Followers

Powered By Blogger

1.5.10

* คน ที่เป็น เพื่อน **



* คน ที่เป็น เพื่อน **


ไม่จำเป็นต้องจบการศึกษา

ระดับเดียวกัน

ไม่จำเป็นต้องมีฐานะ

เท่าเทียมกัน

ไม่จำเป็นต้องมีตำแหน่งหน้าที่

การงานเท่าเทียมกัน

เพื่อนดีๆคือเพื่อนอย่างไร???

คอยเตือน ยามเพื่อนพลั้ง

คอยฟัง ยามเพื่อนขอ

คอยรอ ยามเพื่อนสาย

คอยพาย ยามเพื่อนพัก

คอยทัก ยามเพื่อนทุกข์

คอยปลุก ยามเพื่อนท้อ

คอยง้อ ยามเพื่อนงอน

คอยสอน ยามเพื่อนผิด

คอยสะกิด ยามเพื่อนเผลอ

คอยเจอ ยามเพื่อนหา

คอยลา ยามเพื่อนกลับ

คอยปรับ ยามเพื่อนเปลี่ยน

คอยเรียน ยามเพื่อนเที่ยว

คอยเคี่ยว ยามเพื่อนเล่น

คอยเย็น ยามเพื่อนร้อน

คอยหอน ยามเพื่อนเห่า

คอยเฝ้า ยามเพื่อนฟุบ

คอยอุบ ยามเพื่อนปิด

คอยคิด ยามเพื่อนถาม

คอยปราม ยามเพื่อนหลง

คอยปลง ยามเพื่อนแกล้ง

คอยแบ่ง ยามเพื่อนหมด

คอยอด ยามเพื่อนทาน

คอยคาน ยามเพื่อนล้ม

คอยชม ยามเพื่อนชนะ

คอยสละ ยามเพื่อนชอบ

ส่งให้คนที่คุณคิดว่า

เค้าเป็น... 'เพื่อน'

และอย่าลืมส่งกลับ

ให้กับ 'เพื่อน'

คนที่ส่งมาให้คุณ

เพื่อนที่รักเรา

หาไม่ง่ายเลย

ถ้าเพื่อนๆ คนไหนมีแล้ว

จงรักษา"เพื่อน"ไว้ให้ดีดี

รักกันไว้ให้มากๆ

ไม่มีอีกแล้ว

ถ้า

เราเสียเพื่อนที่ดีไป

เพียงเพราะ

แค่เหตุผล โง่โง่

Thai PM talks tough, police told to clear protesters


(Reuters) - Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva warned anti-government protesters on Sunday there was a risk of "losses" if they did not end a rally that has closed down a shopping district in Bangkok for a month. "From now on, what the government will do may risk clashes and losses, but the government knows what it's doing. What needs to be done must be done," he said, speaking on his normal Sunday television slot.

World | Thailand

It was not clear what he meant by "losses."

Earlier, an army spokesman said police had been told to take back an area near the Silom business district controlled by the red-shirted protesters pushing for early elections.

Abhisit has called an emergency cabinet meeting for later on Sunday to discuss the crisis amid speculation martial law could be imposed to clear the supporters of former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, ousted in a coup in 2006.

However, Abhisit appeared to rule that out.

"By law, martial law comes under the armed forces and they have to announce that, if they see it as necessary. But as we've discussed, this instrument is not needed," he said.

Martial law would give troops more freedom to act to end the rally. Under a state of emergency declared in the capital on April 7, the authorities can already use the security forces to ban public gatherings of more than five people, but this has achieved little.

Late on Saturday, army spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd told reporters the government had ordered police to regain the area around Chulalongkorn Hospital, near the Silom business district, to ensure public safety.

"Tomorrow the police chief has to continue clearing the area by all means, from talks to the use of force if necessary," Sansern told reporters.

"We believe the police can handle this. If we have to use force, it does not mean that we want to disperse protesters at Rachaprasong junction, but we just want the hospital area back."

OUTRAGE

The "red shirt" demonstrators caused outrage when about 200 of them barged into the hospital grounds on Thursday, looking for soldiers they thought were there preparing an attack.

Their leaders apologized and have moved back part of their barricade in the area to allow better access to the hospital.

However, that appears to be the only concession and around 1,000 demonstrators were behind the barricade by the business district at daylight on Sunday.

There were no more police than normal and no attempt to dislodge the protesters, a Reuters photographer said.

Rachaprasong junction is the ritzy shopping area that the red-shirted protesters have occupied since April 3, prompting the closure of many malls and luxury hotels.

The protest rally is now in its eighth week in the capital and the authorities have found no way to disperse it without the risk of serious bloodshed. Some evenings, tens of thousands of protesters gather in the occupied shopping district.

One bungled attempt to dislodge them from a different part of Bangkok on April 10 ended with 25 people dead and more than 800 wounded.

Another person died in still-unexplained grenade attacks on the Silom business district on April 22 and a soldier died in skirmishes on a suburban highway on April 28.

One conflict resolution body, the International Crisis Group, said the standoff could deteriorate into an "undeclared civil war." It said neutral figures with authority could help prevent a slide into greater violence.

The fault lines are widening between the establishment -- big business, aristocrats, the military brass and the middle class -- and the protesters drawn from the rural and urban poor.

Thaksin lives abroad to escape a jail sentence handed down for corruption.

The crisis has cast a pall over the economy, decimating the tourist industry, closing businesses and depressing consumer confidence. Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij said on Friday economic growth could be cut by 2 percentage points if it continues all year.

(Additional reporting by Vivek Prakash; Writing by Alan Raybould; Editing by Ron Popeski)

ข่าวทักษิณตายแล้วจริง‏

สำนักข่าว cnn อ้างถึงแหล่งข่าวระดับสูง กล่าวว่าขณะนี้ ทักษิณ ชินวัตร ได้เสียชีวิตลงแล้ว
ด้วยโรคมะเร็งต่อมลูกหมาก หลังจากเกิดความเครียด และต่อเนื่องไปยังเส้นเลือดในสมองแตก
ยังไม่มีรายงานเพ่ิมเติมว่าอย่างไร และจะนำศพกลับมาประเทศไทยหรือไม่

ข่าวทักษิณชอคคอนเฟิร์มค่ะ แต่เราไม่กล้าเปิดเผยแหล่งข่าวเดี๋ยวเค้าจะเดือดร้อน เพราะเค้าต้องมี
จรรยาบรรณทางการแพทย์ของค่ะ

ตอน นี้ทักษิณชอคยัง ไม่ฟื้น ทางการแพทย์ถือว่าเสียชีวิตแล้วเพราะอยู่ได้ด้วยเครื่องหายใจ ทางเหนือได้
เตรียมทำอนุสรณ์ไว้ให้แล้ว แต่ยังปิดข่าวกันเพราะยังใส่เครื่องช่วยหายใจอยู่ และจะมีผลกระทบกับเสื้อ
แดงมาก

บอกตรงๆ เราไม่ได้เห็นกับตาตัวเองในห้องไอซียูเราคงบอกไม่ได้ว่าร้อยเปอร์เซ็น... See More
แต่แหล่งข่าวเป็นบุคลากรทางการแพทย์ที่เชื่อถือได้ ถ้าไม่เกิดปาฏิหาริย์ทักษิณคงจะกลับมาล้างผลาญชาติไ
ม่ได้อีกแล้ว

และ คิดดูไตร่ตรองดูตามวิจารณญานของแต่ละท่านนะคะ

ทำไมแกนนำมีท่าทีอ่อน ลง
ทำไมวีระเตรียมลี้ภัยไปอเมริกา
ทำไมทักษิณหายไปนานนักท! ั้งที่เป็น เวลาทำแต้ม
ทำไมทุกคนต่างพูดถึงวันที่ 26 ว่าดวงใครบางคนจะดับ
บ้าง ว่าดวงเมืองดับ บ้างว่าดวงนายกดับ
ส่วนคำทำนายสุดท้าย "ดวงมารดับ" เรามารอดูพร้อมกัน


ข่าววงในที่เชื่อถือได้จาก 3 แหล่งคือ วงการแพทย์ วงการการทหาร และฝ่ายการเมือง(รัฐบาล) ทั้ง
3 ได้ประชุมในทางลับเพื่อวิเคราะห์สถาณะการ และเป็นข่าวดีในเร็ว ๆ วันนี้ เมื่อท่านอ่านแล้วโปรดใช้
วิจารณญาณของท่านไตร่ตรองและมีเหตุผลประกอบการพิจารณา ดังนี้
1. ท่านรู้ไหมว่าทำไมรัฐบาลและ ผบ.ทบ จึงไม่สลายการชุมชุมทันที คำตอบคือ.....ขณะนี้ ทักษิณอยู่ใน
สภาพใช้เครื่องช่วยหายใจ ในห้อง ICU และไม่ได้ตื่นมาแล้วกว่า 72 ชม. ทางการแพทย์ถือว่า...ตาย
.... ดังนั้นรัฐบาลและทหารจึงพิจารณาอย่างรอบคอบว่า ไม่มีความจำเป็นต้องใช้กำลังทหารสลายการชุม
ชุม เพราะทุกอย่างกำลังจบ.......
2. ทำไมแกนนำเสื้อแดง จึงเร่งมือ และกรุข่าวให้ร้ายรัฐบาลและทหารว่ากำลังจะใช้ความรุนแรงภายใ
น 48 ชม. เหตุผล....เพราะต้องการสร้างข่าวให้บรรดาเสื้อแดงออกมาชุมุนุมให้มาก ๆ เพื่อก่อการ
จราจลและอาจเป็นเงื่อนไขให้ทหารทนไม่ได้จึงใช้กำลังเข้าปราบ
3. บรรดาแกนนำอย่าง! วีระ และณัฐวุฒิจึงรีบหาทางลงอยู่ 2 ทาง คือ ลี้ภัยทางการเมือง และ
เจรจาก ับรัฐบาลโดยมีเงื่อนไขว่าให้ยุบสภาภายใน 30 วัน และคำตอบที่ชัดเจนว่านายกไม่ยุบสภาตามเ
งื่อนไขนี้ อาจจะ 9 เดือนตามที่นายกเคยประกาศเอาไว้ ซึ่งการจะยุบสภาเมื่อใดไม่สำคัญเท่ากับ แกน
นำต้องการให้นายกออก กม.นิรโทษกรรมตัวเองที่มีดคีอยู่ปัจจุบันก่อนการยุบสภา เนื่องจาก หัวหน้าใหญ่
กำลังตาย(แพทย์ผู้ทำการรักษาทักษิณต้องการปิดข่าวนี้และเยื้อชีวิตทักษิณในสภาพใช้เครื่องใช้หายใจไว้จน
กว่าจะมีการนิรโทษกรรมแกนนำ และประกาศการเสียชีวิต)
สุดท้ายโปรดระวังเสื้อหลายสีที่กำลังชุมนุมอยู่ขณะนี้กำลังจะถูกเป็นเหยี่อ M 79 อีก เนื่องจากเสื้อแดง
ต้องสร้างเงื่อนไขให้เกิดความรุนแรงและต้องการให้ทหารเข้าปราบ ตามข้อ 2 ดังนั้น ขอให้ทุก ๆ ที่
อ่านข่าวนี้อดทนอีกนิดเพื่อรอฟังข่าวดีดังกล่าว.........

"Inevitable" oil slick will hit U.S., Obama to visit


(Reuters) - U.S. officials on Saturday conceded it is "inevitable" that oil from an uncontrolled leak in the Gulf of Mexico will hit the U.S. coast, threatening an environmental and economic catastrophe.

U.S. | Green Business

"There's enough oil out there that it is logical to think it will hit the shoreline. It's just a question of where and when," said U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen. "Mother Nature gets a vote in this."

President Barack Obama will visit the region on Sunday, ramping up efforts to control what has the makings of an environmental disaster and deflect criticism that his administration could have been quicker in responding to the spill.

Coastline from Louisiana to Florida is threatened by the slick, estimated to be some 130 miles by 70 miles in size.

Major shipping channels, key fishing areas, national wildlife refuges and popular beaches are in the path of the oily soup. So far, vital shipping lanes leading to the Mississippi River and huge Gulf Coast ports have not been affected, officials said.

The oil gushing unchecked from a ruptured deepwater well about 42 miles off the Louisiana coast is being pushed northward by heavy but shifting winds. A "sheen" is approaching parts of the Louisiana coast, Allen said.

In the first sign that the spill has affected U.S. offshore energy production, the Minerals Management Service said on Saturday two U.S. offshore Gulf of Mexico production platforms had been shut down and a third was evacuated as a safety precaution. Further shutdowns were possible, it added, but the output affected so far was very small.

The leak, which followed a rig explosion and sinking last week, has forced Obama to suspend politically sensitive plans to expand offshore oil drilling, unveiled last month partly to woo Republican support for climate legislation.

Obama's administration is piling pressure on London-based BP Plc, the owner of the blown-out well, to do more to plug the flow of oil and contain the spreading slick. The cost of the cleanup, and the potential damage that could be inflicted by the spill, are estimated in the billions of dollars.

BP Chief Executive Tony Hayward was traveling to the U.S. on Saturday to oversee the emergency cleanup operation.

BP, the Coast Guard, the U.S. military and volunteers have been trying desperately to disperse, block and stem the oil slick both above and under water.

The various surface dispersal efforts have shown some promise, but "the focus has got to be to stop it at the source," said Obama adviser John Brennan.

Crude oil is pouring out at a rate of up to 5,000 barrels (210,000 gallons or 795,000 liters) a day, according to government estimates, but experts said the quantity of crude escaping was difficult to measure and could be higher.

"UNANSWERED QUESTIONS"

The spill response center staffed by BP and U.S. government officials said crews worked through the night using an underwater robot to aim thousands of gallons (liters) of dispersant at the leaking oil beneath the surface.

Other options to try to cap or seal the well, or even simply reduce the oil flow, are seen taking weeks or months.

Above the surface, several hundred boats and planes were also struggling to contain the slick and the Coast Guard worked to extend long barriers of containment booms in an effort to stop the oil from soiling the shore.

But forecaster AccuWeather.com said deteriorating weather and rough seas were hampering cleanup crews.

A Reuters photographer who traveled in a plane that flew over the Louisiana coast saw some boom barriers broken up by the wind and waves, and the booms washed up on the coast.

Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida have all declared states of emergency, and shrimpers, fishermen and local residents in several states have rushed to file lawsuits against the companies that operated the rig.

Obama, no doubt mindful of public criticism of President George W. Bush's handling of the 2005 Hurricane Katrina disaster, on Friday sent senior officials to check on the efforts to fight the slick.

In an editorial on Saturday, the New York Times said there were unanswered questions about the spill.

"The company, BP, seems to have been slow to ask for help, and, on Friday, both federal and state officials accused it of not moving aggressively or swiftly enough," it said. "Yet the administration should not have waited, and should have intervened much more quickly on its own initiative."

Obama and U.S. officials have increasingly stressed the first responsibility lies with BP. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar met with BP executives and said he told them to "work harder and faster and smarter to get the job done."

"BIG OIL ON TRIAL"

Douglas Brinkley, a professor at Rice University in Houston, said he believed the Obama administration was holding back from criticizing BP more because it needed the company to help seal the well.

"Once the hole is plugged you are going to see the federal government rake British Petroleum over the coals ... Big Oil will be put on trial in the same way that Goldman Sachs is getting put on trial," Brinkley said.

BP's Hayward promised an aggressive cleanup campaign and said the company would compensate those affected.

Officials in Louisiana's Mississippi Delta said on Friday a thin "oil sheen" had reached barrier islands.

Off the Louisiana coast, miles and miles of boom had been laid. BP, working with the Coast Guard, was also using specialized boats with oil-skimming equipment and private fishermen have been contracted to help with the cleanup.

About 6,000 Louisiana National Guard troops were mobilized and two Air Force planes were sent to spray dispersant.

Experts said there was little hope BP would succeed with a quick fix to cap the well, which is very deep at 5,000 feet down on the sea bed. BP hopes to use a giant funnel that would catch the oil and channel it to a tanker ship.

But that would take four weeks. If the funnel does not work, BP will have to try stemming the flow by drilling a relief well, which would take two to three months.

"At 5,000 barrels a day, in two months' time it's going to be a bigger spill than the Exxon Valdez," said Tyler Priest of the University of Houston's Bauer College of Business. He was making a comparison with the 1989 Exxon Valdez incident, the worst U.S. oil spill on record.

The Obama administration has said no new offshore drilling areas would be allowed until after a review of the spill.

The Gulf Coast and its marshlands are home to hundreds of species of wildlife, including manatees, sea turtles, dolphins, porpoises, whales, otters, pelicans and other birds. The wetlands are also a stopover for millions of migrating birds.

The Gulf is also one of the world's most fertile seafood grounds, teeming with shrimp, oysters, mussels, crabs and fish. It supports a $1.8 billion industry second only to Alaska.

(Additional reporting by Chris Baltimore and Kristen Hays in Houston, Tom Bergin in London, Carlos Barria in Venice, Louisiana, Phil Stewart in Washington, Joshua Schnyer and Rebekah Kebede in New York; Writing by Pascal Fletcher and Ros Krasny; editing by Eric Beech)

30.4.10

Possible political fall out from U.S. oil spill


(Reuters) - A massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico could undermine support for U.S. offshore drilling, just as lawmakers were warming to the practice, and even upset hopes for winning bipartisan support to U.S. climate legislation.

U.S. | Green Business | COP15

Last week's explosion on a deepwater rig finishing a well for BP left 11 workers missing, presumably dead, and a subsequent oil slick that now covers about 28,600 square miles (74,000 sq. km) and could not have come at a worse time for the oil industry.

After a decades-long moratorium on drilling in most areas outside the Gulf of Mexico, the Obama administration last month unveiled a limited expansion plan.

The Senate climate change bill was expected to include measures to encourage more offshore drilling, which was seen as crucial to attracting Republican votes.

The well that was being drilled is now leaking about 5,000 barrels of oil per day, five times more oil than previously estimated, and the spill could reach land this weekend.

Here's a look at some of the possible political fall out from the spill.

THE WHITE HOUSE

The Obama administration has stood by its proposal for new offshore oil drilling in the wake of the accident and seems unlikely to change course on the issue any time soon. The president's plan was already a fairly modest, opening only parts of the U.S. Atlantic coast and Alaska to drilling.

Obama must also consider that closing more areas to offshore drilling could alienate the Republicans and moderate Democrats he is trying to court to support U.S. action on climate change.

CONGRESS

A lot will depend on the cause and severity of the oil spill, but the outcome could undermine supporters of more oil drilling and embolden lawmakers, particularly from Florida, who dislike the expansion plans.

If the oil reaches land, damaging coastlines and disrupting sensitive ecosystems, public sentiment could turn against the offshore drilling and make it difficult for lawmakers to call for a significant increase in drilling.

In a worse case scenario, where the clean-up takes months and damage is significant, lawmakers may even consider legislation further restricting offshore oil production.

Regardless of how quickly the spill is contained, it will undoubtedly add clout to the arguments of offshore drilling opponents. Lawmakers in coastal states dependent on tourism are already using the accident to question the safety of the offshore oil industry.

Senator Bill Nelson, a Democrat from Florida, has called on the Interior Department to investigate the industry's safety record over the past 10 years. On Tuesday, the House Energy and Commerce Committee said it will probe the spill and is requesting documents from the companies.

SENATE CLIMATE CHANGE BILL

Offshore drilling was touted as a key component of the climate change compromise bill crafted by Senators John Kerry, Joseph Lieberman, and Lindsey Graham. That bill has been delayed after Graham pulled out for other political reasons, but the accident could have an impact on the legislation.

The infamous Exxon Valdez disaster, which spilled about 11 million gallons of oil off the coast of Alaska in 1989, provided a boost to Clean Air Act amendments enacted after the spill.

But since the Senate bill seeks to expand offshore oil production, the BP accident could put pressure on Democrats to row back on some elements, which in turn could anger some Republicans who have been pushing for more access for drillers.

(Reporting by Ayesha Rascoe; Editing by Marguerita Choy)

Facebook efforts hint at growing ad clout

(Reuters) - Facebook's move to export its social networking features across the Internet could bolster the company's advertising business and pose an increasing threat to the Web's reigning advertising giants.

Facebook, which has more than 400 million registered users, is the No. 1 website in the United States by page views, according to comScore. But it is a relatively small player in the online ad market, where Google Inc's (GOOG.O) paid search business dominates, and a variety of Web portals and ad networks battle over billions of dollars in graphical display advertising.

With its new initiative to expand beyond the borders of Facebook.com, however, Facebook has created the framework for a new generation of highly targeted ads.

The so-called Open Graph project weaves Facebook's popular social networking capabilities directly into third-party websites. A visitor to CNN.com, for instance, can click a button to "like" certain news articles, and see which of their Facebook friends have endorsed content on other websites.

"Having all this data and all this time from consumers almost can't help but to position Facebook in a very strong way for online advertisers," said Gartner analyst Augie Ray.

In the first week, 50,000 websites signed up to provide Facebook features on their sites, according to the company. The "like" button was served up to Web surfers visiting third-party sites more than 1 billion times in the first 24 hours.

All that social activity vastly expands Facebook's trove of data about users -- information that can improve marketers' ability to reach consumers that share specific interests or traits.

"The field in which they (Facebook) can now play, it went from a 10-yard field to a full football field," said Michael Lazerow, the CEO of Buddy Media, a firm that helps companies advertise on Facebook.

Jeremiah Owyang, an analyst at Altimeter Group, believes Facebook will not only collect more data, but expand its inventory of ad space by eventually serving ads to the websites offering Facebook's social networking features.

"This is definitely the precursor to a larger advertising opportunity," said Owyang, though he said it will take some time for Facebook to roll out the full panoply of ad features.

PRIVACY HURDLES

Facebook, which was started by Co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a Harvard dorm room in 2004, makes money primarily by selling ads on the Facebook.com site. Its investors include Accel Partners, Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) and Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing.

As a private company, Facebook does not disclose its financials, though industry estimates for its 2009 revenue range from $500 million to $650 million -- still just a fraction of the nearly $24 billion at Google or the $6.5 billion at Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O).

Facebook has sharpened its ad focus and hired some of the people who had a hand in developing Google's advertising network, including David Fischer, who joined Facebook as vice president of advertising and global operations this month.

"The more time that people spend away from Yahoo and Google, the more that ad dollars will flow away from Yahoo or Google," said Citigroup analyst Mark Mahaney, though he noted that Google's paid search business remains the most effective advertising tool on the Internet.

But before Facebook can transform its advertising business, it may need to quell growing privacy concerns. Four U.S. senators this week took issue with Facebook's automatic integration of user preferences with a trio of websites.

Privacy concerns have doomed previous attempts by the company to develop new forms of advertising, notably its 2007 Beacon project that published a person's online purchases to their Facebook news feed.

"Facebook has had these grandiose visions before and not all of them come to fruition," said RBC Capital Markets analyst Ross Sandler.

"When you talk about re-purposing or using consumer data, that kind of draws a red flag," said Sandler. Facebook and advertisers, he said, will need to tread cautiously.

Facebook spokesman Larry Yu said the Open Graph efforts will not bring about any changes for advertisers. "Facebook's ad policies remain unchanged. 'Likes' and interests from people's profiles are aggregated and, as they have always been able to do, advertisers can target ads on Facebook with this anonymous information," Yu said in an emailed statement.

Kevin Lee, the CEO of search engine marketing firm Didit, said social networking sites have historically proven to be challenging advertising environments, with consumers engrossed in interacting with their friends.

But with improved ad targeting and the potential for ads to appear on other websites, Facebook could play a much greater role in the ad industry, creating the initial demand for a product that eventually triggers a Web search, he said.

"I don't think it's going to displace it (search advertising), but it's going to be a great adjunct," Lee said about Facebook.

(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic, editing by Matthew Lewis)