BTN Revamp

I’m not sure if it is fortune or misfortune that has resulted in me not having to attend any BTN camp before. However, I have some friends who have attended such courses. Of course, there are also many anecdotal recollections of what has happened inside these camps. There is rarely any hard evidence in any of these cases because of the strict restrictions on bringing information devices into these courses.

However, after reading the article in TheStar, it seems that the government acknowledges that there are problems and steps are being taken to fix them. According to the article, “the co-curriculum [sic] will be brought in line with the Prime Minister’s 1Malaysia, which means it will be more inclusive and will not divide Malaysians. If we have a course for only one racial group, then that is not 1Malaysia,” said our Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz.

To me, this seems like an admission on the part of the government, that something is terribly wrong with these BTN camps. If the courses taught during these camps are designed to instill disunity and spew a whole load of bigoted nonsense, it will ultimately do more harm than good. So, while I will not hold my breath waiting for the thing to be fixed, I will at least accept that the government is aware of the problems and that something needs to be done to fix it (at some point in the future).

At the very least, I now know that my friends were telling the truth of the matter and that they were not deranged attention seeking sociopaths. The present crop of BTN courses has to go. Let us do what my former Malaysian Studies professor did – tear up the pages of our distorted SPM history and re-tell our country’s history from scratch, with the necessary logic, rational and evidence to back things up. I loved his lectures, which at least made sense.

It instilled in me a love for our country, it made me proud of our rich history and made me aware of the beautiful cultural diversity that we have inherited. You don’t have to be a right-wing extremist to be a nationalist. I wish that our government would get his help in drafting the new BTN syllabus. He truly knows how to put the right spin on the truth.

Overcoming Jet-Lag

Some people have all the luck. They do not suffer from jet-lag. Unfortunately, I am not one of those people. I can still remember the first time I returned from the UK at the end of my first year. I was only home for a month and it took me a whole week to get over my jet-lag. I was just sleeping and eating all the time. This time around, it has taken me about a week as well. I have spent most of last week as a day-time zombie while trying to sleep at night was a chore.

I got a really good night’s sleep last night and I hope that is enough to overcome jet-lag. Tomorrow is the start of a new day, the start of a new week, and almost the start of a new month.

NameWee vs Rais

Alright, we all know that Namewee loves to court controversy. I have this feeling that he is an attention whore and he needs to be in the limelight for the purposes of furthering his career. Honestly, if he did not face the kinds of trouble that he has, it is unlikely that many of us would know the artiste known as Namewee. Fortunately for him, our government is run by a bunch of fools who continue to feed him his daily dose of notoriety.

The latest incident comes from Namewee complaining about the services provided by our utilities company, Tenaga Nasional Berhad (or more affectionately known as Total National Blackout). Regardless of what Namewee has done or is doing to TNB, this is merely a simple matter of a customer being unhappy with the services provided and venting out, which is a perfectly normal thing to do. I don’t think that there is anyone among us who has not cursed TNB at one time or another (or TMNET for that matter).

What I am amazed at is the stupidity of our politicians. Quoting from TheStar, our Information, Communications, Cul­ture and Arts Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim said that:

…investigations would be conducted on the lyrics, content and composition of the song before any action was taken against Wee. He said the Penal Code and the Communications and Multimedia Act could be used against offenders. We cannot allow acts that insult which could lead to disharmony…

WTF?!

Honestly, I think that our minister is confused by what is happening (or otherwise misquoted as our politicians usually are). This is a simple matter of a customer being unhappy with a service provided by a company and venting it publicly. This could not possibly lead to any sort of disharmony especially at the national level. It sets a very dangerous precedent if the government decides to step in and stop customers from complaining about services provided by private companies. It is extremely detrimental to consumer rights and the whole economy in general.

Let us not confuse ourselves. TNB is a private company that is providing power utility services. It is by no means the only power provider in Malaysia even if it is the biggest one. If its services levels are not good enough, customers have the right to complain as much as they want. If TNB feels that what the customer is saying is slanderous, by all means, take the customer to court and see how that pans out with the rest of its customer base.

While Namewee may be a total bastard in many ways, it is well within his right to rant and rave if there is cause for it. In a proper market, we would have multiple vendors, instead of multiple monopolies, competing for customers. If TNB sucked, we could always walk off and buy power from another company, if only our markets worked properly. Unfortunately, things do not work that way in Malaysia.

PS: I wish that TMNet did not suck and provide us with 10Mbps broadband speeds at a low-cost in Malaysia.

Breathe Sleep

I hate jet-lag. I’m wide awake at night and half-asleep during the day. Let’s hope that this long weekend will give me enough rest to cure it.

And I need to find out what result my nephew got in his end-of-year school exams. I sort of remember promising him a Wii if he managed to top his entire cohort. However, seeing that he is still pretty new at his PS2 games, I may defer getting him the Wii first. I really do not want to waste my money on a Wii if it turns out that he has little interest in playing games. Alternatively, I may get him something else that he wants, instead of a Wii.

Print Magazine

This is interesting. I have never considered my photography of sufficient quality to warrant printing but a Japanese print magazine had recently contacted me to ask for permission to use one of my photographs in their magazine. It is for a special issue of their magazine that will be coming out next month. They have been upfront with their terms, which is good:

Why I would like to use it is so beautiful and really suit for the concept for the special issue. I’m afraid it’s going to be for free although, I will e-mail the page’s PDF to you after it’s published. If you allow me to use it, of course your name will be on it as a credit.

The photo is presently published under a Creative Commons license (SA-NC-BY). I think that it is exceedingly good form on their part to actually contact me for permission in using the photograph for their magazine. There are so many companies out there who will just take your stuff and pretend that it is theirs while hoping that nobody would notice. There are also plenty of professionals engaged in such activities. I decided to grant them the permission to use the photo for their print magazine. In addition, I had asked them to send me a small amount of money to make the transaction all legit.

The photograph was received. The message is done again if there is a question concerning the photograph and others. It makes an effort about Japanese coins being possible to do. Thank you really for polite correspondence.

Now I noticed that the standards of English were not quite as good as the standard message that they sent out earlier. I did not really know if they had understood my request about the Japanese coins but I didn’t bother too much about it. If they did send me the money, I would be happy. The first thing that I found when I came home was that they had sent me a print copy of the December 2009 issue of their magazine along with my photo in it, and the bit of money that I had asked for.

This totally made my day.

PS: I had asked for a single coin of each denomination in Japan, which totals up to about RM25 (666 Yen).

Long Hauler

I am in for another long haul flight back home, soon. I am not looking forward to it. I will try my best to get some work done on the flight back so that I can kick start things once I get home. Life will be very interesting over the next couple of weeks. Let’s just hope that I make it back home safely.

Life Memory

It’s nice to know that I have friends. I got a bunch of emails, text messages and instant messages to wish me luck and all the best, just before my big day. On one hand I was quite glad that there were a lot of people who believed in me and supported me while on the other hand, I was also feeling the weight of all that expectation that I did not want to let down. The day is finally over and the memory of it is something that will probably stay with me for the rest of my life.

It was not a pleasurable experience but a real learning experience and not one that I would soon forget. It did not turn out very well but it could have ended up being much worse. Thankfully, it was not and I think that I got the best result that I could have expected. In fact, the funny thing was, a friend of mine asked me a few days ago what I would do if I was my own examiner and I said that I would have done the exact same thing that I ended up getting.

Well, at least this is finally over and the finishing line is within sight. Now, is the rightful mad dash to the finish!