If you see a helicopter towing one of these over your neighborhood, bad news: your town is getting a data center. They’re running airborne electromagnetic surveys to map groundwater in the area.
TRANSLATION: figuring out how much water they can divert before people notice.
Poison board kata jangan. Dia buat juga. Kuasa menteri katanya.
Sekarang mahkamah dah sahkan benda tu tak betul. Tapi benda dah jadi.
Kita hadap je lah kesan kesan dia.
"Tiada keperluan umat Islam saling serang menyerang sesama sendiri"
Kenapa tiada keperluan ya? Kita sedang bercakap tentang soal agama, tentang dakwaan terhadap sahabat Nabi. Kena tang dia, tiba-tiba lah tiada keperluan, tiba-tiba lah musuh bertepuk tangan.
Two men were caught on closed-circuit television (CCTV) dumping rubbish illegally in Shah Alam and were told by the authorities to "clean up their act".
Read more at tinyurl.com/yav9r3pv
Examples of internet surveillance in China. A man posted a video on Tiktok in China last night, highlighting a potential safety hazard on the street. That evening, the government department left a comment in the comment section. The problem was solved the next morning.😲
WELL PLAYED
Minggu lepas, saya kritik Menteri Pelancongan kerana mengangkat budaya Thailand, Songkran sebagai pesta pelancongan. Buat pula besar2an. Memang patut dapat tentangan.
Minggu ini, bila mereka umum nak buat Majlis Berselawat di Bukit Bintang, kita pun boleh baca, event ni nak cover event minggu lepas. Ada political move di situ.
Pihak Pembangkang pun kuat jadikan isu. Pesta Air memang patut untuk dibangkang. Tapi bila nak buat Majlis Selawat pun mereka keluar dalıl agama mengharamkan nya. Itu pun political move juga.
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Saya terjumpa video ni di Thread. Dapat lebih 40k likes. Beribu shares.
Pelancong omputih yang rakam event Selawat malam semalam.
Satu yang saya belajar dari video ini.
Dakwah itu perlu bersederhana. Islam itu kalau ditunjukkan dengan cara betul, orang lain akan lembut hati dan buka mata.
Pertama kali dalam sejarah hidup saya, menyaksikan Selawat Nabi bergema punya kuat di Bukit Bintang.
Well played Menteri Agama. Political move yang mengena.
Lepas ni bolehlah ketengahkan budaya lain juga. Contoh budaya rakan2 dari Sabah dan Sarawak.
Banyak lagi acara yang boleh diangkat selain Songkran.
~LM~
Hantavirus PATIENT ZERO named: 70-year-old Dutch Leo Schilperoord
He and wife visited massive LANDFILL full of trash in Argentina while birdwatching
Both now DEAD
Eight years ago today, Malaysians queued up at schools just like these.
Most of us didn’t actually think it would happen. We hoped. We showed up.
But deep down, many of us weren’t sure a single vote could change 61 years of the same government.
And then it did.
We did it.
Six years on, it’s hard to know how to feel about all of it.
A government that fell in 22 months.
Three prime ministers without a single election.
Another vote that gave us a unity government that, honestly, still doesn’t feel like what people queued up for back in 2018.
Reforms that were promised are either half-done or quietly forgotten. The feeling of “different faces, but a lot of the same feelings”.
I’ve had this conversation so many times now, with friends, with family, and I keep hearing the same thing.
“I’ve given up. The government disappoints me. The opposition isn’t any better.”
I don’t think that’s apathy. I think that’s what exhaustion sounds like after years of hoping.
But here’s the thing about political cycles.
They end.
And when they do, people who said they’ve given up somehow find themselves back at the polling station.
Pen in hand, doing the one thing that actually changed something once before.
We’re getting close to that moment again.
And if 2018 taught us anything, it’s that we’re more capable of surprising ourselves than we think.