Indonesia has a lot of real wealth: besides the natural resources of land & sea, it has a population that knows how to live with very little (compared to Americans, who can be poor even with lots of material possessions and who think work = jobs). The people in Indonesia's large informal sector are resourceful and have strong social institutions (even though some of them sound a little batty sometimes). Indonesians are growing up politically very fast -- they just need to overcome the biggest obstacle to full economic maturity, which is corruption. That will surely come.
Does this sound naive?
Best wishes,
Diana
2009/3/27 Laraslia <laraslia@yahoo.com>
Kalau sy yg disuruh milih, gak ada yg cocok pilihannya Cok. Karena gak ada yang bisa prediksi apa yang terjadi esok. Ahli nujum aja masih bisa mleset. Terlebih lagi, sekarang ini apa yang tampak dipermukaan belum tentu sama dgn kondisi asli nya.
Tidak selamanya yang diatas akan bertahan diatas, suatu saat akan jatuh juga.
(Hehehe..otak atik ngasal sambil nunggu wangsit dari yang ahlinya)----- Dikirim menggunakan telepon selular Sony Ericsson
---- Original message ----
From: Cokorda Raka Angga Jananuraga <rakabali78@yahoo.com>
Sent: 27 Mar 2009 01:45 +00:00
To: <bali-bali@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [bali-bali] Are we in dipshyaite?
Hi,
Could anybody competent in this field decipher this for me?
http://www.indonesiamatters.com/4307/currency-exchange-rate
Simple. My question: is Indonesia going to survive the turmoil, or not?
(a) Yes.
(b) No.
Thanks,
Raka
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