Movie Review: Lone Survivor

Andy's Movie Blog

lone-survivor4Based on the book written by the only survivor of the failed mission on June 28th 2005 named Marcus Luttrell, we follow four SEAL team members as they stake out a village to make an identification of a top Taliban commander. While waiting on a hill side their communications go down and they are found by two boys and an old man who are herding goats. They have three options, let them go, which would mean over two hundred Taliban soldiers would chase up the hill after them. Or they leave them on the hill side tied up or straight up execute them. This scene is intense and wisely allows the four men to argue about it, this gives the audience time to rack the minds over what they would do. They of course release the three and very quickly find themselves under attack.

This is hands down the best…

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Malaysian Economy, Where Will It Go From Here (Part 2)

Getting priorities Right by Wan Saiful Wan Jan (The Star)

“The Government has suddenly realised that we are in a bad fiscal situation. This news is not very new, actually.

Back in 2010, the alarm had been raised that Malaysia could face bankruptcy by 2019 if we continue giving handouts and subsidies the way we have been doing for decades.

With the benefit of hindsight, perhaps it would be right to say that the Government should have acted as soon as the warning was issued. Unfortunately with the 13th general election, politics took precedence over leadership.

And now, several months after GE13, the Government looks set to make some difficult decisions. The Goods and Services Tax (GST) will come into effect soon. And various subsidies will be reduced.

Let us get one thing clear. The Government is not increasing prices.

Instead, the Government is reducing subsidies and removing price controls that have been keeping prices artificially low for many years.

Prices should have actually gone up gradually over the years. But government intervention has kept them lower than what they should be, such that when the subsidies and controls are removed, the increase is drastic.

Many people are complaining about the rising cost of living. Rightly so. The cost of living is indeed increasing.

But some of the complaints are rather misdirected because they call for the Government to continue subsidising and controlling prices. This is the wrong demand.

Further subsidies and price controls will only keep us living in a false world, one in which the actual cost of living is masked by interventions by politicians, whichever side of the political divide they may be on. And the reality is, the interventions are unsustainable anyway.

The fact is, subsidies, handouts and price controls should be removed. The market must be allowed to function efficiently with minimal distortionary interventions. Therefore the Government’s decision to stop them, is, in principle, praiseworthy.

I say “in principle” because there is another factor that must be taken into consideration. That is the issue of prioritisation.

Malaysia’s fiscal management is in a sorry state. Every day we hear reports about how our money is wasted on travels, projects that are not needed, corruption and leakages.

Plus so much wastage has been identified in the Auditor-General’s Report again and again every year.

If the Government wants to save money, they should prioritise reducing the wastage and leakages.

They should also prioritise removing subsidies given to big businesses and concessionaries, and recovering money given under questionable situations.

Actions that affect common people should come last on the list.

Unfortunately it is still not clear what is being done to prevent problems already identified by the Auditor-General.

There is no news about how the Government plans to stop subsidising corporate entities and concessionaries. Nobody knows if the billions lost to questionable projects and contractors will ever be recovered.

Let me stress again that I completely agree subsidies and handouts must be removed. They have distorted our economy for such a long time, and they are bad for our future economic growth.

But the way these steps are being implemented today makes it impossible to argue for subsidy removal. The Government has prioritised the wrong first steps.

Let me suggest some more steps that can help save money without hurting the public.

Our Government spends billions every year in public procurement. Ideas studied this topic in 2013, and we have released a policy paper on it recently. We calculated that simply by improving the processes of public procurement, we could save up to RM2.3bil in public procurement alone.

If we add the amount of money spent by the Public Private Partnership Unit (Unit Kerjasama Awam Swasta) under the Prime Minister’s Department, the potential saving could be much more. But the unit operates in a protected environment and not much is known about how they evaluate contract proposals.

We need more transparency around Ukas.

Nevertheless, I am glad that Datuk Paul Low, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, has managed to persuade various agencies to improve their processes and employ competitive tendering instead of direct negotiation. This is a brilliant first step.

Another step to save money is by reducing the size of the civil service. Why exactly do we need to have such a bloated civil service anyway?

Now is a good time to start issuing redundancy notices to as many civil servants as possible.

Perhaps they can start with under-performing officers. They should be sacked, not merely transferred to another unit.

An example of government leadership is being shown by another country that is also facing fiscal challenges after decades of government splurging – the United Kingdom.

The UK government has committed to cutting administrative staff at their ministry of education by 40%, and another 23,000 administrative posts in their health services. That is concrete action.

If we see concrete actions with the right priorities, the Government will face less resistance.”

Some highlights of the articles:

  1. Our fiscal situation is bad. It is not new. It has been plaguing the country since many years ago, up to a point the World Bank estimated that at the rate we were going we would probably be bankrupt by 2019. Many Malaysians are ignorant to that fact that we were desperate for fiscal remedies.
  2. Learn about fiscal policies in Investopedia, though some economists shun Keynesian ideas but the gist is there.
  3. Goods and Services Tax is a form of consumption tax which its introduction would aid the country in reducing fiscal deficit. So welcome, GST.
  4. Subsidies, price controls and cash handouts would never ever work in the long run.
  5. Malaysians have been living in a false world where food price is (generally) cheap, non existent price increase (when price hikes normally happened during festivities). Thus when the government had to normalise the price by lifting the price controls, then all hell breaks loose. Just how is it to make you people understand that price increase is inevitable?? You can’t expect the price of 1kg of flour to remain constant at RM2 (for example) forever. That’s just not gonna happen.
  6. It seems that we have too many whiners who don’t (refuse to) understand the necessity of the government’s actions.
  7. Nevertheless spending cut should be a top priority. We have too many civil servants for such a small country (for God knows what reasons). There has been no profound action taken so far in handling corruption and leakages in government spending. UK govt as quoted in the article has successfully cut down their civil servants even up to 40%. That showed how committed the country is in curbing their challenges.

Till then, godspeed Malaysia.

The Actors A List

I have a penchant over watching movies with my fav actors in it. And over times I find that these actresses have consistently choose their roles well and here’s why their on my fav list:

Sandra Bullock – her dazzling performance in Gravity

Rooney Mara – she was the girl with the dragon tattoo

Natalie Portman – Black Swan has always been my fav

Hillary Swank – Read the book, hated it. The only reason of me watching PS I Love You was because of Hillary Swank and boy was I glad cause she was sublime in that movie

Helena Bonham Carter – she’s one good lunatic actress, having partnered with Tim Burton in many of his movies. She and Johnny Depp always a good pair in many of TB’s movies. I liked her best in Fight Club.

Jodie Foster – she rocked Silence of the Lambs

Angelina Jolie – noticed her in Girl, Interrupted and she shone her way through especially in Salt

Marion Cottilard – Inception, inception

Monica Belluci – Irreversible goddess

Carrie Ann moss – The Matrix godlady and of course, Memento

Faye Wong – Chungking Express and her haunting voice in her rendition of Cranberries’ Mung Zung Yan

Maggie Q – she played a cameo in New York, I Love You as a hooker. Very well played.

 

A Trip to Japan

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Uh hello there 2014. 10 days into the new year and unlike the year before, this year I was abroad and partied away the new year.

On a bus. T_T.

It was an overnight journey from Nagano to Kyoto.

Well I went to Japan for 12 days, starting from Osaka – Tokyo – Fujiyoushida – Yokohama – Nagano – Kyoto – Kobe – Osaka.

Some of the things I’d gathered/observed during the trip.

  1. Impressive, impressive public transportation. Japan is famed for their extensive railways system, and yes the system can be so complex it is overwhelming at times. Basically in major town like Tokyo and Osaka, railways (on the ground and underground) are major source of transportation. Everyone uses it for their daily commute. The working class, the college students, families and their senior citizens too. I swear there were old people in almost all train/subway rides that I’d took, even some appeared to be close to 100 years old. Damn impressive. Well, I think that is also a factor why Japanese tend to live the longest. Just take an average Malaysian for example, once he reaches retirement age, he would vow to relax at home, maybe do a bit of gardening, house repairs etc. Seems like it is the norm thing to do. But for these Japs, retirement age means little to them as they still go about doing their routine life, such as taking subways to go places, dining out, playing Othello, going to the malls etc.
  2. They have massive train stations catering to many different subway lines, JR, shinkansen (bullet train), airport line, buses, etc. There are retail shops, high street label shops, high end shops (the likes of LV and Gucci), supermarket, restaurants, cafes, all under one station. The stations are huuugeee with many different exit points that lead to different parts of the town. As the subway stations are located underground, it kinda difficult to decide which exit to take, but fret not, there are english signs for all the exits. Note: it is extremely useful to know which exit to take beforehand, to save time and your strength too.
  3. Subways normally offers day pass, which can be purchased from their ticketing machines. For example in Osaka alone there are few subway lines, namely Hankyu, Hanshin, Kita-Osaka Kyuko, Keihan, Nankai and Kintetsu, and as the single journey fare would set you back around 200yen per trip, it is recommendable to purchase day pass 800yen, which offers you unlimited subway rides for the day. It is more economical that way. Some even combine subway pass with JR, such as in Tokyo whereby this type of ticket is fared at 1,580yen.
  4. Still on the transportation system. Everyone cycles in Japan. They use the traditional, vintage-y but very sturdy bikes. There are multi-tier bicycles parking near to railway stations.
  5. The non-existent traffic jam. It’s weird that Tokyo, as the metropolitan city has no traffic jam. Very few cars on the road.
  6. Japanese are very stylish people. It’s like they share the same motto ‘it’s better to be overdressed rather than under dressed’. Since I was there during winter I could see the nice jackets, coats, puff jackets, anorak that these Japs ladies put on. Even the stores are heavy on the items. And the ladies even paired their kimono with furs. So classy. And the men…oh damn you Japanese men, why are you so hot and ever so very stylish. Coupled with the hat, muffler, jacket and designer shoes, they’re good to go and pleasant to ogle at during train rides.
  7. The ladies are very particular on their looks. They put on heavy make up and they also have super nice skin. The hairs are always in place and it seems that they do blow outs regularly. Even the public toilets have separate section for ladies to do their make ups.
  8. All public toilets are clean.
  9. The people are very hygienic, they wear face masks and I once saw a shop worker manually hand scrubbed the pavement in front of his shop. Impressive.
  10. It goes without saying that the Japanese are very polite and nice people.
  11. No foreign workers. Even the janitors are local.
  12. Tokyo and Osaka have multiple city centres that worth venturing into. Its even cheaper to spend the nights in their neighboring towns. Take Yokohama, it’s only 30mins or so from Tokyo. Kobe is also adjacent to Osaka.
  13. There are plenty of museums in Japan, but mostly are closed between 26th Dec – 3rd Jan for their annual maintenance works.
  14. Moleskines are quite cheap in Japan.
  15. No fat people in Japan. I felt huge there.

 

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