I went to 888China with Shogo after level test.
I looked for DVD writer, but they doesn't sell it. Near 6:30 PM, Shogo came back to ILP, because ILP had a farewell party. I don't want to give up buying DVD writer, so I run to SM and it was getting dark.
I found iStore and asked about USB SuperDrive.
What the fxxx!!! They sell it P4500, I really want to tell them "eat shit". Because it's only P3120 in Taiwan.
No! I never give up! I kept looking for it. I bought SAMSUNG's DVD writer P1600 in the end, but they can't use credit card. I run one around in SM, and exchanged some dollars for peso.
OK! Time is late! I didn't join the party and watched movie alone.
2013 Began run then I was learning 'what is real life'.
2014 Left job and went to the Philippines.I've learnt English for 3 months.
I'm lucky to have happy time.
Try to write diary by English and
Want to share you my happiness and lazy life.
2014年11月29日 星期六
2014年11月28日 星期五
Diary-20141127
Actually, it is 1 am. I just wake up and did homework.
I slept early today. After dinner, Olivia invited me to drink with Jenny, Mika, Alec, and Shogo. But I was really drowsy. So I slept deeply when she left.
When she came back....no! She can't walk! She was carried by Jenny and Mika."Oliva~Oliva~". She was dead drunk.
She already went to the bathroom twice. I think maybe she has to hold the toilet and sleep all night.I'm sorry for her.
I slept early today. After dinner, Olivia invited me to drink with Jenny, Mika, Alec, and Shogo. But I was really drowsy. So I slept deeply when she left.
When she came back....no! She can't walk! She was carried by Jenny and Mika."Oliva~Oliva~". She was dead drunk.
She already went to the bathroom twice. I think maybe she has to hold the toilet and sleep all night.I'm sorry for her.
This is our dormitory! 2F is for men, 3F is for women.
Learn - at Tracy's class
P37
might = probably = maybe = possibly
we'll = we will
they'll = they will
hurt / hit
When someone will hit me, I'll get hurt.
wet opposite dry
sick seasick
puke = vomit
I might travel around the world.
I might work at home.
I might always change = I am never constant (in my life).
pregnant !
Will you arrive soon?
Will you be arriving soon?
Will you cook for me?
Will you be cooking for me?
Will you go with me?
will you be going with me?
I am going to the beach.
I will be going to the beach with my friends.
sisig(sea food)
Read - Health in Central America : Misleading means
By Economist
Nice rich people are looking out for you
An alliance of billionaires and bureaucrats makes a difference

IN FRONT of the skyscrapers on the esplanade in Panama City, joggers puff along a path in the morning heat, as men and women do push-ups and bench-presses. In this part of Panama the enemies are fat and diabetes. But a short flight away indigenous communities living amid fearsome overcrowding on the tropical islands of Guna Yala (formerly San Blas) are so poor and malnourished that their young children can die for lack of a boat fare to get to the nearest health clinic. Parts of Guna Yala are, says an official from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), “hell in paradise”. This disparity between the rich-world health worries of city dwellers and the parlous situation of the poorest is prevalent across Central America. But until recently the IDB says it has never been measured or dealt with directly.
Enter two of the world’s richest men, Bill Gates, a founder of Microsoft, and Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecoms magnate. Together with the government of Spain, the IDB and eight regional health authorities, their charitable foundations set out in 2010 to survey and tackle the problem. The alliance between billionaires and bureaucrats has been fruitful. It has revealed the depth of the inequality and shown how entrepreneurial thinking can be applied to seemingly intractable problems.
The programme, called Salud Mesoamérica 2015, began by introducing the first large-scale health surveys of the poorest one-fifth of the population in Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Belize and the southernmost Mexican state of Chiapas. The results, from surveys of more than 20,000 households by the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, revealed what Julie Katzman, the IDB’s second-in-command, calls “the tyranny of the law of averages”.
In all of the poorest areas levels of stunting, a harbinger of ill health, were well above national averages (see chart). In indigenous parts of Guatemala, for example, rates of stunting and anaemia among infants match those of some of the poorest areas of sub-Saharan Africa. In remote Panamanian areas like Guna Yala less than 10% of children under five are fully vaccinated. Mothers of the poorest children in Panama, Guatemala and Chiapas have far less access to family planning and hospitals than the rest of their compatriots. Yet because national averages show impressive improvement, those on the margins receive scant attention.

Armed with the data, the donors and the IDB agreed on stringent 18-month targets for improvement with the eight regional health authorities, giving them the freedom to design their own approaches to meet the goals. They offered a financial incentive. The total programme was backed with $142m from the donors, and $54m from local governments. Those countries that met their targets were to receive half of their own disbursement back for unrestricted use within the health services.
In all countries, officials say, there were striking improvements, but not everyone met the targets. Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador did. Chiapas, Guatemala and Belize did not. Results are still not available for Costa Rica and Panama. Health authorities found creative ways to meet the tight deadlines. El Salvador, for example, took just four months to grant regulatory approval for distribution of multivitamins to the poor. Women in remote villages in Nicaragua who had given birth to more children than they had wanted—because of the huge distances they needed to travel to obtain contraceptives—nominated one person to be paid a stipend to make the journey on their behalf.
IDB officials, though advocates of “results-based financing”, say money was not the only motivator—indeed the cost of the programme was less than 1% of the region’s total health spending. National pride was also at stake because countries competed to meet the targets. One called it the “Concacaf of health”, after the region’s World Cup qualifying tournament.
The health officials of the countries have since met in Panama City to swap ideas. Those whose countries missed the targets can improve their performance and move on with the other countries to a more exacting set of 18-month targets that have fresh incentives. The biggest challenge of all will be to keep the programme going without the billionaires’ support. But if the lesson is learned that averages should not be the sole basis for making policy decisions, it will have been a step in the right direction.
2014年11月27日 星期四
Diary-20141126
I got a meeting with Ryan after lunch that surprised me. Then he taught how to study English and pronunciation to Mei, Shogo, amd me.
He hopes that we can speak more in the class.
It's like singing in the KTV(Carol OK). Choose a favourite song and exercise everyday. One of these days, we will be a successful singers.
At night, Olivia wanted to eat instant Taiwanese noodles. I cooked it for her, she relished it. But I just ate one bite, I must control my weight.
Fortunately, I got the 70 kilos today. That mean that I didn't lose control yet!
He hopes that we can speak more in the class.
It's like singing in the KTV(Carol OK). Choose a favourite song and exercise everyday. One of these days, we will be a successful singers.
At night, Olivia wanted to eat instant Taiwanese noodles. I cooked it for her, she relished it. But I just ate one bite, I must control my weight.
Fortunately, I got the 70 kilos today. That mean that I didn't lose control yet!
2014年11月26日 星期三
Diary-20141125
When I see the word "reason", I feel that is "season".
Then I came back home and sang Pink's "Just Give Me A Reason". I knew this word in the end!
"Just give me a reason. Just a little bit's enough. Just second, we're not broken just bent....."
Learning is easy, but keeping in my mind is difficult. I guess that must be used to make sentence, maybe it is the way to help me remember.
Now, I am confuse about pronunciation. My listening and speaking are different . I mean, I listen this word and I can't speak it correctly! It's like pain, pen, pan.
Anyway my mouth aches in every exercise.....I want to catch an American to research what's happen with his mouth!!
Then I came back home and sang Pink's "Just Give Me A Reason". I knew this word in the end!
"Just give me a reason. Just a little bit's enough. Just second, we're not broken just bent....."
Learning is easy, but keeping in my mind is difficult. I guess that must be used to make sentence, maybe it is the way to help me remember.
Now, I am confuse about pronunciation. My listening and speaking are different . I mean, I listen this word and I can't speak it correctly! It's like pain, pen, pan.
Anyway my mouth aches in every exercise.....I want to catch an American to research what's happen with his mouth!!
look this could in sky ~ what the putty VIEW.
nnnn~~ I enjoy here.
This book is my reader before sleeping.
You can check this price in Taiwan.
I think one of reasons that is why our English is pool.
(god!see~ I used "reason"~ haha)
2014年11月25日 星期二
Read - News : Who are the Kurds?
By BBC News
Between 20 and 30 million Kurds inhabit a mountainous region straddling the borders of Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Iran and Armenia. They make up the fourth-largest ethnic group in the Middle East, but they have never obtained a permanent nation state.
In recent decades, Kurds have increasingly influenced regional developments, fighting for autonomy in Turkey and playing prominent roles in the conflicts in Iraq and Syria, where they have resisted the advance of the jihadist group, Islamic State (IS).
Where do they come from?
The Kurds historically led nomadic lives revolving around sheep and goat herding throughout the Mesopotamian plains and the highlands in what are now south-eastern Turkey, north-eastern Syria, northern Iraq, north-western Iran and south-western Armenia.
Today, they form a distinctive community, united through race, culture and language, even though they have no standard dialect. They also adhere to a number of different religions and creeds, although the majority are Sunni Muslims.
Why don't they have a state?
Why are Kurds at the forefront of the fight against IS?
Why is Turkey reluctant to help the Kurds in Kobane?
Between 20 and 30 million Kurds inhabit a mountainous region straddling the borders of Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Iran and Armenia. They make up the fourth-largest ethnic group in the Middle East, but they have never obtained a permanent nation state.
In recent decades, Kurds have increasingly influenced regional developments, fighting for autonomy in Turkey and playing prominent roles in the conflicts in Iraq and Syria, where they have resisted the advance of the jihadist group, Islamic State (IS).
Where do they come from?
The Kurds historically led nomadic lives revolving around sheep and goat herding throughout the Mesopotamian plains and the highlands in what are now south-eastern Turkey, north-eastern Syria, northern Iraq, north-western Iran and south-western Armenia.
Today, they form a distinctive community, united through race, culture and language, even though they have no standard dialect. They also adhere to a number of different religions and creeds, although the majority are Sunni Muslims.
Why don't they have a state?
In the early 20th Century, many Kurds began to consider the creation of a homeland - generally referred to as "Kurdistan". After World War One and the defeat of the Ottoman Empire, the victorious Western allies made provision for a Kurdish state in the 1920 Treaty of Sevres.
Such hopes were dashed three years later, however, when the Treaty of Lausanne, which set the boundaries of modern Turkey, made no provision for a Kurdish state and left Kurds with minority status in their respective countries. Over the next 80 years, any move by Kurds to set up an independent state was brutally quashed.
In mid-2013, IS turned its sights on three Kurdish enclaves that bordered its territory in northern Syria. It launched repeated attacks that until mid-2014 were repelled by the Popular Protection Units (YPG) - the armed wing of the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Unity Party (PYD). The turning point was an offensive in Iraq in June that saw IS overrun the northern city of Mosul, routing Iraqi army divisions and seizing weaponry later moved to Syria.
The jihadists' advance in Iraq also drew that country's Kurds into the conflict. The government of Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdistan Region sent its Peshmerga forces to areas abandoned by the army.
For a time there were only minor clashes between IS and the Peshmerga, but in August the jihadists launched a shock offensive. The Peshmerga withdrew in disarray, allowing several towns inhabited by religious minorities to fall, notably Sinjar, where thousands of Yazidis where sheltering.
Alarmed by the Peshmerga's defeat and the potential massacre of the Yazidis fleeing Sinjar, the US launched air strikes in northern Iraq and sent military advisers. European countries meanwhile began sending weapons to the Peshmerga. The YPG and Turkish Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) also came to their aid.
Although the jihadists were gradually forced back by the Peshmerga in Iraq, they did not stop trying to capture the Kurdish enclaves in Syria. In mid-September, IS launched an assault on the enclave around the northern town of Kobane, forcing more than 160,000 people to flee into Turkey.
Despite this, Turkey refused to attack IS positions near the border or allow Kurds to cross to defend it, triggering Kurdish protests and a threat from the PKK to pull out of its peace talks with the government. However, it was not until mid-October that Ankara agreed to allow Peshmerga fighters to join the battle for Kobane.
There is deep-seated hostility between the Turkish state and the country's Kurds, who constitute 15% to 20% of the population.
Kurds received harsh treatment at the hands of the Turkish authorities for generations. In response to uprisings in the 1920s and 1930s, many Kurds were resettled, Kurdish names and costumes were banned, the use of the Kurdish language was restricted and even the existence of a Kurdish ethnic identity was denied, with people designated "Mountain Turks".
In 1978, Abdullah Ocalan established the PKK, which called for an independent state within Turkey. Six years later, the group began an armed struggle. Since then, more than 40,000 people have been killed and hundreds of thousands displaced.
In the 1990s the PKK rolled back on its demand for independence, calling instead for greater cultural and political autonomy, but continued to fight. In 2012, the government and PKK began peace talks and the following year a ceasefire was agreed. PKK fighters were told to withdraw to northern Iraq, but clashes have continued.
Although Ankara considers IS a threat, it also fears that Turkish Kurds will cross into Syria to join the PYD - an offshoot of the PKK - and then use its territory to launch attacks on Turkey. It has also said it is not prepared to step up efforts to help the US-led coalition against IS unless the removal of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is also one of its goals.
What do Syria's Kurds want?
Kurds make up between 7% and 10% of Syria's population, with most living in the cities of Damascus and Aleppo, and in three, non-contiguous areas around Kobane, the north-western town of Afrin, and the north-eastern city of Qamishli.
Syria's Kurds have long been suppressed and denied basic rights. Some 300,000 have been denied citizenship since the 1960s, and Kurdish land has been confiscated and redistributed to Arabs in an attempt to "Arabize" Kurdish regions. The state has also sought to limit Kurdish demands for greater autonomy by cracking down on protests and arresting political leaders.
The Kurdish enclaves were relatively unscathed by the first two years of the Syrian conflict. The main Kurdish parties avoided taking sides. In mid-2012, government forces withdrew to concentrate on fighting the rebels elsewhere, after which Kurdish groups took control.
The Democratic Unity Party (PYD) quickly established itself as the dominant force, straining relations with smaller parties who formed the Kurdistan National Council (KNC). They nevertheless united to declare the formation of a Kurdish regional government in January 2014. They also stressed that they were not seeking independence but "local democratic administration".
Will Iraq's Kurds gain independence?
Kurds make up an estimated 15% to 20% of Iraq's population. They have historically enjoyed more national rights than Kurds living in neighbouring states, but also faced brutal repression.
Kurds in the north of Iraq revolted against British rule during the mandate era, but were crushed. In 1946, Mustafa Barzani formed the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) to fight for autonomy in Iraq. After the 1958 revolution, a new constitution recognised Kurdish nationality. But Barzani's plan for self-rule was rejected by the Arab-led central government and the KDP launched an armed struggle in 1961.
In 1970, the government offered a deal to end the fighting that gave the Kurds a de facto autonomous region. But it ultimately collapsed and fighting resumed in 1974. A year later, divisions within the KDP saw Jalal Talabani leave and form the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).
In the late 1970s, the government began settling Arabs in areas with Kurdish majorities, particularly around the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, and forcibly relocating Kurds. The policy was accelerated in the 1980s during the Iran-Iraq War, in which the Kurds backed the Islamic republic. In 1988, Saddam Hussein unleashed a campaign of vengeance on the Kurds that included the poison-gas attack on Halabja.
When Iraq was defeated in the 1991 Gulf War Barzani's son, Massoud, led a Kurdish rebellion. Its violent suppression prompted the US and its allies to impose a no-fly zone in the north that allowed Kurds to enjoy self-rule. The KDP and PUK agreed to share power, but tensions rose and a four-year internal conflict erupted in 1994.
The two parties co-operated with the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 that toppled Saddam Hussein and have participated in all governments formed since then. They have also governed in coalition in the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), created in 2005 to administer the three provinces of Dohuk, Irbil and Sulaimaniya.
After the IS offensive in June, the KRG sent the Peshmerga into disputed areas claimed by the Kurds and the central government, and then asked the Kurdish parliament to plan a referendum on independence.
However, it is unclear whether the Kurds will press ahead with self-determination, or push for a more independent entity within a federal Iraq.
Diary-20141124
I have amazing lunch at Bascon Cafe today!
Yep! I always stay here, but I don't know what is the "Mongolian" ? Tutors Ina and Tracy invited us to eat lunch at Bascon Cafe.
They taught us how to order them! That's very tasty~ Maybe this contains a large vegetables, so treat my constipation. kkkkkk
[write by Diary of a Wimpy Kid]
『I always though I'D be the one in a relationship and Rowley would be the guy everyone kind of felt sorry for.』
I don't understand what the last sentence's mean!
In fact, every tutor has different method of teaching that can push me to improve and I don't mine whatever way.
Yep! I always stay here, but I don't know what is the "Mongolian" ? Tutors Ina and Tracy invited us to eat lunch at Bascon Cafe.
They taught us how to order them! That's very tasty~ Maybe this contains a large vegetables, so treat my constipation. kkkkkk
[write by Diary of a Wimpy Kid]
『I always though I'D be the one in a relationship and Rowley would be the guy everyone kind of felt sorry for.』
I don't understand what the last sentence's mean!
In fact, every tutor has different method of teaching that can push me to improve and I don't mine whatever way.
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