Saturday, December 28, 2013

UMNO Bloggers, Sekarang Kita Mampus : Wall Street Greed / Malaysian Money – EXPOSE!

This is 8.0 on the Richter. 

Even if 10% of this report is true, UMNO akan bungkus, BN akan mampus. 

US100.0 Million has been spent by Rosmah's son and the PM's step son to make a movie that has been rated slightly below 'X' in the US.

Sarawak Report carries this mindboggling story. At the centre, side, middle, front and back are Rosmah's son, Rosmah's son's good friend Fei Low and of course, last but not least Rosmah herself. 

I just want to know, did Rosmah really say that, "every Malaysian school child should be shown the newly released Leonardo di Caprio film, The Wolf of Wall Street, in order to warn them against greed and immorality" ??    Can the varnishers help to clear this up? 

Because the story is that The Wolf of Wall Street has been X - rated because it features explicit  scenes of debauchery :


You can go to this website here and read that the movie :   'Wolf of Wall Street' first cut was rated Nc-17 over sexual content. Go ahead, check it out yourself.

Without further ado the Sarawak Report story is found here.   A friend warned me that there must be spin in the story as well. So I will just reproduce some pictures from Sarawak Report. 

A picture is worth a thousand words. And if the pictures are not fakes, they tell plenty of stories. 

 Above : This is Fei Low popping champagne. American Press lists him 
as a billionaire at 28 years old.

Below : Extreme right Fei Low, centre Gwai Loh, extreme left Rosmah's son lor, 
at the launch nite of the US100 Million (RM330 Million movie) 'The Wolf of Wall Street
financed by Rosmah's son.


Below : Family foto.  Rosmah and kids. Extreme left 'banker' son 
turned movie maker.

Below : Besides splurging US$100 Million (RM330M) on the movie, 
the son also bought a condo in NY for US33.5M. Thats RM110.0 M


 Below : The son's short "banking career" where he 
ostensibly made his money. "Investment Advisor"? Wolf Of Wall Street pun kalah.


Here is an excerpt :

The recent LA Times article continues:
“Every movie is different,” said Aziz, 37, who is the son of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak. “We are very flexible in the model we [can] pursue.”
Red Granite raises money from a pool of undisclosed investors in the Middle East and Asia,and finances its movies on a one-off basis. The company is able to greenlight a picture without a distribution deal in place. But because it doesn’t have a fund it can tap, Red Granite must convince its investors that an individual project is worth the risk, rather than having the comfort of money to underwrite an entire slate.”
It is surely interesting for Malaysians to know that the PM’s step-son has such access to enormous funds for such enormous risks. There is talk in KL that a number of Malaysian companies are among those who have been encouraged to put money into Wolf of Wall Street. One can only speculate as to why they might have felt encouraged to do so.  

Meanwhile, it also seems valid to ask whether the peculiar financial background of Aziz and Rosmah’s close friend, the 28 year old Jho Low (described as a “billionaire” in a number of American news reports), be linked to this financial muscle?"

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