Friday, January 27, 2017

Trump takes action to rebuild military

Trump takes action to rebuild military, start ‘extreme vetting’ at border

By S.A. Miller - The Washington Times

President Trump signed executive actions Friday to begin rebuilding the U.S. military and to initiate an “extreme vetting” program to root out radical Islamic terrorists attempting to enter the country, both measures making good on top campaign promises.

The president signed the documents in the Pentagon’s Hall of Heroes after a swearing-in ceremony for Defense Secretary James N. Mattis.

He said the moves to beef up the military and keep terrorists out of the homeland were aimed at ensuring the sacrifices of military fighting terrorism abroad were supported by the actions of the U.S. government.

“Our military strength will be questioned by no one and neither will our dedication to peace. We want peace,” Mr. Trump said.
In addition to the policy for providing more ships, planes and war-fighting resources, Mr. Trump is expected to direct Mr. Mattis to plan more aggressive strategies against the Islamic State, the terrorist army also known by the acronyms ISIS and ISIL.

Mr. Mattis, a retired four-star Marines Corps general, will have 30 days to present Mr. Trump with options for confronting ISIS.

The text of the directives were not immediately released, but drafts indicated the vetting will halt the flow of refugees into the U.S. and temporarily bar entrance by visitors from several predominately Muslim countries that are terrorist hotbeds.

The ban is expected to include exemptions for religious minorities in those countries that often face discrimination and brutality.

“I’m establishing new vetting measures to keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the United States of America,” said Mr. Trump. “We don’t want them here.”

The vetting measure immediately came under fire from Democratic lawmakers and civil liberties advocates.

Sen. Bob Casey, Pennsylvania Democrat, said it was “contrary to our values and our security.”

“It will mean turning away children fleeing barrel bombing in Syria, women and girls fleeing human rights violations in Sudan and Somalia, and brave people who risked their lives to work with our troops in Iraq,” he said. “Preventing these vulnerable people from resettling in the U.S. as refugees does nothing to make our nation safer.”

American Civil Liberties Union Executive Director Anthony D. Romero said: “‘Extreme vetting’ is just a euphemism for discriminating against Muslims.”

Although the vetting plan has provoked accusations of bigotry since it was first proposed during the presidential race, Mr. Trump said it was necessary to keep the battle against terrorism from America’s shores.

“We will never forget the lessons of 9/11 or the heroes who lost their lives at the Pentagon. They were the best of us,” said the president. “We will honor them not only with our words but with our actions.”







US New UN ambassador

New UN ambassador warns US will respond against unsupportive allies
Nikki Haley made the statements upon her arrival at the UN's headquarters in New York City.

The new US ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, has pledged to overhaul the world body and warned allies that if they do not support Washington, then she is "taking names" and will respond.

Ms Haley made brief remarks to reporters as she arrived at the world body's headquarters in New York to present her credentials to UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres.

"Our goal with the administration is to show value at the UN and the way that we'll show value is to show our strength, show our voice, have the backs of our allies and make sure that our allies have our back as well," Ms Haley said.
    "For those that don't have our back, we're taking names, we will make points to respond to that accordingly."
Ms Haley — who was South Carolina's Republican governor when President Donald Trump picked her for the post — has little foreign policy and no US federal government experience.

French UN Ambassador Francois Delattre and British UN Ambassador Matthew Rycroft said they looked forward to working with Ms Haley.

The United States, Britain and France, along with Russia and China, are permanent veto-wielding members of the UN Security Council.

After her meeting with Mr Guterres, a US official said they had "a good and productive conversation about ways they can work together to reform the UN".

"Everything that's working, we're going to make it better, everything that's not working we're going to try and fix, and anything that seems to be obsolete and not necessary we're going to do away with," Ms Haley told reporters.

US the largest contributor to the UN

According to a draft executive order published by US media, Mr Trump wants a committee — including his secretary-of-state, attorney-general and director of national intelligence — to carry out a one-year review of US funding to international organisations with the aim of almost halving voluntary funding.

The United States is the largest contributor to the United Nations, paying 22 per cent of the $5.4 billion core UN budget and 28 per cent of the $7.9 billion UN peacekeeping budget.

These are assessed contributions — agreed by the UN General Assembly — and not voluntary payments.

UN agencies, such as the UN Development Program, the children's agency UNICEF, the World Food Program and the UN Population Fund, are funded voluntarily.

Last year, Mr Trump took to Twitter to disparage the 193-member world body after the United States abstained in a December 23 UN Security Council vote, allowing the adoption of a resolution demanding an end to settlement building by US ally Israel.

Mr Trump, who had called on Barack Obama's administration to veto the resolution, warned that "things will be different" at the United Nations after he took office on January 20.

Source:  http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-01-28/new-us-un-envoy-warns-allies-back-us-or-well-take-names/8219532




Republicans Have a Warning for President Trump

Republicans Have a Warning for President Trump: Don't Play Nice With Russia
President Donald Trump looks on following a swearing-in ceremony for Defense Secretary James Mattis at the Pentagon in Washington on Jan. 27, 2017. (Carlos Barria—Reuters)

Andrew Taylor / AP

(WASHINGTON) — A day ahead of President Donald Trump's weekend call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the fight within the Republican Party over the direction of U.S. policy toward Moscow intensified.

Trump, who has said he wants a better relationship with Russia, was noncommittal on Friday about whether he was considering lifting U.S. sanctions against the former Soviet state, telling reporters at a news conference, "We'll see what happens. As far as the sanctions, very early to be talking about that."

But two top Senate Republicans — John McCain, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, and Rob Portman, a member of the Foreign Relations Committee — warned the White House about easing any punishments on Moscow and vowed to turn the sanctions into law.

"I hope President Trump will put an end to this speculation and reject such a reckless course," McCain said in a statement. "If he does not, I will work with my colleagues to codify sanctions against Russia into law."

Portman said lifting the sanctions "for any reason other than a change in the behavior that led to those sanctions in the first place would send a dangerous message to a world already questioning the value of American leadership and the credibility of our commitments after eight years of Obama administration policies."

And Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., also expressed support for the sanctions.

"I think the sanctions are overdue. I think Obama was late putting them in place, so I think they should stay," Ryan said in an interview with Politico.

U.S. intelligence officials have concluded that Moscow meddled in the 2016 election to help Trump become president.

Obama in late December ordered sanctions on Russian spy agencies, closed two Russian compounds and expelled 35 diplomats the U.S. said were really spies. The new penalties add to existing U.S. sanctions over Russia's actions in Ukraine, which have damaged Russia's economy but had only limited impact on Putin's behavior.

In 2014, Russia annexed Crimea in Ukraine, drawing widespread condemnation in Europe and the United States and a raft of penalties.

Relations are also tense over Putin's backing of Syrian President Bashar Assad and allegations of Russian meddling in the U.S. elections.

For his part, McCain has emerged as a frequent critic of Trump among Capitol Hill Republicans. He takes a dim view of trying to reset relations with Moscow and says Trump should remember that Putin is "a murderer and a thug who seeks to undermine American national security interests at every turn."

"For our commander-in-chief to think otherwise would be naive and dangerous," McCain said.

McCain and Portman are part of a bipartisan group of senators who have introduced sweeping legislation designed to go beyond the punishments against Russia already levied by Obama and to demonstrate to Trump that forcefully responding to Moscow's meddling isn't a partisan issue.

The bill would impose mandatory visa bans and freeze the financial assets of anyone who carries out cyberattacks against public or private computer systems and democratic institutions.

The legislation also mandates sanctions in Russia's all-important energy sector and on investments in the development of civil nuclear projects to rebuke Moscow for its provocations in eastern Ukraine and military support for Syrian President Bashar Assad.



President Trump Is Suspending a Refugee

President Trump Is Suspending a Refugee Program and Banning Visas From 7 Countries
Donald Trump at swearing in for James Mattis.
Donald Trump has signed an executive order imposing a temporary ban on most refugees.
(Reuters: Carlos Barria)

President Trump Friday signed an executive order suspending the State Department's Refugee Assistance Program and visa entry from Iraq, Syria and five other countries, saying they are "detrimental to the interests of the United States."

The order, which has been widely anticipated, broadly follows the president's campaign pledge to suspend immigration from several Muslim-majority countries until "extreme vetting" can be put in the place to prevent terrorists from entering the country.

The revised guidelines replace his campaign proposal to institute a religious test for immigration. The countries are those that have been designated as countries of concern by Congress and the Obama Administration, and also include Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen, and Libya, a White House official said.

"I am establishing new vetting measures to keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the United States of America," Trump said before signing the executive order at the Pentagon Friday. "We want to ensure that we are not admitting into our country the very threats our soldiers are fighting overseas. We only want to admit those into our country who will support our country and love deeply our people."

according to the order, to allow increased vetting measures to be put into place, while visas from the countries of concern would be suspended for 90 days. Trump specifically suspended refugee admissions from Syria "until such time as I have determined that sufficient changes have been made to the [U.S. Refugee Assistance Program] to ensure that admission of Syrian refugees is consistent with the national interest."

Trump also ordered the immediate suspension of the Visa Interview Waiver Program, which allows citizens of many countries to enter the U.S. on temporary visas without formal interviews with U.S. consular officers. It was not immediately clear how many countries would be affected by the suspension, as some waivers are guaranteed by statute.

Earlier Friday, Trump told CBN News that he would seek to prioritize refugee assistance for persecuted Christians in the Middle East.

"If you were a Muslim you could come in, but if you were a Christian, it was almost impossible and the reason that was so unfair," Trump said of the existing policy. The executive order provides priority for persecuted religious minorities, "provided that the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual's country of nationality."

Trump's order also requires the departments of State and Homeland Security and the FBI, to develop a comprehensive immigration screening program, to include increased in-person interviews, databases to cross-check documentation for fraud, and assessments of potential immigrants' likelihood of "becoming a positively contributing member of society and the applicant's ability to make contributions to the national interest." It also requires a "mechanism" to assess whether applicants have intent to commit criminal or terrorist attacks in the U.S.

In a statement, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan praised the announcement.

“Our number one responsibility is to protect the homeland," he said. "We are a compassionate nation, and I support the refugee resettlement program, but it’s time to reevaluate and strengthen the visa vetting process. This is why we passed bipartisan legislation in the wake of the Paris attacks to pause the intake of refugees. President Trump is right to make sure we are doing everything possible to know exactly who is entering our country."

But Democrats on Capitol Hill, along with some Republicans, were critical of Trump's announcement, arguing that the refugee screening program has already proven to be effective at keeping out those with ill-intent, and that banning refugees would be detrimental to the nation's standing abroad.

In an interview with ABC News this week, Trump rejected criticism that his proposals could inflame anti-American sentiment abroad.

"The world is a mess," he said. "The world is as angry as it gets. What? You think this is gonna cause a little more anger? The world is an angry place."




Compromise does not work with our political opponents

    Compromise does not work with our political opponents. When will we learn?
US Army Private First Class Bradley Manning, now Chelsea Manning, leaving a military court facility after hearing his verdict in the trial in July 2013.

Chelsea E Manning

Barack Obama left behind hints of a progressive legacy. Unfortunately, despite his faith in our system and his positive track record on many issues over the last eight years, there have been very few permanent accomplishments.

This vulnerable legacy should remind us that what we really need is a strong and unapologetic progressive to lead us. What we need as well is a relentless grassroots movement to hold that leadership accountable.

On the night of 4 November 2008, Barack Obama was elected on a platform of “hope” and “change”. He was hailed as a “uniter” in an age of “dividers”. I experienced a political awakening that night. I watched as the hope that President Obama represented was tempered by the shocking passage of Proposition 8 by a majority of voters in California. This reversed a major marriage equality court victory from earlier that year.

Throughout his two terms in office, these types of contradictions would persist. Optimism and hope would be met with backlash and hate. He faced unparalleled resistance from his opponents, many of whom wanted him to fail.

I remember during his first inauguration, on an icy January morning in 2009. I sat on the floor of a military headquarters office in Fort Drum, New York. With a dusty overhead television showing the ceremony, I sat, working in support of a half dozen military officers. We had our weapons ready, and our rucksacks heavily packed. Selected as the active duty army unit to deploy to Washington DC in case of an emergency, we were prepared for rapid deployment.

Ironically, many of the officers and enlisted personnel that were selected for this security detail openly despised President Obama. The seething vitriol and hatred simmered quietly in that room. In retrospect, it was an ominous foreshadowing of things to come.

On domestic issues, his instinct, as former First Lady Michelle Obama explained at the Democratic national convention this past summer, was to “go high” when his opponents would “go low”. Unfortunately, no matter how “high” the former president aimed to be, his opponents aimed to undermine him anyway. There was absolutely no “low” that was too low to go.

Even when they agreed with him on policy, they resisted. For example, when it came to healthcare reform, Obama opened the debate starting with a compromise. His opponents balked. They refused to move an inch. When he would push for the concessions they asked for, they only dug in deeper in opposition. Even when he tried proposing a bill that had been proposed by opponents years earlier.

When it came to foreign policy, even though he was only carrying out the expanding national security policies of the previous administration, they would ceaselessly criticize him for being too weak, or too soft or too sympathetic. After months of comprise on his end, they never cooperated a single time.

In December 2009, I sat in a hot and stuffy plywood room outside Baghdad, Iraq, as President Obama made speeches. He argued that military action was necessary. An unusual statement to present while receiving the world’s most prestigious peace prize. Yet, the people around me still spoke about him quietly, with a strong criticism, and even sometimes, pure disgust.

In November 2012, when President Obama was re-elected, I sat in a civilian jail cell in suburban Baltimore, awaiting a court martial hearing. Surrounded by a different crowd of people, the excitement and elation of his re-election was genuine. Even among those being penalized merely for being disadvantaged or a minority. Even in those unbearably unfair circumstances, there was genuine hope, faith and trust in the president.

For eight years, it did not matter how balanced President Obama was. It did not matter how educated he was, or how intelligent he was. Nothing was ever good enough for his opponents. It was clear that he could not win. It was clear that, no matter what he did, in their eyes, he could not win.

In the aftermath of the deadly shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando that took the lives of nearly 50 queer and brown people, it took Obama over 300 words of his speech to acknowledge the queer community, and even then, as an abstract acronym.

Never did he acknowledge the particularly painful toll on the Puerto Rican and wider community that was also navigating through this horrific tragedy. Even in the midst of a shocking and horrific tragedy, he attempted to comprise with opponents who were uninterested and unwilling to meet him halfway.

Now, after eight years of attempted compromise and relentless disrespect in return, we are moving into darker times. Healthcare will change for the worse, especially for those of us in need. Criminalization will expand, with bigger prisons filled with penalized bodies – poor, black, brown, queer and trans people. People will probably be targeted because of their religion. Queer and trans people expect to have their rights infringed upon.

The one simple lesson to draw from President Obama’s legacy: do not start off with a compromise. They won’t meet you in the middle. Instead, what we need is an unapologetic progressive leader.

We need someone who is unafraid to be criticized, since you will inevitably be criticized. We need someone willing to face all of the vitriol, hatred and dogged determination of those opposed to us. Our opponents will not support us nor will they stop thwarting the march toward a just system that gives people a fighting chance to live. Our lives are at risk – especially for immigrants, Muslim people and black people.

We need to stop asking them to give us our rights. We need to stop hoping that our systems will right themselves. We need to actually take the reins of government and fix our institutions. We need to save lives by making change at every level.






Chúc Mừng Năm Mới Đinh Dậu 2017


Chúc tết Việt gian Cộng Sản
  • Việt Cộng chết hết và chết một cách thảm khốc.
  •  Thân Cộng (ăn cơm quốc gia thờ ma Cộng sản), VGCS chết hết và chết một cách thảm thương.
  •  Những kẻ đánh phá hoặc mạ lỵ những ngưòi chống Cộng để làm lợi cho Việt Cộng hay để gây chia rẽ hàng ngũ người Việt Quốc Gia, cũng chết hết và chết một cách thảm hại.
  • Những đứa quên tư cách tỵ nạn Cộng Sản Việt Nam, những kẻ luồn trôn Việt Cộng, những tên việt kiều về ăn chơi nuôi sống Việt Cộng, đi máy bay sẽ nổ, đi tàu thì tàu chìm, đi bất cứ bằng phương tiện nào, sẽ chết và chết một cách thảm hại, chết tan xương nát thịt.

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Two former LJ Hooker agents charged

LJ Hooker real estate agents under investigation over missing client money, six branches shut down
Judy Nguyen (Truc Thanh Le Nguyen) and Joseph Ngo (Tri Duc Ngo) have been charged for alleged breaches of the Estate Agents Act.

Exclusive by the National Reporting Team's Josie Taylor and Sam Clark

Real estate giant LJ Hooker says it is pleased two of its former agents will face court for allegedly misappropriating more than $2 million of customers' money.

Consumer Affairs Victoria has laid hundreds of charges against two former LJ Hooker real estate agents over conduct at six franchises in Melbourne's south east.

The ABC exclusively revealed last year that six LJ Hooker branches run by Truc Thanh Le Nguyen (known as Judy Nguyen) and her husband Tri Duc Ngo (known as Joseph Ngo) were shut down by head office.

More than 100 customers claimed their money kept in trust by the real estate agents had disappeared.

Today, Consumer Affairs Victoria announced that it had charged Judy Nguyen with 216 offences and Joseph Ngo with 188 offences for alleged breaches of the Estate Agents Act.

Potential penalties include up to 10 years in jail.

The Director of Consumer Affairs has approved 58 claims from customers who lost trust funds totalling more than $2 million.

Consumer Affairs has also approved the payment of 21 claims for rent money, totalling more than $34,000.

The couple's franchise was terminated by LJ Hooker when the allegations first emerged in April last year.

In a statement a spokesperson for LJ Hooker said: "LJ Hooker is pleased that Consumer Affairs Victoria (CAV) have concluded their investigations and are now able to bring this matter to the courts, giving all those affected some closure.

"These sorts of occurrences are a blight on the industry, and continued vigilance is of the utmost importance to LJ Hooker and our franchisees."

Judy Nguyen and Joseph Ngo are due to face the Melbourne Magistrate's Court next Friday.
______________________________________________
    LJ Hooker real estate agents under investigation over missing client money, six branches shut down

More than 100 customers are owed "substantial" sums of money following the collapse of six LJ Hooker branches in Melbourne, with the couple involved in running the business under investigation for allegedly misappropriating their clients' money.

The ABC has learnt that six LJ Hooker branches in Melbourne were shut down by the company's head office last week with customers claiming that hundreds of thousands of dollars in deposits had gone missing.

In a statement to the ABC the real estate giant said that it had stepped in to end their relationship with the franchisee involved.

"On 21 April 2016 LJ Hooker terminated the franchise offices of LJ Hooker Glen Waverley, Keysborough, Box Hill, Mount Waverley, Doncaster and Burwood … due to a fundamental breach of its franchise agreements," the company said.

The ABC understands the owner of the closed franchises Judy Thanh Truc and her husband Joseph Ngo, are accused of spending home deposits that were supposed to be held in trust for their clients.

Ms Truc is also known as Judy Nguyen.

A real estate website describes Ms Truc as "Director/Officer in effective control" of the business.

According to her online profile, Ms Truc arrived in Australia from Vietnam in 1989 and she holds a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Business.

The Facebook page for Ms Truc's Glen Waverly LJ Hooker says: "The power of SIX offices under ONE DIRECTOR working for you to achieve the best possible outcome in getting your dream home or invest in a property!"
Do you know more about this story? Email investigations@abc.net.au

When contacted by the ABC Ms Truc denied that she had stolen the money.

"Someone tried to hack my trust account," Ms Truc said.

"I don't know what we are going to do now."

Ms Truc said she was unable to provide more details because the matter was now in the hands of Consumer Affairs Victoria. She said she had notified LJ Hooker's head office of the alleged breach of her bank account.

The LJ Hooker head office strongly refuted Ms Truc's claims.

In a statement to the ABC, LJ Hooker said: "On 20th April, the day prior to termination of the franchise agreement, Ms Judy Nguyen informed LJ Hooker for the first time that her partner, Joseph Ngo had misused trust funds.

"At no time did Ms Nguyen say that her trust account had be hacked.

"Prior to 20 April, LJ Hooker had not been notified that money had been wrongfully taken from the trust accounts of JT Law Investments."

Joseph Ngo could not be reached for comment.

Retiree still waiting for $61,000 deposit
Katarina and John Melah are $61,000 out of pocket after the closure of six Melbourne LJ Hooker outlets.
Retired house painter Jan Melah sold his Dandenong house in January through the Keysborough branch of LJ Hooker.

Retired house painter Jan Melah sold his Dandenong house in January through the Keysborough branch of LJ Hooker.

He said he chose LJ Hooker because they were a trusted brand with an international reputation.

"LJ Hooker have got a good name so we sort of selected LJ Hooker and they told us they had a very good success in the region so we gave everything to LJ Hooker," Mr Melah said.

"Unknown to us, it was a franchise."

Mr Melah and his wife Katarina reached settlement on their Dandenong home in March and expected the buyer's deposit of $61,000 to electronically transferred into their bank account.

However, a day after settlement Mr Melah said he was called by an agent at LJ Hooker and asked to pick up a cheque from the office.

Instead of being given a bank cheque, Mr Melah said he was given a personal cheque to the value of $61,410. The cheque was dishonoured by the bank when Mr Melah tried to deposit it.

"A few days later we received a call from LJ Hooker to come, that they wrote a wrong cheque," Mr Melah said.

He said Mr Ngo told him the business would pay Mr Melah $1,000 compensation and transfer the money directly into his bank account. The money never arrived.

"When I went to a bank I discovered that the money's not been paid so we went straight away to speak to Judy," Mr Melah said.

"She said 'I'm sorry we are having some difficulties but we will pay you $2,000 compensation now and we will put money into your bank on Monday, it will be there'."

'Everything was one big lie'

Mr Melah is yet to receive any of the money.

"I was very disappointed, my wife burst into tears and my heart palpitations went sky high, only to be told that the reception is now nothing and everything was one great big lie," Mr Melah said.

Mr Melah has now taken his complaint to Consumer Affairs Victoria (CAV).

CAV has confirmed to the ABC it has launched an investigation, and appointed a statutory manager for the six branches.

A spokesperson for CAV said LJ Hooker was assisting it with an investigation and identifying consumers who had lost money.

"Consumer Affairs Victoria has taken physical possession of the six offices using its powers under the Estate Agents Act 1980, and has instructed the statutory manager to reconstruct records, deal with outstanding consumer and landlord or tenant transactions, and wind the business down," the spokesperson said.

The Victorian Property Fund provides compensation to consumers who have lost money due to the actions of an estate agent.

Clients of LJ Hooker Glen Waverley and the associated branches are advised to contact Consumer Affairs Victoria on 1300 558 181 for further information.



Vietnam Airlines

Vietnam Airlines implicated in $93m money laundering racket

Vietnam Airlines has been implicated in a money laundering racket.

Vietnam Airlines has been implicated in a $93 million money laundering racket smashed by the Australian Crime Commission last week.

Brother and sister Phat and Hang Huynh from Avondale Heights have appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates Court charged with laundering money for organised crime syndicates in Melbourne and Sydney.

They were among nine people arrested during last week's raids on Vietnamese communities in the two cities.

The court heard Phat and Hang Huynh helped launder more than $93 million at their Vietnamese money transfer businesses in Footscray, St Albans, Bankstown and Cabramatta.

They are alleged to have fled to Vietnam in June after hearing a Vietnam Airlines pilot had been arrested for his role in the racket.

The court was told the airline has ferried more than $10.5 million overseas since July last year.

The Huynhs will reappear in July.

Source: abc.net.au


Family members jailed for laundering $16m

Family members jailed for laundering $16m from Springvale home
Beau Donelly

Four people involved in a family business that laundered more than $16 million cash from a suburban house have been jailed.

The 78-year-old boss of the money-laundering operation, Xuan Nhoung Nguyen, was sentenced to 20 months' imprisonment, but will be eligible for release after 12 months.

His daughter Teresa Thi Minh Nguyet Pham, 57, was sentenced to 14 months in prison and must serve nine months.

Nguyen's grandson-in-law, Hiep Long Phi Nguyen, 32, and Thinh Tan Truong, 50, a jeweller and business associate of the family, were both sentenced to nine months behind bars for their part in the scheme, but will eligible for release after three months.

Fairfax Media reported last week that the four dealt with cash in an "off-book" manner, covertly moving funds offshore to Vietnam on behalf of people who "deliberately sought to conceal their identity from Australian law enforcement".

The County Court heard the scheme, which was run from a money remittance company out of Nguyen's Springvale house, laundered about $16.7 million over six months in 2009 and 2010.

Prosecutor Robert Barry said Nhoung had offered to transfer clients' money overseas without the owners' details or source of the cash being recorded or reported to authorities. Clients wishing to transfer money in this way paid a higher commission.

Greg Jones, for Nhoung, told the court his client had accepted "full responsibility" for failing to meet compliance with his legal obligations and would lose his licence to operate and therefore his livelihood. Nhoung was paid about $320,000 commission, but it was found that 97 per cent of the company's transactions were recorded correctly.

All four had no prior convictions and pleaded guilty to two charges of either exporting or dealing with cash reasonably suspected of being the proceeds of crime.

In sentencing, Judge Irene Lawson said imprisonment was the only appropriate sentence due to the large sums of money involved, the quantity of transactions, each offender's specific role in the scheme and the period of time over which the offending took place.

"Money laundering threatens Australia's prosperity and undermines the integrity of the financial system and has the potential to fund criminal activities, which has the real potential to impact on community safety and wellbeing," she said.

"It can corrupt individuals and businesses as demonstrated by this offending. In sentencing you all there is a need for the court to exercise general deterrence."

Judge Lawson said harsher sentences would have been imposed were it not for their guilty pleas. She said she also took into account delays in prosecuting the charges and said the prospect of reoffending was low.

Source: theage


Asia’s Corruption Detailed in New Index

    Asia’s Corruption Detailed in New Index
This graphic details Transparency International's 2016 Corruption Perception Index for countries covered by Radio Free Asia.

By Brooks Boliek

In what looks like a race to the bottom, North Korea is ranked as the most corrupt country in Asia with the closed communist nation receiving one of the worst scores in Transparency International’s 2016 corruption index.

With a corruption score of 12, North Korea ranked 174 in the survey by the Berlin-based organization. The country was beaten out for the most corrupt nation in the index only by South Sudan and Somalia. In 2015 North Korea tied with Somalia with a corruption index of eight.

Transparency International (TI) attributed poor performance in the index to unaccountable governments that lack oversight, along with insecure and shrinking space for civil society organizations that pushes anti-corruption action to the margins in those countries.

High-profile corruption scandals, in addition to everyday corruption issues, continue to undermine public trust in government, the benefits of democracy, and the rule of law, the organization said.

“In countries with populist or autocratic leaders, we often see democracies in decline and a disturbing pattern of attempts to crack down on civil society, limit press freedom and weaken the independence of the judiciary,” explained TI Chair Jose Ugaz.

Ugaz’s description appears to apply to Cambodia, which ranked 156 with a corruption score of 21, the same corruption score the country had in 2015.

In Cambodia judicial independence is lacking, and Prime Minister Hun Sen, his family, and close associates control vast amounts of the country’s wealth.

The London-based nongovernmental agency Global Witness in its 2016 report “Hostile Takeover” detailed how Hun Sen’s family dominates the most important businesses in Cambodia where they can operate outside the law thanks to the protection of Asia’s longest-serving premier, his relatives, and associates who hold top military and government posts.

Opposition leaders and outside observers, including the U.N. special rapporteur on human rights in Cambodia, have criticized the Cambodian judicial system’s lack of independence.

Rarely do politicians of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) face charges, but the list of opposition lawmakers dragged before the courts is long and includes Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) leaders Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha, as well as other opposition lawmakers like Um Sam An and Meach Sovannara, the CNRP's media director.

Laos and Myanmar show improvement

Laos and Myanmar continued to improve their scores in 2016, as leaders in both countries have put an emphasis on fighting corruption.

But while the National League for Democracy’s (NLD) government headed by Aung San Suu Kyi has proposed action to reduce corruption, progress there has been overshadowed by the deadly violence in the Rahkine State. According to TI the fighting highlights a lack of oversight of Myanmar’s military, which allows abuses to take place.

Myanmar received a corruption score of only 28 with a country ranking of 136. Myanmar's corruption score was 22 in 2015.

In Laos, Prime Minister Thongloun Sisoulith has made fighting corruption a key policy of his administration, but Laos still scored poorly ranking 123.

Laos's corruption score of 30 showed some improvement, however, as the country’s score in 2015 was 25.

Vietnam ranked 113 in 2016, with the country’s corruption score of 33 showing a little improvement over the 31 it scored in 2015.

Vietnam has been rocked by a series of crackdowns on public protests and free speech as the country jailed activists and bloggers in 2016 as it tried to reign in dissent.

Hanoi has shown little with patience with demonstrators protesting the chemical spill from the Formosa steel plant that devastated the country’s central coast. Authorities have also thrown bloggers who have dared to challenge the government in jail and have continued their repression of Catholics in the country.

China’s ‘best’ ranking still low

China ranked as the least corrupt country in the region with a country rank of 79 and a corruption score of 40.

While the region’s largest and most powerful nation ranks the highest in the index, it’s still at the low end of the range. In 2015, China’s corruption score was 37.

In Transparency International’s index a score of zero means a country is perceived as highly corrupt, while a score of 100 means the country is perceived to be very clean.

Based on expert opinions of public sector corruption, the annual report rated Denmark and New Zealand as the least-corrupt countries, followed by Finland, Sweden, Switzerland, and Norway.

With a score of 74, The United States placed 18th, down from 16th with a score of 76 in 2015.

Denmark and New Zealand both had scores of 90, closely followed by Finland (89) and Sweden (88). Although no country is free of corruption, the countries at the top share characteristics of open government, press freedom, civil liberties and independent judicial systems.

“In too many countries, people are deprived of their most basic needs and go to bed hungry every night because of corruption, while the powerful and corrupt enjoy lavish lifestyles with impunity,” said TI Chair Ugaz.

Source: rfa.org




Vietnamese International money laundering ring

Vietnamese hotelier Thi Lan Phuong Pham a 'major player' in alleged international
Police search the Vy Vy Garden Cafe in Canley Heights on January 19 as part of an investigation into a international money laundering syndicate. Photo: NSW Police Media

Ava Benny-Morrison

A Vietnamese hotelier allegedly ran a lucrative money laundering ring that washed millions of dollars for some of NSW's biggest organised crime targets.

Thi Lan Phuong Pham cried in the dock of Waverley Local Court on Friday while her role as a "major player" in an alleged criminal syndicate was detailed following her arrest.

The 40-year-old single mother was at the centre of a lengthy Organised Crime Squad and Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission investigation for more than 12 months.

She was arrested at Sydney Airport on Thursday attempting to board a flight to Vietnam, where she and her family own or have interests in multiple luxury hotels, including at the popular Halong Bay and in Ho Chi Min City.

The south-west Sydney cafe Vy Vy Garden Cafe in Canley Heights, where Ms Pham has visited while in Australia, was raided on Thursday not long after her arrest. A Bossley Park home was also raided.

Phones, SIM cards and documents seized will be analysed by forensic accountants.
The Vy Vy Garden Cafe in Canley Heights was raided after Thi Lan Phuong Pham, 40, was arrested hours earlier at Sydney airport. Photo: NSW Police Media

It is understood one of Ms Pham's relatives, who supported her in court on Friday, is involved in the management of the cafe.

Police will allege Ms Pham, who was charged with directing activities of criminal group, came to Australia on a one year visa in 2016 before travelling back and forth between Sydney and Vietnam.

Ms Pham is accused of instructing people on how to launder money and was at the helm of an alleged syndicate that had clientele ranging from notorious bikies to Asian crime figures.

The court heard on Friday that Ms Pham recruited people to launder money and "discussed and directed" her co-accused on how to acquire, deposit and exchange the funds.

"It is not simply she is a minor player but she is in fact a major player," Magistrate Jennifer Giles said of the allegations against Ms Pham.

It will be alleged Ms Pham helped launder millions of dollars over recent years and was co-ordinating the alleged syndicate's activities from Vietnam.

Ms Giles said the case against Ms Pham involved telephone intercepts between herself and other players, including her co-accused, Van Kien Do.

"These telephone intercepts reveal her approving or not Do's methods of exchange of funds and of her approving suggestions made by Do as to how the funds could be exchanged," she said during Ms Pham's bail application.

Do was arrested on Wednesday, a day before Ms Pham tried to catch a flight back to Vietnam.

Ms Pham's barrister Frank Santisi told the court his client didn't understand the allegations and had been on her way back to Vietnam to see her children, not "take flight".

"She doesn't understand them or what they are about," he said.

Ms Pham, dressed in a sharp blue jacket and seated between two police officers in the dock, also denied knowing Do, including after she was shown a photo of herself and Do at the same function recently.

Mr Santisi said Ms Pham appeared to come from a family with substantial wealth and it sounded highly improbable she would engage in these activities.

Despite offering a surety and undertaking to report to police daily, the magistrate found Ms Pham was a risk of failing to reappear in court and of committing a serious offence.

She was refused bail and the case was adjourned to February 6.

Organised Crime Squad Detective Inspector Stuart Sweeney said the investigation highlighted the transnational nature of organised syndicates impacting NSW.

"While borders can present some investigative challenges, the ever increasing collaboration of law enforcement across the globe is showing that being outside the jurisdiction will not save you," he said.





Australia is urging the Trump administration to stay engaged in Asia

    Julie Bishop tells President Donald Trump that Asia wants 'more US leadership, not less'
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has urged President Donald Trump to remain engaged in the region.

David Wroe

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has called on Donald Trump to deepen rather than reduce US leadership in Asia in a speech that underscores Australian concern about the potential for the new President's isolationist leanings.

In a speech she was set to deliver in Los Angeles on Friday morning, Ms Bishop described the US as "the indispensible power throughout the Indo-Pacific" while also spruiking Australia's role, stressing that the heavy lifting would not be left to the US alone.

Couching the speech as a set of ideas that "we believe the new administration should consider", she urged Mr Trump to boost American engagement with the major grouping of South-East Asian countries and said he should personally attend this year's key East Asia Summit in the Philippines.
"Most nations wish to see more US leadership, not less, and have no desire to see powers other than the US calling the shots," she said, according to speech notes given to Fairfax Media.

"Australia believes that now is the time for the United States to go beyond its current engagement in Asia, to support Asia's own peace, and to capitalise on the era of opportunity that long-term US investment has already created."

Ms Bishop has also used the speech to champion Australia's history of immigration at a time when headlines in the US have been dominated by Mr Trump's swift clampdown on refugees and the building of a wall between the US and Mexico.

A leaked draft executive order from the White House reported by US newspapers on Thursday raised further questions about the Turnbull government's planned resettlement deal in which the US would take refugees held in Australia's offshore detention system. The draft order includes a four-month suspension on taking refugees and, as expected, a range of other restrictions over the longer term.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull nonetheless reiterated that he was "confident that we will maintain the arrangements" previously agreed to with the previous Obama administration.

But on Thursday night Australian time, Mr Trump said in a television interview that he would press ahead with "extreme vetting" of immigrants and it was going to be "very hard to come in".

"The world is as angry as it gets," he said. "The world is a total mess."

Ms Bishop told the US-Australia Dialogue on Co-operation in the Indo-Pacific that Australia believes that it is "essential" for the US to give "serious consideration and at the highest levels" to closer involvement with the Association of South-East Asian Nations, which is often maligned but which Ms Bishop said still has the power to positively shape China's rise.

Her robust defence of ASEAN indicates Australia is urging the Trump administration to stay engaged in Asia not by throwing its weight about but by strengthening its role as a backbone of an alliance system that maintains peace and order.

"If we seek an Asia in which mutual respect and the rule of law prevail, as we do, then we should work in the fields that ASEAN and its partners have cultivated for 60 years," she said.

It is widely felt in government circles that Australia has a significant opportunity to influence the Trump administration at a crucial time when its ongoing leadership in Asia cannot be taken for granted.

The new administration is marked by a contrasting and in some ways contradictory tapestry of views ranging from Mr Trump's "America first" rhetoric to more traditional foreign policy views in which the US maintains a carefully crafted network of alliances.

Ms Bishop, who has been cultivating links with the new administration, said it was "critical that President Trump attend" this year's East Asia Summit "as the leader of the pre-eminent strategic power in the region".

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Bà sáu Dậu chửi mất gà

    Đầu năm gà nghe bà sáu Dậu chửi mất gà

Nguyên Thạch

Nỗi hận căm của người dân Việt khi biết rằng ĐCSVN là một lũ phản bội Tổ Quốc, một lũ đang tâm BÁN NƯỚC, đầu năm đảng hãy nghe tiếng nguyền rủa của dân tôi.
    Hôm nay đầu năm Đinh Dậu, bà chửi cho bọn bây biết mặt
    Bọn lòn trôn, bọn liếm c... giặc Tàu
    Mặt của bọn bây là những cái bản mặt sò ngao
    Một lũ bá láp chuyên làm chuyện tào lao cướp giựt...

    Chúng bây chỉ là một đám giòi bọ chỉ biết chui vào hầm cứt
    Bất nhẫn vô lương không biết để đức cho đời sau
    Tại sao chúng bây cướp cả nước non mà bán đứt cho Tàu?
    Rồi đây hơn 90 triệu dân chúng tao làm sao mà sống?

    Thằng nào, con nào ăn cắp gà của bà?
    Hãy mở tai ra và mời cả ông, cả bà, cả mẹ, cả cha chúng bây ra mà nghe bà chửi
    Bà trùm chiếu, trùm mền cả dòng họ nhà chúng xong bà đánh rắm cho bọn mày ngửi
    Đêm qua bà ăn phải mắm tôm ôi nên tanh tưởi vô cùng

    Bà chửi cho chúng bây nghe để hai lỗ tai phải lùng bùng
    Nghe xong thì cả dòng họ nhà bây phải thành khùng thành dại
    Bà đánh rắm cho chúng mày ngửi xong bà bạch quần ra bà đái
    Bà đái bên phải, bà đái bên trái, bà đái thật thoải mái

    Để dòng họ nhà mày từ ông tổ, ông sơ, ông sờ, bà xẫm, già trẻ trai gái tắm nước đái của bà
    Để suốt đời sau của chúng bây, lớp thì không thể đầu thai làm người mà phải thành quỷ, thành ma
    Lớp thì bị mắc chứng tâm thần tà tà dập dập.
    Tài sản nhà bà chỉ trông nhờ vào đàn gà để sống mà tại sao chúng bây ăn cắp?

    Gà của bà là gà đẻ trứng, là gà ấp
    Chúng bây ăn cắp gà của bà về nó sẽ đẻ ra trứng giòi bọ sâu đỉa đầy ngập nhà bây
    Giòi bọ sâu đỉa sẽ chui vô đít, chui vô Hán của gia tộc chúng bây rồi sinh nở ra hàng hàng lớp lớp bầy bầy
    Để cho cả giòng họ chúng bây sẽ trở nên ngây ngây dại dại.
    Hôm nay đầu năm Mồng Một Tết, bà thắp nhang bà vái
    Bà vái chính giữa, bà vái bên phải, bà vái bên trái, bà vái chín tầng cao tục cho đến địa ngục âm ty
    Bà vái cho ma quỷ chặn chúng bây trên từng bước chúng bây đi
    Xong bà đốt vàng mả có hình những con yêu tinh về chắn nhà của chúng bây ngay trước cửa

    Những con quỷ sứ đầu trâu mặt ngựa
    Chưa hết đâu, bà còn yểm bùa bằng những con chằn lửa nhe nanh
    Chôn dưới đất nhà chúng bây để nó sẽ hành cả tộc.
    Hôm nay bà chửi cả băng đảng chúng bây, bà quyết nguyền thật độc

    Bởi bọn chúng bây là quân mất gốc đê hèn
    Bất tướng, bất tài nên chỉ chực hờ ăn cướp của dân đen
    Cướp cả đất nước mà dâng cho bọn sâu lá kèn phương Bắc

    Hôm nay đầu năm Đinh Dậu, bà chửi cho bọn bây biết mặt
    Bọn lòn trôn, bọn liếm c... giặc Tàu
    Mặt của bọn bây là những cái bản mặt sò ngao
    Một lũ bá láp chuyên làm chuyện tào lao cướp giựt...

    Bọn cướp chúng bây mới đúng là quân phản động
    Hôm nay ngày Mồng Một Tết, bà chửi cho bọn bây phải ngọng
    Lời bà rủa vào ngày đầu năm, sẽ nhằm giờ linh khiến bọn bây phải chui cống mà nghe
    Tuy chửi chưa xong nhưng hôm nay là ngày Tết nên bà phải đi cúng bánh, cúng chè

    Tiên sư cha công tằng tiên tổ một lũ đội quần què khốn nạn.
    (*)
Nguyên Thạch

(*) Bà chửi đây là chửi bọn Thái thú VC cùng bọn cuồng ngông tặc Hán.





Chửi Việt Cộng bán nước

    Chửi bọn bán nước
Ls Lê Duy San
Phỏng theo bài “Chửi mất gà”

Bớ làng trên xóm dưới, bớ láng giềng láng tỏi …. bên sau bên trước, bên ngược bên xuôi! Nước của bà hình chữ S, từ Ải Nam Quan tới mũi Cà Mâu. Trải qua 4 ngàn năm văn hiến. Tuy bà bị nô lệ một ngàn năm thằng Tầu, một trăm năm nô lệ thàng Tây, nhưng nước của bà, không những vẫn còn nguyên vẹn mà còn mở rộng xuống miền Nam cả trăm ngàn cây số vuông. Con cháu bà tuy nghèo khổ, nhưng vẫn nề nếp, gia phong. Trai không phải làm lao nô cho ngọai quốc, gái không phải làm đĩ cho ngọai bang.

Nhưng kể từ ngày thằng mất dạy tên Nguyễn Tất Thành con thằng Nguyễn Sinh Sắc trốn lên tầu Pháp làm bồi cho Tây, làm tớ cho Nga, cho Tầu, đem cái chủ nghĩa Mác Lê vô thần về nước, làm cho nước của bà bại hoại gia phong. Chúng mày, từ thằng Hồ Chí Minh, thằng Lê Duẩn, thằng Trường Chinh Đặng Xuân Khu, thằng Phạm Văn Đồng, thằng Võ Nguyên Giáp đến thằng Lê Đức Anh, thằng Nông Đức Mạnh, thằng Lê Khả Phiêu, thằng Nguyễn Tấn Dũng, thằng Nguyễn Phú Trọng, thằng Trần Đại Quang, thàng Nguyễn Văn An, thằng Phan Văn Khải, thằng Nguyễn Minh Triết, thằng Nguyễn Sinh Hùng, thằng Tô Huy Rứa v.v…đem cả đất nước bán cho Tầu. Miền bắc thì mất cả mấy chục ngàn cây số vuông. Miền Trung thì mất cả trăm ngàn cây số vuông hải phận, khiến con cháu của bà ở vùng biên giới không đất trồng trọt, sinh sống, ở vùng ven biển sống bằng nghề đánh cá không còn đất sống. Trai thì phải đi làm lao nô cho ngọai bang, gái thì phải đi làm đĩ điếm cho ngọai quốc. Thằng nào con nào, đứa ở gần mà qua, đứa ở xa mà lại, nó dang tay mặt, nó đặt tay trái, đứa nào toan tính bán thêm, thì buông thả nó ra, có đứa nào trót nhỡ bán thì hãy banh lỗ tai vạch lỗ nhĩ lên mà nghe bà chửi đây nài i i i i i …

Chém cha những đứa bán nước của bà, chiều hôm qua bà ra làm rẫy, thấy đất còn nguyên. Sáng hôm nay con bà đi làm, nó nói đất đã bị mất một phần. Hỏi ra thì chúng bay đã cưỡng chế đất của bà bán cho Tầu. Đất vẫn còn, mà bây giờ bà không có quyền sử dụng. Mày muốn sống mà ở với vợ với con mày, thì hãy mau mau tìm cách chuộc về trả cho bà. Nhược bằng mày lấp liếm, thì bà đào mả thằng tam tứ đại thằng Hồ Chi Minh, cha già của nhà mày ra. Bà khai quật bật săng thằng ngũ đại, lục đại nhà chúng mày lên bỏ vào nhà xí lấy chỗ cho trâu nó đầm, cho chó nó đái … Ới cái đám con cái thằng chết đâm, chết chém Hồ Chí Minh kia ơi, con cháu mày mà không tìm cách chuộc về trả bà, thì con cháu mày một người ăn chết một, hai người ăn chết hai, ba người ăn chết ba. Mày xuống âm phủ thì quỷ sứ rút lưỡi mày ra, thần linh đỏ mỏ rút ruột mày xuống a a a a …

Chúng mày dám dùng tiền bán nước để nuôi sống vợ con chúng mày, để ăn chơi phè phỡn thì bà rủa cho chúng mày ngóc đầu lên không được, chui đầu xuống không xong đấy các con ạ ạ ạ ạ …..

Đất nước của bà nó là núi vàng, núi bạc, chứ chúng mày cưỡng chế bán nó đi, nó về đến nhà chủ mày nó thành đống phân, đống cứt. Nó biến thành con thần nanh mỏ đỏ, nó mổ chồng con, mổ cha, mổ mẹ, mổ ông cố nội, ông cố ngọai chúng mày ra thành trăm mảnh. Bà là bà vứt xuống ao cho cá nó rỉa, rồi bà lại đem lên bờ cho chó nó tha, cho trâu bò nó liếm đấy con ạ. ạ ạ ạ ạ…

Bà rủa cho chúng mày là chúng mày ngủ giường, giường sập, chúng mày ngủ võng, võng đứt. Chúng mày thức, chúng mày cũng mơ thấy ma móc mắt chúng mày ra. Chúng mày tắm ở ao chúng mày chết chìm trong ao, chúng mày đi ra đường, chúng mày vỡ óc mà chết vì bị xe cán bẹp đầu, nát óc. Chúng mày đi trên lề đường cây khô rớt xuống gãy cổ. Chúng mày uống được ngụm nước vào mồm thì máu đỏ từ mồm chúng mày phọt ra đằng mũi, máu trắng chúng mày tuồn ra đằng tai. Chúng mày ăn miếng rau, chúng mày ói ra cứt. Chúng mày ăn uống gì, chúng mày cũng tóc tai lông lá mày rụng sạch. Bà cuộn lại thành chổi bà quét hố phân, hố xí í í í í ….

Chúng mày không mau mau tìm cách lấy lại đất, biển, bà đóng ghế 3 tháng 10 ngày, buổi sáng bà chửi, buổi tối bà chửi, buổi trưa bà hú, ban đêm bà nguyền, bà rủa cho con cháu chúng mày chết đường, chết chợ, chết tan thây, nát óc, cho Thần Trùng đến rút từng khúc ruột của cha ông, vợ con nhà mày ra a a a a….

Bà hú 3 hồn, 7 vía những thằng Hồ Chí Minh, thằng Phạm Văn Đồng, thằng Trường Chinh, Lê Duẩn, Nguyễn Tấn Dũng, Nông Đức Mạnh, Nguyễn Phú Trọng, Trần Đại Quang.v.v…và bè lũ Việt gian bán nước, dâng biển cho Tầu. Bà gọi ông cầm cờ xanh đứng đầu ngõ, ông cầm cờ đỏ đứng sau nhà, ông cầm cờ vàng bên hữu, ông cầm cờ trắng bên tả yểm cho vợ con nhà chúng mày đẻ con đẻ ngược, con ra thì không lỗ đít, cháu ra thì không lỗ tai vì đã dám ăn lấy đất của bà bán cho Tầu Cộng à à à à à …..

À, mày tưởng mày là tiến sĩ toán lý mà bà không dám chơi toán học với mày à. Bây giờ bà chửi từ số học lên tích phân, xuống đại số rồi sang hình học cho mày nghe e e e e ……

Nếu gọi bố chúng mày là A, mẹ chúng mày là B, mày là C, bà lấy A cộng B cộng C, cho vào ngoặc bà khai căn, bà vi tích phân cả họ hàng chúng mày lên thành ma, thành qủy ...ên..ên..ên..

Chúng mày tưởng nuốt được số tiền bán đất, bán biển mà quan thày chúng mà trả cho, là chúng mày có thể yên ổn mà chơi trò “cộng trừ âm dương” trên giường với nhau à….. Bà là trị cho tuyệt đối hết cả họ chín đời nhà chúng mày, cho chúng mày biết thế nào là “vô nghiệm”, cho chúng mày hiểu thế nào là vô sinh, không đẻ, không duy trì được nòi giống nữa thì thôi… Bà sẽ nguyền rủa cho chúng mày đời đời chìm đắm trong “âm vô cùng”, sẽ gặp tai ương đến “dương vô tận”, cho chúng mày chết rục trong địa ngục, cho chúng mày tù tội đến “tối đa” của sự “vô hạn” tối tăm ăm ăm ăm ăm …

Tiên sư cha nhà chúng mày, chúng mày tưởng ngày nào mày cũng rình mò “tiệm cận” hàng rào nhà bà là bà không biết đấy à? Bà là bà “giả thiết” chúng mày ăn cướp hơn hai chục ngàn cây số vuông ở miền Bắc đem dâng cho quan thầy Tầu phù lấy tiền về để chúng mày vỗ béo để nhồi “đường cong” cho con vợ mày, à… à… chúng mày vẽ nữa đi, chúng mày tô nữa đi. Chúng mày tô, mày vẽ, mày nhồi cho đến khi “đường cong” của con vợ chúng mày nó nứt toác, nó gẫy khúc ra, chọc xiên chọc xẹo đi, rồi đi lên đi xuống nữa vào, rồi có ngày con vợ chúng mày sẽ hạ “vuông góc” một mạch thẳng xuống “góc tù..ù ù ù…

Tiên sư cha chúng mày, hỡi thằng Hồ Chí Minh, thằng Nguyễn Tấn Dũng, thằng Nông Đức Mạnh, thằng Trương Tấn Sang, thằng Nguyễn Văn An, thằng Nguyễn Phú Trọng, thằng Trần Đại Quang, thằng Nguyễn Minh Triết, thằng Trần Đức Lương, thằng Nguyễn sinh Hùng, thằng Tô Huy Rứa …ơi, hãy nghe những lời bà chửi cho thấm. Bà nguyền cho cả nhà, cả họ chúng bay chết sầu, chết thảm, chết non, chết yểu, chết nhục, chết nhã, chết không tòan thây, chết không còn đầu, chết mất cả “tự do”.
    “Hôm nay là ngày Tết,
    Bà chúc chúng mày suốt năm gặp nạn,
    Ngày mai bà sẽ chúc chúng mày chết đâm, chết chém.
    Bà chúc con cháu cho chúng mày hóa điên, hóa rồ
    Bà rủa suốt năm, suốt tháng liên miên không ngừng.
    Bây giờ bà mệt quá chừng,
    Bà về cơm nước, cúng bái tổ tiên…
    Muốn sống thì nhả hết ra,
    Kéo nhau lên Núi Nùng,
    Lạy bà hai lạy, bà tha chết cho chúng mày….ày ày ày….”

    Bà Mẹ Việt Nam”
LS.Lê Duy San

Lời Nguyền rủa:
  • Việt Cộng chết hết và chết một cách thảm khốc.
  •  Thân Cộng (ăn cơm quốc gia thờ ma Cộng sản), VGCS chết hết và chết một cách thảm thương.
  •  Những kẻ đánh phá hoặc mạ lỵ những ngưòi chống Cộng để làm lợi cho Việt Cộng hay để gây chia rẽ hàng ngũ người Việt Quốc Gia, cũng chết hết và chết một cách thảm hại.
  • Những đứa quên tư cách tỵ nạn Cộng Sản Việt Nam, những kẻ luồn trôn Việt Cộng, những tên việt kiều về ăn chơi nuôi sống Việt Cộng, đi máy bay sẽ nổ, đi tàu thì tàu chìm, đi bất cứ bằng phương tiện nào, sẽ chết và chết một cách thảm hại, chết tan xương nát thịt.