deeply hurt
May 29, 2009I have the best family ever….
I love you mommy….
I love you tita darleen….
i love you too tita belgin…..
Lord, i know I dont pray a lot…but please if youre there….please give me strength if the road leads me to the edge of nowhere…
People are weak and they never get contented with what they have….
catching…
May 26, 2009I was reading something chico’s blog, though this topic was way back 2008, their top ten really crack up my mornings…
The Topic goes like this…
The Top Ten Tips On How To Be A Happy Singleton:
This caught my attention…
Pag malas sa pag-ibig, suwerte sa career.
jeezzz..what category do I fall in…
seriously, I just felt my heart marching to the shredder..LOL!
makapaglaba na nga amf~~~
Nat
May 25, 2009I’ve been watching this vlog mangki shared and it’s been keeping me busy for now, this girl is hillarious…check this out…
and just so you know, i love anything that makes me smile and laugh..LOL! I mean come on the world sucks already so why not just stop whinning about it and look for something that would make you happy instead for a change. Anyway, the shows I watch just had their season endings last week and it really pissed me off, what am I suppose to do now grrrrrrrrr ~~~
I think I’m gonna watch LOTR, HP and Sex and the City again when i run out of options…Plsssss…Bring back the shows ASAP im going crazy LOL =))
Harry Potter and the Half-blood Prince
May 21, 2009I’ve been waiting for this so bad i think i’m going crazy..waaaaaa
I dont care about twilight, newmoon, halfmoon or whatever stages of moon there is with Robert Pattinson, I had a huge crush on him when he was still Cedric Diggory but hey, he had to die; what a waste..LOL!
From what i’ve seen on the net Harry Potter and the Half-blood Prince will be showing on the 15th July 2009 and what kills me even more is, I wont be able to watch it in the theaters waaaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!! I mean I can but hey, going to the movies alone isnt really what I have in mind. I need a date, a friendly date haha, anyone around kashiwa who can watch it with me? anybody?.. anybody out there? LOL! oh well, its bad enough to wait for it for this long but imagine the torture waiting for the DVD release. Could somebody just kill me right now? =))
This is the best movie ever..hahaha…it always gives me the chills and the imagination of an 8year old wanting this movie to be real…what a retard i am..LOL!
and P.S.
People please, no spoilers. its bad enough I dont have the books but telling me what will happen will totally piss me off…
Bye PrisonBreak =(
May 17, 2009The chase is finally over, Kellerman got them exonerated after scofield handed syllah to him and the UN. The general was arrested and was put to death row, Bagwell returned to foxriver and Sarrah saved Michael from being shot by Christina Scofield by shooting her at the back first.
PrisonBreak is indeed a great TV series, Most of the time I want all of them to get over their business and get on with their lives but at the same time didnt want the show to end hahaha. Its a bitter sweet ending, Scofield gave freedom to all his friends and died coz of his tumor after 4years. He and Sarrah had a son named Michael.
Ang saaaaaaaaaddddddd…waaaaaaaaaaa I’m gonna miss this show.
Goodbye to this..evertime I hear this it makes my heart pound LOL:
SERIES FINALE PREVIEW:
Proposed resident registry card for foreigners creates Big Brother concerns
TOKYO- All foreigners in Japan know him. The 62-year-old isn’t particularly loved — he’s a bit of a square — but we’ve all had to live with him and even take him out with us every day. Like many of his generation, he could keep on working, but he’s recently learned that he may have to settle for his pipe and slippers sooner rather than later.
The Baby Boomer in question is the Certificate of Alien Registration, or gaijin card, a form of ID that non-Japanese residents have been required to carry since the enactment of the Alien Registration Order in May 1947.
It may come as a surprise to learn that, if the government gets its way, the card will be consigned to the bureaucratic scrapheap. The Diet is currently debating bills to replace “gaikokujin torokusho” with a new residency (“zairyu”) card, which would shift administration of alien registration from municipal offices to the Immigration Bureau.
So what are the government’s plans? And, more importantly, what are the implications for foreigners?
If enacted, the bills submitted by the Cabinet in March would revise three laws — the Basic Resident Registration Law, the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act, and the Special Law on Immigration Control — with the government looking to pass them before the end of the current ordinary Diet session on June 3. Once passed, the revisions would become effective in less than three years.
According to the immigration bureau, the government’s main aims are to simplify the administration of foreigners by having the bureau handle nearly all paperwork related to immigration and residency; reduce the burden on foreigners living legally in Japan by extending visa periods and relaxing re-entry rules; ensure all legal aliens join social insurance and state pension schemes; track the movement of foreigners more closely; and clampdown on illegal aliens such as visa overstayers by denying them the right to carry the new card.
However, opposition parties, legal organizations and migrant activists have slammed the revisions. They claim the changes could impose excessive fines for failure to carry the card, make notification of status changes less convenient, and lead to undue dissemination of personal information and excessive monitoring of foreigners.
One aspect of the revisions few would bemoan is the extension of the three-year visa to five years, and the removal of the need to obtain a re-entry permit for residents who leave the country for less than a year. The revisions would also give foreigners some parity with locals by placing them on the same Basic Residents’ Registration Network, or Jumin Kihon Daicho Netowaku, a system the government created to enable easy exchange of information between municipal offices. There is, however, one significant difference.
The Juki-net cards distributed to Japanese do not have numbers printed on them, and the law strictly protects information on the IC chip imbedded in the cards. But as the revisions stand, numbers would be printed on foreigners’ cards, and a greater amount of data could be kept on the chip. While this would ostensibly enable smoother administration, critics have conjured up an image of a regulatory Big Brother tracking foreigners more rigorously than their Japanese neighbors.
Immigration bureau documents state that, in addition to a photograph, the following information would be printed on the cards: name; date of birth; sex; nationality; address; visa status, type and expiry date; card number, issue; date; expiration date; working restrictions; and other necessary information stipulated in justice ministry ordinances. But with the documentation also stating that some or all of this data may be recorded on the chips, opponents fear what may be held in this “other information.”
Masashi Ichikawa, an attorney involved with the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, is concerned about unwarranted access to such personal details.
“The card could be used as identification at places such as banks and libraries, where the chip could be read and the card number recorded,” he says. “I fear that people reading the card would be able to tell how much money is in a person’s account or what books they are borrowing. Authorities such as the police and immigration would be able make inquiries to banks and other places to ask for information on a person’s number.”
Ichikawa also sees disparities between the treatment of foreigners and Japanese. “The law on resident registration for Japanese permits only the card number to be recorded on the IC chip — not the card — and does not make available information from private establishments such as banks. We want foreigners to be protected in the same way as Japanese.”
An Orwellian nightmare?
However, Kazuyuki Motohari of the immigration bureau’s general affairs division says that the IC chip has only been put on the cards to make it easier to share information between government ministries, agencies and local authorities. He also fends off fears of an Orwellian nightmare.
“Only the minimum amount of information would be put on the cards,” he says. “We’ll only perform data matching when absolutely necessary, such as to check whether a person works where they say they do — no more. The IC chip has not been put in for other people to read.”
Opponents point out that the revisions contradict the government’s objective of keeping closer tabs on foreigners. Under the current system, undocumented residents, overstayers and asylum seekers can obtain a gaijin card and access to basic education and health services. But the changes would prevent the issue of zairyu cards to such people — effectively rendering these individuals invisible.
It would still be a crime, however, for foreigners to not always carry the new card. The current law, which the immigration bureau says would not change in the revisions, specifies that aliens must present certification (i.e. the gaijin card) to officials such as immigration inspectors and officers, police officers and maritime safety officers, but mentions nothing about having to show the card as identification to private organizations such as cell phone companies and banks.
The maximum fine for failing to carry the new card would remain at 200,000 yen. Yet the immigration bureau’s Motohari says he cannot recall a case in which a fine has been levied on a legal card-carrying alien who pops out of his house for a short time without it. Even so, opponents are hammering the government to drop this obligation.
“Making all foreigners carry cards is excessive regulation,” Ichikawa says. “There are bad foreigners and also bad Japanese. We don’t think it’s necessary to oblige foreigners, especially permanent residents, to show their card on request. Even the United Nations says it’s wrong to make people with permanent residency in a country carry such a card.”
Azuma Konno, an upper house Democratic Party of Japan lawmaker, says: “The DPJ is considering amending the revisions so people are cautioned rather than fined for failing to carry the cards.”
Notifying authorities of changes in status, such as when you start a new job or get married, is currently relatively straightforward — you just head down to your local municipal office and do the necessary paperwork. The proposed changes, though, could make things more troublesome, as notifications would have to be made at your local immigration office. That means Tokyoites would have to squeeze onto the No. 99 bus at Shinagawa with the rest of humanity to the dreary office in Konan.
Failing or forgetting to notify authorities of a change in status could also come at a heavy price. It would still be possible to change your address at your municipal office, but you must report it within 14 days, and failure to do so within 90 days could mean annulment of your visa — and deportation. Foreigners on spouse visas would have to report to the immigration bureau within 14 days in cases of divorce, or the death of a spouse.
A contentious element is that a visa could be nullified if a person, in cases such as separation or living apart, is not engaged in “marital activities” for three months or more (something many Japanese couples do when one partner is “asked” by his or her company to relocate). The 14-day notification period and 90-day potential cancellation would also apply when foreigners on common visas switch jobs.
The immigration bureau stresses it has considered the plight of foreigners and would take personal circumstances into account when making decisions on visa annulment. “We are considering other more convenient ways to make notifications, such as online or by mail,” Motohari says. “We hope to lessen the burden on foreigners as much as possible.”
The bureau says it has held meetings to gather views from both Japanese and aliens. It also claims it has not widely publicized the content of the revisions because it wants to focus its efforts on getting them passed into law before it provides information to the foreign community.
Opponents, however, insist the government hasn’t really listened to non-Japanese viewpoints and that the insubstantial press coverage has meant few foreigners are aware of the government’s plans, denying them the opportunity to protest.
But with groups such as the Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan organizing rallies and hearings in which opposition lawmakers, Korean groups and legal organizations put counterarguments to the government, the revisions could wind up significantly amended.
Moreover, should the government fall and a DPJ-led administration take office — a distinct possibility this year — before the bills are passed, one 60-something gent could find he has to put his retirement plans on hold for a while.
How will the new card affect you?
Pros
- Typical length of visa stay changed from three years to five years
- No need to obtain a re-entry permit when leaving the country for less than a year
- Assurance that all legal foreigners will be placed on social insurance and state pension schemes
- Administrative procedure simplified
- Possibility to notify authorities of certain changes of status by email or post
Cons
- Notification of most changes of status must be made at Immigration Bureau rather than at local municipal offices
- IC chip on the new card raises privacy concerns
- Asylum seekers and visa overstayers won’t be eligible to receive the cards, resulting in possible loss of basic health and education services
- Possibility of visa annulment if status notifications are not made within a 90-day period
NAMAN AMP NAKAKAHAYBLAD HA THEY ARE PUTTING FOREIGNERS IN A LEASH!
MENDOKUSAI AMP!
Restaurant City in Facebook.com
May 10, 2009Ok for those of you out there still stuck with friendster your missin out a lot in life if u havent signed up for facebook yet! Its much more interactive than that of friendster because you can chat with your friends too when they’re online, you can leave messages in their status found at their page and comment on their existing status. You can even see what your applications your friends use and with a vast variety of quizzes to choose from its amazing how funny and sometimes true they turn out to be.
Game applications are fun in facebook, its so fun it makes it seem like you just dont have enough time to do so many things. I use game applications like Farm Town, Pet Society and the oh so wonderful Restaurant City. And for those who still dont know what I’m talking about you can check them out here :
- Farm Town
- Pet Society
- Restaurant City (personal fave)
If you still dont have your FB (facebook) this is the the time to quit slacking around and get your fingers workin LOL! Facebook may seem hard to navigate at first but believe me we’ve been there and this may be the perfect time to use you brains for a change LOL!
I love my “Kubo Style” Resto, I have 3 branches of restos but I love what I did with this one, hahaha.
Here’s what she looks like from the outside…oops I think one of my lamp is not where its suppose to be LOL! and the second pic is what it looks from the inside :p…
I’m havin so much fun with this I even forgot about playing tantra.ph hahaha… It feels so good to be stress free LOL!
Tamang Youtube
May 7, 2009wahahaha yes im “Tamang Youtube” moments and please I no complaints ahehehe…
I’ve found someones channel that has huge collections of japanese karaoke and I might aswell post it here fore reference too:
Fayray Music Video “Tears”
And just for studying purposes I’ve included her video with Japanese lyrics ahehehhe.. WALANG AANGAL! LOLZ =))
Remioromen Konna Yuki MusicVideo: (ampogi nya pramis mahal ko na sha wahahhaha)
Remioroment Karaoke “Konna Yuki”
Another Orion by Fuji Fumiya Music Video
Another Orion - Fuji Fumiya KARAOKE
Missing by Kubota Toshinobu -Karaoke (hanapin nyu nlng sa Youtube ung Music video lelz)
wet pers to be continued lelz…..
(after 2hrs…)
Waaaa may nakita akong ibang vids! kung sha to aym inlab na sa voice nya wahahaha…maitta na =)) Yabai yo wahahahha =))
huwaaaaaaaa subarashiiii koeeeeeeeeee, mo horechatta yo yabai wahahahhaha =)) shujin ni ima kara rekkon suru kara ne mattete ^^ wahahaha…sana pogi ka amp LOL =))
wet pers again nga ampotpot…
I’m gonna cyberstalk him. I’m gonna cyberstalk him…LOLZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ =))SULMEYT! LOL!
Wakatte itta hazu - Fushigi Yuugi
Have to post this before I forget about it completely LOL!
Waaaaa..tamahomeeee!!!!! ang sad! LoLzzzzzzz….
aging
May 5, 2009I just have to post a thought i suddenly have…
aside from dying, I’ve always been scared of aging…but come to think of it, who would mind aging if you’re with someone who wouldnt mind aging with you as well?
hala cge TCBMWYB mode! (There Can Be Miracles When You Believe) LOL!









