Saturday, March 22, 2008
Shabery or is it Khairy monitoring bloggers?
The news yesterday announced Shabery Cheek, the newly appointed Information Minister from Terengganu as wanting to know and to monitor political bloggers closely.
Since Shabery is another proxy to Khairy in the cabinet, we can take this as Khairy's warning to bloggers.
Becoz if the Pak Lah's Government is really TRUTHFUL about tyring to gauge the ppl's thots thru the internet..well if they have been monitoring the bloggers closely, it is unanimous the ppl wants Khairy and Pak Lah out of the country's management. Khairy Jamaluddin and Abdullah Ahmad Badawi are the TWO main reasons for the BN voters sway in PRU 12. BN didn't lose becoz the ppl want the Opposition, BN lost becoz the ppl want Khairy and Pak Lah's out. Other than voicing it out in their political blogs, which the Government (read Pak Lah and Khairy) conveniently labeled as opposition voices, while taunting us to show it thru the ballot box, well the we did!.. the ppl can only do this thru the PRU 12.
Interestingly Pak Lah and Khairy are still not heeding us. How many ways can we say Pak Lah and Khairy PLEASE RESIGN!
Shabery on bloggers, politics and the middle-class
Posted by kasee
Thursday, 20 March 2008
NEW Information Minister Datuk Ahmad Shabery Cheek shares a few quick thoughts on his appointment and the general election results.
Q: The Information Minister post is a contentious position. (Former information minister) Datuk Zainuddin Maidin had his hands full?
A: I take it as a serious challenge that I have to bear. Information is always very important. Everybody wants to know what's happening in the country and what are the government policies, or how we are going to manage things that could easily be misunderstood by people. That is a challenge for me.
Q: The new media has exploded. Are you going to engage the bloggers at all?
A: Well, I wish I could see them. But I don't know how many there are. Bloggers can be local and global. They can be everywhere and they emerge every day. They are important. In this explosion of information technology, everywhere is the centre of information. And people are free to express what they think. There is the good and bad about that. I wish we can sit down and talk to them and think openly what's best for the country. That's the bottom line.
Q: Your jump from parliamentary secretary to minister has been phenomenal.
A: Politics is not like you need to sit for STPM or before that SPM, PMR or UPSR. It doesn't work that way.
In politics, somebody can emerge from nothing. And somebody can almost become prime minister and then they are nothing after that. That's politics. Everything is temporary. What remains is your integrity and your good name. And that's the thing I think that our team is trying to promote this time.
Q: Are you nervous at all about your appointment?
A: Yesterday, yes I was. But today, I look around and there are people around me who share the same vision, the same ideas of what the Government and country should become.
Q: Will the new Cabinet line-up inject new spirit into the Government?
A: There are new faces and young faces. The new faces might not be all that young. But, I hope the people accept this as something that is fresh – a new approach brought about by the Prime Minister. Surely it will bring new inspiration especially to those who want to see current developments truly fulfil the aspirations of the new generation in our country.
Q: Why do you think Barisan Nasional did not do well in the elections this time?
A: My thinking is that it is the middle-class urban voters who shape the ideas and the outcome throughout the country. This also happens in other South-East Asian countries. In Indonesia for example, we see it in Jakarta. In the Philippines, we see it in Manila, in Thailand it's Bangkok. In Malaysia, we feel it in the Klang Valley.
The thinking of the young people in the Klang Valley – their doubts, uneasiness, new ideas – these are what they bring with them. If I go to a kampung in Terengganu, for example, there is not one household there where they do not have a child or a cousin who is living in the Klang Valley.
It is the thinking of the middle-class people or the urban voters that is very much going to shape the outcome of the election as a whole. We have to look at this. We have to tackle this. We may be a good constituent worker, take care of our voters and meet them; but if we are out of touch with the thinking of the people here, we may get some results which are out of expectations. That's the thing.- STAR
Since Shabery is another proxy to Khairy in the cabinet, we can take this as Khairy's warning to bloggers.
Becoz if the Pak Lah's Government is really TRUTHFUL about tyring to gauge the ppl's thots thru the internet..well if they have been monitoring the bloggers closely, it is unanimous the ppl wants Khairy and Pak Lah out of the country's management. Khairy Jamaluddin and Abdullah Ahmad Badawi are the TWO main reasons for the BN voters sway in PRU 12. BN didn't lose becoz the ppl want the Opposition, BN lost becoz the ppl want Khairy and Pak Lah's out. Other than voicing it out in their political blogs, which the Government (read Pak Lah and Khairy) conveniently labeled as opposition voices, while taunting us to show it thru the ballot box, well the we did!.. the ppl can only do this thru the PRU 12.
Interestingly Pak Lah and Khairy are still not heeding us. How many ways can we say Pak Lah and Khairy PLEASE RESIGN!
Shabery on bloggers, politics and the middle-class
Posted by kasee
Thursday, 20 March 2008
NEW Information Minister Datuk Ahmad Shabery Cheek shares a few quick thoughts on his appointment and the general election results.
Q: The Information Minister post is a contentious position. (Former information minister) Datuk Zainuddin Maidin had his hands full?
A: I take it as a serious challenge that I have to bear. Information is always very important. Everybody wants to know what's happening in the country and what are the government policies, or how we are going to manage things that could easily be misunderstood by people. That is a challenge for me.
Q: The new media has exploded. Are you going to engage the bloggers at all?
A: Well, I wish I could see them. But I don't know how many there are. Bloggers can be local and global. They can be everywhere and they emerge every day. They are important. In this explosion of information technology, everywhere is the centre of information. And people are free to express what they think. There is the good and bad about that. I wish we can sit down and talk to them and think openly what's best for the country. That's the bottom line.
Q: Your jump from parliamentary secretary to minister has been phenomenal.
A: Politics is not like you need to sit for STPM or before that SPM, PMR or UPSR. It doesn't work that way.
In politics, somebody can emerge from nothing. And somebody can almost become prime minister and then they are nothing after that. That's politics. Everything is temporary. What remains is your integrity and your good name. And that's the thing I think that our team is trying to promote this time.
Q: Are you nervous at all about your appointment?
A: Yesterday, yes I was. But today, I look around and there are people around me who share the same vision, the same ideas of what the Government and country should become.
Q: Will the new Cabinet line-up inject new spirit into the Government?
A: There are new faces and young faces. The new faces might not be all that young. But, I hope the people accept this as something that is fresh – a new approach brought about by the Prime Minister. Surely it will bring new inspiration especially to those who want to see current developments truly fulfil the aspirations of the new generation in our country.
Q: Why do you think Barisan Nasional did not do well in the elections this time?
A: My thinking is that it is the middle-class urban voters who shape the ideas and the outcome throughout the country. This also happens in other South-East Asian countries. In Indonesia for example, we see it in Jakarta. In the Philippines, we see it in Manila, in Thailand it's Bangkok. In Malaysia, we feel it in the Klang Valley.
The thinking of the young people in the Klang Valley – their doubts, uneasiness, new ideas – these are what they bring with them. If I go to a kampung in Terengganu, for example, there is not one household there where they do not have a child or a cousin who is living in the Klang Valley.
It is the thinking of the middle-class people or the urban voters that is very much going to shape the outcome of the election as a whole. We have to look at this. We have to tackle this. We may be a good constituent worker, take care of our voters and meet them; but if we are out of touch with the thinking of the people here, we may get some results which are out of expectations. That's the thing.- STAR
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