Head on!!!

Monday, December 1, 2008

The Gift....

In the 25th of october... another chance has been given to me by the Maker to have a person to have me love.. thank you Maker for giving me another inspiration, a life and a direction. Thank you for your gift!

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Warrior's Hero



Davis is also a shoot-first type of player with a low shooting percentage. Health has been a big problem for Davis. His injuries caused him to miss 115 games over the last 4 years and limited him to 52 games. But in spite this, he gathered 9 assists per game, making him second in the NBA.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

My Life in CDO

Cruel Life

1 Ang kalungkutan na walang pamilya

2 Kakulangang Pinansyal

3 Nagkaroon ng sakit na umabot ng 3 Linggo

4 Hindi nakuha sa trabaho na gusto

5 Nagkasakit ulit... Allergy

6 Iniwan ng isang kaibigan

7 Nakasunog ng bahay nong bagong taon

8 Nagkasakit ulit... sa sikmura

... Alam ko my gusto kang sabihin sa akin Dakilang tagapagawa... Kaylangan ko lang sumunod at malaman un,,,

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

True Rastafarian


Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery
None but ourselves can free our minds…

Revelation reveals the truth …
It takes a revolution to make a solution …


Robert "Bob" Nesta Marley
OM (February 6, 1945May 11, 1981) was a Jamaican singer, songwriter, guitarist, and activist. He is the most widely known performer of reggae music. Marley is regarded by many as a prophet of the Rastafari movement, although he was baptized by the Archbishop of the Ethiopian Orthodox Christian Church in Kingston, Jamaica on November 4, 1980.

Marley was born in the small village of Nine Mile in Saint Ann Parish, Jamaica. His father, Norval Sinclair Marley, (born in 1895), was a white Jamaican of English descent, who lived in Liverpool. Norval was a Marine officer and captain, as well as a plantation overseer, when he married Cedella Booker, a black Jamaican then eighteen years old. Norval provided financial support for his wife and child, but seldom saw them, as he was often away on trips. Marley was ten years old when his father died of a heart attack in 1955 at age 60.

Marley suffered racial prejudice as a youth, because of his mixed racial origins, and faced questions about his own racial identity throughout his life.

Upon returning to Jamaica, Marley became a member of the Rastafari movement, and started to wear his trademark dreadlocks

Cancer diagnosis

In July 1977, Marley was found to have malignant melanoma in a soccer wound on his right hallux (big toe). Marley refused amputation, citing worries that the operation would affect his dancing, as well as the Rastafari belief that the body must be "whole"

Musical career

Marley is best known for his reggae songs, which include the hits "I Shot the Sheriff", "No Woman, No Cry", "Three Little Birds", "Exodus", "Could You Be Loved", "Jammin'", "Redemption Song", and "One Love". His posthumous compilation album Legend (1984) is the best-selling reggae album ever, with sales of more than 12 million copies.




Saturday, December 29, 2007

WILLIAM WALLACE - THE TRUTH

Perhaps the best-known account of the life of William Wallace is the 1995 film Braveheart, directed by and starring the actor Mel Gibson, written by Randall Wallace, and filmed in both Scotland and Ireland. This film was a commercial and critical success, winning five Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. While the film is based on historic events, it contains numerous historical errors. The most prominent factual error is the suggestion that Wallace sired Edward III, who was born seven years after his death, through a romance with Isabella of France, a ten-year-old child at the time of his death whom he never met. Additionally, the nickname "Braveheart" originally referred to Robert the Bruce, not Wallace. Furthermore, William Wallace and, future king, Robert Bruce never actually met and were fighting effectively on different sides. Wallace was fiercely loyal to King John Balliol while Robert Bruce upheld his own claim to the Scottish throne.

In March 1998 Iron Maiden released the album Virtual XI which contained the 8:59 epic track "The Clansman", loosely based on the life of William Wallace. Iron Maiden bassist Steve Harris states that the song was inspired by the films Braveheart and Rob Roy, starting first as two separate songs before they were melded into one

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Che???


Che Guevara, who did so much (or was it so little?) to destroy capitalism, is now a quintessential capitalist brand. His likeness adorns mugs, hoodies, lighters, key chains, wallets, baseball caps, toques, bandannas, tank tops, club shirts, couture bags, denim jeans, herbal tea, and of course those omnipresent T-shirts with the photograph, taken by Alberto Korda, of the socialist heartthrob in his beret during the early years of the revolution, as Che happened to walk into the photographer’s viewfinder—and into the image that, thirty-eight years after his death, is still the logo of revolutionary (or is it capitalist?) chic. Sean O’Hagan claimed in The Observer that there is even a soap powder with the slogan “Che washes whiter.”

But do you know he really is???Ernesto Guevara de la Serna (June 14, 1928[1] – October 9, 1967), commonly known as Che Guevara, El Che or just Che was an Argentine-born Marxist revolutionary, political figure, and leader of Cuban and internationalist guerrillas.

As a young man studying medicine, Guevara travelled rough throughout South America, bringing him into direct contact with the impoverished conditions in which many people lived. His experiences and observations during these trips led him to the conclusion that the region's socio-economic inequalities could only be remedied by socialism through revolution, prompting him to intensify his study of Marxism and travel to Guatemala to learn about the reforms being implemented there by President Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán.


While in Mexico in 1956, Guevara joined Fidel Castro's revolutionary 26th of July Movement, which seized power from the regime of the dictator General Fulgencio Batista in Cuba in 1959. In the months after the success of the revolution, Guevara was assigned the role of "supreme prosecutor", overseeing the public show trials and executions of hundreds of military and civilian leaders associated with the previous regime. After serving in various important posts in the new government and writing a number of articles and books on the theory and practice of guerrilla warfare, Guevara left Cuba in 1965 with the intention of fomenting revolutions first in Congo-Kinshasa, and then in Bolivia, where he was captured in a military operation supported by the CIA and the U.S. Army Special Forces. Guevara was summarily executed by the Bolivian Army in the town of La Higuera near Vallegrande on October 9, 1967.

After his death, Guevara became an icon of socialist revolutionary movements and a cultural icon worldwide. An Alberto Korda photo of him has received wide distribution and modification, appearing on t-shirts, protest banners, and in many other formats. The Maryland Institute College of Art called this picture "the most famous photograph in the world and a symbol of the 20th century."

SO NOW YOU KNOW...

Thursday, December 13, 2007

song of Zapata


wealthy vampires
w/a cold hands of executioners...
execute executive decisions,
determined to destroy...
what 1,000,000 women, children & men
1910.. died, drowning in the rage of battle
mothers, half-naked...
infants clutching their necks running frantically...
tripping over the bodies of their dead sons...
teeth gnashing, swinging machete
spilling blood & mud & screaming...
land & liberty... were erased...
buried & burned.. along w/ the memory of the dead
along with the Ejido.

w/a smooth stroke of a pen...
and w/ the ghost of Nixon
present in their eyes... they smile
and pronounce the omnipotence of the free market
the prophets of profit...
extending the scourge of Columbus & Pizarro

The Freedom to buy things you could never afford
The Freedom for indians to buy corn...
that once flourished, overgrown in their backyards.
The Freedom to die of curable disease
The Freedom to watch their children stomachs swell & burst
The Freedom to starve & die w/o land or liberty

But Ramona... w/ eyes of obsidian...
peering through her blood & sweat
dreached mask... darting unseen...
changing direction w/ the swiftness of a bird...
through the shanties of the canyon
with every coyote, every insect...
every phylum of life urging her...
propelling her forward
The leaves & branches of the forest...
part for miles clearing her path.
the voices & screams beneath her feet...
echo in the deepest chasm of her soul...
hurling her towards the city...
history surging through her veins...
pursing through her fingers...
hurling her towards the city...
she caresses her trigger...
and the words of Magon fulfill her being
and w/ ewach shot she fires, she affirms her moments saying...
enough... enough...
no... I will see my own blood flow...
before you take my land or liberty