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3 月 29 日, 2008 年

我想去海口学修飞机,学费要六万

Ken 隨筆 小伊 0 Comments

晚上十一点,终于起身去煮了点面条,加了点饭遭殃,加一点豇豆,加一点豆腐乳,加两个煎蛋,加一点虾米,加两根火腿肠,加一把生菜,勤俭节约呀,没钱的时候只能不吃肉了,上周因为喝了变质的牛奶,肚子整整拉了三天,都是早上七点多的时候,那个牛奶并不是过期,而是我把它阳台上,在那些阳光灿烂的日子里,四十度的高温让塑料袋装的牛奶迅速滋生出许多细菌,而我,在喝第二袋的时候觉得味道不对才醒悟过来是为什么。

上周连续三天早上肚子不舒服让我养成了早起的习惯,每天很早就醒了过来,然后我想了下似乎那些老年人才有很早就醒的习惯,我还是应该恢复成睡懒觉的习惯比较好,不过早起也有早起的好处,走在大街上一个人都看不到,我这附近都是大小的公司,不到上班时间是不会有人的,把窗户开着,温度居然只有八度。

下面放个视频,这个视频跟花花公子以前出的整人系列类似,看过那个系列的自然就知道这个要表达什么意思,没看过的智商没问题的应该也能知道这个要表达什么意思,不过这个视频我觉得要表达的意思不多,我想说的是那个女演员很敬业,全程不苟言笑,花花公子系列里面,虽然也是暴笑的场面,但是都是在一种轻松愉快的氛围里面进行的,而这个呢就直接切入了。

点这里下载WMV文件(4.5MB)

小伊:阿,最近太忙了,都没看你日志,我考真感动,都没钱了还送我熊熊
我:……我刚才在拖地板
小伊:可怜的 坑坑 现在你改做家政服务了??
我:!!!我拖我自己房间
小伊:那好吧,那你是不是没钱了
我:……你是不是要送我钱
小伊:你需要多少吗
我:……我想去海口学修飞机,学费要六万
小伊:…………………………………………再等一段时间吧
小伊:我在找大款,真的
我:……也!我可以当小白脸啦!
小伊:哈哈,为什么想学修飞机
我:学了可以帮基地组织在飞机上放炸弹
小伊:这个我倒没想那么远
我:恩,我志向远大
小伊:那我明天去卖血好了
我:……

小伊资料请参考我相册中的说明,大款看到此文如有意请即刻联系我,可安排见面吃饭活动等,只要你有需求我们就可以考虑,全球直线联系电话+8613488770928。

3 月 26 日, 2008 年

月光 皎洁 如故

Ken 隨筆 2 Comments

今晚 的 月亮 没有 昨夜 的 圆 , 一定 是 因为 我 , 对你 , 没有 足够 的 思念 。

3 月 23 日, 2008 年

不待天明尽北飞

Ken 隨筆 33, 奥莉维娅, 婷妹, 爽妹 7 Comments

虽说是打算办一个内部俱乐部形式的论坛,但是还是看了下以前的几个类似论坛,看来看去也只有chongda.net还在那里残喘着,不过他也算坚持得不错了,七年时间不是谁都可以撑下来的,在历次整风浪潮中都没有被搞下去,而上次的域名转换,根据我英明的估计应该是他们把域名卖了,网站做到一定程度,没有盈利是很难支撑下去的,当然了除非像那些阿拉伯国家的王子什么的或者拉登他儿子之类,就可以不考虑这个问题,在闲逛期间发现33的三个愿望漂流瓶,由于她老公更换频繁,且漂流瓶时间跨度太长,所以无法判断漂流瓶里面写的到底是谁。

吃多了晚上,半斤面条加一根香肠加一个煎蛋加一堆小白菜,胃很不舒服,特别是我缩着脚坐在地上靠着床铺望着黑漆漆的窗外思考的时候,婷妹打电话来问爽妹的生日是多久,她错过了多久,都一个月时间过去了她才想起问……爽妹最近很是积极,在我们的相册里面上传了不少激情照片,一如她的专业,都是英文的相册名字,可是,很显然她不太注重保养,而她在照片中的状态,我越看越觉得像奥莉维娅,许久没有和奥莉维娅联系,大概她还是奔波于各地的招聘,只是她的日记,写来写去,都只能写她一个人,也许她已经习惯了那种氛围,也许她有了新的情人,不管是哪种可能,都是对婚姻的否定,一个人的表情,最容易判断的,莫过于迟疑,和迷茫。

移动运营商势力划分的问题其实没有什么惊喜,三个移动运营商,C网的不通用,不通用的直接后果就是不能随便换卡,G网的两张牌照跟原来没有什么区别,我非常怀疑这次划分能达到什么样的效果,因为手机制造商的原因,WAP1.2的标准在一定程度上成为了一堆废纸,就算是W3C,微软还不是在IE里面把css,javascript乱搞一气,从某种程度上讲,现有的手机平台,唯一通用的就是kjava,除此之外,没有任何一个东西可以放到任意一个手机平台上通用,当然了,中国移动那Y的喜欢定制手机,国外的定制通常是往低价走,国内的定制通常就是往高价走了,2.75G甚至3G的网速快不到哪里去的,中国移动现在的平台根本就不具备支撑那么大流量的能力,远不如直接在城市里面布置WIFI热点来得直接有效,不信我们走着瞧,这次势力划分之后,如果中国移动解决了WIFI的计费问题,那厮一定会铺开WIFI甚于EDGE。

下面欣赏一首唐诗,

《春夜闻笛》
寒山吹笛唤春归,
迁客相看泪满衣。
洞庭一夜无穷雁,
不待天明尽北飞。

解析:诗人以恍惚北方边塞情调,实写南谪迁客的怨望,起兴别致有味;又借大雁春来北飞,比托迁客欲归不得,寄喻得体,手法委婉,颇有新意。而全诗构思巧妙,感情复杂,形象跳跃,针线致密。题曰“春夜闻笛”,前二句却似乎在写春尚未归,所以有人“吹笛唤春归”,而迁客不胜其悲;后二句一转,用回雁峰传说,想象笛声将春天唤来,一夜之间,大雁都北飞了。这一切都为笛声所诱发,而春和夜是兴寄所在,象征着政治上的冷落遭遇和深切希望。在前、后二句之间,从眼前景物到想象传说,从现实到希望,从寒山笛声到迁客,到洞庭群雁夜飞,在这一系列具体形象的叠现之中,动人地表现出诗人复杂的思想感情。它以人唤春归始,而以雁尽北飞结,人留雁归,春到大地而不暖人间,有不尽的怨望,含难言的惆怅。

3 月 19 日, 2008 年

Summer Dance

Ken 隨筆 6 Comments

这首歌是很小的时候,在舅舅家里那个双喇叭夏普录音机听到过的舞曲,想想那个时候的年轻人生活多么的富含技巧性呀,在舞厅跳舞,不经过学习那是不可能的,不像现在这些KTV,只要你是个人可以发声就可以进去吼一曲,完全没有技术含量,不过,李贞贤的腿的确是很漂亮也……

点击播放按钮即可收看,她跳的太happy了,所以码率较大,静候缓冲。

点这里下载

猛然发现<NCIS>里面的Ziva,和<From Russia With Love>里面的Tatiana,长得非常相似,特别是笑起来的时候,当然Ziva似乎为了突出一个杀手的身份往往笑得很豪放,而且是胸腔发声,我一般也是这样笑,六十年代的Tatiana现在已经是奶奶辈的了,不过相较之下我更为喜欢Ziva的发型,而<From Russia With Love>里面的经典打斗场面,也许是最接近真实的打斗,不像现在电影里面这么多花哨的架势,Tatiana只能算作花瓶了。

3 月 18 日, 2008 年

At least 80 had been killed

Ken 隨筆 6 Comments

其实一直都是这么乱,新疆也差不多,国内的新闻不能相信,国外的中文新闻也是不能相信的,现在网上大多数流转的照片,发生地并不是在拉萨,虽然如此,我还是很想去新疆。

China Defends Response in Tibet
08-3-19

BEIJING — China raised the death toll from the violent anti-Chinese protests in Tibet last week to 16 on Monday but said security forces had avoided using lethal force, countering Tibetan exile groups who asserted at least 80 had been killed.
The Chinese assertions came as scattered protests by ethnic Tibetans continued in the neighboring Chinese provinces of Qinghai, Gansu and Sichuan.
As paramilitary police and troops deployed to quash those protests, international pressure mounted on China to show restraint in dealing with dissent ahead of the Beijing Olympic Games in August.
The clashes in Tibet could also undermine China’s efforts to encourage self-governing Taiwan to move toward reunification.
In the final days of campaigning ahead of the island’s presidential election Saturday, both major political parties condemned Beijing’s suppression of protests in Tibet.
Chinese officials said the Tibetan regional capital, Lhasa, was quiet Monday after the biggest anti-government protests in almost two decades turned violent Friday.
Earlier, state media reported that 10 people had been killed when Tibetans went on a rampage attacking ethnic Chinese and destroying their shops and property.
The senior Chinese political leader in Tibet, Qiangba Puncog, said at a news conference in Beijing on Monday that security forces had used only water cannon and tear gas to disperse protesters in Lhasa.
He said 13 of those killed in the protests were “innocent civilians” attacked by the mob.
Another three Tibetans had died when they jumped from the roof of a building after refusing to surrender to police, he said.
Mr. Puncog, an ethnic Tibetan, said supporters of Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, had organized the unrest in an effort to generate publicity during the Olympics.
“Calm has returned to Lhasa, and society has returned to a state of normality,” The Associated Press quoted him as saying.
“This was organized, premeditated, masterminded and incited by the Dalai clique, and it was created under the collusion of Tibet independence separatist forces both inside and outside of China,” he was reported by the news agency to have said. “Those activities were aimed at splitting the country, were aimed at undermining ethnic community and undermining social harmony and stability in Tibet.”
The Dalai Lama on Sunday accused China of waging “cultural genocide” in Tibet and called for an international inquiry into the suppression of the protests.
From the headquarters of the Tibetan government in exile in Dharamsala, India, he said Tibetans had the right to peaceful protest.
There has been no independent corroboration of either the Chinese or Tibetan exile version of the casualties and damge from the protests in Tibet.
The Chinese authorities have barred foreign journalists from Tibet and access for other foreigners including tourists has been “temporarily” suspended, according to government officials.
Footage of Lhasa streets shown by Hong Kong television over the weekend showed a heavy Chinese military and police presence on streets still covered with debris. The Chinese authorities have set a deadline of midnight Monday for those who took part in the demonstrations to give themselves up or face harsh penalties.
Journalists and photographers attempting to cover the outlying protests said they had been taken into “protective detention” and prevented from approaching sensitive areas.
For China, the timing of the unrest in Tibet has drawn unwelcome attention to some of the longstanding tensions in the country at a time when the ruling Communist Party is planning a show of unity and harmony during the Olympics.
China says Tibet has been part of its territory for hundreds of years but Beijing has exerted full control only since 1950, when Communist troops invaded the region.
The catalyst for last week’s violence was a series of pro-independence protests led by Buddhist monks to mark the 49th anniversary of a failed uprising that forced the Dalai Lama into exile.
Now China is under international pressure to avoid further bloodshed or a heavy-handed crackdown in Tibet.
The president of the International Olympic Committee, Jacques Rogge, said on Sunday the Olympic body was very concerned about the situation in Tibet.
“The IOC hopes that there can be an appeasement as soon as possible to this situation, and I also want to offer our condolences to the relatives of those people who lost their lives,” The Associated Press reported Rogge saying. Earlier, Rogge had ruled out a boycott of the games because it would only penalize the competitors.
Australia, the United States, Japan and Europe have also called on Beijing to exercise restraint.
“With the approach of the Olympic Games, which ought to be a great show of fraternity, France would like to draw the attention of the Chinese authorities to the importance of respecting human rights,” the French Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
In Taiwan, the pro-independence ruling party of outgoing President Chen Shui-bian seized on the violence in Tibet and China’s threat of harsh measures against protesters as a warning of what could lie in store for the island if it was reunited with the mainland.
The front-runner in the presidential race, the Nationalist Party candidate Ma Ying-jeou, has campaigned strongly for improved ties with China, but he also called for an end to the “violence used by Beijing authorities.”

Curbs on Protest in Tibet Lashed by Dalai Lama
08-3-18
DHARAMSALA, India — The Dalai Lama accused China on Sunday of waging “cultural genocide” against his followers in Tibet and called for an international inquiry into the suppression of protests there, his strongest defense to date of Tibetan Buddhists who have staged an uprising against Chinese rule.
Speaking at the headquarters of the Tibetan government in exile, the Dalai Lama endorsed the right of his people to press grievances peacefully against the Chinese authorities, and said he would not ask Tibetans to surrender to Chinese military police by midnight on Monday, as Beijing has demanded. He said that he had no moral authority to do so and that Tibetans had beseeched him not to capitulate to that demand.
“Whether the Chinese government admits it or not, a nation with an ancient cultural heritage is actually facing serious dangers,” the Dalai Lama told reporters during an emotionally charged news conference here. “Whether intentionally or unintentionally, some kind of cultural genocide is taking place.”
His comments reflected the inflamed passions among Tibetans abroad, who view the revolts, the largest since the late 1980s, as a watershed moment.
Some Tibetans hope to press for outright independence from China. They argue that they have an unprecedented political opportunity to push for change as China prepares to be the host country for the Olympic Games in August and faces intense scrutiny of its human rights record.
The Dalai Lama, 72, who heads the Tibetan government in exile and serves as the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism, does not call for Tibetan independence and has remained far more cautious, fearing that the reprisals could worsen in Tibet. But his tone on Sunday and the words he chose to describe the Chinese crackdown are the strongest he has used since his representatives began negotiations with the Chinese in 2002.
Though the impact of the Dalai Lama’s words was difficult to gauge, they were almost certain to further enrage Beijing. Even as he spoke, there were unconfirmed reports that demonstrations by ethnic Tibetans had spread to the nearby Chinese provinces of Sichuan, Gansu and Qinghai.
The developments also appeared to diminish the Dalai Lama’s hopes of persuading Chinese leaders to allow him to return to Tibet, his goal in talks between his representatives and Communist Party leaders.
“They have no experience how to deal with problems through talk, only suppress,” he said.
Aides to the Dalai Lama said they had confirmed 80 killings on March 13 and 14 in Lhasa, Tibet’s capital, including 26 victims killed just outside Drapchi prison. Tibetan exiles in Dharamsala said they had also received news that at least two Buddhist monks had set themselves afire in protest. The claims could not be independently confirmed. China says the death toll in the recent unrest is much lower.
China says Tibet has been part of its territory for hundreds of years. It has exercised full control only since 1951.
Several times during the news conference, the Dalai Lama reminded reporters that he was not calling for secession. “As far as material development concerned, we get much benefit” from being part of China, he said. He also said he remained supportive of the Olympics’ being held in China but called on the international community to exercise its “moral responsibility” to remind Beijing about human rights.
Asked whether he endorsed the protests in Tibet, during which, the Chinese authorities say, ethnic Tibetans assaulted Han Chinese, the Dalai Lama said Tibetans were entitled to air grievances peacefully. “Protest — peaceful way express their deep resentment — is a right,” he said.
The unrest comes during the twilight of the Dalai Lama’s life, during which he has achieved awards and acclaim but little progress to resolve the fate of Tibet, which he fled for India after a failed uprising in 1959.
China has consolidated its hold on the frontier region, most recently extending a rail line that many Tibetans believe will spread Han Chinese domination.
Some Tibetans say they fear that Beijing is simply waiting for the Dalai Lama to die in hopes that his influence will be difficult to replicate.
The latest clashes in Lhasa are by far the largest since the late 1980s, when China declared martial law and violently suppressed demonstrations there, leaving scores, perhaps hundreds, of ethnic Tibetans dead. The Dalai Lama said Sunday that he feared such a crackdown again.
“I do feel helpless,” he said. “I feel very sad, very serious, very anxious. Cannot do anything.”
The Dalai Lama said the Chinese ultimatum to Tibetan protesters to surrender reminded him of 1959. Asked if he could stop the protesters from defying the deadline, he replied, “I have no such power.”
He went on to say that he had spoken with a caller in Tibet on Saturday who said, “Please don’t ask us to stop.” The Dalai Lama promised he would not, even though he expected the Chinese authorities to suppress the protests with force.
“Now we really need miracle power,” he said, before laughing starkly. “But miracle seems unrealistic.”
He took questions for more than an hour inside a temple in the lap of snow-capped Himalayas. The limits of his influence, and even his “middle path” message of freedom for Tibetans, rather than total independence for Tibet, came into sharp relief as thousands of mostly young Tibetan exiles raised a chorus of stridently anti-Chinese slogans and called for outright secession.
“We, the young people, feel independence is our birthright,” said Dolma Choephel, 34, a social worker active with the Tibetan Youth Congress, who went to a demonstration on Sunday morning outside the gates of the main town temple. “We understand the limitations of the Dalai Lama’s approach. What we got after six rounds of talks — this violence?”
She was referring to the six negotiating sessions between the Dalai Lama’s representatives and Chinese authorities over the past six years.
Just behind where Ms. Choephel stood, Buddhist monks began a hunger strike. Protesters laid Chinese flags on the road, inviting cars and pedestrians to trample them. Later, thousands streamed down the hill, to Dharamsala town, the largest Tibetan settlement in India. Many had painted their faces with the colors of the Tibetan flag.
“Long live the Dalai Lama,” they chanted, making it plain that, despite their more radical calls, they remained loyal to him.
For the second consecutive day, protests appeared to have spread into Tibetan-populated regions beyond Tibet. Buddhist monks and the police reportedly clashed in Aba County in Sichuan Province. A crowd of about 200 Tibetan protesters burned a local police station, according to news agency reports. One witness said a police officer was killed in the confrontation.
The India-based Tibet Center for Human Rights and Democracy reported that the police had killed at least eight Tibetan protesters. Meanwhile, monks at a monastery in Qinghai Province defied an order to remain inside the Rongwo Monastery, according to The Associated Press.
A day after Buddhist monks and other Tibetans demonstrated in Xiahe in Gansu Province, residents said the military police had secured the city. Witnesses said numerous people were injured in Xiahe after the Tibetans hurled rocks and the police responded with tear gas.
Meanwhile, Chinese military police continued to canvass the streets of Lhasa on Sunday in what has become a virtual lockdown of the city. More than 200 transport vehicles, each carrying as many as 60 military policemen, had moved into the central part of Lhasa, according to a Hong Kong television crew there.
Foreigners were blocked from traveling to Lhasa, while some tourists trapped there during the riots said the authorities were arranging for them to leave. Some witnesses reported continued unrest in small pockets of the city and described hearing the sound of gunshots.
India has been the host country for Tibetan refugees since the Dalai Lama’s exodus, but on condition that they not protest against the Chinese government on Indian soil. India’s efforts to improve ties with China in recent years have made the Tibet issue exceptionally tricky. The Dalai Lama, while acknowledging India’s hospitality, described the government’s official position as “overcautious.”
Hari Kumar contributed reporting from Dharamsala, and Jim Yardley from Beijing.

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過 客

  1. R2 on 卷進了美商5 月 15 日, 2024 年

    终于回来了,好。

  2. Ken on Mommy最後的樣子11 月 6 日, 2023 年

    也沒有很久吧,最近終於閒下來

  3. R2 on Mommy最後的樣子10 月 26 日, 2023 年

    好久不见

  4. Ken on 天朝Loli控组曲(带歌词,修正版)10 月 12 日, 2023 年

    哈哈哈,祝福你,好人一生平安

  5. liu on 天朝Loli控组曲(带歌词,修正版)10 月 12 日, 2023 年

    hello,我在找天朝lolicon组曲时发现了你的博客,感谢你十四年前做出的贡献,祝一切安好

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