-time decisive
However
Russia were unbowed, Semshov forcing a diving stop from Van der Sar
while Arshavin blazed over and Pavlyuchenko’s dipping shot was only
kept out by the crossbar. Arshavin then burst through and crossed for
Torbinski, only for Van der Sar to block again. The second extra period
continued in the same vein, Pavlyuchenko just failing to turn in
Arshavin’s cross but finally the breakthrough came when the FC Zenit
St. Petersburg playmaker delivered another looping centre for Torbinski
to volley in. Four minutes later Arshavin sealed a semi-final place
with the goal his play deserved as his shot deflected in off John
Heitinga, confirming that the Netherlands would follow fellow group
winners Portugal and Croatia home.



Portugal ousted by German power show
Saturday June 21st 2008, 9:13 pm
Filed under: Sports

Bastian Schweinsteiger celebrates after giving Germany the leadGermany progressed to the semi-finals of the UEFA
European Championship for the first time since 1996 as goals from
Bastian Schweinsteiger, Miroslav Klose and Michael Ballack secured a
3-2 victory over Portugal in Basel.

Heads, you win
The
Mannschaft ended up lifting the Henri Delaunay trophy that year and the
way they raised their game to meet the challenge of a Portugal side
that refused to lie down – halving a two-goal deficit twice through
first Nuno Gomes and then, in the dying minutes, Hélder Postiga –
augurs well for Joachim Löw’s team. By contrast, it was a night when
the worst fears of Portugal’s Chelsea FC-bound coach Luiz Felipe
Scolari were realised, his pre-match nightmares about Germany’s aerial
superiority materialising in the form of headed goals by Klose and
Ballack. Portugal were semi-finalists in 2000 and runners-up in 2004
and Scolari had hoped to take that final step at UEFA EURO 2008™ but
his farewell party fell flat at St. Jakob-Park, where Portugal were
overpowered by opponents who shrugged aside impressively their
occasional first-stage torpor.

Debt paid
With
Simão probing down the right, Scolari’s men appeared to be finding
their stride as they offered the first threat on goal when Bosingwa
crossed and João Moutinho, free of his marker but seemingly caught in
two minds, steered the ball over at the near post with his knee. Yet in
the 22nd minute they fell behind. It was a wonderfully worked goal too,
swift passing between Philipp Lahm, Ballack and Lukas Podolski
advancing the ball down the left, with Podolski bursting clear to drive
in a low cross which Schweinsteiger converted with a sliding finish.
Schweinsteiger’s coach Löw had told the midfielder he had a "debt" to
his team-mates after his red card against Croatia and here, in his
first start of the finals, he resembled a man on a mission.

Portugal`s Cristiano Ronaldo congratulates Nuno Gomes on his goalScoring feat
Scorer
of two goals against Portugal at the 2006 FIFA World Cup,
Schweinsteiger was the architect of their second here too, drifting a
free-kick into the Portugal box which Klose, ghosting clear of the red
shirts, headed past Ricardo. Raul Meireles replaced the injured
Moutinho and Portugal went in search of a lifeline. It came via captain
Nuno Gomes five minutes before the break. Simão’s crossfield ball sent
Ronaldo racing clear of Per Mertesacker down the inside-left channel
and though Jens Lehmann blocked his shot, Gomes was first to the
rebound, striking first time into the net via the foot of Christoph
Metzelder, defending desperately on the line. It was Gomes’s sixth goal
on the European stage over three tournaments – a scoring span only
achieved by Jürgen Klinsmann, Thierry Henry and Vladimír Šmicer before
him.

Tense finish
Ronaldo was a whisker
away from an equaliser moments before half-time, flashing the ball past
Lehmann yet just wide of the far post. Deco did find the net shortly
after the interval but was in an offside position and the little
midfielder then flicked on a Simão corner to set up Pepe, only for the
defender to nod over. Ballack showed him how it should be done in the
61st minute when – to the displeasure of his future manager – he
shrugged off Chelsea FC team-mate Paulo Ferreira and beat Ricardo to
another Schweinsteiger free-kick to head home. Scolari sent on Nani and
Postiga as Portugal chased the game and the pair combined to ensure a
nervy finale when Postiga headed in from Nani’s left-wing delivery but
the glimmer of hope was soon extinguished.The German team celebrate with their supporters



Saturday June 21st 2008, 9:13 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Bastian Schweinsteiger celebrates after giving Germany the leadGermany progressed to the semi-finals of the UEFA
European Championship for the first time since 1996 as goals from
Bastian Schweinsteiger, Miroslav Klose and Michael Ballack secured a
3-2 victory over Portugal in Basel.

Heads, you win
The
Mannschaft ended up lifting the Henri Delaunay trophy that year and the
way they raised their game to meet the challenge of a Portugal side
that refused to lie down – halving a two-goal deficit twice through
first Nuno Gomes and then, in the dying minutes, Hélder Postiga –
augurs well for Joachim Löw’s team. By contrast, it was a night when
the worst fears of Portugal’s Chelsea FC-bound coach Luiz Felipe
Scolari were realised, his pre-match nightmares about Germany’s aerial
superiority materialising in the form of headed goals by Klose and
Ballack. Portugal were semi-finalists in 2000 and runners-up in 2004
and Scolari had hoped to take that final step at UEFA EURO 2008™ but
his farewell party fell flat at St. Jakob-Park, where Portugal were
overpowered by opponents who shrugged aside impressively their
occasional first-stage torpor.

Debt paid
With
Simão probing down the right, Scolari’s men appeared to be finding
their stride as they offered the first threat on goal when Bosingwa
crossed and João Moutinho, free of his marker but seemingly caught in
two minds, steered the ball over at the near post with his knee. Yet in
the 22nd minute they fell behind. It was a wonderfully worked goal too,
swift passing between Philipp Lahm, Ballack and Lukas Podolski
advancing the ball down the left, with Podolski bursting clear to drive
in a low cross which Schweinsteiger converted with a sliding finish.
Schweinsteiger’s coach Löw had told the midfielder he had a "debt" to
his team-mates after his red card against Croatia and here, in his
first start of the finals, he resembled a man on a mission.

Portugal`s Cristiano Ronaldo congratulates Nuno Gomes on his goalScoring feat
Scorer
of two goals against Portugal at the 2006 FIFA World Cup,
Schweinsteiger was the architect of their second here too, drifting a
free-kick into the Portugal box which Klose, ghosting clear of the red
shirts, headed past Ricardo. Raul Meireles replaced the injured
Moutinho and Portugal went in search of a lifeline. It came via captain
Nuno Gomes five minutes before the break. Simão’s crossfield ball sent
Ronaldo racing clear of Per Mertesacker down the inside-left channel
and though Jens Lehmann blocked his shot, Gomes was first to the
rebound, striking first time into the net via the foot of Christoph
Metzelder, defending desperately on the line. It was Gomes’s sixth goal
on the European stage over three tournaments – a scoring span only
achieved by Jürgen Klinsmann, Thierry Henry and Vladimír Šmicer before
him.

Tense finish
Ronaldo was a whisker
away from an equaliser moments before half-time, flashing the ball past
Lehmann yet just wide of the far post. Deco did find the net shortly
after the interval but was in an offside position and the little
midfielder then flicked on a Simão corner to set up Pepe, only for the
defender to nod over. Ballack showed him how it should be done in the
61st minute when – to the displeasure of his future manager – he
shrugged off Chelsea FC team-mate Paulo Ferreira and beat Ricardo to
another Schweinsteiger free-kick to head home. Scolari sent on Nani and
Postiga as Portugal chased the game and the pair combined to ensure a
nervy finale when Postiga headed in from Nani’s left-wing delivery but
the glimmer of hope was soon extinguished.The German team celebrate with their supporters



Turkey Strikes Again!
Saturday June 21st 2008, 7:01 pm
Filed under: Sports

Turkey made it through to their first UEFA European
Championship semi-final at Croatia’s expense after a thrilling match in
Vienna was decided on penalties after the two sides had swapped goals
in the final moments of extra time.

Turkey players celebrate their shoot-out triumph in ViennaSensational comeback
When
Ivan Klasnić headed in Luka Modrić’s cross with a minute of the
overtime period to play, Croatia looked to have booked their place in
Wednesday’s semi-final against Germany. However, for the third game
running, Turkey sensationally hit back at the death to force the
first shoot-out of these finals when Semih Şentürk drove in, with the
aid of a deflection, from just inside the area. They went on to win 3-1
on penalties after Rüştü Reçber saved Mladen Petrić’s kick following
earlier misses from Modrić and Ivan Rakitić. Turkey coach Fatih Terim,
though, will struggle to get a team together to play Germany with Emre
Aşık, Tuncay Şanlı and Arda Turan all suspended along with Volkan
Demirel after being booked here.

Rüştü Reçber makes the winning save in the penalty shoot-outNervy start
Terim,
without the banned Volkan Demirel and Mehmet Aurélio and with injuries
also taking their toll, made four changes from the side that
defeated the Czech Republic dramatically to reach the quarter-finals.
The 35-year-old Rüştü, who had played against Croatia coach Slaven
Bilić at EURO ‘96™, started in goal, while Bilić reverted to the
team that had beaten Germany en route to topping Group B. With so much
at stake, both sets of players made nervy starts. On five minutes
Turkey right-back Sabri Sarıoğlu’s misplaced pass allowed Rakitić to
dart to the byline and he pulled the ball back for Darijo Srna whose
shot was blocked by Hakan Balta. It was a portent of things to come as
Croatia probed with success down both flanks with Terim’s reshuffled
back line struggling to cope with their slick passing.

Olić denied
For
Turkey, Hamit Altıntop flashed an early effort wide and Robert Kovač
bravely blocked his free-kick, but Bilić’s men were soon in the
ascendancy and should have gone ahead on 18 minutes. Croatia fans had
descended on Vienna en masse during a baking hot day and they roared as
one when Modrić raced clear on the right. His low centre singled out
Ivica Olić who crashed a shot off the crossbar before Niko Kranjčar
headed the rebound over. Just as against Austria, however, Croatia lost
their way when it looked like they were ready to take a stranglehold on
proceedings. Turkey began to enjoy more of the possession and though
chances were few, Mehmet Topal drew a gasp from the crowd with a
30-metre drive that whistled just wide.

Rüştü saves
The
traffic was soon flowing back towards Rüştü, with Croatia almost given
a goal four minutes after the restart. Gökhan Zan’s weak header
let Olić in and the veteran goalkeeper had to race off his line to get
a finger to the striker’s headed attempt. Rüştü saved from Kranjčar
moments later and then, on 70 minutes, Rakitić fired over after a neat
one-two with Olić had given him a clear sight of goal inside the box.
Knowing their side’s propensity for late goals Turkey supporters grew
in confidence as extra time loomed. But as the clocked ticked down
Croatia again came close, Rüştü brilliantly tipping away Srna’s curling
free-kick on 83 minutes, then blocking from Olić.

Luka Modrić shows his disappointment after missing the first Croatia penaltyIncredible climax
Having
taken the match to added time, Turkey started to show more adventure.
Stipe Pletikosa did well to parry after Emre Aşık had skipped through
the Croatia defence and the goalkeeper was then grateful to see
Tuncay’s drive flash wide on 102 minutes. In an incredible climax,
Klasnić would head Croatia in front in the final minute – Modrić
capitalising on an error by Rüştü to provide the assist – only for
Semih to hit back with the last kick of the game. His deflected strike
flew past Pletikosa, leaving it to a shoot-out to finally tilt the
balance in Turkey’s favour.



Piturca faces Romania credibility gap
Monday June 09th 2008, 1:56 am
Filed under: Sports
Piturca faces Romania credibility gap

The
task facing Romania over the next fortnight is perhaps the most
daunting of all the UEFA EURO 2008™ finalists’, yet coach Victor
Piţurcă remains convinced his emerging side have enough
quality to hold their own in arguably the toughest group of all.

Fine campaign
Romania
have been rewarded for their fine qualification campaign with a place
in Group C alongside traditional giants France, Italy and the
Netherlands. Competing in their first finals for eight years, the
Tricolorii have been labelled by many as outsiders to reach the
quarter-finals, but Piţurcă hopes to change that view by
springing a surprise against Les Bleus in Zurich. "When you look at the
four teams it’s understandable that people say we’re underdogs," the
52-year-old said. "Our aim is to start changing those opinions."

More

»

 

 
 
 

Focus



Ankle injury forces Cannavaro out of Euro 2008
Tuesday June 03rd 2008, 1:39 am
Filed under: Sports

Milan - The Italian squad faces an uphill start to their Euro 2008 campaign after losing their captain Fabio Cannavaro to an ankle injury suffered during a training session.

A clash with defence team mate Giorgio Chiellini ended Euro 2008 before it began for the 34-year-old Real Madrid defender, who was set to leave the world champions’ camp outside Vienna on Tuesday.

As Italy gear up for a debut game against the Netherlands on Monday, coach Roberto Donadoni has already called Fiorentina’s Alessandro Gamberini to join the 23-man line-up.

Goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon is to be the new captain, while two among Marco Materazzi, Christian Panucci, Andrea Barzagli and Chiellini will make up the core of Italy’s defence package.

"I am an optimist, even in moments like this," Cannavaro said, explaining he had "hit half the ball and half the ground, getting (my foot) stuck" when he and Chiellini clashed.

The result was a blow to his calf and a sudden twist that damaged the ligaments in his left ankle.

 

Exams in a Vienna hospital showed no fracture, but it was unclear Tuesday if the ankle had to be operated on.

In 2006, Cannavaro won the Golden Ball and the FIFA World Player awards after being crucial for Italy as it won its fourth World Cup in Germany.

His absence has raised concerns about the reliability of Italy’s defence, which lately seemed to have lost its trademark solidity.

La Gazzetta dello Sport newspaper noted that Italy has always conceded at least one goal in its last five outings, a far cry from the two goals conceded during the World Cup, which were an own goal and a spot kick.

 

Italy faces a tough start in Group C against the Netherlands, Romania and France, but is among the favourites to win the tournament jointly hosted by Austria and Switzerland.

They last won the continental crown in 1968 and look to clinch a prestigious double in the wake of the World Cup triumph.