I started to watch with some reserve but all of a sudden tears were running down my cheeks , there are elements of all kind of emotions in it and they got to me. Thank you my Pinoy inmate 'friends' for this unforgettable event. Hope you are all free soon, cause there are more criminals, idiots and fools 'outmate' than inmate !!!!
Sunday, June 28, 2009
A marvelous tribute to Michael Jackson
I started to watch with some reserve but all of a sudden tears were running down my cheeks , there are elements of all kind of emotions in it and they got to me. Thank you my Pinoy inmate 'friends' for this unforgettable event. Hope you are all free soon, cause there are more criminals, idiots and fools 'outmate' than inmate !!!!
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Saturday, June 27, 2009
Heart-attack or cardiac arrest ?

A cardiac arrest, also known as cardiopulmonary arrest or circulatory arrest, is the abrupt cessation of normal circulation of the blood due to failure of the heart to contract effectively during systole.[1]
A cardiac arrest is different from (but may be caused by) a heart attack or myocardial infarction, where blood flow to the still-beating heart is interrupted (as in cardiogenic shock).
"Arrested" blood circulation prevents delivery of oxygen to all parts of the body. Cerebral hypoxia, or lack of oxygen supply to the brain, causes victims to lose consciousness and to stop normal breathing, although agonal breathing may still occur. Brain injury is likely if cardiac arrest is untreated for more than five minutes,[2] although new treatments such as induced hypothermia have begun to extend this time.[3][4] To improve survival and neurological recovery immediate response is paramount.[5]
Cardiac arrest is a medical emergency that, in certain groups of patients, is potentially reversible if treated early enough (See "reversible causes" below). When unexpected cardiac arrest leads to death this is called sudden cardiac death (SCD).[1] The primary first-aid treatment for cardiac arrest is cardiopulmonary resuscitation (commonly known as CPR) which provides circulatory support until availability of definitive medical treatment, which will vary dependent on the rhythm the heart is exhibiting, but often requires defibrillation.
The chances you get hit by an attack increase when you: smoke, drink alcohol, have overweight, have a wrong diet, (at that moment diabetes sees an opportunity to join the party). Of course there are many more factors that cause you to get a bad health. Air pollution, bad mood, stress, private circumstances, work etc.
It's great to see someone smile, it's even better to hear them laught. What's wrong with loving eachother instead of hating.... Then peace will be the result. Sports will keep you moving and I tell you: it's no punishment to eat the right fruits and foods.
Cayenne peppers have proven to be very effective, and there are more remedies to benefite your heart. Check on the next
link to health problems.
water-hot-water-and-heart-attack
Often diabetes patients believe they suffered a heartattack but were the symptoms caused by a Hypo.
sweating, nervousness, shaking, faintness, palpitations, and hunger. More severe hypoglycemia reduces the sugar supply to the brain, causing dizziness, fatigue, weakness, headaches, inability to concentrate, confusion, inappropriate behavior that can be mistaken for drunkenness, slurred speech, blurred vision, seizures, and coma. Severe and prolonged hypoglycemia may permanently damage the brain.
Symptoms can begin slowly or suddenly, progressing from mild discomfort to severe confusion or panic within minutes. Sometimes, people who have had diabetes for many years (especially if tightly controlled) are no longer able to sense the early symptoms of hypoglycemia, and faintness or even coma may develop without any other warning.
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Thursday, June 25, 2009
The finger*
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Wednesday, June 24, 2009
The dimension(demention) between life and dead
That's hard to figure ???
It's like yin and yang , one cannot be there without the other. How can there be a left if there's no right. When all surface is flat, there's no up and down. When something has a front, there must be a backside. White/black, rich/poor, etc. You can think of some yourself for sure.
It needs more thought when it comes to: There's no light if darkness doesn't exist; The spirit needs a body or : Life needs dead to exist.
We are not always aware of our subconscious, oh, but it's there, as soon as we start thinking.
.Now, when you merge white and black, it gets grey, (why do I have to think about half-breeds all of a sudden. ?) this 'grey' goes for the mental aspect as well. This moment of grey is an area round the center line of a sinus, in the middle of the up-and down curve. That's where speed is at its top and hard to seize and hold. It's sort of a twilight zone. At that transition point you're not awake nor asleep. And you know you're not dreamin' either, there's only a very short moment when you are ón the center line. When you'r changing from minus to plus.The higher the amplitude, the faster this moment passes.

At point pi at highest speed from plus to minus.
To be able to stay in this grey neighborhood for a longer period, it needs a retarder to slow down the process. When the amplitude of the life/dead-curve lowers to a ripple only or comes to a hold, time stops!!. When this process takes too long, you're dead. Yogi-masters, meditators, trance-media, healers and magicians are able to to reach a stage where the heart beat is lowered to enter a world beyond imagination. They can slow down or stop time.( their own time world or someone else's !!!)
Compare this with a near-death-experience. I have no experience in traveling the sub-world this way, once you've been there it seems to be a great happening, a revealing, an explanation to unanswered questions.
By: B.E. Spoor
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Monday, June 22, 2009
Imelda Romualdez turns 80
Imelda at 80: Still trying to look presentable
Updated June 22, 2009 12:00 AM
MANILA, Philippines - Imelda Marcos is nothing if not a survivor.
As the Philippines’ most notorious first lady approaches 80, she is still courting publicity and claiming that despite the billions reportedly stashed away during her late husband Ferdinand’s rule, and the 22-carat diamond ring on her finger, she is nearly broke.
“Here I am, at 80, still struggling to look presentable,” the former beauty queen said as she greeted reporters this weekend in her swank two-story Manila penthouse, wearing a dark red dress over matching pants and red slippers.
Imelda, whose birthday is July 2, will forever be remembered for the dazzling jewels and 1,220 pairs of shoes she left behind in the presidential palace after the “people power” revolt that toppled Marcos’ authoritarian regime in 1986 and forced the family into exile in Hawaii.
She said the diamond ring was given to her by Ferdinand 55 years ago on their engagement.
Ferdinand died in 1989 and Imelda was allowed to return home in 1991.
Despite her notoriety for extravagance in a nation wracked by poverty, she still has her supporters and even won a congressional seat in 1995. She ran, unsuccessfully, for president in 1992.
These days she keeps busy working on her own jewelry collection, making the pieces from her old accessories and clothes, mixed with newly bought stones and other materials.
Some Filipinos were incensed at her unashamed opulence, but others, especially the generation born after 1986 with no memory of martial law under the Marcos regime, view her as an entertaining curiosity.
“She’s captivating and mesmerizing, whether or not you share her politics,” said architect Gigi Gonzalez.
Despite some 900 civil and criminal cases she had faced in Philippine courts since 1991 - cases ranging from embezzlement and corruption to tax evasion - she has emerged relatively unscathed and never served prison time.
All but a handful of the cases have been dismissed for lack of evidence and a few convictions were overturned on appeal.
But she still does not weary of complaining of her lot.
Imelda, her hair coifed and cheeks rouged, teared up as she complained she had to withdraw money from her husband’s meager war pension to post bail so she could travel to Singapore earlier this month for an eye checkup paid for by her children.
“I was first lady for only 20 years. All the beautiful things I gave to the Philippines, am I being persecuted for that? I didn’t know you can inherit a crime from your husband.”
Her husband and his cronies allegedly amassed ill-gotten wealth estimated at $5 billion to $10 billion during Marcos’ 20 years in power, but the Presidential Commission on Good Government, created to recover the Marcos billions, says the government has only found cash and assets totaling $1.63 billion.
The assets include three separate sets of diamond tiaras, ruby brooches, emerald necklaces and other jewels.
She remains unashamed of her past, when she shopped in the world’s richest boutiques and launched lavish beautification projects at home in the midst of the Philippines’ extreme poverty.
“Filipinos are brainwashed to be beautiful. We’re allergic to ugliness,” she said by way of explanation.
To Imelda’s horror, the government of former President Corazon Aquino - the Marcos nemesis who restored democracy after leading the 1986 revolt - auctioned off some of the jewelry collection but the proceeds were less than expected.
The government is planning to sell the remaining jewels, estimated at about $300 million - including a diamond-ringed 150.01-carat ruby pendant bigger than a thumb.
But Marcos wants them back, not for herself but to be kept as a national treasure, she said.
Outgoing Justice Secretary Raul Gonzalez indicated last week the sequestered jewels should be returned if there is no evidence they are part of ill-gotten Marcos wealth.
However, his replacement shot down the idea, saying they will remain in the central bank vault until all cases against Marcos are resolved.
Imelda is keen to keep defending the family name.
The Marcos legacy, as she sees it, adorns her apartment walls.
There are photographs of the Marcoses with world leaders of the 20th century, among them former US President Ronald Reagan and China’s Mao Zedong - pictured kissing Imelda on the hand during a visit to Beijing.
In her apartment - a temporary residence while her house is renovated - court documents were neatly arranged on tables in the living room, including from a 1990 New York jury ruling that acquitted her of embezzling $140 million from the Philippine treasury, which she saw as a vindication.
“I won on my birthday,” Marcos said. “I was alone, widowed, helpless, penniless, countryless. But even the Bible says there is a special place in hell for those who oppress widows and orphans.” -
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Saturday, June 20, 2009
Two friends from the '80's
Well, my friend Eric Hahn also didn't have the most ideal childhood. His parents didn't care, they were addicted and he got his ass kicked once too often. He ran away from home at age 10, got caught, ran away again a became intractable. This very young child was put away in a mental hospital and did time. 5 years later at age 15 he was released and had to find his way in this hostile world, completely new to him. We don't wonna know what happened to this juvenile boy during his 'detention' , growing up between idiots and criminals. As a minor and no experience at all it was hard to find a job. One way or another he got himself somebody else's draft card showing an 18 year old. He got away with that for a while and made some bread. But then he was busted and convicted to 6 years !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! charged guilty of the intention to use the draft card for false representation. We're talking about a 17 year old child.
He was paroled as an adult 4 years later.
No wonder Eric grabbed his few belongings and went overseas. He worked as a fisherman, got on board of freight ships and spent some years in Europe and probably learned some French as well. When the 80's arrived this young man felt the urge to return to the states, he did so in 82.
He was only 26 or 27 at that time.
It didn't last long. The country seemed too hostile to him and he left again, to start a new live in the Oriënt.
I'm writing 1983. Eric Hahn enters a new world as he joins the 'movie makers' . Obviously he seemed to do a great job as he was offered one movie after on other. Couldn't miss or I was to meet this guy. Oh, yes I did. Eric made it up to a fabulous 100 movies or maybe more.
To my count we share at least 10 films, check my filmography.
So I can say I met and worked with this fellow, and I'm proud of it.
Great you're here Eric, welcome.
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Friday, June 19, 2009
And another one......from the past. Eric Hahn

Can you believe this, another oldy from the roary 80's found his way to the Bird. I am proud to write that Eric Hahn, residing in Mexico, wrote me a note that he is following all our posts to stay up-dated in his film-hobbies. Eric joined the film world for some 8 years and was involved in probably a hundred movies or more. Correct me if I am wrong Eric. You're in my filmography from beginning till the end. Great you are here dude.
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Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Contact with another lost movie-veteran, Don Gordon Bell.* (click to visit his blog)
Due to my buddy Nick I decided to have my story done in English as well for him and some friends in Scandinavia. I was really surprised by the widespread red dots on my Cluster counter which I had installed over a week ago. This inspired me so much to keep this blog running, but made curious as well cos these dots represent readers. From the east- to the west coast in the US, the UK and even India. Now the very latest dot appeared on Korea were an old movie-veteran found his domicile in or around Seoul some years ago.
Of course I had heard of Don Gordon, we even happened to shoot some movies together, till 86. From there on I never saw Don again, he had left for the states as I was told. I liked the guy's attitude, rough but fair and a real lady-killer. He seemed to have a lot of good friends on the sets. We never got close though, I mean there were hundreds of people on these filmsets and one sticks to his nearest buddies mostly. I'm sure we smoked a doobie somewhere someday together with Nick. That's how we met.
I was so pleased to find me an e-mail sent by Don. He is running a blog also and had noticed the critical situation Nick was in at the moment and shared his emotions with me. I was so glad to hear he's offering his very appreciated help to Nick and Annie.
God bless you dude.
The story he's writing on his blog is amazing. I advice you to read his "Korean War Baby".
Bert
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Friday, June 12, 2009
'Imelda' Strikes Again: Thieving Fox Amasses 120 Shoes - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International
Thieving Fox Amasses 120 Shoes
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Thursday, June 11, 2009
How I became an instructor to the NBI








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Monday, June 8, 2009
Women of valor - Hamburger Hill



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