2013년 12월 31일 화요일

When security may not guarantee safety


When security may not guarantee safety








WE
are supposed to feel secure and safe with round-the-clock security at our home
or office.But
that confidence seems to have been shaken if we go by recent incidents.Security
guards had hogged the headlines lately or just in the past two weeks. And
looking objectively at the concomitant factors, it may well be just the tip of
the iceberg.In
a tragic bank robbery, operations officer Noazita Abu Talib, 37, was shot dead at
the AmBank branch in Subang Jaya by the banks security guard who later fled
with an undisclosed amount of cash.In
another robbery, a Filipino security guard of a jewellery shop in Setapak threatened
his colleagues with a pistol before walking off with a tray of gold chains. He
was later nabbed while waiting to board a plane to Sabah
but his girlfriend, believed to keeping a large stash of the gems, is still at
large.Both
security guards are reportedly from Sabah and
holding fake MyKads.At
home, a security guard at a Welfare Department shelter was arrested after two
under-aged female residents lodged police reports, claiming he had raped them.
The guard could also have raped four other under-aged girls staying at the same
shelter.“We
are supposed to provide a place that can give them a sense of belonging. Yet,
something like this happened when they are under our care. We feel angry,
betrayed and frustrated,” Welfare, Women and Family Development Minister Datuk
Fatimah Abdullah was reported as saying.According
to the Home Ministry, there are more than 700 security companies hiring over
220,000 guards in the country. The
Security Services Association Malaysia (SSAM), however, gave a conflicting
figure of over 280,000 -- with 180,000 foreigners working “legally” as security
guards and making up 53 per cent of the total employed in the profession. Illegals
and locals make up the remaining 11 per cent and 36 per cent respectively.SSAM
Sabah Zone chairman Najmuddin Mohd Ibrahim was quick to point out that the cowardly
acts of the two security guards (allegedly from Sabah)
should not be generalised as being typical of the security service industry nor
labelled as “one bad apple spoiling the whole barrel.”Najmuddin
who also operates a security service company, said his firm only confirms the
appointment of applicants after a probationary period covering training, physical
and fitness assessment where a pass is compulsory, identity verification and
criminal records checklist. The
hired security guards will undergo constant training throughout their
employment.According
to Najmuddin, the successful applicants are not mere guards but, more
importantly, also “trained security officers” who are to be recognised as the
third line of defence after the army and the police. Such a high standard of
professionalism is necessary to earn the confidence and trust of the public.While
the need to hire competent and honest security personnel should not be
compromised, the point is how could public angst be assuaged when weaknesses and
flaws still managed to get past the verification process in the first place?SSAM
has already revealed there are known illegal security guards -- 11 per cent of
the total number or 30,800 of them. However, another national newspaper
reported on Nov 6 that there are about 150,000 of the 400,000 security guards
are illegal.What
are the Home Ministry and SSAM doing about these people? Also, how many of
those classified as “legal” are holding their jobs with fake MyKads?Immediately
after the incidents involving security guards, Home Minister Datuk Seri Dr
Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said the National Registration Department will conduct a
biometric examination on identification documents of all security personnel in
the country.It
is already bad enough to know that our security providers are not verified and
cleared of criminal records before we put guns in their hands but what Zahid revealed
is even more disquieting -- that his
ministry has received information certain companies have used security and
firearms-handling licences for other purposes. He
warned that permits of security companies will be withdrawn if they were found
to have been engaging in activities other than those stated under the licensing
conditions.He
did not say how long ago he received this lead but announcing it only after the
robberies does imply a seeming indifference to the issue.So,
now, even companies issued with licence to hire private security guards have
problems – apparently arising from the failure to strictly enforce the rules
and ensure only good agencies are allowed to set up shop.Surely,
its not wise “to mend the fold after some of the sheep have been lost” (Chinese
idiom -- wang yang bu lao)?Will
the incidents that put a stain on the security service industry serve as a
wake-up call for the Home Ministry and other authorities concerned so that the
victims deaths at the hands of desperados masquerading as security guards will
not be in vain?The
time is ripe for the Home Ministry, the National Registration Department and
the Police to do a thorough background check on the 280,000 security guards in
the country and for the security companies themselves to verify their own
representatives.Several
politicians and activists in Sabah have alleged there could be as many as 1.5
million unqualified immigrants out there holding Malaysian citizenship
documents issued in Sabah since the 1970s. It
is time to solve this problem festering in Sabah
once
and for all.There
is acute urgency to look into the job description of security guards to ensure they
stick to the scope of duties they are engaged to perform. Its
no secret that banks are hiring guards to transport piles of cash. Well and
good if this falls within the ambit of their responsibilities but should be
avoided if not contractually spelt out.Now
is the time to know that not everyone in uniform with a gun can be called a
trained guard.Now
is the time for SSAM to maintain constant liaison with law enforcement agencies
and keep close tabs on “blacklisted” employees.Lest
it be overlooked, now is also the time
for security bosses to reward guards who have devoted the best part of their
lives to the company by treating them well so that they will not succumb to
“makan gaji sahaja” syndrome but will instead go beyond the call of duty while
doing their jobs. For
after all, wang yang bu lao can also
be taken to mean “its never too late to mend.”To
give credit where it is due, I think I will be plainly out of line if I dont
put on record the dedication shown by the phalanx of guards in maintaining security
24/7 on the grounds of our work place.It
is with all sincerity that I appreciate the diligence of the guards both in my
place of stay and at our office.


The Great Planner Wallet Debate


The Great Planner Wallet Debate


Plannerds often use their planners as wallets. It's one way to score a soft, leathery wallet with some extra functionality. I empathize. My wallet does not do everything that I want it to do. In fact, during Christmas shopping season, my purse often looks like this, with receipts just crammed in there next to my wallet.

Add that to the recent stretching of my much beloved current wallet, so that credit cards are loose and about to fall out, and I need to replace the old wallet with something more practical. I wanted something useful. I wanted a small planner.But I know better.You see, I can't keep two planners. It's just not practical for me. Also, I needed a place to put receipts, coupons for things other than grocery shopping one (that go in my grocery shopping coupon Fold 'N Go), and cash. I knew, in the great debate between using a planner as a wallet or a wallet as a wallet, I wanted the wallet. But I wanted to cheat. I wanted that elusive extra something that planner/wallet combo people seem to have.So I pulled out all the loose receipts...and put everything in a pile (with a sneak peek of the new wallet).
My new wallet has fabulous features. It's purple. (Come on, you know that is FAB. U. LOUS.)


It's got two main parts - one for money-related matters (also known as shopping) and one for all those pesky cards.


And...drum roll please....IT'S GOT LABELS.


I knew you would like that part!The sections are labeled Cash, Receipts, and Coupons. Guess what the main things that stump me happen to be? Cash (my old wallet folded and I couldn't keep the case neat), receipts (until I get them home, I need a dedicated place for them), and coupons (like 15% off at Kohl's or a free appetizer at Outback).You might not be able to find the same wallet (that I bought at the Bass Outlet), but have you considered labeling parts of your wallet like you do your files? It's not my idea, as I totally stole it from my new wallet, but I think it's going to work.My wallet set-up is in two parts.First, I set-up the money section.My ID and primary credit card go in the see through slots at the top. Notice that my ID is upside down, so that I can show it to a cashier.In the three divided pockets, I have cash (with change in the perfectly placed zipper pocket between cash and receipts), receipts (folded so I can see the store, date, and total on the outside, instead of folded with the printing on the inside), and coupons.
Second, I have the non-shopping stuff that I carry in the other part of the wallet.I have some tricks for knowing where things belong. The most often used stuff goes on the outside, while less used stuff gets tucked behind the most used stuff. For example, my medical cards are in the upper left quadrant, while my social security card is tucked behind them. My gift cards are in the upper right quadrant, with the punch cards (like buy 4, get one free) behind it. The library cards are the lower left quadrant, with my bar card (needed at court and the law library) behind it. And the spare credit cards are in the lower right quadrant, with rewards cards behind that.
One final trick is that the external zipper compartment is left empty, so that if I need to take off jewelry (like my wedding ring before going swimming), I can zip it securely in that pocket.I love having all the essentials that I was looking for in a planner/wallet combo in my wallet instead.The verdict? If a planner/wallet combo works for you, great. If not, list your actual problems and find a wallet that solves those issues.Happy shopping!Etcetera.



Recess to complicate push to renew plastic gun ban


Recess to complicate push to renew plastic gun ban


The law should be allowed to lapse. It does not serve any useful purpose, and stifles technological advancement. David Codrea writes about the eager way in which the NSSF is willing to throw the second amendment under the bus on this issue.

The federal law banning undetectable plastic guns expires in two weeks and Congress is on a Thanksgiving vacation, making it likely the law will lapse — and opening up at least a temporary problem.

Gun
control proponents say the search for a solution is even more urgent
with the expanding capabilities of 3-D printers, which can manufacture
plastic guns that can be untraceable through traditional means.

Racing the Dec. 9 deadline, Senate
Democrats tried to speed through a bill last week keeping the ban in
place, but a Republican objected, arguing the legislation had just been
introduced hours before the chamber was scheduled to leave town. That
objection halted the bill.

“[T]his is not a good day to move
forward with this legislation,” said Sen. Jeff Sessions, Alabama
Republican. “We will be glad to give it serious attention. I know it is
the kind of thing we probably can clear at some point.”
Sen. Charles E. Schumer,
New York Democrat and the bills sponsor, said he understood Mr.
Sessions objection, given the upheaval in the chamber, but said that
“this is serious stuff.”

“What makes us need to do this rather
quickly is that a few months ago someone in Texas published on a website
a way to make a plastic gun, buying a 3-D printer for less than
$1,000,” Mr. Schumer
said. “There are over 200,000 copies, hits on that website. People hit
the website then, so we have to move quickly here. I hope we can move as
soon as we get back.”

The State Department in May ordered
Texas-based Defense Distributed to take down a 3-D gun model, called the
“Liberator,” from its website.
Mr. Schumers office said Monday theres still a chance to pass the renewal since the Senate
convenes on the day the act expires, but if it does lapse, they will
continue working to get an agreement to advance legislation as quickly
as possible.

Federal law also says that gun parts and components
must appear clearly when examined by X-ray machines commonly found in
airports. The act was first passed by Congress
and signed by President Reagan in 1988 and has been renewed twice since
then — once under President Clinton and once under President George W.
Bush.


More Here


Morse 600 sewing machine


Morse 600 sewing machine

I forgot to post a photo of the Morse 600 machine. I guess I'm easily sidetracked these days. Anyway, I picked her up a few days ago. Cleaned, oiled, greased, and had to set the timing on her but now she sews perfectly.

I love this machine! The belt is rotted but as of right now it sews fine but I have ordered another belt to fit it because I know this one will break soon. The belt only cost $2, so that's not bad considering these two machines were given to me.

A couple of photos of my goofy dog! She is so silly!

This one is my favorite! Hunter, being the silly little boy that he is, said, "look mom, she has neck boobies!" LOL!

Going tomorrow to look at another machine! Not sure if I will get it or not yet, but it's PINK! That's all that I know about it right now. She doesn't even know if it works.
Kristie


January Jeans 2014 Have a Script To Turn Down Holiday Food


January Jeans 2014 Have a Script To Turn Down Holiday Food


Welcome to all of the January Jeans Club 2014 members so far! This is a very diverse International group--including members from Finland, Australia, Belgium, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the U.S. states of Georgia, Indiana, Nevada, Colorado, California, and Wisconsin, and more! How Cool! I will make up a list--so you have new blogs to visit and new friends to meet. :D

***

I think, for me, the most important thing about not overeating during the holiday season is to have a well-constructed mental plan and a script to say.

We've all been through holidays before. Most of them are remarkably the same. In fact, it is often the very same family members, friends, and colleagues at work who push high calorie food at us during the very same get-togethers and parties. And if we don't know certain new parties and people, we can make an educated guess. Nothing is really surprising about the situation.

We can make a great plan about how to tackle each event. I personally think that having a short script greatly helped me last year:

1. The person pushes the food.
2. I say, "Oh, your food looks so delicious! But I'm in this holiday weight loss contest, and I don't want to lose." (Sometimes, I add, "I mean--I don't want to lose the contest, but I do want to lose the pounds.")
3. A friend from TOPS (my weekly weight loss group) suggested ending with, "Thank you for your support."
4. Now, you set up the food pusher for 2 choices: 1) wanting you to lose your contest by eating too much; or 2) supporting you by wanting you to win.

I also tell the hostess/host that "I didn't come to this party for the
food--I came to see you!" A big smile or hug, whichever is appropriate, is good at this point. I've had
great success with this script. You give the hostess/host a chance to be
on your successful health team.

Some people will keep insisting, "have some..." (which doesn't work for most of us), to which you have to say the script a second time in slightly different wording--but equally as "No," in meaning. Definitely--have a second version of the script ready. You probably already know who is going to need to be told twice.

The wording changes slightly per individual. You'll deal with your aunt somewhat differently than a business friend. At a party, I might add a joke to this.

My comment has often turned into heart-felt conversations about better eating and exercising. Many people remember my fatter years and see me as a health success. Honestly, people ask me about exercising and dieting at almost all get-togethers I attend. It's a popular party conversation for the people far away from the food tables.

You should feel good about being a positive health influence to people around you. Hopefully, your positive role modeling helps them eat less during the holiday season too. Many people told me last year how they felt much more "comfortable" at a party when I was turning down food beside them. It made it easier for them to turn down food too!. Positive peer support.

When you turn down the holiday food, you're doing a good thing. Own it with pride. And still say lovely things to your family and friends--but for non-food related reasons. When we place a higher priority on people, rather than food, it shows in gracious attitude towards others.

What do *you* think? Many of you have been not gaining weight during the holiday season for years! What are you saying at parties to the food pushers? What's your script? If this is the first year, what do you plan to include in your script? And, of course, anything else you'd like to add.

Have a delightful day!

:-) Marion


Five Things That Really Surprised Me In Marvel's 'Essential' Collections


Five Things That Really Surprised Me In Marvel's 'Essential' Collections


It still surprises me, sometimes, that I'm kind of sort of maybe just a little bit of an expert on Marvel Comics. I mean, I don't really feel like one; I've read the first 100-300 issues of the Avengers, the Defenders, Thor, Hulk, Captain America, Iron Man, Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, Wolverine, X-Factor, and Daredevil, along with a smattering of obscure titles like Man-Thing, Spider-Woman, Howard the Duck, Ghost Rider, Godzilla, and Son of Satan...but that doesn't feel like it should make me an expert. That feels like it should make me an obsessive reader with a good memory. And yet, when I go to conventions, I invariably wind up on panels where I explain the backstory of Marvel characters (and DC as well, for that matter) to comic book fans. This weirds me out. I feel like they should recast me for these things.

But I do appear to be settling into a mantle of expertishness. And so, having read more comics than any sane person probably should, I figure I should pass along a few of my more unexpected responses to you, the reader, so that you can then pass them along as received wisdom to a bunch of people who will tell you I'm full of it. I feel that it's only fair.

1. The Defenders really went catastrophically downhill around issue #125. The thing about the Defenders was that it was a great title for a very long time. There was great chemistry among the cast, they played off the quirky, counter-culture concept really well for a very long time and did fun things with the idea of a team as a social grouping rather than a family or an organization (the two directions explored by the FF and the Avengers, respectively). Doctor Strange worked perfectly as a guide and mentor rather than a "leader" per se, and they had a nice mix of headliners like the Hulk and interesting B-listers like Valkyrie and Hellcat...although I'll admit, Nighthawk never worked for me. The bigger a role he got, the less I liked the series.

But then J.M. DeMatteis, a writer who I generally like and respect a lot, decided to write out Doctor Strange and the Hulk and turn the series into a vehicle for Angel, Beast and Iceman, and to turn them into an official team. The headliners were written out, and most of the new additions felt charisma-free. Suddenly, the book felt like an amateur-league group of Avengers, rather than a social grouping of powerful and interesting characters, and the series went into a slump it never recovered from. This is a shame, because the reboots have all tried to go back to the very basic concept (Doctor Strange, Hulk, Namor and Silver Surfer) rather than to the middle period that worked so well, simply because of the stench of failure that clung to the later efforts. I'd love to see a modern Defenders reboot that kept Doc Strange and maybe added "non-team" heroes like Spider-Man, Luke Cage, and Wolverine. (Yes, I know I'm describing Bendis' Avengers. Your point?)

2. Stuff actually happened in Thor. I know, this shouldn't be as surprising as it was, but I really never touched Thor as a kid. Even Walt Simonson's legendary run barely impinged on my consciousness, other than the bits they mentioned in Avengers where every bone in his body was broken inside his armor. I knew the very basic stuff, like the Warriors Three and Odin and Loki, but I had no idea that this was where Ego first showed up, and where Galactus' origin was first revealed, and where Firelord made his initial appearance. It was surprising to me to find out how much cosmic space adventure occurred in a comic that was ostensibly high fantasy mixed with Earth-bound superheroics. (It still didn't wow me for a lot of the run, I'll admit. The whole always felt like it was less than the sum of its parts. But it was an interesting look at a piece of Marvel history I never heard of.)

3. Howard the Duck really captured the zeitgeist of the Seventies. To be honest, it captured the zeitgeist of the Seventies so well that it really doesn't work as a modern comic; you have to read it as a piece of history, a record of the mood of a particular time to be able to enjoy it. But Steve Gerber got it perfectly; the fads, the crazes, but more than that the sense of palpable disaffection and disorientation that the Sixties had produced. People had spent a decade searching outside the norms of society for meaning, and the Seventies was where they realized that they still hadn't found it and weren't even sure what they were looking for. There was a sort of existential despair that permeated the era, and Howard ("trapped in a world he never made"--aren't we all?) hit it perfectly.

4. Some of these series really work as stories with beginnings, middles and ends. I don't actually think that anyone intended any of their series to have endings. Endings in comic books, save for a few notable exceptions, come about due to low sales and not due to any kind of overarching intent. But many of the comics that were collected into big, thick Essential volumes turned out to have really good endings that summed up their whole series. Ghost Rider, for example, had a finale that finally brought together all the revelations about the character's past and gave him something he'd never had, a meaningful nemesis who was a match for him in his final battle. Godzilla had a truly epic conclusion, featuring a huge battle against the Avengers in mid-town Manhattan that was everything you could hope for. Killraven turned out to be the story of the Second War Against the Martians, from first strike to the final human victory. And Super-Villain Team-Up was the fore-runner of the modern crossover, pulling in the major players of the Marvel Universe in a war between Atlantis and Latveria that spanned two years of comic book history. Had these titles not been canceled, they might have had to do very different things to keep going. But the ends they had cemented their reputation.

5. Marvel deserves more credit for their horror books than they ever got. Most of the praise you hear for horror comics is for horror anthology books, specifically the EC comics of the Fifties and the later DC horror renaissance under Joe Orlando. But Marvel had some excellent continuing horror series, something that was amazingly difficult to achieve given the natural tendency of the genre to end in the death of the protagonist. They had an amazing werewolf comic, Werewolf by Night, and an underrated Monster of Frankenstein series that went back to the character's roots. And Tomb of Dracula is one of the best things Marvel ever produced, bar none. Even their lesser lights, like Man-Thing, Son of Satan and Satana, had some great stories in there. (I will not work too hard at defending Brother Voodoo, though.) They really deserve a critical re-evaluation by enthusiasts of horror comics, because they had some amazing stuff in there.

I could probably go on longer--I've barely even touched on Spider-Man, which seems criminal--but I've got five already and I haven't even touched on DC's output. But that seems like a good topic for next time...


Conjunction Junction - Wait, what's conjunction


Conjunction Junction - Wait, what's conjunction


The other night as we drove home late from softball, my wife started asking me a few questions about astronomy terms, and so I thought I might write down a few of them.
Conjunction: A conjunction is when two (or rarely three or more) objects are close together in the sky. This is typically spoken of in terms of the planets. For instance, just this week Mercury and Venus experienced conjunction, and were very close in the sky. With so many moving objects in the sky, a conjunction of some sort occurs just about every month -- and certainly so if you include the moon as one of the objects


Jupiter and it's moons
"being occulted"?
(I don't think that's proper English)
Occultation: A very special conjunction where objects appear so close together in the sky that one object actually passes behind another. The most common types are when the moon passes in front of some object, and for a short time, that object is hidden behind it. I have never had a chance to observe this. Here is a list of lunar occultations for this yearand you can see that the moon passes in front of stars all the time (nearly every day) but in front of major planets only a few times. And during those times, you can only see the occultations from generally small locations on earth.


Transit: A transit is another type of conjunction, when a smaller object moves in front of another bigger object. The most famous transit is when Venus transits the sun, an event that occurs twice every 120 years or so. The most recent was June 5, 2012, so I'm sorry -- if you didn't see it then, you probably won't see it ever. I made sure to watch it, and took this picture. The transits of Venus in 1639, 1761 and 1769 are of historical interest, because they helped scientists get an accurate measure of the distance from the earth to the sun.Syzygy: This is just too cool of a word to leave out, even though I've never seen it written anywhere except in a glossary of astronomical terms. It's a great Scrabble word, worth 25 points, for those rare (impossible actually) occasions when you have 3 y's. Essentially, a syzygy is whenever three astronomical objects are all in a line.Eclipse: An eclipse is when the sun, moon, and earth are in syzygy -- and depending on the order of the three, and when the syzygy occurs, you might experience an eclipse. Every 14.5 days the three are aligned in some way, but most of the time the moon is slightly above or below perfect alignment, and so only a handful of times each year does some kind of an eclipse occur. Here's the next ten years of eclipses. The next total solar eclipse that will be fully visible in the North America will be on August 21, 2017, an event I'm planning on driving down to see.Opposition: When a planet is at opposition, that means it is on the opposite side of the earth from sun. This is for the planets further away from the sun then earth -- and is usually the best time to observe them. The planet is usually the brightest then -- and highest in the sky (along the local meridian) at midnight.
Elongation: Elongation occurs for inferior planets (Venus and Mercury) and is when appears the farthest away from the sun. This marks the best times to observe Venus and Mercury -- when they are their brightest, and furthest away from the sun's blinding glare.