Tindakan TEGAS mesti di ambil. Jika bukan sekarang bila lagi???
Kemarahan rakyat akibat pemandu mabuk ini sudah sampai ke kemuncaknya.
Hukuman sedia ada iaitu penjara minimum 5 tahun, maksimum 10 tahun dan denda minimum RM20,000 & maksimum RM50,000.00, serta hilang kelayakan memiliki lesen selama 5 tahun; hukuman ini ternyata GAGAL memberi pengajaran kepada pemandu-pemandu di luar sana.
Pindaan undang-undang mesti dilakukan segera khusus untuk PEMANDU MABUK & MENGAKIBATKAN KEMATIAN.
Pindaan terhadap peruntukan undang-undang semasa dilihat wajar dibuat menjadi MEMBUNUH TANPA NIAT terhadap PEMANDUAN MENYEBABKAN KEMATIAN AKIBAT MABUK (dadah/arak/seumpanya). Jika ini boleh dilakukan maka, pemandu-pemandu mabuk yang sabit salah akan berdepan dengan hukuman penjara sehingga 30 tahun.
Pindaan juga wajar di buat untuk membolehkan pampasan wajib diberikan kepada waris mangsa.
*kredit kepada pemilik video.
KitKat is owned by Nestlé.
Nestlé is one of the most unethical companies in the world.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Nestlé wanted to grow its infant formula sales in developing countries, especially in Africa. So they came up with a strategy.
They gave free baby formula to new mothers and promoted it as better than mother’s milk.
At first, it seemed helpful. But it was not.
The free supply lasted just long enough for many mothers to stop producing their own milk. Once it ended, they had no natural option left and had to depend on formula.
But many of these mothers were poor. They could not afford to keep buying it. So they tried to stretch it by adding more water and less powder.
This led to weak and undernourished babies.
It got worse because many of them did not even have clean water or proper conditions to prepare the formula safely. Babies fell sick. Some even died.
And Nestlé did not even provide proper instructions. No clear guidance in local languages. No support for mothers who could not read.
They knew the risks. They still continued.
They only reacted when Western countries protested and boycotted them.
Even today, they are not fully ethical. And people still eat KitKat.
This is probably the very best explanation of Allahu Akbar ever made and it is also realtime shown and proven in the video with real time US-Israeli bombs literally dropping almost onto the crowd
A both funny and educational meme. Let me explain:
In the first panel, Joey is excited because the hotel’s “free Wi-Fi” is extremely fast. Anyone who has stayed in hotels knows their Wi-Fi is usually slow, overloaded, and frustrating. So when a connection suddenly feels blazing fast, it feels like you got lucky.
In the second panel, Joey checks his device and notices his IP address starts with 172.16.42.x. His expression instantly changes to shock — because that number means something very specific in cybersecurity.
That IP range is the well-known default network configuration used by a device called a WiFi Pineapple.
A WiFi Pineapple is a portable penetration-testing tool that attackers can use to create rogue Wi-Fi access points. It can imitate legitimate networks … like a hotel’s Wi-Fi and trick nearby devices into connecting to it instead of the real network.
Once your device connects, the attacker effectively becomes the network in the middle, allowing them to observe or manipulate traffic passing through it. This is a classic Man in the Middle (MitM) attack.
The reason the connection feels “fast” is simple: you’re probably one of the few people connected to it, and the attacker is letting your traffic pass through so they can monitor it.
So if you ever connect to public Wi-Fi and notice an IP address like 172.16.42.x, there’s a good chance you’re not actually on the hotel’s network…. you might be connected to a rogue hotspot controlled by someone else.
Spanish PM Pedro Sanchez responds to Trump :
"23 years ago, U.S govt dragged us into a war with Iraq, A war said to fight to eliminate Saddam Hussein's nuclear weapons and bring democracy
But NO nuclear weapon was found in Iraq"
You can't fool us twice !! BRUTAL !!
This is amazing
Sydney Swisher is a self-taught painter who transforms thrifted fabrics into textured, memory-filled oil artworks that blend pattern and image.