21 August 2010

Change is in our hands

When I was in college I witnessed many a good expression of concern bout the country from the ‘elites’. Expressions of anger and disgust at the blatant corruption in our government came from many lips. When we had the two unrests of our time patriotic outburst proceeded in our gatherings. Orators were always available to stir the hearts and minds of other students to rise to stand against an “injustice”.

From those same lips on other days I heard loud cursing and profanity. I watched the unbridled chewing and spitting of beetlenut all over the campus pavements and the busstop…from those same lips. Those same hands lifted up against a macro-injustice would vandalise property, toss rubbish cans, paint aliases on toilet walls, litter freely. Drunk and disorderly, ethnic differences and poor sportsmanship on weekends resulted in ethnic wars--from the ‘cream of the crop’ in a place that literally meant ‘unity in diversity’. I watched the abuse of women by this nation’s elites and wondered if our college education ever helped us appreciate the value and dignity of women.

Our definition of corruption extended to everything apart from ourselves. It rested on the bureaucracy and the politician but not on who you and I are. We seemed immune and yet there were not more darker hearts and minds than those supposedly more “enlightened”. We were hypocrites. And we still are (yes me too!). With our left hand we wish for change and progress. With our right we destroy it. Obviously one hand is more powerful.

MJ’s “Man in the Mirror” sums it up in our contemporary language. But throughout eternity the ever-applicable formula for change of any society first came from the SOURCE Himself in Whom no hypocrisy is found:

“YOU HYPOCRITE, first remove the plank from your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.” ~Jesus

Senisim Pasin, Senisim PNG!

God Bless Papua New Guinea

Ganjiki

20 August 2010

YUMI YET YUMI PNG!!

Dia Patriots!

Mi ting olsem bai mi raitim dis'la toksave lo tokpisin. Mi save olsem yupla olgeta save lo tokspisin so em bai orait…

Lo makim maus blo President Henry Osembo na ol narap'la lidaman na meri blo Patriots PNG mi laik tok bikpela tenkyu lo yupla ol memba na u husait sa’ salim tok hamamas na sapot lo wok blo PPNG. Dis'la grup em no wanpla fb grup nating. Em trutru Asosiasen o grup i wok long mekim trutru wok i go het long kamapim senis lo PNG (ino lo intanet tasol). As tingting blo grup em long helpim yumi yet ol pipol blo PNG lo laikim kantri blo yumi trutru long bel na tingting na ino lo maus o bilas tasol. Na long helpim yumi long sensim pasin. Sapos yumi senisim pasin bai kantri blo yumi senis trutru.

Dis'la no wanpla isi wok. Bel na tingting blo man em yu yet gat pawa long senisim (yu yet wantaim God). Wok blo PPNG em long soim (1) sampla asua blo yumi oslem pipol blo PNG, (2) sampla as blo senis na (3) sampl rot o wei we yumi ken senis. Em ken soim ol disla samting tasol sait blo senis trutru em stap lo yumi wanwan. Sapos yu no lukim nid lo senis bai yu les lo wokim wanpla senis. Olsem na mipla laik kamapim sampla wei lo soim yumi olgeta PNG manmeri long ol dis'la nid blo senis.

Planti grup ol wokim planti gutpla wok long PNG lo senisim kantri blo yumi. Tasol lo sait blo strongim toktok blo senisim pasin em nogat planti grup i stap. Patriots PNG em kamap long dispela wanpela as tasol. Yumi no politikol ektivist, or charity grup. As tingting blo PPNG em lo bungim ol yumi pipol blo PNG long lukluk lo senisim pasin.

Lo pinis mi tok tenkyu gen lo sapot blo yupla ol fb memba blo PPNG. Sapot blo yupla i save helpim mipla bikpla stret lo go mo long disla wokabaut.

Tenk yu na God i ken Blesim Papua Niugini!

Laikim

Ganjiki

13 August 2010

WE THE PEOPLE!!

Hi Patriots!

Max De Pree writes in his book LEADERSHIP IS AN ART, these words: "The corporation can never be something we are not".

Its true for the nation as well. Our Nation can never be something we the people are not. We cannot demand that our nation be progressive, and less corrupt if we are not willing to take step in that direction. (Of course it takes leadership to get the people to move in that direction but that’s something for another post)

Our Constitution opens with the words "WE THE PEOPLE". Not only does that phrase provide the basis for our democracy and the power of governance; in my view it prophetically puts down RESPONSIBILITY on the shoulder of WE THE PEOPLE OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA. Ultimately WE THE PEOPLE are responsible for either the demise or the prosperity of our country. No matter how much we yell and scream that some foreign power, people or element is driving us into the ground, it is Us, you and me, that really stand in the way of this country's greatness.

You may not identify with that unless you appreciate that you and I, carry the weight as integral parts of "WE THE PEOPLE".

Effectively what this all means is YOU and I, since we are the Obstacles to this country's progress, are the most potent SOLUTION for its progress. Only when we accept that We are the Problem, can we move on and BECOME the Solution. Without knowing this truth the majority of us automatically remain national liabilities.

Take some time to think bout how your actions or inaction affect the progress of our country. A politician may toss a million bucks in a year down the drain. But if 6 million people each toss a kina a day...?

Who really HAS THE POWER? WHO REALLY ABUSES THAT POWER AND WHO REALLY HAS THIS NATION IN A NOOSE??

WE THE PEOPLE OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA.............................CHANGE STARTS WITH US!

God Bless PNG!

02 August 2010

Sensual Pictures on our dailies do not help our Moral Landscape

Here's a copy of a letter I sent to the two dailies and a weekly. I dont know if they'll publish it. Anyway...

To Post Courier,
I'm disappointed at your recent front/back-page pictures, latest being Friday 30/07/10, in which you clearly subscribe to the Western marketing philosophy of ‘sex-sells’. Both dailies are guilty of this but more so the Post Courier.

Its quite clear now that the dailies not intend to protect this country but to exploit it. How? By providing news that ride on the emotions of the people (and in fact you super-size it!) so that we buy your paper. Then you show pictures of half-naked women so that all the men would buy it and expand our imaginations (and your sales). What’s with the topless Tapioca dancers, the netball players' bare thighs and now the Brazillian bare-bottoms? I cannot think of anything more hypocritical than your current methods of selling papers. You speak against crime and corruption yet you show complete lack of understanding (or maybe you do but deliberately ignore it) of where all these evils start: THE MIND. And the door to the mind is the eye. You provide an initial source of filth, lust and greed and unbridled passion. When we act on it by raping, stealling, killing, rioting you make a report of it and sell even more papers. Free speech; free expression; free press? These are concepts you exploit to facilitate your market.

WE are an ancient people of decency, respect, dignity and communal harmony. The West has slowly moved into our country through the media. It has caused us to change our values. From self-respect, dignity and true love for family and community to materialism and selfish pursuit of pleasure. Look to the West and see the filth and immorality. Do we want that for our beloved Papua New Guinea? Corruption starts with little gradual steps. First a bare knee and a tight skirt; then a bare thigh and some bellybutton. Now you have Brazilians with tiny garments barely covering the essentials. Knowing the way men are wired we soon want fewer garments on the women. Porn is born. We let the mind loose; becoming less satisfied with our wives or impatient because we don’t have one yet. Promiscuity increase as well as AIDS and sexual crimes. Yes of course we should have self-control. But just because we should does not give you the right to bombard us with filth that pushes our control to the limits.

If the dailies want to change this country? Then encourage proper standards of morality and decency. Or the least you could do is NOT contribute to the decay with your sensual publications. If you cannot, do not speak against corruption; for you are becoming the fountain of it.

Ganjiki