Sunday, August 8, 2010

wow they can!

Whenever something happens in front of our eyes, if that is a good thing we feel glad, but if sad or unexpected, we feel sorry for the one who faces that. I think this is a good side of us. Therefore we think too much moreover talk too much about that thing.

People used to say then, why did you go there? Why did you do that? Why did you do so? You shouldn’t have done so. And then they pull themselves over the matter and keep saying that if they were them, wouldn’t do that, wouldn’t go there, and wouldn’t do so etc. they impersonate themselves as a hero or someone intelligent. But truth is, they could do nothing. They only can talk too much.

It is not true that most people are like these. Many people confess.

Again sometimes something happens that make our laughter, but we can say nothing, just keep watching. Some people are like this, they love to recreate an event, let say like an accident, that was occurred in past. What they say, if the real event was of 70%. They make over 30%.

Sometimes it happens that some people try to be a hero who faces an event himself as a coward. They totally forget that there were witnesses but him.

There is another criterion of some liars. They impersonate themselves as some cool sexy playboys. They have tons of (so called) girlfriends, they are having sex with many girls etc. maybe some of them are true, but most of them are jerks. I don’t know what pleasure they get by this kind of lie. Funny thing is we always see them craving for an affair. And sex? That is too many miles away from them. Whatever, we have to listen to them.

Some people are like this, they pretend to know too much. But they do less. When we start something they come to advice us do that, do so etc. but when we tell them to do that instead of us, they ignore. They say then, you don’t have to do prove that you can. Yes, right. But saying and doing is not the same thing.

These kinds of people sometimes entertain us. We laugh at them. They can do a lot in their imaginary world. Sometimes we wish to show them their lies. But know what? No use. They will be always heroes in their imaginary world.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Most horrible places in the world

There are many wonderful places in the world. Fabulous sun beaches with miles of sands,wonderful mountains with crystal steams cascading down into tropical paradises.

In our big world, there are also some horrendous cities populated by a subculture of pollution, poverty or gangsters. Here I will share some of the most polluted and violent places.


Dharavi(India),

Asia's largest slum, Dharavi, lies on prime property right in the middle of India's financial capital, Mumbai.In the 18th, century Dharavi was an island.In February 1739, Chimnaji Appa attacked Bassein. Before that, he took possession of Dharavi.
The area of present-day Dharavi was predominantly mangrove swamp prior to the late 19th century, inhabited by Koli fishermen. However, the fishing industry disappeared when the swamp areas filled in. A dam at Sion, adjacent to Dharavi, hastened the process of joining separate islands into one long, tapered mass. Thus began the transformation of the island city of Bombay. In the process, the creek dried up, and Dharavi's fishing town was deprived of its traditional sustenance, but the newly drained marshes provided space for new communities to move in. Migrants from Gujarat established a potters' colony, and Maharashtrian tanners belonging to the Charmarkar caste migrated to Dharavi and set up the leather tanning industry. Other artisans, like the embroidery workers from Uttar Pradesh, started the ready-made garments trade.
Tamil migrants, including Tamil Muslims and Nadars started coming into the area in the late 1800s, many of whom worked in nearby tanneries, though a large influx came in the 1920s. Bombay's first Tamil school and Dharavi's first school was constructed in 1924, it remained the only school of Dharavi, for the next four decades.
In 1930s, a single road passed through the Dharavi towards Mahim railway station.

A bright side of is that it provides a cheap and affordable option to those who move to Mumbai to earn their living.


Rents here can be as low as 4 U.S. dollars per month.

"Mumbai's Shadow City"
Some call the Dharavi slum an embarassing eyesore in the middle of India's financial capital. Its residents call it home.
By Mark Jacobson
He said,
“Dharavi is routinely called "the largest slum in Asia," a dubious attribution sometimes conflated into "the largest slum in the world." This is not true. Mexico City's Neza-Chalco-Itza barrio has four times as many people. In Asia, Karachi's Orangi Township has surpassed Dharavi. Even in Mumbai, where about half of the city's swelling 12 million population lives in what is euphemistically referred to as "informal" housing, other slum pockets rival Dharavi in size and squalor.
Yet Dharavi remains unique among slums. A neighborhood smack in the heart of Mumbai, it retains the emotional and historical pull of a subcontinental Harlem—a square-mile (three square kilometers) center of all things, geographically, psychologically, spiritually. Its location has also made it hot real estate in Mumbai, a city that epitomizes India's hopes of becoming an economic rival to China. Indeed, on a planet where half of humanity will soon live in cities, the forces at work in Dharavi serve as a window not only on the future of India's burgeoning cities, but on urban space everywhere.
Published: May 2007 (NATIONAL GEOGRAHIC).


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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

What is a life ?



What is a life ? It's kind of good or bad question,bcz
life is a big thing and every parson have own life meaning .When I was kid
I thought life like a playful and beautiful like a butterfly but now life is not like a butterfly.
Life have a many part,some times I fell dispute about life meaning.
I think life is like a sky a big and bigger, sky have many various gaudy color, just like that our life have various colorful part. When we are happy it's look like fresh blue sky.
Most of the human in the earth wanna try to be happy, bcz it is the main part of our life, and we never like sorrow in our life but it's the another most common part in our life. Love is the one of most important and most strong part in our life and we also wanna give love and want love.
Many parson said that life mean running with time, if u running fast your life will goes to better and if u slow you r lost.
Other parson think that life is duty, like working,family responsibility etc.
I think all the parson is right. I wanna share one article bcz I like this article.

Life is worthwhile if u....Article by Jim Rhon,
Life Tip 1)
First, life is worthwhile if u LEARN. What you don't know WILL hurt you. You have to have learning to exist, let alone succeed. Life is worthwhile if you learn from your own experiences, negative and positive. We learn to do it right by first sometimes doing it wrong. We call that a positive negative. We also learn from other people's experiences, both positive and negative. I've always said it is too bad failures don't give seminars. We don't want to pay them so they don't tour around giving seminars. But the information would be very valuable – how someone who had it all, messed it up. Learning from other people's experiences and mistakes.

We learn by what we see - pay attention. By what we hear – be a good listener. Now I do suggest being a selective listener, don't just let anybody dump into your mental factory. We learn from what we read. Learn from every source. Learn from lectures, learn from songs, learn from sermons, learn from conversations with people who care. Keep learning.

Life Tip 2) Life is worthwhile if you TRY. You can't just learn; you now have to try something to see if you can do it. Try to make a difference, try to make some progress, try to learn a new skill, try to learn a new sport. Life is worthwhile if you try. It doesn't mean you can do everything but there are a lot of things you can do, if you just try. Try your best. Give it every effort. Why not go all out?

Life Tip 3) Life is worthwhile if you STAY. You have to stay from spring until harvest. If you have signed up for the day or for the game or for the project - see it through. Sometimes calamity comes and then it is worth wrapping it up. And that's the end, but just don't end in the middle. Maybe on the next project you pass, but on this one, if you signed up, see it through.

Life Tip 4) Life is worthwhile if you CARE. If you care at all you will get some results, if you care enough you can get incredible results. Care enough to make a difference. Care enough to turn somebody around. Care enough to start a new enterprise. Care enough to change it all. Care enough to be the highest producer. Care enough to set some records. Care enough to win.
Four powerful little words:LEARN,TRY, STAY and CARE. What difference can you make in your life today by putting these four words to work?

Four powerful little words:LEARN,TRY, STAY and CARE. What difference can you make in your life today by putting these four words to work?

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Do you know him?


Che Guevara is by far one of the most popular T-shirt political figure . Once I asked a boy wearing a Che printed t-shirt , `do you know this face?’. He hesitated for a moment and afterwards I acquired the knowledge from him that Che is a beard man with a star sealed beret. Most of the people who wear Che on their chests have their knowledge of Che like this. Disgraceful, A T-shirt is not worthy to print the face of ``Ernesto (Che) Guevara De La Serna’’(1928-1967). If you wear one , please have a least knowledge respect for him.

Ernesto Guevara De La Serna, El Che, or simply Che, was an Argentine first row Marxist theorist, revolutionary politician, author, physician, military theorist, and paramilitary guerrilla leader. He was a great leader of Latin America and played a great role in freedom of Cuba from the dictator `Batista’ government of the country.

Ernesto Guevara de la Serna was born in Rosario, Argentina(June 14, 1928) into a middle-class family of Spanish-Irish descent. In his youth Guevara read widely and among his reading list in the 1940s were Sartre, Pablo Neruda, Ciro Alegría, and Karl Marx's Das Kapital. He also kept a philosophical diary and in Africa 1965 Guevara planned to write a biography of Marx.

In 1953 Guevara graduated from the University of Buenos Aires, where he was trained as a doctor. During these years Guevara read Stalin and Mussolini but did not join radical student organizations. He made long travels in Argentina and in other Latin America countries. At the same time his critical views about the expanding economic influence of the United States deepened. In 1952 he made journey with his Friend Alberto Granado on his motor bike, an old Norton 500 single, around South America. The journey opened his eyes about the situation of the Indians and was crucial for the awakening of his social conscience. Guevara recorded his impressions in The Motorcycle Diaries.

After witnessing American intervention in Guatemala in 1954, Guevara radicalized and become convinced that the only way to bring about change was by violent revolution. He had joined Fidel Castro's revolutionaries to overthrow the Batista government. In 1956 they loaded 38-feet long motor yacht Granma full of guerrillas and weapons and sailed to Cuba, landing near Cabo Cruz on December 2.

Guevara rose to the rank of major and led one of the forces that invaded central Cuba in the late 1958. After the conquest of power in January 1959 Guevara gained fame as the leading figure in Castro's government. He attracted much attention with his speeches against imperialism and US policy in the Third World. He argued strongly for centralized planning, and emphasized creation of the 'new socialist man'.

From 1961 to 1965 Guevara was minister for industries, and director of the national bank, signing the bank notes simply 'Che'. He traveled widely in Russia, India and Africa, meeting the leading figures of the world, among others Jawaharel Nehru and Nikita Khruschev. Guevara was also the architect of the close relations between Cuba and the Soviet Union.

In 1966 Guevara turned up incognito in Bolivia where he trained and led a guerrilla war in the Santa Cruz region. In his manual Guerrilla Warfare, Guevara had stressed that the guerrilla fighter needs full help from the people of the area, it is an indispensable condition, but Guevara failed to win the support of the peasants and his group was surrounded near Vallegrande by American-trained Bolivian troops. Guevara was shot in a schoolhouse in La Higuera on October 9, 1967, by Warrant Officer Mario Terán of the Bolivian Rangers at the request of Colonel Zenteno.

Latin American revolutionary leader, who rejected both capitalism and orthodox Soviet communism, Guevara lived an adventurous life. Guevara's tragic early death in Bolivia created a legend that still lives. "Che considered himself a soldier of this revolution, with absolutely no concern about surviving it," said Fidel Castro.

Selected works:

  • LA GUERRA DE GUERRILLAS, 1960 - Guerrilla Warfare

  • PASAJES DE LA GUERRA REVOLUCIONARIA, 1963 - Reminiscences of the Cuban E Revolutionary War - Vallankumoussota Kuubassa

  • Guerrilla Warfare: A Method, 1963

  • EL SOCIALISMO Y EL HOMBRE E CUBA, 1965 - Socialism and Man

  • Che Guevara Speaks, 1967 (ed. by George Lanvan)

  • DIARIA DE CHE EN BOLIVIA, 1968 - Diary of Che Guevara (ed. by Robert Scheer) / Bolivian Diary of Ernesto "Che" Guevara

  • OBRAS COMPLETAS, 1968

  • Venceremos! The Speeches and Writings of Che Guevara, 1968 (ed. by John Gerassi)

  • Che Guevara on Revolution, 1969 (ed. by Jay Mallin)

  • Che Guerava, 1969 (selected works)

  • Che: Selected works of Ernesto Guevara, 1970 (ed. by Rolando Bonachea and Nelson P. Valdes)

  • OBRAS 1957-1967, 1970 (2 vols.)

  • ESCRITOS Y DISCURSOS, 1977 (9 vols.)

  • Che Guevara and the Cuban Revolution: Writings and Speeches of Ernesto Che Guevara, 1987

  • The Motorcycle Diaries: A Journey Around South America by Ernesto Che Guevara, 1995 (trans. by Ann Wright) - Moottoripyöräpäiväkirja (trans. into Finnish by Aleksi Siltala, from Notas de viaje. Mi primer gran viaje: de la Argentina e Venezuela en motocicleta) - film 2004, dir. by Walter Salles, starring Gael Garcia Bernal, Rodrogo de la Serna

  • Episodes of the Cuban Revolutionary War, 1956-58, 1996 (ed. by Mary-Alice Waters)

  • Che Guevara Reader: Writings by Ernesto Che Guevara on Guerrilla Strategy, Politics & Revolution, 1997

  • Che Guevara Speaks: Selected Speeches and Writings, 2000

  • Che Guevara Talks to Young People, 2000 (ed. by Mary-Alice Waters)

  • The Complete Bolivian Diaries of Che Guevara, and Other Captured Documents, 2000 (ed. by Danile James)

  • The African Dream: The Diaries of the Revolutionary War in the Congo, 2001 (trans. by Patrick Camiller)

  • Back on the Road: A Journey to Latin America, 2002 (trans. by Patrick Camiller) - Tien päällä taas (trans. into Finnish by Anu Partanen, from Otra vez)

  • Che Guevara on Global Justice, 2002

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Me and my


Hi,
I am diganta and i live in narayanganj in bangladesh, I am a student and i love my life style, i have lot of good friends,i like writing,movies,traveling,chating with friends,i also like shopping but most of parson thing that it's girls duty but i like and love that.
Anyway this is my blog and i will share anything with you, like everything in this blog and i hope you will like my blog and enjoy that.