sallu alan nabi
Hadis Nabi
Rasulullah SAW berpesan, “Bersegeralah kamu melakukan amalan soleh kerana akan datang kepada umatku di suatu masa, satu fitnah yang begitu besar yang datangnya seperti satu kepingan hitam di malam gelap gelita tak nampak”. Sahabat bertanya, “Apakah fitnah besar itu ya Rasullullah?”. “Fitnah itu adalah kamu akan lihat umatku di hari itu, di waktu itu, pada masa itu, pagi hari Islam, petang kafir. Petang Islam, pagi kafir semula”. Sahabat bertanya lagi, “Mengapa begitu ya Rasullullah?”. Rasullullah SAW menjawab, “sebab dia menjual agamanya dengan nilai dunia”.
Ayat Al Qur'an
Sesungguhnya ini ialah pemberian Kami kepada kamu, pemberian yang tidak akan habis-habis; -
(Saad 38:54)Ayat Al Qur'an
"Dan sesungguhnya aku telah memohon perlindungan kepada Tuhanku dan Tuhan kamu, daripada kamu merejam (atau menyakiti) daku.
(Ad-Dukhaan 44:20)Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Surat layang punya angkara/sms memberi mesej
Monday, June 29, 2009
Cerita Orang Terkenal dan matinya juga menjadi heboh
Lawyer: Jackson's doc didn't give excessive drugs
Play Video ABC News – Michael Jackson's Family Seek Answers
Slideshow:Michael Jackson dies at 50
Play Video Video:Jesse Jackson: 'Family wants 2nd autopsy' AP
Play Video Video:Fans Across World Remember Michael Jackson CBS 3 Philadelphia
AP – A Japanese woman weeps during a memorial vigil for Michael Jackson in Tokyo, Saturday, June 27, 2009. …
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY, AP Entertainment Writer Anthony Mccartney, Ap Entertainment Writer – 17 mins ago
LOS ANGELES – A lawyer for Michael Jackson's doctor said his client never gave or prescribed Jackson the painkillers Demerol or OxyContin, and denied reports suggesting that the doctor gave the pop star drugs that contributed to his death.
Edward Chernoff told the Associated Press on Sunday that any drugs that Dr. Conrad Murray gave Jackson were prescribed in response to a specific complaint from Jackson.
"Dr. Murray has never prescribed nor administered Demerol to Michael Jackson," Chernoff said. "Not ever. Not that day. ... Not Oxycontin (either) for that matter."
Jackson still had a faint pulse and a warm body when Murray found him in bed and not breathing on Thursday afternoon, Chernoff said.
Chernoff told the AP that Murray was at the pop icon's rented mansion when he discovered Jackson in bed and not breathing. The doctor immediately began administering CPR, Chernoff said.
"He just happened to find him in his bed, and he wasn't breathing," the lawyer said. "Mr. Jackson was still warm and had a pulse."
Jackson's family requested a private autopsy in part because of questions about Murray, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said. Murray also told the family an autopsy should be performed, Chernoff said.
People close to Michael Jackson have said since his death that they were concerned about his use of painkillers. Los Angeles County medical examiners completed their autopsy Friday and said Jackson had taken unspecified prescription medication.
Paramedics were called to the mansion while the doctor was performing CPR, according to a recording of the 911 call.
Because Jackson was so frail, Murray "administered with his hand behind his back to provide the necessary support," Chernoff said. Some have speculated the doctor botched the CPR.
"He's a trained doctor," Chernoff said. "He knows how to administer CPR."
Medics spent three-quarters of an hour trying to revive Jackson. He was pronounced dead later at UCLA Medical Center.
Murray was interviewed by investigators for three hours Saturday. His spokeswoman called Murray "a witness to this tragedy," not a suspect in the death, and police described the doctor as cooperative.
The attorney said Murray will wait to speak publicly until after the police and forensics investigation is complete.
A second autopsy can allow the family to get some information about a death almost immediately, including signs of heart, brain or lung disease or fresh needle punctures, said Dr. Michael Baden, a medical examiner not involved in the Jackson case.
"Usually if it looks normal with the naked eye, it looks normal under the microscope," said Baden, who recently performed a second autopsy on actor David Carradine.
Los Angeles County coroner's officials said their autopsy found no indication of trauma or foul play. But because of additional tests, an official cause of death could take weeks to determine.
Three days after the death of the King of Pop, celebrities descended on Los Angeles for a spectacular celebration of Jackson's life at the annual BET awards show.
Joe Jackson, Michael's father, walked on the red carpet wearing a black hat, sunglasses and a dark suit. He did not appear on stage during the show.
"I just wish he could be here to celebrate himself," he said. "Sadly, he's not here, so I'm here to celebrate for him."
In a statement read at the show, Jackson's parents said they solely had the personal and legal "authority for our son and his children." It was their strongest declaration yet about their son's affairs.
A tearful Janet Jackson appeared on stage in a white dress at the end of the BET awards. After a long pause to gather herself, she spoke haltingly but deliberately to the audience.
"I'd just like to say that to you, Michael is an icon. To us, Michael is family. And he will forever live in all of our hearts," she said.
There was no word from the family on funeral plans. Many of Jackson's relatives have gathered at the family's Encino compound, caring there for Jackson's three children.
Al Sharpton planned to visit the Jackson compound Monday and would talk with the family about how to memorialize the late pop star. Sharpton said they want to hold memorials in key cities around the globe and also planned a memorial service Tuesday at the Apollo Theater in New York.
___
Associated Press writers contributing to this report include: Sophia Tareen in Chicago; Juan A. Lozano in Houston; and Nekesa Mumbi Moody, Gillian Flaccus, Brooke Donald, Beth Harris and Mike Blood and AP Global Media Services Production Manager Nico Maounis in Los Angeles
Blackout lektrik.
Cadangan Kepada pengusaha Bau-bauan.
Terlintas dalam fikiran saya bila melihat banyak terdapat perosak tanaman. Perosak tanaman tersebut akan merugikan petani dan pekebun sendiri. Perosak tanaman dikebun petani dan pekebun sekarang ini yang ketara sangat ialah terdiri dari monyet dan berok serta speisis seperti itu. Kerana itu jika syarikat dan pengusaha bau-bauan dapat menciptakan bau-bauan harimau dan dijual kepada petani dan pekebun tentunya akan menakutkan perosak-perosak itu.
Cadangan ini berdasarkan tindakan yang telah dilakukan oleh seorang petani di kampong Sumpitan . suatu ketika dahulu kumpulan pertunjukkan haiwan dating kelenggong dan membawa gajah dan juga seekor anak harimau. Sahabat saya dari kampong sumpitan telah mengambil najis harimau tersebut dan diletakkan dikebunnya. Hasinya selama sebulan babi hutan tidak masuk kekebunnya untuk merosakkan tanamannya. Selepas masa itu yakni setelah bauan harimau tu hilang babi hutan masuk dan merosakkan tanamannya.
Saya fikir jika bauan tersebut dan dijual barangkali akan member faedah kepada pekebun.
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Friday, June 26, 2009
Bukit Sapi Blackout
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Monday, June 22, 2009
Hujan sedikit dilenggong
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Durian telah mula dijua dijual di Pekan Lenggong
sesiapa yang teringin bolehlah berkunjung
Dua kenduri kawin di Lenggong
Anak saudara Allahyarham Hj Salleh Kuak.
Kedua di Gua badak
Yusof Husin kahwin
Kuala Kangsar juga jerebu
Tapi di kawasan sungai siput ada hujah. umpama orang kata buat mencelor daun saja.
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Lenggong juga turut dilanda jerebu.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Haji Abdul Wahid Nok
Tak ada minta bila dah beri begitu jadinya.
Pembinaan Mesjid Kampong Sumpitan
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Murid Sheikh Osman Jalaluddin Penanti
Raja Kayu
Papan Tanda yang dah lusuh
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Monday, June 15, 2009
Catatan kematian di Lenggong.
Membaca catatan blog
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Hidup pasti mati
Friday, June 12, 2009
Memanjangkan info
AFP/File – A traveller wears a face mask on arrival at the airport in Beijing on June 9, 2009. Health experts are …
by Richard Ingham Richard Ingham – Thu Jun 11, 2:09 pm ET
PARIS (AFP) – Now it's official: We have a flu pandemic. But what does it mean?
For many, the term may be tinged with fear. It evokes folk memories of three influenza pandemics that erupted last century and claimed tens of millions of lives.
The worst was the 1918-19 "Spanish flu."
The greatest plague of the 20th century killed as many as 50 million people, particularly the young and healthy, who could be dispatched to their grave in just a few days, their ravaged lungs filled with blood.
But health experts are keen to defuse any "we're all going to die" reflex after the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Thursday announced a flu pandemic was underway.
For one thing, "pandemic" is only a technical term that indicates the geographical spread of a disease.
Despite its scary connotations, the word is no indication as to how contagious or lethal the disease is.
"Your can have serious pandemics, and you can have wimpy pandemics," notes Albert Osterhaus, a well known virologist at the University of Rotterdam in the Netherlands.
Nor does the term apply only to influenza: the world already has pandemics of AIDS and malaria.
Together, they kill around three million people a year and infect millions more. They may cause grief and fear, but not panic.
The reason is that these pandemics have been established for decades, which means people deem them quantifiable risks, rather than a new, apparently random and thus terrifying peril.
Adam Kamradt-Scott, research fellow at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine at the University of London, says keeping a sense of proportion is essential as the world confronts the new flu virus.
"Even in the worst-case scenario, if this turns out to be a particularly nasty strain with around 25 percent of the population affected, the bulk of people are going to recover and lead normal lives healthwise," Kamradt-Scott told AFP.
"There is a risk that some people could die, but ultimately the majority of people who contract it will recover. So people need to be cautious and take precautions, and act on scientific evidence and not panic."
How lethal the new flu is, or could become, is a question for virologists and epidemiologists -- specialists in analysing a pathogen's genetic ID and how it propagates.
Pandemic viruses are microbes that have acquired new genetic material while mixing in an animal host -- usually a pig, which is able to harbour bird, flu and swine viruses simultaneously -- and then leap the species barrier.
The new genes mean people have no immunity to the virus, as they have not been exposed to it before. And as the virus spreads among humans, the strain is likely to further mutate.
"After emerging into a population it may acquire sudden virulence," explained Patrick Berche, professor of microbiology at the Necker Hospital for Sick Children in Paris.
"Then, when more and more of the population build up immunity to it, the virus starts to lose its virulence."
The pandemics of so-called Asian flu in 1957-58 and of "Hong Kong" flu in 1968-69 killed up to four million people and around a million respectively, according to varying estimates.
Their case fatality rate was around 0.1 percent. By contrast, mortality for "Spanish flu" was 25 times higher -- "The Mother of All Pandemics" is how US virologists Jeffery Taubenberger and David Morens describe it.
By resurrecting the virus, recovered in scraps among frozen corpses in Alaska, and then testing it on lab animals, Taubenberger and colleagues found it had a unique combination of genes that caused the immune system to run amok.
There is a host of factors other than genes that determine the toll from a pandemic.
These include the speed at which it travels geographically, the proximity of people, the season (winter is more favourable to the virus than summer), and, of course, medical preparedness and precautions taken by individuals and governments.
What makes the world more vulnerable in 2009 as compared to 1918 is the advent of jet travel, which means a virus can travel continents in just hours, and a population that has surged from two billion to six billion.
"But the advantages are that we have antivirals and antibiotics," said Berche. "In 1918, many deaths were due to secondary bacterial pneumonia following viral infection."
"In developed countries, we're no longer in 1918," said Joseph Ajjar, an epidemiologist who is head of the French Society of Hospital Hygiene. "On the other hand, I fear the ones who will pay a heavy price are developing countries."