kutwo181.blogspot.com Headline Animator

18 March, 2011

Pakar Radioaktif cakap..


kah.kah.kah..
 
jgn takut..takut jgn sekali..takutlah banyak kali..!!!
radioaktif akan transit ke amerika sebelum ke eropah..
 
kah.kah.kah..

warga amerika boleh sambut ketibaan en radioaktif..
tunggu sahaja di rumah..
tak perlu ke air port..
tak perlu kemana-mana..
kah.kah.kah
 
malaysia????
iye ke??
kena jugak laa..
alamak !!!
 
 
jgn lah ada bomoh dari amerika yg tolak angin ke mari..
woit org kampung..
panggil bomoh angin..
panggil bomoh hujan..
panggil bomoh siam..
tolak angin..tahan angin..
hangin.hangin.hangin!!!
kah.kah.kah.
 
statement pakar nuklear..
"en radioaktif akan terkena hujan..lalu jatuh ke laut"
kah.kah.kah.
woit uncle nelayan..
jgn turun ke laut..
jgn pergi memancing..
jgn menjaring..
nanti dapat en radioaktif..
kah.kah.kah..
ikan-ikan dalam bahaya..
sotong-sotong dalam bahaya..
dugong-dugong dalam bahaya..
jaga-jaga..cepat-cepat ke darat..!!!
kepada semua berhati-hati lah..
en radioaktif ni tak de kaler..
cukup bahaya..
cukup danger..
mari sama-sama berdoa..
agar keselamatan kita dilindungi olehNYA..

Japan quake

Japan quake: live report

1950 GMT: Obama says he has ordered a "comprehensive review" of US nuclear safety and vows to learn lessons from Japan's nuclear accident.
1945 GMT: "We will stand with the people of Japan as they contain this crisis, recover from this hardship and rebuild their great nation," he says.
1943 GMT: President Barack Obama says he does not expect harmful radiation from Japan's nuclear crisis to reach the United States or any of its territories.
1925 GMT: Obama is due to make remarks on Japan's crisis any minute now in the White House's Rose Garden.
1901 GMT: Welcomed by the ambassador at the Japanese embassy in Washington, Obama inscribes the condolence book placed on a table with a vase of flowers near a Japanese flag.
"Because of the strength and wisdom of its people, we know that Japan will recover and indeed will emerge stronger than ever. And as it recovers, the memory of those who have been lost will remain in our hearts and will serve only to strengthen the friendship between our two countries," he writes."May God bless the people of Japan."
1830 GMT: The Pentagon dispatches a team of experts to evaluate how American forces can assist Japan with the quake-hit Fukushima nuclear plant.
The nine-member team "will work with the Japanese military and they will provide advice to the (US) commander to determine if any additional US forces are required for that mission," spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan says.
1820 GMT: A study released in the United States says the risk of thyroid cancer among people exposed as children to the nuclear fallout at Chernobyl has not declined nearly 25 years after the disaster.
The National Institutes of Health-led study examined more than 12,500 people who were under 18 at the time of the Chernobyl accident on April 26, 1986, and who lived near the accident site in one of three parts of Ukraine.
Each person's thyroid radioactivity levels were measured within two months of the accident, and they were screened for thyroid cancer four times, beginning as early as 12 years after the disaster and continuing for 10 years.
When researchers examined the cancer risk in relation to how much exposure to radioactive iodine-131 (I-131) each person received, they found a two-fold increase for each additional gray, an international unit of absorbed radiation.
"The researchers found no evidence, during the study time period, to indicate that the increased cancer risk to those who lived in the area at the time of the accident is decreasing over time," says.
1808 GMT: President Barack Obama pays an unannounced visit to the Japanese embassy in Washington to sign a condolence book for victims of the disaster.
Obama is due to make a statement on the attempts by Tokyo to stave off a catastrophe at its damaged nuclear reactors at 3:30 pm (1930 GMT).
1804 GMT: Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), which operates the quake-hit Japanese nuclear reactors, opens an official Twitter account, immediately drawing more than 117,000 followers.
"We sincerely apologise for causing serious worries and trouble over the accident at Fukushima No.1 Nuclear Power Plant, radiation leak, planned blackouts," TEPCO says in its profile in Japanese on the micro-blogging site.
1801 GMT: Oscar-winning Hollywood actress Sandra Bullock has donated $1 million to help victims of Japan's earthquake and tsunami crisis, the latest celebrity to pledge aid, the American Red Cross says.
Other celebrities who have stepped in include Lady Gaga who raised $250,000 in 48 hours by selling red and white wristbands bearing the message "We Pray for Japan" for $5 a piece via her merchandise website.
1758 GMT: First US charter flight taking Americans out of Japan left for Taiwan four hours ago with "just under 100 people" on board: State Department.
1745 GMT: The situation at Japan's stricken nuclear plant has not worsened "significantly" over the past 24 hours, but it would be premature to talk about a ray of hope, according to an expert at the UN's atomic energy watchdog.
"At the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant the situation remains very serious. But there has been no signficant worsening since yesterday," Graham Andrew, scientific and technical advisor to the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, says.
Asked whether his assessment represented a small ray of hope, Andrew replies: "I think it's too early to say that. It hasn't got worse, which is positive. But it's still possible that it could get worse. So I'd rather not speculate. I think we'd say it's reasonably stable compared to yesterday."
1734 GMT: US senators call for a review of nuclear sites to test their ability to withstand attack or disasters like the one in Japan.
Democratic Senators Barbara Boxer and Tom Carper deliver their appeal in a letter to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).
"We call on the NRC to conduct a comprehensive investigation of all nuclear facilities in the United States to assess their capacity to withstand catastrophic natural or man-made disasters including scenarios that may be considered remote like the recent events in Japan," they write.
"Special and immediate attention should be given to those US nuclear reactors that share similar characteristics as the failing reactors in Japan, including similar designs or located near a coastline or seismic fault line."
1722 GMT: EU nations behind the former Iron Curtain are unbowed in their support for atomic power, setting themselves apart from many of the bloc's western member states.
Eastern Europe was on the frontline of the world's worst nuclear accident, the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in what was then the Soviet Union, and many of its atomic plants pre-date the fall of the communist regimes in 1989-1991.
But regional leaders have warned that Japan's crisis must not lead to a knee-jerk reaction in the European Union, which their countries joined in 2004. Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas has denounced what he dubbed anti-nuclear "hysteria" and the country's president, Vaclav Klaus, has slammed as "political opportunism" calls for restrictions on nuclear power.
1704 GMT: US officials say there is still no concern about raised radiation levels in the United States or its territories.
This follows a day of near-panic buying of iodide pills in the United States, notably in California and Hawaii, the Pacific island state some 4,000 miles (6,500 kilometers) east of Japan.
Demand for potassium iodide, which can protect against the effects of radioactive iodine, surged on the US West Coast, where some fear a cloud spewing from Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant could be blown, drug company Anbex says.
1655 GMT: Stretched Japanese authorities have asked for European Union relief to be coordinated to ease delivery to the devastated nation, Europe's aid chief Kristalina Georgieva says.
1630 GMT: The American military, which is allowing families of troops and civilian employees stationed on the main Japanese island of Honshu to leave, says most evacuees will be sent home on commercial airlines, including charter flights being secured by the US state department.
1610 GMT: Germany says it will temporarily move its embassy from Tokyo to Osaka as a "preventative measure" as fears grow that dangerous radiation could leak from the damaged nuclear reactor.
1600 GMT: The latest situation in Japan following the devastating earthquake, tsunami and nuclear alert:
- Millions remain without water, electricity, fuel or enough food and hundreds of thousands more are homeless, the misery compounded by heavy snowfalls, freezing cold and wet conditions.
- Military helicopters and trucks have sprayed water over the stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant in a bid to restore water levels in cooling ponds where spent fuel rods are stored. Plant owner Tokyo Electric Power Co says it cannot tell if the spraying was successful but efforts will continue.
- Tepco is attempting to reconnect electricity supplies so that pumps can be restarted in the plant's cooling systems.
- Countries from the United States to Europe and Australia have warned their citizens to get out of Tokyo.
- The official number of dead and missing has topped 15,000. The number of confirmed dead rose to 5,692 while the official number of missing increased to 9,522, the National Police Agency said in its latest update. A total of 2,409 people were injured in the disasters.

kena selalu ingat..

kena selalu ingat aku hebat..
kena selalu ingat aku ada kebolehan..
kena selalu ingat aku pasti berjaya..
kena selalu ingat aku istimewa..
kena selalu ingat aku pun boleh..
kena selalu ingat ada yakin..
kena selalu ingat ada org akan berminat..
kena selalu ingat penolakan perkara biasa..
kena selalu ingat org berbeza-beza..
kena selalu ingat aku akan biasa..
kena selalu ingat rezeki tak kan dtg bergolek..
kena selalu ingat aku akan bebas kewangan..
kena selalu ingat aku akan ada kereta impian..
kena selalu ingat aku akan ada rumah impian..
kena selalu ingat aku akan banyak masa bersama anak-anak..
kena selalu ingat aku positif..
kena selalu ingat aku insan yg luarbiasa..
kena selalu ingat aku sentiasa bersyukur..

tiap-tiap usaha dan doa berterusan tanpa mengira cabaran dan halangan..pasti membawa kita ke pentas kejayaan dgn izinNYA...

Jadi selalulah ingat kita di lahirkan sebagai JUARA..!!!

17 March, 2011

Hampeh lagi..

Apa ke halnya ni melayu???
nak jadi samseng in the school????
jentik dahi???!!!
jentiklah kerandut kalau samseng sangat..
kalau 20x jentik boleh mandul..
kah.kah.kah..

Buang duit ayah je hantar asrama..
Buang masa emak je manjakan kau..
Buat ayah terluka..'
Buat Ibu kecewa...
semuanya hampa..

woit..melayu..
mana melayu kutuk melayu???
mana melayu tipu melayu???

Ini semua salah siapa??? Guru besor tak kan ajar ini semua...warden asrama lagi laa..
Habis siapa yg ajar??? siapa yg kurang ajar ???... siapa yg biadap ???
Kuantiti sekolah banyak..
Kualiti eeelleekk..
tak sedar ke @ buat-buat pengsan..- Tn Hj bakhil..
kah.kah.kah..

ayat budak-budak sekolah melayu sekarang " ala..setakat kena buang sekolah apa ada hal..???"
kah.kah.kah..

kekalkan positif..

Assalamualaikum..

b'mana hari-hari kita??


kekalkan minda positif..
memang kadang-kadang mood terganggu..
itu normal...
kena atasi segera..
kekalkan minda positif..
memang kadang-kadang mood jadi penat..
itu biasa..
kena atasi segera..
kekalkan minda positif..
memang kadang-kadang dtg mood kecewa..
itu normal..
kena atasi segera..
kekalkan minda positif..
memang kadang-kadang dtg mood marah..
itu biasa..
kena atasi segera..
kekalkan minda positif..
kadang-kadang dtg mood malas..
itu normal..
kena atasi segera..
kekalkan minda positif..
kadang-kadang dtg mood bosan..
itu biasa..
kena atasi segera..
kekalkan minda positif..

b'mana nak kekal positif..
1.sumber bacaan dari buku-buku motivasi..
2.layar internet,blog yg positif
3.bersama org yg positif
4.selalu ingat pada "impian"
5.selalu berdoa
6.dan lain-lain asalkan positif

dan satu lagi yg selalu kita lupa utk kekal positif..
"BUANG NEGATIF"..

thank you..see you at the top !!!

Radiasi

Bahayanya Radiasi..
Dari sumber yg boleh dipercayai..

Fukushima 2

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Containment vessel failure unlikely: Edano

Smoke, fires spark new havoc, tactics at ground zero


By KANAKO TAKAHARA and KAZUAKI NAGATA
Staff writers
White smoke rose from the No. 3 reactor at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant and radiation levels rose at one point Wednesday, but the government later played down the possibility of grave damage to the containment vessel.
News photo
Damage control: Tokyo Electric Power Co. released an image Wednesday showing damage to reactors No. 3 (left) and No. 4 at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant. KYODO PHOTO

Correcting an earlier remark, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told reporters in the afternoon that the government now believes the water pool for spent nuclear fuel at the No. 3 reactor probably heated up, causing steam to rise.
The containment vessel is the last line of defense for containing lethal radioactive materials, and significant damage would pose grave safety concerns.
"The possibility of any great damage to the containment vessel is low," the government's emergency headquarters said in a statement.
But evaporation of the water in the spent fuel rod pool poses another kind of threat.
If the fuel rods were to melt, high amounts of radiation could be released into the environment. The pool is not in the containment vessel.
Unlike the reactor itself, the fuel pool is not protected by a containment vessel and the roof of the No. 3 building was blown away by an earlier hydrogen explosion.
The temperature of the water in the spent fuel pool at the No. 4 unit also spiked Wednesday. The reactor had caught fire a day earlier after a hydrogen blast created two big holes in the facility's wall.
Providing more water is urgently needed to prevent the fuel rods from melting. In a race against time to cool the water pool, the government dispatched a Self-Defense Forces C-47 helicopter carrying a bladder to dump water into the pool.
But the plan was canceled for the day because of the abnormally high level of radiation escaping from the plant.
News photo
Quake survivors brave a snowfall to dig for belongings where their homes once stood in Sendai. KYODO PHOTO
It was later reported that a Metropolitan Police Department water cannon was requested to pump watere into the overheating facilities.
Earlier in the day, the nuclear safety agency said the radiation level briefly reached 10 millisieverts per hour at the plant's main gate at 10:40 a.m.
Still, that was lower than the 400 millisieverts per hour — a level equivalent to roughly 400 times that at which people can be safely exposed in one year — that was recorded Tuesday and the maximum so far reported at the plant after apparent hydrogen blasts hit the No. 2 and No. 4 reactors.
Radiation levels had dropped to 1.5 millisieverts per hour at the main gate by 4 p.m.
Tokyo Electric Power Co., operator of the nuclear plant, instructed its officials to evacuate the area.
Despite a series of events that further raised fear of radiation leakage, the government said it doesn't intend to expand the evacuation zone.
At present, residents within a 20-km radius have been ordered to evacuate and people between a 20- to 30-km radius have been instructed to stay indoors.
Seawater continued to be pumped into all the Nos. 1, 2 and 3 reactors, but water levels were still not high enough to cool all of the fuel rods.

Fukushima 1

Rebuilding northeast Japan to take years, billions 

It took only minutes for the earthquake and tsunami to devastate Japan's northeast. Rebuilding will take years - if it can be afforded. The relentless wall of water that the quake unleashed killed thousands, swept away whole towns, inundated roads and knocked ports, oil refineries, steel plants and factories out of action. Experts say the cost of the destruction likely exceeds that of the catastrophic 1995 Kobe earthquake - estimated by Standard & Poor's to have totaled $159 billion. The four most severely affected prefectures - Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima and Ibaraki - are home to industries from farming to auto parts to electronics and make up some 6 percent of Japan's economy.
Hundreds of thousands of people have spent five nights with little food, water or heating in near-freezing temperatures as they dealt with the loss of homes and loved ones. The biggest port on the northeast coast, Sendai, has been destroyed. It handled mainly container shipments of exports including rubber and marine products, office machinery, paper goods and auto parts. Three others - Hachinohe, Ishinomaki and Onahama - were severely damaged and will likely be out of commission for months.
Six oil refineries that can turn 1.4 million barrels of oil a day into fuel - a third of Japan's refining capacity - are shut down, two due to fires. An out of control blaze at one refinery is raging for a sixth day.
Steel plants have also been hit.
Nippon Steel Corp.'s factory in Kamaishi, Iwate Prefecture was shut after the tsunami flooded part of the plant. The facility makes steel and wire rods for vehicle powertrains and chassis. Sumitomo Metal Industries Ltd. plant in Kashima, Ibaraki prefecture also went dark after the earthquake.
Elsewhere, widespread power shortages from damage to four nuclear plants - an unfolding crisis in itself - have forced many companies to halt production.
Sony Corp. has halted output at several factories, including one that makes Blu-Ray discs. Toshiba Corp. has done the same. All automakers including Toyota Motor Corp., the world's biggest, have stopped making cars nationwide.
Companies are also facing problems shipping components, receiving raw materials and getting workers to facilities that are working, said Dale Ford, an analyst at technology market research firm IHS iSuppli.
The components made by Japan's hi-tech industry are destined for final assembly in China and other countries. Analysts said there's enough inventory in the global supply chain to tide over customers up to four weeks and companies such as Apple, Dell and Lenovo will have to switch to backup sources by then to avoid shortages of parts for iPads and computers.
Initial estimates of insurance losses from the disaster range as high as $60 billion.

16 March, 2011

Jgn Main-Main..

simbol kehancuran sejagat..
 
ingatkah kita pada peristiwa Chernobyl di ukraine dulu..
meletusnya reaktor nuklear..?.
menyebarkan radiasi radioaktif yg telah menghancurkan
rakyat russia pada masa tu..
 kesannya akan berkekalan didalam jiwa dan sanubari
rakyat russia khasnya dan satu dunia amnya...
lihatlah foto-foto yg dilampirkan atas kesan dari radiasi tersebut..
 
 
adakah kita ingin ini berlaku?
adakah salah mereka?
apakah dosa mereka?
adakah lagi masa depan mereka?
fikir-fikirkan...


kini jepun pula dilanda musibah yg hampir serupa..
loji nuklear di fukushima telah meletus..
reaktor yg ke-4 amat ditakuti sekali sudah meletup..
radiasi diruang udara jepun makin meruncing..
tiupan angin akan membawa radiasi ke mana hala..

 kita harus berjaga-jaga..
ini buka angin biasa..
bukan angin puting beliung..
bukan angin tornado..
bukan angin taufan..

tetapi
angin yg lebih DAHSYAT !!!!!

Radiasi Hp pun bahaya..


ada kenal kawan-kawan yg mati pucuk..???
cuba tanya brand apa dia pakai..???
kah.kah.kah..
 
 

Japan braces for potential radiation catastrophe (updated)


TOKYO (March 15, 2011): Japan faced a potential catastrophe on Tuesday after a quake-crippled nuclear power plant exploded and sent low levels of radiation floating towards Tokyo, prompting some people to flee the capital and others to stock up on essential supplies.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan urged people within 30km of the facility north of Tokyo – a population of 140,000 – to remain indoors amid the world's most serious nuclear accident since the Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine in 1986.
Around eight hours after the explosions, the UN weather agency said winds were dispersing radioactive material over the Pacific Ocean, away from Japan and other Asian countries. The Geneva-based World Meteorological Organisation added that weather conditions could change.
As concern about the crippling economic impact of the nuclear and earthquake disasters mounted, Japanese stocks fell as much as 14% before ending down 9.5%, compounding a slide of 7.5% the day before. The two-day fall has wiped some US$620 billion (RM1.9 trillion) off the market.
Radiation levels in the city of Maebashi, 100km north of Tokyo, and in Chiba prefecture, nearer the city, were up to 10 times normal levels, Kyodo news agency said. Only minute levels were found in the capital itself, which so far were "not a problem", city officials said.
"The possibility of further radioactive leakage is heightening," a grim-faced Kan said in an address to the nation.  "We are making every effort to prevent the leak from spreading. I know that people are very worried but I would like to ask you to act calmly."
Two of the reactors exploded on Tuesday at the Fukushima Daiichi plant after days of frantic efforts to cool them. Kyodo news agency said the nuclear fuel pool at the No 4 reactor may be boiling, suggesting the crisis is far from over at the plant, 240km north of Tokyo.
Levels of 400 millisieverts per hour had been recorded near the No 4 reactor, the government said. Exposure to over 100 millisieverts a year is a level which can lead to cancer, according to the World Nuclear Association. The government later said radiation levels around the complex had plunged.
The plant operator pulled out 750 workers, leaving just 50, and a 30km no-fly zone was imposed around the reactors.
"Radioactive material will reach Tokyo but it is not harmful  to human bodies because it will be dissipated by the time it gets to Tokyo," said Koji Yamazaki, professor at Hokkaido University graduate school of environmental science. "If the wind gets stronger, it means the material flies faster but it will be even more dispersed in the air."
Despite pleas for calm, residents rushed to shops in Tokyo to stock up on supplies. Don Quixote, a multi-storey, 24-hour general store in Roppongi district, sold out of radios, flashlights, candles and sleeping bags.
In a sign of regional fears about the risk of radiation, China said it would evacuate its citizens from areas worst affected but it had detected no abnormal radiation levels at home. Air China said it had cancelled flights to Tokyo.
Several embassies advised staff and citizens to leave affected areas. Tourists cut short vacations and multinational companies either urged staff to leave or said they were considering plans to move outside Tokyo.
"I'm scared. I'm so scared I would rather be in the eye of a tornado," said 10-year-old Lucy Niver of Egan, Minnesota, who was on holiday in Japan. "I want to leave."
"What the hell is going on"
Japanese media have became more critical of Kan's handling of the disaster and criticised the government and nuclear plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) for its failure to provide enough information on the incident.
Kan himself lambasted the operator for taking so long to inform his office about one of the blasts, demanding to know "what the hell is going on?", Kyodo reported. 
Kyodo said Kan had ordered Tepco not to pull employees out of the plant.
"The TV reported an explosion. But nothing was said to the premier's office for about an hour," a Kyodo reporter quoted Kan telling power company executives.  
Lam Ching-wan, a chemical pathologist at the University of Hong Kong, said the blasts could expose the population to longer-term exposure to radiation, which can raise the risk of thyroid and bone cancers and leukemia. Children and fetuses are especially vulnerable, he said.
"Very acute radiation, like that which happened in Chernobyl and to the Japanese workers at the nuclear power station, is unlikely for the population," he said.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano, talking of levels of radiation at the Fukushima Daiichi plant's No 4 reactor, said: "There is definitely a possibility that this could affect people's bodies."
There have been a total of four explosions at the plant since it was damaged in last Friday's massive quake and tsunami. The most recent were blasts at reactors No 2 and No 4.
There was a real possibility of a leak in the No 4 reactor container, which houses the nuclear fuel rods, according to Murray Jennex, a professor at San Diego State University in California.
Concerns centre on damage to a part of the reactor core known as the suppression pool, which helps cool and trap the majority of cesium, iodine, strontium in its water. The nature of the damage was unclear, as was its impact on the containment structure, a thick steel vessel that surrounds the core.
Jennex said the crisis in Japan, the only nation to have suffered a nuclear attack, was worse that the Three Mile Island disaster of 1979.
"But you're nowhere near a Chernobyl ... Chernobyl there was no impediment to release, it just blew everything out into the atmosphere," he said. "You've still got a big chunk of the containment there holding most of it in."
Authorities had previously been trying to prevent meltdowns in the complex's nuclear reactors by flooding the chambers with sea water to cool the reactors down.
A sudden drop in cooling water levels when a pump ran out of fuel had fully exposed the fuel rods for a time, an official said. Tepco had resumed pumping sea water into the reactor early on Tuesday.
US warships and planes helping with relief efforts moved away from the coast temporarily because of low-level radiation. The US Seventh Fleet described the move as precautionary.
South Korea, Thailand, Hong Kong, Singapore and the Philippines said they would test Japanese food imports for radiation.
Villages and towns wiped off the map 
The full extent of the destruction from last Friday's 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that followed it was still becoming clear, as rescuers combed through the region north of Tokyo where officials say at least 10,000 people were killed.
Whole villages and towns have been wiped off the map by Friday's wall of water, triggering an international humanitarian effort of epic proportions.
About 850,000 households in the north were still without electricity in near-freezing weather, Tohuku Electric Power Co. said, and the government said at least 1.5 million households lack running water. Tens of thousands of people were missing.
Toshiyuki Suzuki, 61, has a heart pacemaker and takes seven kinds of medicine a day. He lost all of them when the waves swept away his home, along with his father and son. 
He cannot go to hospitals because there is no gasoline at local fuel stations. "I am having problems with walking and with my heartbeat. I absolutely need medicine." — Reuters

radioactive 1

France: Low-level radioactive wind may reach Tokyo in 10 hours

March 15, 2011
TOKYO, March 15 — Low-level radioactive wind from a quake-stricken nuclear power reactor in northern Japan could reach Tokyo within 10 hours, based on current winds, the French embassy said in a statement today.
The statement, posted on its Japanese website, urged French citizens in the city to stay indoors, close the windows and not to panic. — Reuters

15 March, 2011

Jaga-Jaga..

PM JEPUN SAHKAN LOJI BOCOR, PARAS RADIASI SANGAT TINGGI - mkini

Radiasi yang merebak dari loji kuasa nuklear yang meletup di timur laut Jepun selepas dilanda tsunami dalam tempoh empat hari, memaksa kerajaan mengarahkan rakyat berdekatan supaya duduk dalam bangunan bagi mengelak terdedah.

Dalam kenyataan yang disiarkan menerusi televisyen seluruh negara, Perdana Menteri Jepun, Naoto Kan, berkata kesan radiasi yang merebak dari empat reaktor di loji nuklear Fukushima Dai-ichi, wilayah Fukushima adalah kawasan paling diteruk ditimpa gempa bumi berukuran 9.0 magnitud dan ombak tsunami.

"Tahap (radiasi) nampak amat tinggi dan masih wujud risiko lebih tinggi bahawa banyak radiasi akan merebak," kata Kan.


Botol Susu Haram..


macam-macam lah...
haram..haram..haram..
pandai lah doktor ni ckp pasai haram..
doktor mau kasi tau sikit..
haram tu berdosa wooohh..
 
 
tapi doktor ni ca ya nun alip..
haram dia start tahun depan..
bukan on the spot..
sebab duit haram banyak nak masuk...
kah.kah.kah...
 
 
kakak-kakak,makcik-makcik yg ada anak kecik..
kalau tak nak beli botol susu tak per...
mintak dgn
en abg-abg,pakcik-pakcik..
beli je sekor lembu susu bawak balik rumah..
 
kah.kah.kah.kah....

Tahniah Dato Lee

Tahniah Dato...
Dato memang terrer..
Dato smash sampai 270km/j..
sapa boleh ambik smash mcm tu punye laju..
Dato memang hebat...
Dato Lin pening kepala..
Dato Lin terkejut..
Dato Lin teruja..
tahniah Dato Lee...

Soalan???
Siapa yg ajar Dato Lee main raket...?

 alaa...potong stim la dato ni...
alaa...bosan lah tuan director ni....
diam-diam sudahlah...
pandai ke pegang raket..?
kalau ada cap apa..?
dato poyooo.....
kah.kah.kah..


Dato Lee memang punyai bakat..
Bakat beliau di mata Misbun..-si Jawa banting
Bakat beliau digilap oleh Dato Misbun..bukan dato MSN..
sikit punya hal dato MSN nak tunjuk terrer...ppprraahh...

kah.kah.kah...
woit...
mana melayunya???
mana melayu tipu melayu..???
biasalah melayu...
 

14 March, 2011

Berani untuk gagal bukan gagal utk berani...

don't give up..
jgn give up...give up..!!!
never n ever give up !!!
teruskan walaupun gagal..!!!!

 bacalah..
pasti kita akan dapat sesuatu..
bertanyalah..
pasti kita akan dapat sesuatu..
buatlah..
pasti kita akan dapat sesuatu..
 binalah kejayaan..
binalah impian..

sebuah kejayaan pasti bermula dari kegagalan..!!!

tanamkan keberanian..
baja keberanian..
bina keberanian..
kongsikan keberanian..

ADA BERANI ?????

kah.kah.kah...
 

Hampeh..


ingat dulu masa bujang-bujang..
turun KL...jalan-jalan bersama jeans Levis 501..
seluar dalam pun Levis..kah.kah.kah..
naik bas mini 5 kupang..
turun pertama kompleks..
turun campbell..
lalu semua house...
lalu masjid india..
lalu kota raya kompleks..
turun central market..
ramai sibujang-bujang mcm tu dulu-dulu..
ramai bujang kelantan.
ramai bujang trengganu..
ramai bujang johor..
ramai bujang pahang..
ramai bujang melaka..
ramai bujang n.sembilan
ramai bujang perak..
s.bernam teramai bujang..kah.kah..kah..

tak puas jalan lagi turun sg wang plaza..
lalu bukit bintang..
baru jadi warga bujang negara..
kah.kah.kah..
tetapi....sekarang..

kalau turun KL mcm jakarta..
mcm phnom penh..
mcm myanmar..
mcm bangladesh..
mcm colombo..

kah.kah.kah..

mana melayu???
mana melayu kutuk melayu??

kah.kah.kah..

ramai marah setakat marah..
habis nak buat apa...??
mcm mana diorang masuk ni..??
ada dah jadi warganegara kot...

tak percaya..??

cuba naik bas pengakutan awam...siapa ramai??
cuba pegi klinik bersalin swasta..siapa ramai??

kah.kah.kah...

*kutwo kalau nak g oversea tak payah jauh-jauh..
turun KL jer..

kah.kah.kah...

Fukushima..

Bayangkan berapa kuatnya Tsunami...?
Bayangkan berapa besarnya kekuasaan Allah s.w.t...
bayangkan kapal yg beribu-ribu tan beratnya..
tersadai di darat..
hingga kini dianggarkan lebih 10,000 nyawa terkorban..
SubhanAllah...

Jepun adalah negara yg termaju di dunia..
Jepuun adalah kuasa ekonomi terpenting di dunia..
Jepun adalah negara yg berjaya..

kekayaan,kemajuan dan kejayaan itu
adalah milik Allah s.w.t..

berapa masa diambil untuk Fukushima hancur.???
bayangkan dan fikirkan..dalam kita berniaga...
siapakah kita...?

sekadar peringatan utk kutwo181....

maafkanlah..

kah.kah.kah
tau takut..
kecut kerandut..
padan muka..
kah.kah.kah..

kutwo181..

apa citer pagi ni bro..???

demo.demo.demo..
kongsi.kongsi.kongsi.
appoinment..apoinment.appoinment..
dah apa lagi nak buat..?
Full Time maaa...
buat apa saja yg kita suka..



ok..kutwo ada temujanji..
bukan dgn janda..
dgn bakal yg MENJADI-JADI..
chaow...
kah.kah.kah..
semoga terus berjaya !!!!

 

 

Polompang!!

woit....
zaman sekarang..
dulu lain sekarang lain cikgu..
jgn ikut nafsu..
nanti malu..
kah.kah.kah..
dulu..dulu..
dulu kalau tampar balik rumah ayah sambung..
dulu kalau tampar cikgu dihormati..
dulu kalau lempang "terima kasih cikgu"..

sekarang..sekarang..
lempanglah kalau berani..
tamparlah anak i kalau tak takut..
jumpa di surat khabar..
jumpa di court..
kah.kah.kah..

zaman dah berubah..
kalau dah cikgu mengajar aje lah..
tampar-tampar tak usah lah..
buat menyusah...!!!

mak bapak pulak jgnlah berlagak..
anak di lempang terus nak menyalak..
check la dulu apa agak-agak..
jgn anak nanti jadi penyangak..

alang-alang melempang...
biar terajang sampai terbang..
kah.kah.kah..

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