Sunday, December 31, 2006

The Pursuit of Happyness


I have always been a fan of Will Smith ever since the good old days of his light hearted appearance on the early 20th century sitcom The Fresh Prince of Bel Air. But, let's face it, times have changed and people outgrow such wild comedic outbursts the day they hit puberty or perhaps a few before.

But that's besides the point here.

The point I am trying to make here, is that Will Smith is a wonderful actor who knows exactly how to act when given the best lead roles in a movie with exception to his second action flop Bad Boys II. I say flopped not because there are underlying facts that it did just not hit the commercial nerve in the summer it was released but rather because it came out too late after it's first debut's success plus with the unnecessary vulgarity and obscene scenes that we just did not come to adone from actors such as himself.

But as I said, given the lead roles that would best suit him, he takes it all the way to success with no sweat. Take his last comedic venture Hitch, a wonderful comedy that touched both sensitive nerves in both the male and female kingdoms of our race. Something so wonderfully romantic and yet a very simple idea that just grows within our heads as the movie goes along.

The Pursuit of Happyness rides along that line with the idea coming from a father and his son having gone through every part of bitterness of life that anyone could ever bare to imagine in a personal manner, from losing a mother to another man, to losing your job and your home and having to live through each day as it's your last just trying to think of what you're going to do the next day in order just to survive.

The movie strikes a chord within all human beings because it brings out the human touch that shows us that it is when we are our strongest we can also be at our most vulnerable stage.

Unfortunately, The Pursuit of Happyness has not hit the Omani cinemas yet and I have no idea if it has even reached the UAE. But this is what I understood from its brief internet trailer and the official movie site.

A movie I think no one should ever try to miss, no matter what age you are.

Last but not least, this movie has been nominated for 2 Golden Globe Awards. Somewhat of an achievement near to the Oscars for our multi-talented actor - Mr. Will Smith.

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Links:

- Official movie site

- Movie trailer

- Movie info (Yahoo! Movies)

no longer an environmentalist's safe haven

Back in the old days - well, my old days, anyway - when Oman was still unknown to the world and it was called back then as the safe haven of all environmental breeds like the animals, birds, trees and even insects, it was hard to even think about how one day we would ruin our own country with our own two hands.

And this day, has unfortunately come to reality.

The growing demand for tourism to the Sultanate of Oman has blinded the fact that we are country that are out on a double mission; preserving the environment as well providing the economy with the amount of money needed for it's necessary growth.

And unfortunately, tourism - as an industry - needs the full co-operation of all the country's major industries pulled together in order to create a good opportunity for it to grow steadily. Something which, Oman as a new contender into the game, is pain-stain-kingly only beginning to fathom.

For Oman to build itself a proper base that can withstand the demand for future tourism into the country, it is having to sacrifice a great deal in order to attract the number of foreigners and regional visitors by building more roads, establishing more tourism spots, creating more hotel rooms, giving off lands to big multinationals to draw up their gigantic projects that will draw up millions of Omani Rials in the future to come.

But what is the role of the people behind these organizations besides making their beloved green bills grow and grow so that they can only make more? None Governmental Organizations such as the Environment Society Oman were given permission to be established by the government to create awareness to environmental factors that affect our country in all manners and types. But to what end? Is creating awareness really the solution to such problems with such an organization like the Ministry of Tourism holding the peer in hand to lead the industry really going to create a difference should there be an environmental concern in any project or area in the Sultanate of Oman that is under environmental threat?

The answer is no.

Mainly because the ESO is not given the right to intervene into any project that could hundreds, if not thousands of jobs opportunities and a load of wealth to the local economy.

So what is the point then of such an organization?

In my opinion, there is no such benefit other than having to teach yourself of the pros and cons of anything environmental of which was, is, and should it ever be there in the times to come. Something that should definitely reconsidered very seriously especially after such unions have been allowed to carry out duties to unfairly treated parties in the private sector.

Should the environment receive less of a treatment after what it has been through especially with the detoriating situation that our one and only planet that we inhabit is going through of late?

Such projects that are creating environmental threats are the new tourism projects in Ras Al Had, where there is an environmental sanctuary for the turtles. The new Al-Hoota Cave that has been recently established by the Ministry of Tourism in co-operation with an Arab tourism development company. Beaches are slowly fading away in Muscat because Muscat Municipality wants to develop those fronts for tourism development projects such as The Wave - Muscat, and The Blue City project and the new hotel spot in the Al-Ashkhara area. And with more underway, there is no doubt that we will have lost in no time at all everything that this country has worked so hard to preserve through our entire lifetime.

Something must be done.

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Links:

- Ministry of Tourism

- Environment Society Oman

- Promo-Oman LLC (company responsible for Al Hoota Cave)

- Muscat Muncipality

- The Wave project, Muscat

- The Blue City, Oman

Saturday, December 30, 2006

how private sector employees waive off their rights


When the Eid Al Adh'ha holidays were announced for the private sector, most of the employees were rejoicing even though the facts stood that they only get 4 days off for the entire period in comparison to their public sector counterparts who got 9 whole days since their holidays would include two weekends plus the week that the government gave them off.

Having considered that if the entire private sector shut down then the country would come to an entire standstill and no one would stand to gain from giving the entire holiday for their employees, but there is also the matter of decency when, like Christians all over the world celebrate their Christmas and New Year holidays by staying at home and gathering around their loved ones, be it family, friends or close relatives that they know - the same should go for the Muslims who work in the private sector in such organizations that offer only a day's holiday on a shift rotation per week in addition to having this extra Eid holiday as a extra advantage in their pockets.

However, the laws of the private sector say that as long as the companies see it in their advantage that the employee should attend his work during the holiday they they may 'order' them to do so but by agreeing with each each other on proper compensation. Most of the companies ask the employees to attend the holiday just because they don't want to lose out on their business which serves services or products by adding the compensation automatically and not enquiring about the employees favoritism.

In a matter of speaking, companies can do that. But they can't get away with it if the employee is dissatisfied with the end result by losing out on a day that brings him joy maybe only twice a every year.

In this case, the employee can choose not to attend that day by leaving an early notification of this and if forced complain to the Ministry of Manpower as the law gives the employee to choose whether to be compensated or to take the holiday - either way, it has to be in agreement between the employer and employee.

Unfortunately, since this is a new update in the Omani labor law as of this year only, none of the employees in the private sector (irrespective of their nationality or gender or race or ethnicity) are willing to go down that road simply because of the saying that 'one hand does not clap'.

Employees who work in the private sector have that right yet waive it off because they are too afraid of the consequences that could come afterwards. And unfortunately, this issue is not addressed by the Ministry of Manpower since the new update to Omani labor law that was updated by a Royal Decree by His Majesty, Sultan Qaboos, the Sultan of Oman.

A dilemma that this country faces every year only to repeat itself time and time again.

Thursday, December 28, 2006

getting it off the chest


We only start to recover by pushing ourselves into further limits of toleration.

This is what I believe and this is what I am doing at this very time. I believe my sickness is because I don't do much and don't get around very often which is why I am pushing myself further and further beyond my limits to make sure that I don't get weaker to a point which I can't tolerate anything and return to the hospital bed again.

The same thing goes with the matters of the heart.

I know I am lonely as do I know that I am probably the least probable human being with a chance to be looked at twice (say what you want, me being pessimistic and all in that way) but I am pushing my sensitive feelings aside by trying to occupy my mind with other things of bigger importance such as this blog. Focusing my mind on the topics that I come up with on this blog pushes my mind away from pathetic nonescence about falling in love and feeling sad and lonely for myself because I have no one.

The only way to make yourself stronger is by pushing yourself further down memory lane and reminding yourself how things were far too painful for yourself and disregarding everything that could be a potential opportunity. That way you don't get broken hearted nor do you end up having high expectations of something that could have not been.

I guess I just wanted to get that off my chest.

so who is it all for then?

Tourists flocking into Muscat this year will have a fun surprise on their hands when they learn that a few of the 5 star hotels are closing up for renovations - woohoo for nothing at all.

That's what you get out of bad planning from both the Muscat group of Hotel companies along the help of the Ministry of Tourism.


Of the few 5 star hotels that will be closed up for total renovation over a period of 8 whole weeks, is the well known The Bustan Palace Hotel, which is known for it's royalty statement of enrolling its guests into speechless beautifully catered rooms at gasping views at the ocean from the behind and the mountains from the other side. This will be the second renovation this hotel receives in a period of 2-3 years. This very fine hotel was the top notch hotel until it was beaten the Shangri La Bar Al Jassa group of hotels that had been established by less than a year ago now, with also the comparison of The Bustan Palace Hotel enjoying the full support of government funding in all it's matters, the Shangri La is an overly high investment of private sector funding with little backup by the government.

Tourists now will have to go and reside into other hotels in Oman during the Muscat Festival 2007, which will commence on 1/1/2007 and end on 2/2/2007, such as the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Qurum, the Grand Hyatt, the Intercontinental Hotel, Muscat; and other hotel suites over Muscat amongst other 4 star hotels of which the government seems to be refusing to give further permissions to start newer hotels because it has stopped deploying grounds out for further commercial development but says that it is in talks with big names in the international hospitality industry in the GCC region for help in funding like the United Arab Emirates Al-Futtaim group of companies that has already set it's mark in The Wave project that should be finished in sometime in 2015 or nearer, as well The Blue City Project that still has a very long way to go with the largest investment in the entire Sultanate of over $1 billion US Dollars and another chain of small 5 star hotels to open up near the environmental sanctuary declared by the government of the Sultanate of Oman in the Ras Al Had area.

So whose really gaining here? Definitely the population - being the nationals, the citizens, the residents of Oman. Not the environment. But the economy is.

The question in my mind which I was settling down to was: is it the sound economy that enables a good political stability for a country or the other way around. Because as far as it seems, it looks like we are heading towards the capitalist system of world trade economies of worldly countries.

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Links:

- The Bustan Palace Hotel

- The Shangri La Bar Al Jassa group of Hotels

- The Crowne Plaza Hotel, Muscat

- The Intercontinental Hotel, Muscat

- the Grand Hyatt, Muscat

- The Golden Tulip Hotel, Seeb - Muscat

- Muscat Festival 2007

- Golden Sponsor: Gulf Air

Eid Mubarak


I'd like to take this opportunity to congratulate everyone in the blogosphere on an Eid Mubarak and to everyone else a Belated Merry Christmas and a very Happy New Year.

May 2007 be a year fulfilled with the promised intention of getting to where you have targeted yourself during your entire lifetime and that you achieve that result with flying colors.

Take care of yourselves and have a great holiday!

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

what's fair anyhow?

Long has the employee in the private sector - those who don't have a high qualification that enables them to get a very excellent salary - been dis-serviced for all his hard work during the 36 long years of the renaissance in many matters such as the number of holiday days he may take during one year, or his weekly weekend off his work, his work timings, his public holidays, and last but not least - his salary.

Unlike the public sector employee that follows a structural payment system enabling so much for the degree number he falls under and allowing that same person a chance to prove himself further to get to a higher position through gaining a better qualification. Hence, earning himself a better salary for him.

Up until now the private sector employee still works double shifts, less weekend hours and sometimes none in some newer organizations, less holiday days during a year especially during their first year of service (i.e.: 15 days in the first year of employment only), his public holidays in comparison to his public sector counterpart are very relatively less which means less time with the family (sacrifice is sacrifice but there are limits) and most of the employees who only have HNDs (Higher National Diplomas) earn no more than 200 Omani Rials ( no more than 2100 AED) (source: employees of the very same establishment - unanimously).

And this was after there was an intervention from the Ministry of Manpower.

But there have been stories - for instance - that when, for example, Starbucks first opened, it wanted initially to give it's employees higher salaries in the beginning that the very same Ministry pushed the organization behind the establishment in the Sultanate of Oman to bring down the salaries to the same line of that of other companies within it's field.

Fair, would you say? And for what reason? Nothing apparent. Though, this was more than four years ago when it was first starting up the chain here in Muscat.

Now, the head of private sector employee association is calling upon all private companies, establishments and institutions to set forth the same example when His Majesty Sultan Qaboos ordered that all public sector employees get a 15% raise in their basic salary income by asking the private companies to at least raise the bar for income by - at least - 10%.

Will they follow suite? No one's to know really? And should they? And if so, why and if not, why too?

No one really knows for sure.

But I know one thing for sure. It won't make a big difference in the salaries of those who barely earn 200 Omani Rials and can barely keep a roof over their head let alone help their families out, and still try to do their monthly shopping while planning to get married by getting a loan from a local bank which they end up paying for the rest of their natural lives? Let alone the problem of inflation that the country is now feeling it's bend on its curves.

What I don't get is why Oman insists on making all employees whether they are nationals or foreigners, making them work like they are damn slaves? People need time to breath to think, to eat, to dream, to sleep to do their other natural parts of their so called life. And not the other way around.

And in the end, nobody is really appreciated.

It's a shame, I tell you.

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Update: The holidays for the 'big Eid' - Eid Al Adh'ha have been declared as follows; the public sector will have 5 days from Saturday 30th December, 2006 - 3rd January, 2007 (which makes the grand total of the days off 9 days including weekends); private sector will have only 4 days off from Saturday 30th December, 2006 - 2nd January, 2007 (making the grand total of 1 week off if you count both Thursdays as half days off together combined into one day). Still think it's fair? Happy Holidays and Eid Mubarak to everyone out there who does and doesn't celebrate Eid Al Adh'ha, and a Belated Merry Christmas to everyone out there and Happy New Year.

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Links:

- Private sector union calls for higher salaries by private companies (in Arabic).

- Holidays declared for public & private sector (in Arabic).

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Updated Links:

- Holidays declared (in English)

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

the transparency effect



Everyone the world thinks that Oman is the most peaceful piece of Earth on this planet. But there are those hidden facts that are need the 'transparency effect' that Muscati calls upon in how our government shows in it's guidelines, in it's line of information to the public and everyone in this proud nation; because it's their right to know what it is going instead of being lead on.

Take into example, for instance, that when the numbers were released after results were brought together for the number of road accidents, the numbers had a horrifying effect on everyone in the street, parents, drivers, foreigners, and most of all, all the organizations who put young drivers behind the wheel. Raising standards for safety measurements everywhere - granted that only went on for only a short amount of time, nonetheless it had the needed effect to change the society's and community's decision about how things were done in the manner of driving. We had the 2nd highest death rate in road accidents after the United States of America and following us was the United Arab Emirates.

Not exactly something you'd be proud of. Though, it shows how information can be used to a certain advantage.

Now, having you know that the Sultanate of Oman is a Muslim country that would produce an image in your mind saying that it doesn't deal with issues that Islam prohibits in all standards like Alcohol, bank interest and the such, right? But if you were told that you can't buy Alcohol cannot be bought legally off the public shelves but can be purchased in hotels and places that have such licenses. What does that say to you?

Many are the GCC countries that follow this procedure even like Saudi Arabia - even if they shut down the manufacturing plants. Whose to say that they don't produce it locally for their own consumption? If Saddam Hussein had a wife and his sons had some different booty to choose of every single night they were with daddykins, whose to say that we are no better than him? All of us?

It is rumored that the number one crime 'infester' is alcohol in Oman. When you hear of people getting drunk in Oman and actually doing the most atrocious things that could ever be conjured up in somebody's sick demented mind. Like for instance, a father returning drunk only to rape his own flesh and blood. The poor soul goes to a police station seeking sanctuary. Or when a brother gets his own sister impregnated after the two get drunk?

I have a question to those who actually drink: Just what is it that makes you feel like you need to drink to have a nice time when you can easily do the same without having to sip one drop of that poison, without having to pay tickets to get inside a bar and having a couple of free drinks on the house? You could easily sit at a cafe', sit down with your friends have a couple of laughs and enjoy the atmosphere, the ambiance of the place and enjoy the please of being with the ones you really enjoy being around with - your friends.

It is this kind of information with-holding against the society that leades the society members on that they live in such a peaceful country when the truth is contrary on that. When confronted with such info there's always an answer to our question, like it is in the best interest of the country nationalits to keep such information out of reach so as not to panic society members and cause alarm, when the truth is that when this information is released, it lead to better control on the people who actually cause these crimes.

This may not be the last you see of such a post.

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Update: There was a not-so-recent rampage of killing not so long ago in the Muscat capital of a drunk Religion teacher who got fired because they caught him drunk on the job and when confronted with the command he turned against all those were 'culprates' in his case killing several and injuring more until he comitted suicide. Such information was not released in local tabloids but was known through the informal marketing effect of word of mouth.

Monday, December 25, 2006

to be or not to be - bah! who cares!

While I believe that writing is my life after my life (if you get what I mean), I also agree that it is a passion that yearns within everyone who wishes to express their inner self in their own creative way.

This, in the Sultanate of Oman, can be done in several ways, one of which is the most famous is depending on the government to back you up. Which is what most of the newspapers and tabloids in Oman have taken on route. Now, don't get me wrong, if you believe you can't get to your target by going independent, then why go on such a failed-top mission in the first place? Just so you can make yourself an easy buck? I think not. Writing is about having to write with the biggest guts that you think you have because you have firstly the right to, and secondly because you know it's the truth when you write it with a conscience and not with an organization like the government that you have to keep looking over your shoulder to see if their still smiling at what you wrote or getting ready to pounce at you with their red tape.

The reason I am writing this is because yesterday - since I was sick - I never attended the inagraguation ceremony for the Omani Writers Association/Guild.

I was read in an internet article by a professional writer that if you seek glory to write, then you're not a writer, if you seek to be well known then you're not a writer, if you seek fame and fortune from writing then you're not a writer. For a writer is heart with a pen and soul that knows only the pen as their one and true love. And without such, there can be no life for either.

I think I made part of that up. Point is: you're a writer only if you write to tell the truth with all honesty even if it costs you your life. For thats where the honor is.

I don't think that I need some organization to tell me that I am a writer or not, nor would I ask for some organization to help me in financing the book because I know in the end that it's gonna slap me in my face some day.

Sunday, December 24, 2006

never giving in

I am the strength in the pain
I am the will in the power
I am the wind beneath thy wings
I am the glory that looks for no fame

I am the person who will never fall
I am the man who will always stand tall

I am the order behind the chaos
I am the chest of hope in a heart, robust

I am the man who will never more give in
I am the one who will stand up when everything caves

I am me

I am the pigeon that will fly up high
I am the bird that soar through the skies
I will cut the wind with my wings
I will soar like a kite never to land again

For I am me

And no matter how sick I may be

I will never, ever, give in

Saturday, December 23, 2006

straight out of the horses mouth

So we haven't seen anything or any movement from the government about doing anything to help out the people in Oman who had suffered from last Thursday's flood. All I had seen were a few sandbags waiting just in case should it happen again.

Muscat Municipality claims that it has nothing to do with planning out the streets of the Muscat capital but it has chosen to move most of the industrialized institutions in Al Wadi Al Kabir to a more reliable area - in which case, this would be Sohar and the reason would be the great big flood that hit that are too on Thursday.

Today, most of the roads were cut off because the Saudi King had come in for a visit - maybe this would be a good time to ask him why him along with all the Wahabis in Kingdom of Saudi Arabia hate the Shi'ats so damn much. Because I would just love to know what his answer would be. 'Duh duh duh.....I don't know what you're talking about'.

And guys here in Oman still don't seem to understand that women who sit alone or with their friends can't be bothered about two-timing losers who try to impress them with their blue-tooth nicknames, Mr. 'I have a special number my daddy got for' and Mr. 'Bond'. Eat your heart out, you wuss.

Patience is a virtue, we are taught, but how long is it can you stand a man standing up in public scratching his unmentionables then moving on to his ass between garments and then lastly taking the odd green germ out of his for a lick on his tongue?

Friday, December 22, 2006

second of the wedding nights

He's busy running the streets
He's busy doing the chores
Three things he needs to do in one day
Yet what lies ahead, he does not know

He's got an appointment in the early morning
He gets it done in time to go for his second one in the afternoon
He barely makes through the second and goes home

He's sick
He's tired
He feels hot and cold
He feels like a big woodpile

He sleeps it off
He tries to shake it away
He wakes up too late
Too late because he missed his friend's wedding

That's how the second of the wedding nights was..

Thursday, December 21, 2006

here's a thought

When it was the summer here in Muscat, I was always wishing for more cooler weather because we would sweat like you hadn't seen before - even in the night as we go out. And it was totally ridicilous. Now that the climate has become colder and we had our fair share of scattered showers and adventure, I just want the warm weather back again. And I just know how that will feel.

And I can tell that I am to curse myself over this.

But seriously, when you can't take the heat and you can't take the cold, what do you end up doing? You'd either call yourself a bubble boy and live in or move to another planet like Saturn where the weather there this time of year is simply scorching to death.

I guess 2007 will mark for me the year of several changes.

My best friend will be getting married very soon, another friend of mine will be leaving the country for good and me? Well, I ...

I don't know..

humpty dumpty and the kings army

I was once told way back when I was young never to talk publicly about three different things because all they would do is create problems and tension for me and for who surrounds me. Those three topics were; religion; politics and finances.

At the time I took the advice to protect myself from being in harm's way and so to speak, it worked a great deal for me to some extent. But as I grew older, I began to realize that having to shut your mouth about what goes in your own country in those specific topics is just truly a crime. Because you're not voicing out your concern for the better welfare of the country. I was told that it was wrong and that I could get arrested one day for being so outspoken about such indecently undiscussed topics in our society and community. That may be the case to come one day; but, so help me, I will do what I think is right because I can't stand seeing something wrong happening in front of me and not having to discuss it out loud through this blog or my small circle of friends.

Like, for instance, last year when the rains hit hard on Muscat again but on a specific place called Al Amerat, His Majesty Sultan Qaboos had ordered to rebuild the houses that were infected by the bad rains. But you see none of that this year. Why is that? I mean, I know His Majesty is the leader of the country and that he has a great deal to do every single day of his life, but we could use a little help here after the rains on Thursday.

There was a Royal Decree by His Majesty to raise all government employees salaries by 15% beginning the 1st of January, 2007. But I have two questions to that; one of them would be: if the social services already deduct 6% from an employees salary and the salary increase is 15%, then effectively the salary increase would only be at 9%. So what gives? And another question; what about the private sector employees who work twice as hard as any lazy public sector employee on a desk and work 6 sometimes a whole week instead of 5 days a week. Why shouldn't there be a salary increase for them as well? Once again, there is an equality issue here that needs attending to.

And if I had to start about religion, good God, I wouldn't be finished if I was typing this post from now until sunrise. So I am going to leave this to the open minds to lay it out for themselves to talk about to themselves.

And just so that you all know, I am not afraid one bit of saying my true name here. But it seems that many just don't care about what I write as they only read it through as passersby, so I compliment them with my nickname.

Happy hunting, boys and girls.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

there's no excuse for this (part 2)

Following yesterday's post I am posting here several pictures of what happened during and after the rains that recently happened in Muscat and several parts of the Sultanate to show what kind of dimwits are actually planning out our own streets and safety.

I think you will all agree with me that they all look horrifyingly wrong.





















Now, you tell me if I am being over-fussy over such a catastrophe?

I am demanding that the idiot who is planning our streets be relieved from his position to some other position where he can't create public problems.

I am pledging to His Majesty - The Sultan of Oman - Sultan Qaboos to do something about this whole incident. Please.

Monday, December 18, 2006

there's no excuse for this

People in Oman have obviously seen the effects of the latest rains to land on Muscat for 2 or 3 days since last Thursday. We've heard of so many tragedies, but this one the tragedies where you begin to ask yourself 'what have we done to deserve such a whoop ass?'

For those who went out in the rain as far as the Shangri La series of hotels on the way to the Al Bustan Palace Hotel to enjoy their bit of rain. Good on you. You were lucky enough to come back in one piece.

For those who lost a relative in this tragedy, I grieve beside you with all my heart and soul.

There was a news article that was printed just yesterday in the Shabiba Arabic newspaper about the ROP (Royal Oman Police) bringing out a body of an 8 year old child who was playing in the rain with his fellow mates and all of a sudden a sewage hole gulped him up in front of them. After hours of search, they finally found him between life and death and on the way to hospital - he passed away.

So for you all fools who played around in the rain thinking that all you'll ever get is a cold, keep doing that. Maybe, one day, you just might end up a dead body, too.

It was crazy when it rained here. And what was worse were still going along with their business. So what happened? Evidently, the entire Qurum commercial area was flooded with many businesses having water passing into their shops/malls on the ground floor - especially restaurants and cafe's.

It wasn't the matter of just pouring rain and a little wind with it. It was gushing down telling everyone to go home. That's the message that was later translated. Unfortunately, people who knew of the translated message either ignored it, or faced being flooded and entrapped in their automobile while being drifted when regret holds no price to take you out of the outcome you became blind to.

Kay shows some of the pictures that she managed to get from her friend on her blog and here are some I found on the 'net where a foreign correspondent reported how the situation was in Al Wadi Al Kabir commercial district.

If this has ever taught us anything, is that we need a re-restructure of our whole roads system from A-Z because the way it is now isn't working at all. And don't say that it would be a total waste of time and money otherwise I just might end up kicking your behind so far up [censored for so many obvious reasons] and start talking about how many projects in Oman end up being embezzled by the people in authority for personal reasons leaving the nationals/citizens/residents with the crappy material and projects that were not worth getting worked up about.

The thing that's most irritating about Oman, folks, is that nothing is done unless in four situations; one would be there would a Royal Decree issued by His Majesty Sultan Qaboos - The Sultan of Oman; two would be if there was a big massive foreign investment from outside into the project (and when I say 'foreign', I mean GCC national big shots); three if there were many deaths happening or a clog in the traffic system such as what happened when they finally decided to make a bridge one the way to Barka because of a bad intersection location and so many people's lives lost or the latest building of the Express Highway that takes you straight from Al Qurum roundabout all the way to Al Naseem Park because of the massive increase of motor vehicle use on the roads; and four and this would be if it was done by using the great, the all powerful mighty use of W in Wasta.

So, how many more bodies do we need to lift from sewage holes, and creating wrong intersections, so that the people high high above us in their great mansions can hear us?

When?

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Update: A foreigner's body was found drifting off the wadi near the Sultan Qaboos University premises. It is said that the drifting waters pushed him all the way from Al Khuwair, which is about 40kms far.

Sunday, December 17, 2006

marriage? phooey!

Do me a favor and stop talking to me about getting married.

I don't need to get married; I don't want to get married and I couldn't care less about being involved with someone of the other sex or the same sex at all.

Just because I am next in line to be 'happily married' doesn't neccersirily mean that I have to get hitched. Does it, now?

From my experience, having to get involved with someone from the other sex is nothing but a great big headache. Seriously, I kid you not. All you ever get is how they did this that day and how they find that funny but when it comes to you and your problems it's just too much for them and if you complain about that to her - God forbid - then you're being insensitive. Especially if you're like me when you're angry and very sarcastic. With my fooling around with jokes you couldn't tell sometimes if I am being serious or funny. Which is a point to consider, yes. But, hey, doesn't everyone?

Seriously, who needs the headache?

I swear the next person to come up to me and say congratulations on being ' next in line' will get it so bad from me - and my friends all think that I am just saying this and that no matter what I say or do about it right now, it's somehow my 'destiny'.

Yeah, and Jack & Rose will rise up from the dead to make a sequel to the Titanic having Jack drifting off in sea on a broken ice capsule. Please.

The last time I believe in 'love at first sight' was when I saw Jessica Alba in her Dark Angel ill fated series.

If it was tied down to me and an Ant being the last two beings on Earth, I'd still not get married.

public announcement - end 2006


I've made some adjustments as to which blogs I would participate.

I've deleted the 'Starbucks Oman' one because it's about a store of chains and my marketing them somehow, which wasn't the case. So I just decided to delete it once and for all.

As for 'Topics from 192 countries' - I have deleted the link to the blog and soon I will send an email asking to withdraw from it as a contributor due the reason that author of the blog has requested all contributors to write a topic once a week at least about their country of origin, otherwise face deletion. So, I pretty much made up my mind on that blog.

I am barely keeping trying to keep up with writing in many blogs as much as I can to expand my writing experience.

People who read 'A Secret Arabian Journal' will notice that I haven't blogged there for quite a while as is the case with the other two blogs 'BizzWhizzDubai' and 'Arab UAE Community Blog'. This is a bit due to my recent falling health but hopefully will not last long - not if I can help it.

Just thought I'd make that clear.

it's not rocket science

People in Oman keep thinking that things can never get worse than it is currently. Apparently they were all proven wrong by nature - when Oman was struck, as much as some of it's neighborly countries like Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

That's why, I have thought of introducing some new laws and practices that every Omani national, citizen, resident and tourist should adhere to:

  • There should be an appointment of a much better roads architect instead of the current one. Since this intelligent person never had the knowledge of knowing that Wadis do tend to overflow from time to time hence the effect of the current tragedy of what happened in the Sultanate of Oman.
  • There should be a law against people who make farting noises in public or even think of trying to humor themselves and their friends with such repulsive noises in Muscat.
  • There should be law to fine or jail every person who scratches their testicles in public. It's not amusing.
  • There should be a law against anyone who sits in their car waiting for the traffic jam to ease while picking his nose. That's what they made tissues for.
  • 'Dogs are not allowed to be walked on the beach'. Thats what the sign says made by the Muscat Municipality. Although every foreigner in the country knows how to read it - they completely ignore this sign. Stubbornness?
  • 'Spitting is prohibited'. This sign, though, is written in both the Arabic and the Urdu language of our fellow Indian brothers in the country. Does this mean that the white man is a total Angel and doesn't do the same? I wonder..

Saturday, December 16, 2006

racism - an even bolder post


I have written in the past about how Saudi Arabia has the intention to intervene into the worsening post-war situation in Iraq and how they intend on funding Sunni groups with arms and financial capabilities to set what they might think is an 'equilibrium point' until the Shi'ats no longer the stronger uphold of the government nor the country.

I also attached a news article on how the Saudi monarchy had denied such possibility saying that this was off their national security adviser and that it hold no bearing on the government's side nor truth.

At the time, I thought that this was a beat-a-bush game that they were playing under the table to put things into motion whilst no one is really watching of what is going on behind the scenes.

And that's exactly what happened.

A very close yet quite meeting was set up in Jordan and Washington between the Saudi prince, the King of Jordan and the president of the United States of America.

They've all agreed to allow the Saudis the power of intervention into Iraq should the US troops with-hold their promise of pulling out from there and giving financial & military aid to the Sunni groups what would hold up their rights of the bargain in case there was a face off to slay off all the Shi'ats.

What's more interesting is how the US is keen on giving away that right to Saudi Arabia as if it was their own country. It's not enough that they're not liked by their neighbors and moreso by their own citizens, that they go and have to create a clan war between Sunnis and Shi'ats which will probably throw the entire Muslim world into total chaos at who they support or who deserves to live and the whos, whys, whens.

The issue here isn't why I am so displeased by this unwanted development because I am Shi'at; it is, though, about how to avoid an explosive situation that would probably open Pandora's box and let loose all Hell.

Sunnis, Shi'ats - aren't we all Muslims?

When will Muslim leaders get it through their thick heads?

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Links:

- Al Shabiba article ( in Arabic only)
- New York Times: Saudis Say They Might Back Sunnies if U.S. Leaves Iraq