From the monthly archives:

July 2006

The Agenda Behind Darfur

by Drima on July 18, 2006

Who is financing and supporting the rebels in Darfur in their rebellion against the Sudanese government? Who’s providing them with their weapons and ammo? How can they afford the private jets that fly them in and out of their European and African bases? Those are some questions I started to ponder after Sudan Watch brought them to my attention.

I’ll start with a question. Is there really an agenda behind Darfur or is it only an illusion? I personally believe that to some extent an agenda does exist. It’s obvious that the rebels are receiving support from an unknown party and I’m a strong believer in the notion that nothing in life comes for free especially when it comes to politics. The unknown party supporting the Darfur rebels are providing support for a reason and as such to some extent an agenda does truly exist.

Currently the majority of people in the Sudanese street believe that the Zionists have a hand in the Darfur crisis. Their beliefs are founded on the fact that in the past the US and Israel did provide support to the southern SPLM in their war against the north. This fact shouldn’t come as a surprise.

The Sudanese government considers Israel as an enemy. Therefore it’s only natural for Israel to do what is in its power to destabalize an enemy… the enemy in this case being Omar al-Bashir and his gang.

By 1969 the rebels had developed foreign contacts to obtain weapons and supplies. Israel, for example, trained Anya Nya recruits and shipped weapons via Ethiopia and Uganda to the rebels.

Also in the near past Sudan harboured terrorist elements including Bin Laden himself who spent some time in the country. As such it was in America’s interest to destabalize the Sudanese government at that time.

In 1996 the US government decided to send nearly $20 million of military equipment through the ‘front-line’ states of Ethiopia, Eritrea and Uganda to help the Sudanese opposition overthrow the Khartoum regime. US officials denied that the military aid for the SPLA and the Sudanese Allied Forces (SAF), described as ‘non-lethal’ — including radios, uniforms, boots and tents — was targeted at Sudan.

It is for those reasons that the Sudanese street believes the Zionists and “Israeli lobby” dominated US is involved in Darfur. There are also non-Muslims who do believe that Darfur rebels are receiving support from Israel. Here is a post with a very fruitfull discussion on the topic. It’s entitled “Playing the Israel Card”.

It would make sense if Israel is supporting the rebels as the situation hasn’t changed until now. However the notion that America might be involved in Darfur being based on the fact it did support the SPLM in the past becomes weaker. The situation now is different. The Sudanese government has learnt its lesson and it isn’t involved in harbouring terrorists any more. On the other hand if we look at it from a different perspective, the possibility of America being involved increases.

In the American media Darfur has repeatedly been called the 21st century’s first genocide and the crisis has received much attention. There are tons of garbage and propaganda about the issue too. What about Congo and Rwanda? Why haven’t their tragedies received as much attention as Darfur is getting now. Why are they forgotten while Darfur is on the spotlight? I believe it has to do with the fact that Darfur is rich in uranium and the Western fears it might end up in the wrong hands. I also believe that the oil in Darfur might be a factor since the American competition with the Chinese and French is increasing. Currently China is given the largest share of Sudanese oil.

That being said, it would be easy to simply blame the “evil Zionist” Jews and “imperialist” USA for the problems in Darfur. That’s a very wrong attitude in my opinion. If anyone should be blamed then it’s primarily Omar Hassan al-Bashir and his gang for being corrupted dictators and caring nothing for the Sudanese people. Following them on the “blame list” would then immediately be the unknown party supporting the rebels in Darfur… the unknown party probably being Israel, Corporate America and/or African countries neighbouring Sudan. I include African countries because in the past, African countries have aided SPLM too and therefore might be doing the same with Darfur’s rebels. I would like to delve into this deeper but I must admit that I lack the required knowledge about African politics to conduct an analysis.

I wish I could provide conclusive evidence on who is behind Darfur’s agenda but I can’t. I can only go about it on the bases of probabilities. My bets for now would probably fall on Israel and/or America. Why? Well for the reasons that I have stated above and many others. An example of those other reasons would be the fact that America provided chemical weapons to Iraq to go to war with Iran (and now Iraq is occupied. Ah, The irony of politics!) . Also keep in mind that SPLM still maintains ties with Israel and that Darfur rebels also have ties with some SPLM elements.

Anyways before I end this post, let me repeat again that I hate the attitude of blaming it all on the “evil Joooooz and America”. It’s so easy to point the finger at them and forget all the criminal things our own governments are doing to us. I certainly don’t like foreign meddling in Sudan’s affairs. I also believe that we as Sudanese people shouldn’t focus too much on it and let it distract us from the real problem… the real problem being our attitude and that of our own criminal government. As we saw recently, Omar al-Bashir played the Israel card by including Darfur with the war in Lebanon and Palestine and saying it’s part of the Zionist war against Muslims. He won the support of many simply by being vocal and strongly condemning the Israeli attacks on Lebanon. Soon some people will probably see him as a great hero and forget all the nasty things he did. Sigh!

Aimster, you’re so right. “My friend’s enemy is my enemy; but the enemy of my enemy is my friend.”

To get a very good idea of the information floating around in the Sudanese street and amongst some Sudanese intellectuals, check out this post. I so very highly recommend reading it and the links it contains.

UPDATE: Here is a little thing I just received from a friend. It’s about the Neocons’ war plan that includes Sudan. It’s the first time I’m reading such reports. Hmm interesting! So is this “leftist rubbish” or real facts?

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Titanic VS The Notebook

by Drima on July 17, 2006

Ya ya I know what the hell right? Well hey don’t blame, I’m not in the mood to blog about something serious or depressing today since I already am depressed with the super depressing news… SO… for a change I thought we could all maybe discuss something that would do us some good if we practiced it a little bit more… How about we discuss LOVE for a change huh?!


In your opinions, if you had to choose between the two and only the two which movie would you choose as the greatest romance and love story movie of all time… Titanic or The Notebook?! Stop trying to act all tough and emotionless because I know all of you who do act like that are in fact soft and sensitive baby rabbits deep inside so come on… which one is it… Titanic or The Notebook?? (and please don’ tell me you haven’t watched them or I’ll strangle you!!)

UPDATE: Coming up next is “The Agenda Behind Darfur”.

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3 Weird Things About Americans

by Drima on July 17, 2006

One. They’ve got some seriously weird trash shows like Maury and Jerry Springer.Two. They talk to their dogs… (WTFish?!) … and the best part is that they both seem to understand each other. Amazing but seriously weird.

Three. They chill in grave yards as if the grave yard is a place for a picnic. When I was at NYC, I visited Trinity Church and to my utter amazement people were sitting down on the benches and chilling in the grave yard. Pinktoes told me that back in the day she sometimes used to go there to chill with her friends after school. The high school she used to study in is right across the street. Isn’t it a little creepy to date and chill in a place where you’re surrounded by dead people? What about things like respect for the dead? Seriously what’s up with that? Double WTFish?!! Amazing but seriously weird.

Americans… No disrespect intended okay =p

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Bye Bye Darfur, Hello M.E. Madness!

by Drima on July 13, 2006

Shouting out that WW3 might be about to start is not a childish overstatement especially when you examine the current Israel, Lebanon, Palestine, Syria and Iran madness closely. Something interesting but not surprising always happens when I visit other blogs with posts about Israel or Palestine. All posts with nothing about the Pali/Israeli conflict get almost completely ignored while any ones with the words “Palestine”, “Hamas”, “Israel” or “Zionism” get bombarded with tons of comments. Sweet! Bye bye Darfur. Almost all the attention is about to turn to Israel. Bashir must be glad I guess. He’ll obviously continue blaming the Joooooz for all the problems facing Darfurians. It’s obviously retarded but hey let’s look at it without being blinded by “anti-Zionist” anger. When the Zionists are accused of being behind an agenda in Darfur many people end up believing such things. When the US is accused of being biased towards Israel, it also is true in one way or another. I mean hey let’s look at Egypt.
The US loves to rant about how it wants to spread democracy in the world but when America’s close friend “Mubarak dominated” Egypt smacks the living crap out of democracy supporters and reformers, America simply gives a slap on the hand to Egypt and better even approves $2 billion worth of aid from American tax payers’ money. America doesn’t really want democracy in Egypt because if true and fair elections were held the Muslim Brotherhood will win without a doubt and the peace between Israel and Egypt will be most probably be bye bye. America only wants democracy when the results are in accordance with its interests. That’s a serious and glaring double standard especially when the war in Iraq is fought under the pretext of spreading democracy. Well hey can you blame a superpower for wanting to remain a superpower?!
Anyways here comes THE question… Is true democracy more important than peace and stability or is it the other way around??! As innocents are dying in the ME so are the ones in Darfur. Bashir blames the Joooz and many rally behind him. Blame them now and he’ll probably have triple the amount of people rally behind him. Poor Palestinians got fed up of corrupted Fatah and elected Hamas as a hopefully better alternative but the opposite happened. Hamas brought disaster. I hate seeing Israel’s campaign of collective punishment but on the other hand after following the news closely I really don’t think Hamas or Hezbollah want peace with Israel. I think they really do want to wipe it off the map. Damn it! Hamas is now backed by Hezbollah which in turn is backed by Syria which is in turn backed by “pain inflicting capable” Iran. Sudan is allied with Iran by the way. It’s just a stupid move meant to be like “hey America take the finger wohooo, we’re with Iran whom we know already has nuclear missiles… Yaay”. Jihad is always the supreme option.
Now hey I’m not going to try and be an Islamic guru but please answer this question fanatic supporters of regimes in Syria and Iran. Which jihad is better, wiping a country that already exists whether we like it or not from the map or waging a jihad against so called Islamic dictatorial regimes that care nothing for the population, holds it back while other countries move forward with building a better infrastructure with clean water, education, healthcare, a just legal system and so on? Whic jihad is better?? Listen up Muslim supporters of this madness, I’m a Muslim myself and I believe in miracles okay but I prefer being realistic. I hope you start thinking the same way too. As far as I’m concerned I believe the Palestinians are oppressed and living in harsh conditions and that Israel is an illegal occupier. However I hate seeing the stupid actions of Hamas and Hezbollah that leave no room for peace and bring disaster for the people. My heart goes out to the Israelis and Palestinians, both victims of their leaders in my opinion. Meanwhile I’m also sad for the people in Darfur as I know the current M.E. madness will overshadow them. I won’t forget them though or those still living in pain after the Asian tsunami and earthquakes in Pakistan and Indonesia.
Ah me and my stupid fantasies of a peacefull world full of love and tolerance. Let’s all blast our ourselves into oblivion shall we?! Get ready for a war spanning from Iran all the way to Israel. Include North Korea in the list too.
UPDATE: I thought I should include a link to this wonderfull yet depressing post from Rambling Hal. She’s right.
My grandparents never lived in complete peace in their lifetimes. Neither have my parents. Neither will I. And it goes on. When was the world ever completely at peace?

NEVER… Yes? No?

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Maury: Another Culture Shock!!

by Drima on July 12, 2006

What kind of freaking show is this??! I’m supposed to be chilling and taking a break right now but I couldn’t help it. I had to blog about this today rather than blog after 2 days. I can’t believe such shows exist! A guest comes out accusing her lover he got her pregnant and he denies that the already born child is his. He’ll be like “look at her she ain’t got ma nose ain’t got my eyes ain’t got ma mouth. NOTHING! That girl ain’t mine. You stupid hoe been busy. This little girl ain’t mine and I got nothing to do with her. You ain’t getting a single dollar from me hoe. Child support my ass!” The lovers/couples/ex-lovers/one night “flingers”/whatever you want to call them then fight and the DNA results come out live in front of the audience proving the child does actually belong to the angry guy and that the girl is right. They both run backstage crying like babies and start fighting more. I mean seriously I don’t want to start cursing on this blog but what kind of damn show is this??!! SHOCKING!!! And someone told me a show called Jerry Springer is much worse! Seriously WTFish?! The best part is that the girl’s mother will be usually present and demanding child support too. What kind of mother is that?! It’s as if her daughter getting pregnant like that isn’t a big deal. Sheeesh. Teach your daughter how to keep her legs closed damn it. Random BooM BooM is not good especially when it’s unsafe! Do people actually watch such shows?! SHOCKING!!

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The Physical & Mental Road Trip

by Drima on July 11, 2006



Indeed the road trip was both physical and mental.

On Thursday night at 11.30pm, we left to LA from Chicago in our rented Ford Explorer. We were all hyped up. After 3 hours, I wasn’t anymore really. We had just left Illinois and made it across into Iowa. Nebraska, Colorado, Utah and Nevada were still ahead of us. It seemed like a never-ending journey. My mind wondered so far away as we crossed the flat plains of Iowa. You can’t help but not contemplate many things especially when both sides of the highway are all farms as far as the eyes see. In a way it felt as if I was the highway and the farms on both my sides were strangers that brought me insecurity. As far as I went they still followed me and not only on one side but on both. I felt sandwiched between two worlds. I felt sandwiched between two farms. I felt claustrophobic. Both sides could seem very similar or different depending on how a person views things. I guess I saw a bit of both. Those farms on both sides were me in a way and I was the highway sandwiched in between. Those farms were strangers but familiar in a way. Here I am, a Sudanese, a Nubian Arab, a Shaige and a Muslim traveling across the United States of America. There I was contemplating and struggling within myself. It’s a struggle I wake up to face everyday. It’s the struggle of the Westernized me VS the Sudanese Muslim deeply engrained within me. It’s the fight and the search for answers. It’s about finding a place where I belong. This place is not a physical one but a mental one. It’s a mental state, which I and only I can achieve for myself. How can I not contemplate and simply turn my back away? Sudan has been raped over and over again by a corrupt and bloody dictatorship. It still continues to be. Naturally I want to fight for it and I want to free it but I feel too weak and despaired. I need the Sudanese people to join me. I want the righteous ones to wake up and help me overthrow this disease that is sinking my country deeper into misery as everyday passes by. “Oh well” I say to myself. “I’m scared and I’m not brave enough to do it”. “Running away is the answer,” I say to myself. Running away mentally and physically to another place is the way I will find peace within but where do I run though? To America, Canada, London, or do I stay in Malaysia… Where?? I love and admire the West dearly for so many reasons but in a way I don’t think I could ever be Western mentally. There are just way too many contradictions that bring me a feeling of anxiety. On one side I see a torn and oppressive Sudan and on the other I see a prosperous West that is free and yet contradicting to many of my beliefs. On one side I see a brutal and bloody Sudan and on the other a US with a foreign policy filled with many double standards and which corporate interests heavily distort. When looking beneath the politics, most of the frustration and confusion evaporate away. I start to see kind, lovely and such wonderful people on both sides of the divide, the divide being me the highway cutting across the farmlands of Nebraska. The divide being me sandwiched between two worlds, and two farms that reap a harvest equivalent to their peoples’ efforts and their amount of fair or unfair access to water and other vital resources. Bump! Our Ford SUV shook a little and I snapped back to reality.

The scenery was just beautiful. America’s skies are exceptional. I’ve never seen such pretty skies in my life. The clouds and the sunshine edging through little holes in them are truly breath taking. The journey continued and the green flat plains started getting yellowish and hilly. I was mesmerized by the views. I couldn’t help it and so my mind started drifting away again but before it took off too far, I snapped back to reality and no it wasn’t a road bump this time. It was something else, something ugly, something way different and much more disastrous than a bump. Someone in the SUV took the pleasure in starting the vicious “road trip” game of anonymous and sound proof “emergency gas releases”. I don’t know how bad it was when Saddam gassed the Kurds and I don’t care because this was by far worse. Man, I could have died from chocking. Shouts accompanied by laughter then followed after the disgustingly powerful and smelly gases assaulted our nostrils. Game on! Drima was about to turn into a fart machine. I was done cooking “it” and just as I was about to blast it into the air in a sound proof manner, sirens blasted into our ears instead. Cops! We pulled over. “Here comes the racism test,” I said to myself. Five colored men in an SUV, speeding across Nebraska must seem bad. She came and uttered the words that I’ve memorized from Hollywood movies. “License and registration please.” My brother was driving and so he provided the required documents. She looked at them, then at us, then at them and finally back at us one more time. I guess she could easily tell we weren’t high on weed or drunk on vodka. She was very nice and polite. I got no racist vibe from her whatsoever. My brother got down, went into her car and they talked for a while. He came back with a smile and a disappointed look. He just got a speeding ticket for $169! It was the first he ever received in his whole life. We agreed to split it 5 ways. I would pay $9 while the others $40 each. It’s so nice being a student. The engine roared again and the windows were closed. 5 minutes later I finally blasted it. Yes, I did it. It was perfectly sound proof and anonymous. Success! Shouts erupted again and everyone used Shaggy’s famous line “it wasn’t me”. I did too and hey it truly, honestly and most certainly wasn’t me okay! We calmed and the air freshened up again. We continued on our long journey across America. I slept and woke up only to find myself in the high and beautiful mountains of Colorado. No more yellowish hills. I was in awe. It was amazingly beautiful. However my brother and his friends who took turns driving as we made regular stops every 4 or 5 hours, didn’t enjoy it much. I was resting and chilling. Thank the Lord my driving license isn’t international. My brother and his friends found it difficult and annoying driving in Colorado as the highway wasn’t straight anymore. It was curved and had many steep uphill climbs and scary downhill descends. It was like a plate of Spaghetti. Good thing they had their GPS system. I didn’t care. I was just enjoying the scenery and day dreaming as usual. From love and relationships, to politics, religion, music and my ambitious entrepreneurial dreams. I think too much.

We made it into Utah. The mountains were still to be seen but the green and tall trees were gone. The land started becoming desert like. We continued and drove on. We were now in Nevada and were excited again. Las Vegas was right ahead. We drove on but still there was nothing but a never-ending expanse of tar and a few weak lights overwhelmed by the total darkness that surrounded us. Suddenly it appeared. It was beautiful. There it was right in front of us. Las Vegas baby! The darkness was no more. Millions of tiny twinkling lights sat there in the middle of the Nevada desert. It was an oasis in a dry valley of death. “Sin City here we come,” we all cheered. 45 minutes later we were driving right by the Luxor. The day was already Saturday and it was 3am in the morning. We’ve so far been on the road for more than 24 hours. We decided we would stop at Vegas on the way back and so we continued to LA. We made it into California after about 4 more hours of driving from Las Vegas. I was at the west coast of the US now. It was great. We arrived and checked in into our hotel, which was near Hermosa Beach. I was already in love with LA! The beach was sweet. I jumped into the Pacific Ocean after 10 minutes of hesitation since the water was really cold. The waves, the girls, the sand, the wind, the girls, the skies, the sun and everything else were absolutely great. It was crazy too because not more than 11 days ago, I was all the way on the east coast of the US at Portland, Maine and I was literally in the Atlantic Ocean. This truly is such a wonderful and amazing vacation. It’s a great experience indeed. After the beach we went back, showered and slept like pigs. We then woke up and got ready to go to a Sudanese wedding that we were invited to.

The wedding was nice but not as big as the ones back home. There were a good number of cuties there too. You see it’s a Sudanese thing. In the West men go to bars to pick up women but in Sudan we go to big wedding parties and observe. If you see something you like and you exchange “sparky” glances, then you find out who the mother is and you politely inform her of your good intention to get to know her daughter. That doesn’t happen in all weddings though but when it comes to my family, our close friends and their families that’s how it works. It’s important to inform the parents and introduce yourself before going up to the daughter, exchanging phone numbers and later going out with her. It’s just more polite that way. This approach is already considered to be kind of liberal. The vast majority of Sudanese only marry within the same family or at least same tribe. I don’t like that idea and I personally think it’s primitive and kind of racist. I don’t mind unforced arranged marriages but I don’t like the idea of them being constrained only within the same family or same tribe. Another wedding is about to take place in Virginia between a Sudanese girl and a White American guy. They fell in love while in university. The parents don’t mind at all. There is a catch however. He is Muslim. He converted way before he even met her. Thank the Lord they said yes and not rejected him simply because he’s a “white infidel”. I’m glad the mentality is changing. The wedding in LA was between a Sudanese man and a half Sudanese half Ethiopian girl. The man’s family in Sudan is not very happy because the girl is not pure Sudanese but he doesn’t care much. I guess his family is still sticking to the backward things in Sudanese culture, which I’m against. Anyways we ate, chilled and danced to the beats of Ethiopian and Sudanese music. The wedding wasn’t bad even though small by Sudanese standards. Before we left, my brother and I conversed with an old lady who turned out to be our relative. This is the amazing thing about us Sudanese people. Wherever we go, we find out we’ve got relatives there. Sweet! It makes approaching the cuties much easier since there is already an “established trust”. We left back to the hotel.

Next day we woke up, checked out and sped off to LA’s Downtown Disney’s ESPN Zone to watch the World Cup finals. The majority of people there were supporting Italy. It made sense since 90% of the place was filled with Italian Americans. However there were a few cool white non-Italian Americans there supporting Italy too. We, the road trip gang were all supporting France. I asked those surprisingly “soccer loving” non-Italian white Americans why they were supporting Italy and they gave me 2 interesting answers. Some of them bet a lot of money on Italy and others didn’t support France for political reasons. I guess the latter were the “red necks” we saw protesting and pouring French wine in the streets just before the start of the Iraq war. The match starts. Penalty! Zidane scores. Wonderful! We clapped and cheered together with the few Franch people next to us. Stares immediately followed. Italy scores. Crowd cheers and our smiles fade away. The suspense almost killed us until the worst happened. Henry took the seat but hey we were wrong. That wasn’t the worst that happened. Zidane was. One hit from his bold stone head and the rude Italian player fell down in pain. Good for that rude Italian but too bad for Zidane. He should have controlled his anger and ended his career properly. I still love the man anyways. Long live Zidane! World Cup ended in a depressing way indeed. Also something, which pissed me off, happened after that. When we all walked out of ESPN Zone some of the French people holding French flags were literally crying and wiping their tears. Out of nowhere comes this rude Italian guy and starts cheering at the top of his voice and laughing at them “Italia, Italia, Italia, wohooo, France lost, yaaay, Italia”. That was so disgustingly rude especially the fact that this rude Italian guy was in his 20’s and he had the guts to come up to this weeping French man in his 60’s and laugh at him. Where is that monkey’s sportsmanship and respect for older people? I’m glad the weeping French guys kept their cool. Anyways half an hour later I received news back from Malaysia that my mom was very happy while my sister was literally crying her eyes out. Yes I know. My family is weird when it comes to sports and my little sister is a football fanatic.

After the match we went to eat pizza in downtown LA. It was the most annoying pizza I’ve ever eaten in my life and that’s exactly the reason why it was the best and tastiest ever. You take a bite and the cheese stretches from LA all the way to London and back. Following the elastic cheesy pizza, we went to the Hollywood Walk of Fame and took pictures there. After that we left off to Las Vegas. We reached and stopped there for about 2 hours. The weather reminded me of Qatar’s and Dubai’s. Believe me people, the fact the word “palace” is part of the name “Caesar’s Palace” is not an overstatement. Downtown Las Vegas is huge and exciting. It reminded me of Times Square in New York City. On the way back to the car, we passed by a fence, which was polluted with pictures of nude women. They were promoting their “services” and the cards had phone numbers if you wanted to call and get a good “massage”. Hmmm. After Vegas I woke up only to find myself in Colorado’s Copper Mountain Resort. It was lovely. It reminded me of Genting Highlands back in Malaysia but the weather was better though. We spent an hour there and took many pictures.

During the road trip to LA and back to Chicago our diet mostly consisted of, Pringles, Subway and chocolate bars. I always asked for extra onions in my Subways to recharge my “gas leaking” abilities. On the way back here to Chicago, we agreed on a truce and the farting battle was over. Don’t ever mess with Drima when it comes to emergency “biohazardous” gas leaks. Come to think about it, why not donate all your farts to this blog so I can collect them and try releasing them on corrupt dictatorships all over the world to try and get rid of them. That would be great wouldn’t it? The road trip ruled. I’ve got 10 days left in the US and I’ll spend them all in Chicago. I’ve had so much fun traveling all over the country and I’m glad to have met many wonderful American people. Indeed you “infidels” ain’t bad at all you know. I wish others who come from where I do can start judging you guys without the political factor being involved. That will make it much easier to absorb the truth in. Every race, followers of a religion and nationality have the good and the bad in them. Never stereotype the majority based on the actions of an evil few whomever those people maybe. Always keep an open mind. Down with the corporate media!

In America each city was beautiful in its own way. In terms of fun I loved New York the best and I really enjoyed Broadway’s Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. Walking around the city with Pinktoes was too sweet and I guess that’s why New York is now so dear to me. It’s because of her and New Yorkers. If I judge the cities without the “people” factor then LA is definitely my number one choice. I loved California and its beaches. Sometimes this vacation doesn’t seem real to me that I feel the need to pinch myself. I’ve done way too much in the last 3 weeks alone. 10 days left here in Chicago and I look forward to a whole day’s stay at Tokyo’s Ginza during my transit on the way back to Malaysia. It’s going to be depressing when I go back to my boarding 2 days after I arrive. I’ve got 2 more years to graduate from university. I’ll be 21 that time. I’ll work for a while to get some experience and after that I truly hope to do my postgraduate studies in either Canada or America. I aim to get accepted in Syracuse, Princeton, Harvard or maybe Ottawa’s Carlton. Big dreams for a small man huh? I always like to tell people something. Either I’m too small for my dreams and they’re not really that big or I really am very big but my dreams are just way bigger. Time will tell. Until then, I’ll always keep dreaming and thinking. That’s why I am Drima, The Sudanese Thinker. Blogging about Sudan to resume soon. Peace out friends!

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I’m Back From the Road Trip

by Drima on July 11, 2006

I just arrived 5 minutes ago. We were on the road for 30 freaking hours. Ouch!! I’m dead tired. LA and Vegas were too nice. Expect a long post about the whole experience in around 12 hours. It’s good to be back in Chicago. Me gonna unpack now, take a shower and sleep coz I stink and I badly need rest. Oh ya and France lost =( … I watched the finals at ESPN Zone in Downtown Disney, LA. I’ll tell you all about it later.

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Thank You Sudan Watch

by Drima on July 6, 2006

For the past one week I was too busy having fun and chilling that I missed out on so many events regarding Sudan and Darfur. I was afraid it would be hard for me to catch up but thanks to Sudan Watch I was able to get updated easily. Believe me when I tell you Sudan Watch’s Ingrid Jones knows what she’s talking about. I find her to be one of the most credible sources of information on Sudanese events and news. Her perspective is not contaminated with anger or self serving propaganda. She’s out after the truth and real facts. Thank you Ingrid Jones for what you do. I admire your efforts and look up to you.

Here is a great article I stumbled upon through her blog. It explains how anti-UN sentiments in Darfur is lighting the rod for African nationalism. It’s a great article indeed. Also recently Al Mahdi who was the last democratically elected leader of Sudan voiced his support for UN troops. Why am I not surprised? He’s only blinded by his lust to be in power again. What a shame! I wish I can have the time to blog and share with you all the analysisessisss (ops what’s plural for analysis?) that I’ve been thinking about 24/7 in my head but I don’t have the time. I’m not a fan of conspiracy theories but believe me when I tell you there is an agenda behind Darfur and no it’s not the Joooooooooooooz. I have to go and pack up my stuff for the road trip to LA since we’re leaving in a while so I’m gonna go now. You all take care. I’ll try to do my best to blog again soon and post my thoughts about the developments in Darfur and the agenda behind it. I hate the fact that I can’t update regularly. Plus I’m already losing traffic =(

Peace!

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New York: 4 Days 3 Nights

by Drima on July 5, 2006






Hey people, I’m back in Chicago. I just arrived today back from New York City. I spent my whole time in Manhatan. The 4 days I spent there could easily qualify as some of the best ever in my whole life. This thanks to a very special someone. She knows who she is. I was staying at her place on the 56th floor of the Corinthian. Great location and great views. I visited Ground Zero, Trinity Church, the UN, Wall Street, Broadway, Times Square and a bunch of other places too. Oh ya by the way New York rats are scaaaaary and huge man!

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I Love New York, Oh Yes I LOVE IT!!

by Drima on July 3, 2006

People I’m having the time of my life. Absolutely GREAT. I LOVE New York. It’s mad cool man!! It is SICK here you feel me. WORD!! (I’m learning some New York slang now =p) I LOVE IT!!I’m going to Broadway now (Aimster too bad, you can’t kill me now). I’ll do my best to blog later and post some pictures. I just got back from the UN’s General Assembly hall. I met a number of officials there. It was great. We dicussed many issues including Darfur and I grabbed some of the Security Council’s reports… Anyways PEACE OUT and sorry for not updating. I’ll really do my very best so please be patient. Apologies…

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