Link graphic for a KJB version Bible Verse that will be automatically updated when we update it from time to time
">


Articles, Opinions & Views

Photobucket
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
 
Fighting Seventh
The Fighting Rangers
On War, Politics
and Burning Issues
Profile
Miscellaneous

American Thinker
American
Newspapers Online

Arab News
Asia News
Asia Times
Assyrian News
BBC News
Breitbart News
British and
International
Newspapers Online

CAMERA
CBS News
City Journal
CNN
Christian Solidarity
International

Daily Caller
Daily Mail
DAP Malaysia
Dawn
Drudge Report
Dutch News
Faith Freedom
Ali Sina

Foreign Affairs
Forward
Fox News
Google News
Guardian
Haaretz
Harakah Daily
English

Herald Malaysia
Hurriyet Turkey
History of Jihad
Independent
Indian Newspapers
Online

Inspire Magazine
IPOH Echo
International
Herald Tribune

Jerusalem Newswire
Jihad Watch
Local-
French News
In English)

London Times
Malaysiakini

Malaysian Insider
Malaysia
Centre for Policy
Initiatives

Free Malaysia Today
Malaysia Chronicle
Malaysia
-Sarawak Report

MEMRI TV
Middle East
Forum

Mission Network
News

MSNBC News
National Review
NEWSMAX
New York Post
New York Times
Nut Graph
Opinion Journal
Right Wing News
Spiegel
Star Online

Straits Times

Sun Malaysia
Sydney
Morning Herald

Telegraph
The Malay Mail
The Rebel Media
The Sun (UK)
Time
Times of India
Town Hall
US News
World Report

USA Today
VBS TV
Washington Post
Washington Times
World Net Daily
World
Watch Monitor

Yahoo News
Ynet News



No Atheists
In A Foxhole

Rudyard Kipling

" “When you're left wounded on
Afganistan's plains and

the women come out to cut up what remains,
Just roll to your rifle

and blow out your brains,
And go to your God like a soldier”

Proud To Have
Served With Warriors

Glorious
Malaysian Food
Foreign Bloggers
&
Other Stuff
Gaming

Major D Swami
WITH Lt Col Ivan Lee
Click Here

Lt Col Ivan Lee
you want him with
you in a firefight!!!!

Dying Warrior
xxxxxx
Condors-Infantry
Fighting Vehicles
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Camp
Bujang Senang
Click Here
xxxxxxxx
The A Team
Click Here
xxxxxxxx
Major General
Toh Choon Siang
Click here
Lieutenant General
Stephen Mundaw
Click Here
With His
Dying Breath
Killed in Battle
In Death
Last Thoughts
Before Battle
Whilst There Is
Life, There Is Fight

Not Done In Yet!!

Iban Trackers
XXXXXXXX
Facts On RoP
Hutang Negara
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Teoh Beng Hock tragedy: How to get away with murder By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Malaysiakini : This coming from the Royal Malaysia Police, which has had no trouble interviewing witnesses or compelling them to come forward and of course claimed that the family of Beng Hock, the victim, was uncooperative.

The attorney-general’s brief statement, unlike what the courts concluded, that “the police investigations into Beng Hock’s death did not find sufficient evidence to prove wrongdoing by any individuals”, is a rubber stamp on the narratives that the state has been pushing for 15 years and enables cretins to claim that there is no evidence, hence no crime.

As reported in the press, the family’s lawyer wondered if this investigation, which by the way in no way reflects the intent of the court, was done merely as a formality or more accurately in the minds of rational citizens a legal legerdemain to make it seem that the police was complying with the ruling of the court.

Indeed, by never investigating this crime as a murder, the state enables the narratives that this was a suicide. By never investigating this crime as a murder, the state denies the family justice by never acknowledging the crime and gives credence to cretins who delight in claiming that this was a suicide.

I often wonder how these “persons” live with themselves? Are they going about their duties to the state and carrying out whatever religious obligations as though they did nothing sinful? I wonder what they think when they read in the press how Beng Hock’s family is grimly pursuing justice for their murdered son.

Who was there that night?

For instance, when Beng Hock’s sister Lee Lan said at the 2014 verdict: “Now it is clear the court, in its final decision, says that the death is caused by unlawful acts of a person or persons, including the MACC.

“His death is not due to suicide. We want the IGP (inspector-general of police) and AG (attorney-general) to reopen investigations into this case and charge those responsible.” – I wonder if the perpetrators were worried that the state would do something?

Were they fearful when Pakatan Harapan took over with the DAP’s 40 MPs in tow, that they might finally face a reckoning? Or were they secure that they got away with homicide? Did they realise they were untouchable when it came to justice?

And that’s the problem, right? The state security apparatus obviously does not care what the courts rule. They certainly do not care about being seen as mendacious or duplicitous or even murderous, as the numerous deaths in custody demonstrate.

This is what the prime minister said when he met with the family of Beng Hock: “I have heard the grievances and several requests from the family. I have been closely following this case for a long time and deeply understand the sorrow and suffering of the family who have long been fighting for justice for the deceased.

“I affirm the government’s position that it agrees for the police to reopen the investigation into the death of the late Beng Hock.”

You have to wonder, why the police had trouble finding witnesses when the key question posed by the Court of Appeal verdict and articulated by Teoh Beng Hock Association for Democratic Advancement (TBH-ADA) chairperson Ng Yap Hwa was, “They want the police to shift their attention to the MACC officers who were present at the Selangor office on the night Beng Hock died, as these individuals are the most suspicious.”

This is not a high-tech case. Indeed, this is not even a complicated case. Successive governments have created this narrative that any investigation into the death of Beng Hock is a complex, arduous process.

In fact, why was the state security apparatus even harassing Beng Hock’s family about his state of mind when the court had already ruled that the death was caused by a person or persons unknown?

Indeed, if the police followed the ruling, all they would have to do is investigate those individuals who were there the night Beng Hock was murdered. But here is the thing. Politicians are hoping that the passage of time dulls the feelings of outrage. They want the rakyat to forget or, worse, believe that this is a communal issue.

Lee Lan lamented that we seem to be trapped in a BN-era rule and said, “The same MACC remains unaccountable. The same police force refuses to investigate the MACC. The same opaque conclusions are drawn, and the same murderers walk free.”

This, of course, is an indictment of this unity government, the brief Harapan regime, the brief Perikatan Nasional regime, but more importantly, the same political players who continue to enable the people who are responsible for Beng Hock’s death.

Death of a DAP comrade

TBH-ADA said it “believes that DAP leaders should not hide behind the excuse of cabinet collective responsibility without taking action”.

Two minor DAP MPs have made noise, but the big guns in the party are silent on the death of their comrade. Former party secretary-general Lim Guan Eng, who used Beng Hock’s death as a political talking point for years, is too busy squabbling with the current chief minister of Penang. Meanwhile, the DAP’s big cheese would most probably remind everyone that cool heads prevail or some such nonsense.

And this is the most shocking part. All those MPs who in the past made use of the death of Beng Hock have not said a word. Can you imagine the message this sends to cretins like Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh and the rabid, far-right, theocratic state-in-waiting?

In fact, they would say, unlike them, the DAP does not even care about the death of their comrade, much less someone from their community. Online trolls rejoice in the fact that the non-Malays will continue supporting DAP even though their political leaders do nothing.

Gerakan is on point when it reminds everyone that DAP used this issue for years, but they are part of a virulent Malay uber alles coalition, which, in terms of outcome, amounts to the same as this coalition government.

But what is shocking and unnerving is when a sister of a slain citizen said, “Under Anwar’s ‘Madani Malaysia’ slogan, will the government stand with the officials who killed a civilian, or with the victim’s family seeking truth and justice? The people are watching closely.”

But are the people watching closely? It certainly does not seem that way. Here is a family who believes that officials within the government murdered their son, and this was confirmed by the courts. They commiserate with the prime minister of this country, and what they get is no further action.

Imagine if this were your brother, father, or loved one. Could you move on?

Of course this is about accountability and it is a two way street. We cannot really blame political parties for not holding the state accountable because we the rakyat do not hold political parties accountable.

And this is how they get away with murder.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 8:54 PM   0 comments
What does Rafizi want PKR to be? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Thursday, May 22, 2025

Malaysiakini : And the embattled deputy president makes sense because not only has Rafizi, over the course of his career in PKR, involved himself in various palace intrigues for the benefit of Anwar, the old maverick has publicly stated that Rafizi was rude or some such nonsense.

Frustration with unclear reform agenda

To be honest, everything about this federal government must irk the Pandan MP.

Rafizi, over the years, has made it clear what he thinks of big tent strategies when it comes to winning elections.

Keep in mind the last time in 2022 when Rafizi was vying for the number two spot in PKR, he made it clear that he thought this type of big tent strategy for Malay support was madness:

“Although there are no signs that this ‘big tent’ approach will work, it appears to be the only option considered by Pakatan Harapan’s entire leadership.

“It is as though they have run out of ideas to regain public confidence.”

Here is the thing. I like Rafizi’s bull-in-the-china-shop style of politics. Former US ambassador and Umno big chief Nazri Aziz has the same style. But I do not know what Rafizi wants PKR to be.

Indeed, his detractors have called on him to talk about issues, but I suppose Rafizi would argue that what PKR is, or what it has become, is the issue. Still, I would like to know what the incumbent deputy president wants PKR to be.

Rafizi says less than 30 percent of the Malay polity backs PKR and that the coalition is bleeding non-Malay support. The question is what he thinks are the strategies needed to address these issues.

He also said, “Everyone wants to show Anwar, ‘Datuk Seri, you are great, everything is good’.”

PKR supporters

Ok, has anyone told the prime minister that the reason why he is losing non-Malay support is because of all the Malay uber alles things he’s doing, which antagonise the base that put him in power?

Has anyone told him that Umno is running riot with its Youth chief, Dr Akmal Saleh, defining the racial and religious narrative of this government that makes Anwar look weak to the Malays?

More people believe that the prime minister views PKR as a placeholder for Umno than that Harapan wants to carry out reforms.

And keep in mind that this bodek (apple polisher) culture has got Rafizi into trouble with the Big Cheese of PKR before. Three years ago, Rafizi warned of a bodek culture that was seeping through PKR.

“What is important for the party and the new leadership is not really to try to physically ‘bodek’ Anwar or defend Anwar. Anwar Ibrahim is Anwar Ibrahim, he doesn’t need to be defended.

“What we need to do is to appeal to the people and try to win again,” Rafizi said.

And how did Anwar respond?

“He knows his focus, his role. He is no longer Rafizi di pinggiran (on the sideline).

“The person you were talking about just now is Rafizi di pinggiran. Today’s Rafizi is in the party’s top leadership.”

Internal dysfunction, uncertain goals

And it is funny because Nurul Izzah talked about the youth vote and yes, the prime minister in the past has acknowledged that he is not attracting the youth vote as before - “Of course, I do not have the strength to attract youth’s support, unlike 40 years ago.”

But here is the thing. What is PKR offering to youths that is different from what Perikatan Nasional is offering?

Rafizi talks about a luxury culture seeping into PKR. He talks about how new members are only there for the positions and perks. But here is the thing. All this happened under Anwar’s watch.

PKR members

Perhaps if Rafizi had support, we would not have all these opportunists infecting the party. Honestly, all those reformasi stalwarts who were claiming that Anwar had changed were correct, but unfortunately, they were shouted down.

Rafizi said, “Over the years, Anwar has been given the power as the party president to allow any new party member to contest in an election despite not meeting the one-year minimum requirement, and Rafizi has publicly said he wants to end this power.

The question is, how much sway do these opportunists have over the party and over the prime minister?

What is PKR fighting for?

What is PKR really fighting for? PKR is now in the position to offer the bounties of government to the flotsam and jetsam of the Malay political establishment. People are essentially fighting over positions in a moribund political party, which may very well be wiped out in the next general election.

Sure, they may cling on to power in various states, but the reality is that if by now PKR has not got a grip on what it is and what it hopes to achieve, this may very well be the death knell of the party.

And haven’t we all heard this before? Anwar and his second-in-command sniping behind the scenes before it becomes public?

PKR supporters and their proxies in the media have to take sides, while the situation in the country gets worse.

This, in turn, creates the optics that, as the “Malay” vote-getter in Harapan, PKR is failing miserably, which then allows detractors to wallow in the kind of racism, especially on social media, which feeds into the narratives of the Malay uber alles parties.

Maybe Rafizi has defined what PKR is or has become, three years ago when he said this - “This whole idea that you bring someone to the top that he becomes a messiah, we have seen this for decades, and that is the reason we are in trouble now.”

By his speeches, Rafizi has defined this fight as one between himself and Anwar, with Nurul Izzah as a proxy for the latter. It remains to be seen even if Rafizi wins, what kind of PKR he would be leading.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 8:46 AM   0 comments
Madani vs P Ramasamy By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Sunday, May 18, 2025

Malaysiakini : News of the charges against Ramasamy has brought out the schadenfreude (malicious glee) of some sycophantic DAP supporters, who believe he betrayed the party because he was rejected by the mandarins in power.

This is to be expected, but of course, the idea of reforms, which was supposed to be the raison d’être of DAP and Pakatan Harapan, has been tossed aside in favour of replicating BN-era politics and policies.

I suspect the reason why there is so much vitriol against Ramasamy is because, when he left DAP, he has been saying what many non-Malays believe or, more importantly, feel about politics in this country.

Those of us who knew that the political parties promising reform were merely gaslighting the base got the proof we needed, while those who still wanted to believe in reform were angry that someone who was part of the system was now turning against it for supposedly selfish reasons.

A system of goodies

Indian political operatives are told to be grateful for whatever positions they achieve in DAP. They are reminded by the base that the only reason they are there is because they were voted in by the Chinese community.

Former Batu Kawan MP Kasthuri Patto

You can observe this on news sites and social media. In fact, when Ramasamy left DAP for various reasons - not all of which had to do with the “Indian” community - former Batu Kawan MP Kasthuri Patto said this: “For 15 years, he enjoyed the power, privilege and perks that came with the job and most importantly because of DAP.”

This is not a good line of attack because it exposes the reality that political operatives benefit from a system of goodies and that their effort and drive in politics are geared towards sustaining this position of privilege instead of serving the rakyat.

Non-Malay political operatives cannibalise each other for the benefit of maintaining a place on the Malay uber alles table instead of securing a place under the Malaysian sun, which is the social contract of Malaysian political life.

To go after Ramasamy in such an overt manner means what he’s saying is gaining traction. After all, the Malay uber alles types really do not care what he says or does, because he’s just ammo for them against Harapan.

But for the Harapan component of this government, Ramasamy, even though he speaks of the Indian community, is shining a spotlight on the failures of the coalition to live up to its secular and democratic values.

The fact that he was part of the system means he knows how he helped the system fail and how to course correct it, but of course all this is lost on those DAP supporters who believe that either DAP/Harapan can do no wrong or that voting for DAP/Harapan is the only alternative to the green wave.

Frivolous charges, political persecution

What Madani pinned on Ramasamy is extremely suspect. Ramasamy’s lawyer, as reported in the press, said the Penang Hindu Endowments Board (PHEB)’s accounts were audited yearly by the auditor-general and were given clean certificates.

Former DAP MP for Klang Charles Santiago

He wondered why it took so many years for these “red flags” to be detected. “These charges are frivolous,” he said.

Charles Santiago, a loyal DAP soldier, reminded the peanut gallery, “The allegations levelled against Ramasamy were nothing new and had been brought to MACC’s attention previously.”

This should make any rational Malaysian wonder how much DAP is complicit in this alleged political persecution. Ramasamy, as reported in the press, pointed out that PHEB’s decisions were made collectively by the board. “Every payment had the board’s approval. I’m not the only signatory,” he said.

All of this is made worse by the fact that MACC is probably one of the most untrusted public institutions in this country. Even PKR vice-president Nurul Izzah Anwar, daughter of the current prime minister and a step away from power, said the contract extension of MACC head honcho Azam Baki was unwelcome.

“The party (PKR) needs to stand for reforms - and we require the support of the rakyat and our members to do this. We ask brave and courageous civil servants and personalities to rise to the occasion,” she said.

There is really no genuine reason to believe that either Nurul Izzah or this government wants to reform the MACC. It has come to a point where nobody is even pretending anymore. This is all about who holds on to power, and the non-Malays are merely the vote bank of a coalition which knows it is imploding.

Going after Ramasamy merely gives him a louder platform and the relevancy he needs to keep stoking agitations in the Indian, but more importantly, the non-Malay community. However, I doubt that the non-Malay community, which is the base of Harapan, is going to abandon the coalition.

Ramasamy, meanwhile, is taking this opportunity to grab the spotlight on what he considers a reckoning of the system he served for decades, but as an opportunity to gather more to his banner.

Speaking to reporters after his first day in court, he said, “Charging me (in court) is actually a blessing because I think Urimai is going to be more popular.”

This remains to be seen.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 12:21 PM   0 comments
Pamela Ling kidnapping devolves into a Pastor Koh tragedy By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, May 12, 2025

Malaysiakini : The men were garbed in police vests. We know that there may have been other individuals in a third car from the witness report.

So, in other words, we are dealing with an organised group of people who were confident that the symbols of authority they wore would ensure compliance and were using trade craft that the state security apparatus uses, and they abducted her not in some secluded place but on her way to the MACC.

How did they know she was going to the MACC? Obviously, Ling was under some sort of surveillance but by whom? Here is a woman missing for a month on her way to the MACC and let us face facts: a member of the plutocrat class and the cabinet has not been briefed on the latest developments?

Remember Pastor Koh?

We know that a similar kind of tradecraft was used in the disappearance of Pastor Raymond Koh. We know that Suhakam has classified the kidnapping as an enforced disappearance and has laid the blame squarely on the state security apparatus.

But most importantly, we know that the political class has done absolutely nothing about this.

Pastor Raymond Koh and Amri Che Mat

Former MACC chief Dzulkifli Ahmad claimed publicly that - "The sequence of events in Ling's case, if accurate, calls into question the procedural integrity and legality of the investigation process.”

Now, forget about what we know of the former MACC chief but focus on what he said about the procedure and legality of the MACC on what it did in this case.

Only in the Madani era would the cabinet not be briefed on the disappearance of a woman being investigated by the MACC, who was taken on her way to the MACC.

Indeed, as former deputy law minister Hanipa Maidin wrote – “The fact also demonstrates that just two days before the disappearance, Ling had filed a judicial review application in the High Court of Malaya challenging the actions of the graft busters.”

Former deputy law minister Hanipa Maidin

In any functional democracy, when the lawyers of a kidnapped person accuse the state security apparatus of malfeasance, political operatives would be exploiting the issues and demanding that the relevant agencies be investigated.

The victims’ families would be surrounded by a gaggle of political operatives hoping the spotlight not only shines on them, but also that any investigation into government institutions not only demonstrates the integrity of the institutions but the political process as well.

What is happening here? Absolutely nothing. PSM had to wonder why this kidnapping only saw the light of day after a month and the family’s lawyers rightly pointed out that they were hoping that the state security apparatus would inform them of any developments or that they did not want to impede the investigation in any way.

Tragically, because of the way she was kidnapped, this may have given more time to the abductors.

Already, the narrative of “rogue cops” is being tested. Remember in the cases of Koh and Amri Che Mat, Zamri Yahya, a member of the Home Ministry's Special Task Force (STF) claimed (in his personal opinion, of course) - “(The STF) Found that the incident behind Amri and Koh may have been caused by the actions directly or indirectly of irresponsible rogue police officers who acted on their own individually or in a group

“They acted on their own accord, together with outside religious groups. However, this is only my view.”

Spinning narratives

Kuala Lumpur police chief Rusdi Isa said that new leads were discovered by the police but here is the thing, this press conference was only being held because this news is public.

What were the police doing for a whole month? Again, all these narratives are being spun. That there were eight kidnappers, that only two wore police vests and that there were five cars etc.

Mind you, the police have not shown the public any evidence to support these statements because they claim they do not want to jeopardise their investigations.

Kuala Lumpur police chief Rusdi Isa

If you look at press conferences in other functional democracies, they want the public to know as much as possible without jeopardising the investigations.

In a case where the state security apparatus' credibility is in question, the police forces in functional democracies are even more transparent.

Keep in mind Rusdi even entertained the idea that the victim could have staged the kidnapping. Remember in Koh’s case, how the state security apparatus attempted to imply that Koh had links to underworld crime elements?

We can easily dismiss that these were rogue cops working on their own in Ling’s disappearance because what would have been their purpose for kidnapping her?

Operatives from the state security apparatus do not simply go around kidnapping citizens, and there are always reasons, either legal or extrajudicial, for their actions.

No ransom demand

Indeed, the family has received no ransom demands. No proof of life. And this is how it starts. It started like this with the Koh’s case. It started like this with the Amri’s case.

It started like this with Ruth Sipue’s case. In all these cases, the state security apparatus has come under scrutiny and decried that they are being demonised.

Imagine if the family had gone public immediately instead of trusting institutions meant to protect and serve them?

You have to ask yourself if criminals are going around masquerading as cops, and this is not the first time this has happened, why is the state so blasé about it?

Why is the state not hunting down these perpetrators? They would view these people as a threat to national security. Why doesn’t the state view them as a threat to national security?

A threat to national security is something that cannot be controlled, right?

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 10:00 AM   0 comments
The tragicomedy of Parti Keluarga Rakyat By Mariam Mokhtar
Friday, May 09, 2025

Malaysiakini : Anwar dismissed the allegation of nepotism and said, “Nepotism is where (a family member) is given a position to abuse power, enrich themselves, obtain contracts, and get paid a huge sum.”

Does Anwar think we are daft? When relatives are given special positions, including within political parties, they can wield enormous influence, and few people dare challenge them because of the blood ties.

They are in an extremely powerful position, but are not accountable to the public.

Malaysians were not convinced by Anwar’s definition of nepotism, and the public backlash prompted Nurul Izzah’s removal.

However, it was very concerning when she kept popping up in overseas locations whenever her father was present for a conference or summit. When quizzed, Anwar’s aides would say her expenses had been paid for by NGOs.

When these politicians were in the opposition, they would have cried out, “nepotism”; but as the ruling party, their aides will come to the rescue with daft comments like “the public should not question the PM’s decision”.

Propaganda overdrive

Towards the end of April 2025, Nurul Izzah suddenly declared that Reformasi was not dead, and she urged Malaysians to be patient because reforms take time.

It felt strange that reformasi had been brought up for no apparent reason, but now we know why.

At around the same time, many negative newspaper reports were circulating about PKR deputy president Rafizi Ramli’s absence in the cabinet, his extended leave, and his alleged resignation.

Even Bersatu Youth joined in the chorus, questioning Rafizi's absence.

Rafizi Ramli

So, was it a coincidence that a week later, intense lobbying started for Nurul Izzah to vie for the deputy president’s post in PKR?

PKR vice-president Shamsul Iskandar Akin, who is also PKR Hang Tuah Jaya chief, and other Malacca division chiefs openly declared their support for Nurul Izzah to challenge Rafizi.

Shamsul hailed his boss’ daughter as someone who is “capable of advancing reformist values, driving change, and translating the people’s aspirations more effectively”.

Really? Didn't her electorate reject her in Permatang Pauh? What are her notable achievements besides spearheading the movement to free her father from prison?

What has she done to advance women’s causes? What has she done to stimulate change? What has she done to ban child marriages or polygamy, or urge the education minister to introduce sex education in schools, or to help single mothers who have been abandoned by their polygamous former husbands?

With Nurul Izzah gaining increasing support for the deputy presidency, Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil denied the charge of nepotism.

Nurul Izzah Anwar

He, like others in PKR, was confident of her capabilities, her integrity as a future leader of PKR, and her “high diplomacy to unite party members”.

The PKR Women deputy chief, Faizah Ariffin, voiced support for Nurul Izzah because “no woman has occupied the position before”. Is that it?

Pasar Gudang MP Hasan Abdul Karim claimed that he opposed nepotism, but said that Nurul Izzah was an ideal candidate for the post as she has been involved in PKR’s struggle since she was 18. Seriously?

Slippery slope of nepotism

None of these people appear to listen to the rakyat, who understand that with nepotism, the seeds of mistrust will be sown among the rakyat.

Nepotism goes against democratic principles and diminishes equal opportunities. Nepotism discourages highly qualified and more experienced contenders from participating.

Posts that are filled with people with blood ties instead of merit will eventually lead to inefficiency, potential conflict of interest, possible abuse of power, probable misuse of funds, and discrimination.

We’ve seen firsthand with Malaysian political dynasties that family members occupy important positions, and family businesses (and cronies) often “win” lucrative contracts.

Anwar has been a huge disappointment for Malaysians who supported change. PKR is no longer seen as a party which champions justice and equal rights. PKR behaves more like Parti Keluarga Rakyat. Mother, father, daughter.

The weakest link in the Madani administration is PKR, with its never-ending internal conflicts, personality clashes, power struggles, and the sidelining of potential young leaders.

Malaysians are fed up with playing family charades.

Perhaps, Nurul Izzah is being groomed to be the prime minister. Her qualification? Being Anwar's daughter.

Perhaps Rafizi should challenge Anwar for the top post.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 2:54 PM   0 comments
Does Peninsular Malaysia belong exclusively to the Malays? By Ranjit Singh Malhi
Thursday, May 08, 2025

The real indigenous people of Malaysia

Malaysiakini
: Peninsular Malaysia’s formation as an independent nation in 1957 was built upon the principles of equality, justice, and shared citizenship. The Federal Constitution, our supreme law, guarantees full citizenship and equal rights to all citizens regardless of race or religion. While Article 153 acknowledges the special position of the Malays, it also affirms the principles of equality before the law and fundamental liberties for all.

These constitutional provisions were never intended to create a racially exclusive state but rather to ensure harmony and justice in a diverse society.

Significantly, the Federal Constitution does not confer territorial ownership or political superiority to any one ethnic group. The Reid Commission Report of 1957, which laid the foundation for our Constitution, emphasized the importance of a common nationality and equal rights for all. It envisioned a unified Malaya in which every citizen – Malay, Chinese, Indian, or others – would not be made to feel like a foreigner or ‘pendatang’ in his or her own country.

‘A country for all’

Equally important, the Reid Commission regarded Malay privileges as transitional – not permanent – and firmly rejected institutionalised racial discrimination. This inclusive vision was endorsed by the then Malay Rulers, the British government, and the Alliance Party (Umno, MCA, MIC), reflecting a common aspiration to build a plural, united Malaya.

Our beloved “Bapa Kemerdekaan”, Tunku Abdul Rahman, proclaimed in 1957: “This is a country for all of us… not just for one race.” The granting of citizenship to non-Malays was part of a historic inter-ethnic bargain, built upon mutual respect, shared sacrifice, and national unity – not ethnic supremacy.

To now claim that only Malays “own” Peninsular Malaysia is to betray the Merdeka spirit, distort our Constitution, and ignore the contributions and sacrifices of generations of non-Malay citizens. Malaya was established as a multi-ethnic nation in which all citizens have an equal stake and shared sense of belonging. That is the true soul of our independence – and the path we must continue to defend.

The argument that Malays are the sole indigenous people of the peninsula – and thus the exclusive inheritors of the land – is historically problematic. The term ‘Malay’ is not an ancient ethnic identity but a socio-political construct that evolved over centuries. It broadly refers to Muslim communities in the Malay Archipelago who share common linguistic, cultural, and religious traits, particularly after the spread of Islam.

Moreover, the demographic composition of Peninsular Malaysia has always been diverse. Even during the Malacca Sultanate in the 15th century, the region was a melting pot of Orang Asli, Arab merchants, Indian-Muslim traders, Chinese settlers, and migrants from across the Nusantara. The presence and contributions of these groups are part of the region’s long and inclusive history.

It is also an undeniable historical fact that the earliest inhabitants of Peninsular Malaysia are the Orang Asli, a truth candidly acknowledged by Dato’ Abdul Rahman, then Secretary to Sultan Abu Bakar of Johor: “The aborigines were the possessors of the soil before we [the Malays] came to the peninsula.”

The 1931 Census Report similarly states: “The Malays are, in fact, merely immigrants of generally longer standing than the other migrant races represented in the peninsula…”

Deep roots

Moreover, the 1947 Census revealed that approximately 26 percent of Malays in Peninsular Malaysia were immigrants from what is today Indonesia. By contrast, in that same year, 63.5 percent of the Chinese and 51.6 percent of the Indians in Peninsular Malaysia were local-born – born and raised on this land they now call home.

These facts are not meant to deny anyone’s identity or heritage but to remind us of our shared history – one that is far more intertwined than divisive narratives suggest.

Contrary to the misconception that non-Malays are recent arrivals, several non-Malay communities have roots in the peninsula dating back centuries. Among them are the Baba-Nyonya (Peranakan Chinese), Malacca Chettis, and Portuguese Eurasians – distinctive communities whose integration into local society challenges any narrative of exclusivity.

The Baba-Nyonya, for instance, trace their origins to the 15th century, when Chinese traders settled in Malacca and married local Malay, Javanese, Batak or Balinese women. Over time, they developed a rich hybrid culture, blending Chinese and Malay traditions. They spoke Malay at home, practised Malay customs, and were deeply loyal to their homeland. Many played key roles in colonial administration and local commerce.

During both the Dutch and British colonial periods, the Peranakan Chinese were recognized as indigenous inhabitants. This status was reflected in the granting of land deeds similar to those awarded to the Malays – a historical precedent that underscores their longstanding presence and integration.

Likewise, the Malacca Chettis descended from South Indian traders who settled in the region during the same period. Through intermarriage and assimilation, they adopted many aspects of Malay culture while maintaining their Hindu faith and Tamil linguistic roots. Their contributions to local trade, religious life, and cultural heritage span over 500 years.

The Portuguese Eurasians, another long-standing community, emerged from intermarriages following the Portuguese conquest of Malacca in 1511. Speaking Kristang, a Portuguese-based creole, and practising Roman Catholicism, this community has preserved its identity while contributing significantly to the socio-economic life of the region.

These communities, along with others such as the Tamils, Malayalees, Telugus, Gujaratis, and Sikhs, are deeply rooted in Malaysian soil. Many settled here long before large numbers of Malays themselves migrated to the peninsula. Historical records reveal that hundreds of thousands of Malays from Sumatra, Java, and Sulawesi migrated to Peninsular Malaysia only in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, spurred by colonial labour demand and economic opportunity.

For instance, Minangkabau settlers formed significant populations in Negeri Sembilan, while Javanese migrants settled in Johor and Selangor. Yet these migrants were absorbed into the Malay identity due to their shared religion and language. It is thus inconsistent – and unjust – to claim indigeneity as the basis for exclusive ownership when many Malays themselves are descendants of relatively recent immigrants.

Non-Malays have not only resided in Malaya for generations but have also played an indispensable role in building the country. Economically, the Chinese community transformed Malaya into a global hub of tin mining and commerce. Entrepreneurs, bankers, and small traders helped create a thriving business ecosystem.

The Indian community, brought in under British rule, toiled in rubber plantations, built railways and roads, and served in key roles within the colonial civil service. Indian professionals – teachers, doctors, engineers – were essential to public infrastructure and education. The contributions of these communities were not peripheral; they were foundational to the economic success of the country.

As noted by Kernial Singh Sandhu, a renowned academician, Chinese and Indian capital, enterprise and labour contributed significantly towards the creation of modern Peninsular Malaysia. In a similar vein, Charles Vlieland, who compiled the 1931 Census Report, highlighted the fact that the “phenomenal development” of Peninsular Malaysia has been due largely to the “industry, enterprise, and commercial genius” of the Chinese.

Urban centres such as Kuala Lumpur, Ipoh, George Town, and Seremban flourished through the combined effort of all ethnic groups. The tin boom of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, driven largely by Chinese enterprise and labour, helped turn Ipoh into the “City of Millionaires”. Kuala Lumpur’s emergence as the capital was underpinned by the labour of Indian and Chinese workers, who built its railways, drainage systems, and buildings.

Moreover, non-Malay philanthropists and leaders established schools, temples, churches, hospitals, and social institutions that served both their own communities and the nation at large. Institutions like Chung Ling High School, the Vivekananda Ashrama, and St. John’s Institution exemplify the civic spirit of non-Malay Malayans.

Strength in unity

These contributions are not limited to economic development. Non-Malays also played crucial roles in securing Malaya’s independence. The multi-ethnic Alliance Party – comprising Umno, MCA, and MIC – negotiated independence on the basis of interethnic cooperation and mutual respect.

Tunku Abdul Rahman, Malaya’s first Prime Minister, repeatedly stressed that independence was achieved through the unity and partnership of all races. He envisioned a Malaya for all Malayans – not an exclusive homeland for any single ethnic group.

To assert that Peninsular Malaysia belongs exclusively to the Malays is to erase this shared legacy and marginalise generations of loyal citizens. It is a dangerous narrative that fractures our unity, undermines social cohesion, and betrays the inclusive vision on which our nation was founded.

Such rhetoric also damages our nation’s global image. In a world that prizes inclusivity, pluralism, and human rights, the idea of a mono-ethnic nation is outdated and contrary to democratic values. It tarnishes our reputation as a progressive, harmonious society.

To conclude, the strength of our nation lies not in the dominance of one race, but in the unity of all its people. Let us rise above toxic rhetoric and embrace our diversity as a source of strength. Let us think and act as fellow citizens, committed to building a truly united, just, and progressive nation – for all.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 2:42 PM   0 comments
Syahredzan, Young Syefura and the burden of race By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Wednesday, May 07, 2025

Malaysiakini : Non-Malays have no choice but to equate everything on racial terms because to do otherwise would mean that any kind of secular democratic principles would be written off the books.

Meanwhile, the Malays have a plethora of race-based parties to choose from and the whole political ecosystem is engineered to ensure that entitlement programmes are geared towards Malay consumption.

So, in order for one to be a race traitor, he or she would not subscribe to the existing political system.

I like Syahredzan. He has chutzpah, you have to have it if you play in the DAP swimming pool which is supposed to be “Bangsa Malaysia”.

At the same time, you have to uphold race and religion, and you belong to a party which claims it has a secular foundation but does not want to spook its Malay partners.

In 2019, Syahredzan wrote a piece asking if free speech was for fascists. If you have forgotten, activist Helmi Effendy ranted on social media, calling for a “Night of Long Knives” for liberal Malays and certain non-Malays. In essence, he was calling for the murder of these people.

Syahdrdzan wrote - “It is also clear that in advocating extrajudicial killings, Helmi has stepped beyond the boundaries of free speech.

“Even the most ardent advocate of freedom of speech and expression will agree that free speech stops when you call for injury or death onto others. But what about situations where it is less straightforward? What about those spreading extreme right-wing narratives, or what is known as ‘fascist’ ideology? How do we deal with such expressions?”

What Helmi said, when you really think about it, is not something which is anathema when it comes to the mainstream political discourse in this country.

Malay political operatives are always accusing each other of being race traitors. They are always claiming that the Malay polity will lose its power to non-Malays.

So, what Helmi wrote is merely taking this position to its logical extreme. The demonisation of progressive Malays is a strategy to maintain political power.

Madani is no different

What Madani has demonstrated, even more so than when Perikatan Nasional or BN were in power, is the disparity of treatment when it comes to not only free speech issues but also the consequences of transgressions when it comes to the laws of the state.

This includes Malays who assumed that under Madani, there would be more freedom to express their ideas and influence the political ecosystem.

Syahredzan wrote - “Those who spread extremist expressions already have a platform. They even have a political audience. It would be naive to think that they can be defeated simply by being ignored.

“Instead, such expressions must be called out. An incredulous claim that Islam is under threat because of a commemorative stamp must be exposed, challenged and even ridiculed.”

How does one tell the difference between mainstream political ideology and “far-right” ideology? How exactly is the ideology of PN different from the mainstream political ideology of the coalition government when it comes to racial and religious policy in this country?

This is the burden of race, when it comes to the Malays who want to uphold secular and democratic principles and norms, even though they are observant Muslims.

Is there a dissonance there? Yes, but only when the majority continue to be narcotised by race and religion.

Demonising liberals

Indeed, demonising liberals, especially the Malays, has been part of the Madani government. When a right-wing imbecile calls out liberals, they are essentially talking about progressive Malays.

And when a Malay is called a race traitor, it means he or she does not believe in racial and religious superiority.

Keep in mind that in 2001, the current prime minister identified as a “liberal” and he gave very cogent reasons as to why.

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim

Addressing his supporters, Anwar Ibrahim said - "We are liberal in a sense that we are willing to listen, to discuss and are tolerant of other views."

Anwar said the alternative to being "liberal" was to have an authoritarian regime where differences in opinion were not tolerated.

"If not, you can choose an authoritarian regime, like the Taliban. ’Semua tak boleh’ (everything is forbidden). All sorts of things will result in punishment. Women can't go to school. That would be our fate, but I won't choose that path."

Fast forward to 2018 and Anwar is decrying the super liberals. Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli talks about the ultra-liberals in his defence of the former deputy prime minister Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail - “But certainly to some extreme activists, her wearing ‘tudung’ and more Malay-looking in her outlook and appearance will always be seen as biased towards more Malay conservative.”

Do not for one minute fall for the horse manure of people who tell you to ignore someone like Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh.

He is allowed by the state to continue because he serves a political and strategic purpose and this includes demonising Malays who do not fall into the racial and theocratic paradigm of maintaining political power.

Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh

Why hasn't the mainstream Malay political apparatus decried or sanctioned this kind of speech against certain Malays?

A long time ago, I knew this mid-level potentate in the police. Now the non-Malays were wary of him enough to affix upon him the label of “ultra”.

But here’s the thing, the Malays did not really care much for him either, labelling him at various times a “pengkhinat bangsa” (traitor to the race).

The fact that he belonged to a bygone gang unit who spoke fluent Mandarin, Tamil and a smattering of Hokkien just muddied the waters.

You see, he believed that the existing Malay political power structures had betrayed the Malay polity.

Even though he was an observant Muslim, he believed the religious apparatus had betrayed its spiritual mission and had become an appendage to the political state meant to narcotise the Malay community.

It is not that he did not want to support Umno, he just thought they were not doing their job of elevating the Malay community.

He believed that the state wanted the Malay community to remain as “peasants” (his words) while a cadre of imbeciles got rich from the coffers of the state.

He prided himself on being an honest cop, which was why he claimed he was stuck in his job and he always intoned “family, country and God”, whenever we used to meet when I was in his neck of the woods.

He was my kind of traitor.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 9:06 PM   0 comments
DAP will neither alter Islam nor advocate for secular state By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 28, 2025

Malaysiakini : Because of how cowed DAP is with Umno, it may end up rejuvenating Umno, which in turn could leverage its political clout to hook up with PAS.

Imagine if DAP was collaborating with a party like PSM to change the mindset of the working-class Malay polity, instead of spending years attempting to cultivate Malay power brokers so it could hang on to their coattails.

After all, the foundational aspects of the religion of the state are socialist. PSM, which has many potential Malay youth leaders, could have been extremely effective in counteracting the narcotising effects of the religious bureaucracy in the Malay heartland.

The apogee of this kind of appeasement came when Lim Kit Siang once proclaimed that DAP supports Islamisation through the Constitution, and he also claimed that a vote for PAS is a vote for Umno, so go figure.

Lim was attracted to the idea that the religion of the state could be a benign force to foster religious and racial harmony, but how he got this idea is beyond me.

Political operatives never use the Constitution as a means to create equilibrium but rather as a means to justify their political positions.

Demonising DAP

All these lies about DAP are merely the chickens coming home to roost for Umno.

For decades, Umno and MCA demonised DAP. Before the non-Malay community abandoned BN, those lies and propaganda were swallowed hook, line and sinker by the non-Malay voting polity and, of course, the majority polity.

If DAP were anti-Malay and anti-Islam, this would mean that Penang is governed by a political party which is a threat to the Malay community and Islam, but it does so without any sanction from the federal government, which is supposed to safeguard both.

This would also mean that the royal houses in states where DAP enjoys support are complicit in supporting DAP’s anti-Malay and anti-Islam agenda.

Therefore, by claiming DAP is a threat to Islam, Perikatan Nasional is effectively accusing the royal houses of colluding with such a threat, yet PN has not been investigated for undermining the 3Rs (race, religion, royalty).

Keep in mind that the demonisation of DAP was a political strategy of Umno and, to a lesser extent, PAS.

Former Kedah MB Mukhriz Mahathir said so.

Ex-MB Mukhriz Mahathir

"Looking at Umno, when there were big issues which we could not address, we would talk about DAP, Chinese chauvinism and how Lim becoming prime minister would destroy Malaysia, that the Malays would disappear, and the mosques could no longer air the azan.

"I admit that I, too, have said such things in front of a 100 percent Malay audience. Thinking back, I feel guilty and a sense of regret,” he admitted in 2018.

PAS is no better. In 2013, according to Hadi, Pakatan Rakyat states and political leaders were free from corruption. He said this during the opening of a Chinese New Year festival in Kedah.

So basically, when PAS was with DAP, they managed to run states with zero corrupt leaders, and it was Umno who was the big bad wolf.

Having been injected into the mainstream of Malaysian politics on the wings of DAP, they now continue racial and religious narratives that they know are a lie, but which are perfectly acceptable to the kind of religion they preach.

DAP is merely dispensing the kool aid, with its Malaysian Malaysia agenda.

It’s gaslighting the base into thinking that the secular/egalitarian agenda is on the table, when the reality is that coalitions that DAP have been involved in have strengthened the theocratic apparatus of this country.

Far from being a moderating or civilising force for religious extremism, which is what secularism is, DAP has colluded with and enabled various Malay power brokers in an attempt to sustain power.

‘Malaysia is all of us’

I talked about Lim’s rather misguided attempt to find something good about Islamisation. I much prefer his nuanced take on the debate on whether Malaysia is an Islamic or secular state, which demonstrates that Lim, at his best, is a politician with a fearsome intellect.

DAP veteran Lim Kit Siang

In a comment piece, Lim wrote: “Malaysia cannot claim that it is a secular nation simply because there are clear indications of religion playing a pivotal role in the governance of the country, such as Islamic schools, Islamic courts and Islamic finance.

“However, Malaysia can neither claim to be Islamic because the spirit and letter of the Federal Constitution go against several core tenets of the Islamic belief system, chief of it is the supremacy of the Constitution and not the Quran.

“Is Malaysia secular or Islamic? Malaysia is neither. Malaysia is both. Malaysia is all of us.”

Isn’t that something?

“Malaysia is all of us” is not something DAP has pursued. Instead, its leaders and cadres have gaslighted urban polities into believing that appeasement will secure non-Malays a place under the Malaysian sun.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 7:57 AM   0 comments
What makes you ashamed to be Malaysian? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 21, 2025

Malaysiakini : Here’s the thing: nobody can really be ashamed of their citizenship. No, when folks say they are ashamed to be a Malaysian, for instance, what they are really saying is that they are ashamed of the acts of their fellow citizens. They are ashamed of the acts of the people in power. They are ashamed of the behaviour of the people who support the class in power. And sometimes they are ashamed of the acts of the public institutions they belong to. More importantly, in a democracy, they are ashamed of who they voted for.

And people should be ashamed. If you voted for a coalition for reform and the said coalition essentially deepens religious and racial divides, you should be ashamed you voted them in. When I see race hustlers who glorify the national flag but who support racial and religious supremacy, I feel ashamed only because I voted these people in.

Ashamed of a nation

But here is the thing. In order to feel ashamed, especially by acts that are contrary to decency, you have to have some sense of morality or conscience. When Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim declared victory by sanctioning the building of a mosque over the foundation of a temple which stood for 130 years, and claimed that the temple was built illegally, was there no shame in this?

Wang Kelian makes me ashamed of Malaysia. The death of Teoh Beng Hock and the way his family is treated by the state security apparatus makes me ashamed for the DAP, even though, when in power, the mandarins do not want the truth of the death of a fallen comrade.

The disappearance of Pastor Raymond Koh, Pastor Joshua Hilmy, and others makes me ashamed of Malaysia because this is supposed to be a country where these kinds of acts are not supposed to happen. In fact, we pride ourselves on being a safe country, with a stable government, and not the kind of country where enforced disappearances happen.

And here’s the thing, the people who are ashamed of their country, which in reality means they are ashamed of the acts of the people in power, are normally a minority. The people who are not ashamed don’t really care about the things they claim embody love of country and fidelity to independent institutions.

Teoh Beng Hock’s family

Take this flag fiasco. Umno Veterans’ Club secretary Mustapha Yaakub said Tajuddin’s statement was unpatriotic and talked about the king’s displeasure.

Really? PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang has openly declared that he will defy the Terengganu sultan when it comes to political sermons in mosques. The PAS ulama wing ignored the Selangor sultan when it came to the Bon Odori festival. Former prime minister and former Umno kingpin Dr Mahathir Mohamad has had run-ins with the royalty and even curtailed their power.

So, when it comes to royalty and their dikats, are these groups and personalities unpatriotic? Isn’t it shameful to profess an ideal and not have any fidelity to it, as the Umno Veterans’ Club demonstrates? But you see, these people have no shame.

A land that rewards the shameless

Lawyers for Liberty director Zaid Malek, when commenting on the temple issue, noted that most of the hostility is coming from “one ethnic group”, calling it a disturbing and concerning trend. And you have to ask yourself, are these people ashamed of their actions? No, they are not. They are coddled by the state, enabled by their religion, and supported by the political class.

They will claim there is a religion of peace, and in the words of a Perkaksa goon, “Today, Malaysians - especially Malays - have been too tolerant with various issues such as KK Mart, and have now reached a tipping point when the national flag has been desecrated by those who purposely want to enrage the Malays. How can Malays be called ‘vindictive’ for wanting to defend the nation’s dignity?”

Lawyers for Liberty director Zaid Malek

Now, a person with any sense of decency or morality reading that statement would feel ashamed to have anything to do with these kinds of people and ideology. They would feel that such behaviour goes against national dogma like the Rukun Negara. And the irony is that these people would be considered unpatriotic for feeling ashamed of such behaviour that truly warrants shame.

A soldier from a foreign land long ago told me, you can tell a lot about a people by what they find shameful about their government. I replied that it says even more about what they support in their government.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 9:07 AM   0 comments
UiTM KKK drag show reflects 'don't spook Malays' politics By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Saturday, April 19, 2025

Malaysiakini : According to the late Abdul Khalid Ibrahim, “The state government proposed this because we want to increase our competency in higher education.”

The former menteri besar said, “It was a sincere suggestion by someone who has the best interests of the Malays and Malaysian community at heart (and) at times it is good for us to accept advice because it will help in global development.”

Fast forward to 2024, students dressed in black (which, to this writer, gives a bad name to goth culture) because there was some talk emanating from Putrajaya or at least there were rumours that UiTM was going to be opened up to non-bumis.

As one student said, “We may be seen as racist, but it has nothing to do with that. Some people think that we are selfish by fighting for the university’s enrolment policy to remain as it is, but they must remember, this was how it started back in the day when the university was set up.”

When the KKK blew up empty buses to oppose school integration, they justified their actions because they wanted to keep things as it was back in the day. Did this come up in the UiTM KKK drag show?

Apologies to former MP Kasthuri Patto, but what do you think the response would be from these 587th QS World University Ranked students if a non-bumi did a Rosa Parks and was determined to have an education in Uitm? What would be the response of Madani?

I did say I was going to make a few false equivalencies, but when you have the gall to defend students dressing up as a terrorist organisation with the excuse of teaching them about racism and where your university and its student body justifies exclusion in the name of bangsa (race), then you deserve all the mockery you get.

But do these students know any better? Actually, they do. The system enables and encourages them to think this way. Take the Biro Tata Negara (BTN or National Civics Bureau) for instance. I have no idea what the status of this organisation is now, but it was created to mould a certain segment of society into thinking that, by race, they were superior and endangered.

Do not take my word for it. Take the former ambassador to the United States, former government official in various capacities, and Umno veteran Nazri Aziz. He laid it out clearly when he feuded with former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad in 2009.

From reportage, Nazri did not deny that the programmes encouraged antagonism towards the other races. “You want me to lie? You (will) make people laugh. I mean there are people who attended the courses who came out very angry.

Former ambassador to the United States Nazri Abdul Aziz

“There were many instances when words like ‘Ketuanan Melayu’ (were uttered and it) is ridiculous. So I want them to tell me where did I go wrong in not supporting the revamping of the BTN syllabus. Tell me where I went wrong?

Should I lie and say we all get along? Or maybe the state does not want us to get along.

Remember in 2018 when the G25 got into trouble because they suggested that Islamic Development Department (Jakim) and Institute of Islamic Understanding Malaysia (Ikim) were unconstitutional? As reported in the press, “As we are not sure what they are doing, but maligning other Muslims as apostates and liberals.”

Real patriotism

Forget about UiTM’s KKK drag show. Let us talk about the Jalur Gemilang. I despise all this faux reverence for the national flag from the political class, and of course, thoroughly spooked non-Malays on social media platforms.

I spent a good part of my life serving this country. The men and women I served with came mostly from underprivileged backgrounds.

Let me tell you something. Most of them did not know the significance of the colours or symbols on the national flag. Some of them did not even know the words to the national anthem. What they did learn was genuine patriotism.

They learnt that patriotism meant that we were all in the same boat together because we all bleed red. They learnt that loving your country meant loving the person beside you, regardless of race or religion.

That is patriotism, not something these politicians and pencil-pushers tell us we should feel aggrieved about the desecration of the national flag. But that is part of the social contract.

Minorities have to genuflect because we are apparently not patriotic enough. Mistakes are weaponised. Apologies are never enough, and there should always be retribution. But when we are maligned, insulted, demeaned, and vilified, we should - what did MIC deputy president M Saravanan beg us to do? - just ignore it.

You know what ketuanism (supremacy) really does and which is reflected in the action of these UiTM students and the mainstream political class? It encourages its adherents to see the mote in another’s eyes but ignore the beam in theirs.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 4:40 PM   0 comments
Bawani in Ayer Kuning – true grit By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 14, 2025

Malaysiakini : PSM, the natural inheritor of the long-destroyed Malaysian mainstream left, is a constant reminder of the failure of Malay uber alles politics and the parasites that latch onto it promising progressive reform.

The two ustaz from Umno and PN who are competing in this by-election would never take such an oath as she did.

Their bread and butter is racial and religious politics and like US President Donald Trump and his acolytes, they do not care about the bread-and-butter issues of their constituents.

If you look at this rationally, Bawani is the only candidate who is offering something different to the voters of Ayer Kuning.

BN and PN are offering the status quo which is meagre handouts and the narcotising effects of race and religion.

The problem with politics in Malaysia and everywhere else is that candidates like Bawani - who exemplify the kind of personality needed in a political ecosystem to enact change - are rejected by the tribalism that defines mainstream politics.

Of course, voters being who they are, are not going to look at this rationally which means that PSM’s chances are slim because not only do voters tend to vote against their self-interests, but they have been conditioned to think that their self-interests are the interest of mainstream political parties through race and religion.

While the mainstream political coalitions are busy finding easily identifiable “enemies”, what PSM identifies are deficiencies in the system and misguided policies that essentially encourage the working-class Malay base to vote against their long-term interests and the non-Malay base to enable a system which ultimately disenfranchises them.

Muda’s support

Muda has said that it will give ground support for PSM and this is a good thing. To put it mildly, PSM’s messaging is terrible.

Muda has demonstrated that for a young party, it has garnered a percentage of votes that PSM never managed to do.

Their messaging, especially using social media, does seem to resonate.

PSM could benefit in Ayer Kuning from the exposure that Muda offers using social media to highlight issues that PSM has been attempting to garner support for, but would be drowned out because of the battle between the two ustaz.

All about the money?

Keep in mind the federal government has been pouring in aid for the disenfranchised in Ayer Kuning.

PSM understands this type of politics and how it leads to corrupt politicians. As another great PSM leader Dr Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj said about Santa Claus politics - "I asked them, 'do you want me to be clean or not?

"You want your YB to be Santa Claus, a feudal lord giving away money... But at the same time, you want your YB to be clean. It doesn't jive," he said, adding that the role of politicians goes beyond just providing cash handouts or immediate assistance.

This is why when a DAP minister in the coalition government plays a card which for decades DAP has decried as outright bribery, it is Bawani who has to remind voters that - “You cannot blindly say that it wasn’t your agenda (and) you didn’t plan it. It’s very direct - you’re blatantly giving bribes to the people.”

We have to keep in mind what working-class philosopher Eric Hoffer wrote - “Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket.”

PSM is also facing PAS and as former PSM head honcho Nasir Hashim said when PSM went up against PAS years back - “We were literally on our own and got help from NGO friends. We were not prepared to fight PAS because they are not our principal enemy and our actions were construed as being weak.”

Non-Malay votes

While Umno is hoping that the browbeaten DAP would canvass for the non-Malay vote and whatever the MCA and MIC could scrounge up, the choice of candidates demonstrates that Umno and the PAS-led PN are going to use religion to detract from real-world problems the voters of Ayer Kuning face.

Umno is of course hoping that the non-Malay community will view PAS as the bigger threat even though both are the same kind of threat.

Umno Youth leader Dr Akmal Saleh is as virulent or more so than most PAS leaders and has demonstrated that he thinks the non-Malay coalition partners in the unity government should be seen but not heard.

And keep in mind that Malays who do reject Umno, are in fact also rejecting Madani so there is a protest vote that could happen, just not the kind that would strengthen the crumbling democratic infrastructures of this country.

So not only is the question can PSM attract the disaffected non-Malay vote but can it peel off Malay votes from those people dissatisfied with what mainstream politics is offering?

This is a steep hill. Non-Malay participation in elections is traditionally low and PSM has never been the choice of the non-Malay supposedly progressive community.

People often talk of how this country is going down the theocratic and kleptocratic rabbit hole.

But there have always been options to slow or stall this dissent. They were just never considered for tribal reasons.

PSM may very well lose this election. However, what Bawani and PSM are demonstrating and will continue to demonstrate is true grit.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 11:15 AM   0 comments
Calling detractors 'bebal' unhelpful, alienates genuine critics By Mariam Mokhtar
Saturday, April 12, 2025

Malaysiakini : Name-calling unhelpful

Upset that his critics dared to undermine his authority and criticise him, he called them “bebal” (stupid).

“Bebal” appears to be the current fashionable word in Putrajaya. It was first used five days ago by Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek to lash out at a Perikatan Nasional activist, Syarul Ema Rena Abu Samah, also known as Ratu Naga.

Fadhlina said Syarul Ema was suffering from “bebal-ism” (being stupid) and spreading “kebebalan” (stupidity), for mistakenly accusing Chinese school pupils of disrespecting the national anthem, when in actual fact, they were singing the Perak state anthem.

Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek

Prime ministers and ministers who freely label their critics as “bebal” show that they are insecure. They appear vulnerable, lack intuition and are out of touch with the electorate.

Instead of processing and paying attention to what had been said and taking note of any constructive criticism, these ministers fail to listen hard to what their critics are saying.

The temple issue and the balloon vendor fracas are not “small” issues as described by Anwar. “Small” issues which are not managed with the delicacy and urgency they deserve may escalate into major issues.

Self-serving politicians will almost always complicate matters and allow the problem to spiral out of control.

Temple issues

There have been many other temple issues nationwide.

in 2018, the 120-year-old Seafield Sri Maha Mariamman temple in Subang Jaya arose from a relocation issue between the temple authorities and the developer. A riot broke out, which resulted in the death of a firefighter, Adib Kassim.

If temples which are over a hundred years old face such threats, do mission schools and churches also fear the risk of being relocated or their lands seized, and their tenants issued with eviction notices?

Adib Kassim

Developers with powerful political friends appear to be able to purchase prime land with ease, often under cover of secrecy.

When a scandal erupts, these politicians often use the religious factor, Islam, to seize ownership of the land on which these buildings are sited.

What ‘strength’?

At the groundbreaking ceremony of Masjid Madani, Anwar said that he wanted to "showcase Islam’s strength".

Is this "strength" connected to the rising fundamentalism in Malaysia? An increasingly conservative Muslim society does not bode well for a multi-cultural Malaysia.

The following examples are probably "small" issues for Anwar. He may recall that last Ramadhan, an old Malay man slapped a non-Malay for eating in a shopping mall.

Was the mental and physical assault of the non-Muslim, this Malay's version of "showcasing Islam's strength"?

On April 8, we learnt that the state government of Perlis, the Perlis Islamic Religious and Malay Customs Council, the State Registrar of Converts and the mufti Asri Zainul Abidin were denied their chance to exercise their religious might over the rights of the individual, the single mother Loh Swee Hong.

Perlis mufti Asri Zainul Abidin

Loh's three children, all Hindus, were unlawfully converted by her former abusive husband. The Perlis authorities demanded Loh bring the children up as Muslims. Which politician dared show support for Loh?

Losing sight of important matters

Will our MPs initiate a debate in Parliament about banning child marriages? Some Muslims consider it their religious right to marry an underage girl, just like their religious right to have four wives.

When Bernama reported a rise in incest and statutory rape cases in Kelantan, the most conservative state, only Bentong MP Young Syefura Othman expressed disgust.

The other MPs, including the prime minister, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Islamic Affairs) Naim Mokhtar, and PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang said nothing.

Large-scale corruption, slapping, hate speech, destroying/relocating temples, child marriages, incest, underage sex, and sexual abuse of tahfiz pupils and children in Global Ikhwan Services and Business Holdings (GISBH) are all perpetrated by Malays.

Despite the increased religious education, their moral values appear to have diminished.

No Malay MP has shown the courage to undo the decades-long religious brainwashing at home, in school and in the mosque.

So, would solving these "small issues” interest the PM?

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 8:55 AM   0 comments
Malaysia's snitch society By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 07, 2025
Malaysiakini :Tattle telling

So we have two stages here. The first is one, where the state encourages citizens to snitch on the “other” by using race or religion as a galvanising issue.

The second stage is when the state encourages citizens to snitch on each other. This happens when the state religious apparatus encourages the faithful to report “deviant” teachings or lifestyles.

Can you imagine if there was a Facebook page where people documented behaviour which was deemed haram by the religious state? Can you imagine a Facebook page where adherents of the religion of the state had their pictures taken and what they were engaging in, to encourage sanction from the state?

Imagine if non-Muslims set up a Facebook group like this. What do you think would be the reaction of the state and ordinary Muslims?

Already the Malay language social media and mainstream press are a toxic environment where people are named and shamed for various reasons.

Moral policing for moral purity

Indeed the religious bureaucracy, both at the state and federal level, actively encourages snitching as a form of religious piety.

The idea is that moral policing of the community symbolises the moral purity of said community.

What religious groupthink does - and it does this everywhere - is to make a clear distinction between “us” and “them”.

What these types of snitching behaviour encourage is that the majority community understands that there will always be deviants who threaten the foundational aspects of the religion.

This kind of thinking is not only reinforced by the state but is actively encouraged as a form of communal protection from the inclusion of ideas and concepts that would alter the community.

For decades, the Islamic bureaucracy - through its various tributaries - has moulded a young voting polity to despise democratic traditions and norms, with the belief that doing so makes you a better Muslim.

So in other words snitching on your fellow citizens makes you a more pious person. The demonisation of Muslims who do not follow this groupthink is the underlying cause of tension within the Malay community, even more so than the cultural war with the non-Muslim communities.

The emotional justifications for these kinds of acts using social media as an alternate reality to justify socially destructive behaviour have been perfected by US President Donald Trump supporters here in Malaysia and in the US.

This kind of groupthink is the ultimate endgame for fascist governments/political parties.

As Andrew Sewer wrote in his percipient, Atlantic article: “…Trump supporters, whose community is built by rejoicing in the anguish of those they see as unlike them, who have found in their shared cruelty an answer to the loneliness and atomisation of modern life.”

While Madani claims it wants social cohesion, the ultimate goal or “victory” as the prime minister so casually announced, is a polity not only beholden to the state but which thinks it is powerful in its own right. They are not.

The Russians have a perfect term to describe such people, “useful idiots”.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 8:28 AM   0 comments
Anwar’s irresponsible 'victory' speech By Mariam Mokhtar
Saturday, April 05, 2025

Malaysiakini : Leaders bereft of leadership

Our leaders struggle to unite this fractious nation with the 3Rs (race, religion, royalty) influencing their every action. It does not help when the perennial issues of temples, forced conversions, halal food and dress codes keep cropping up to divide us on a regular basis.

Most of the time, these conflicts are fanned by the same politicians who know that the only way they can hang onto power is to drive a wedge between us. They have no desire to be rid of the 3Rs.

We will never know for sure if the temple issue was resolved amicably, although everyone involved would like us to think so. Many of us suspect that the usual carrot and stick approach was employed, with more emphasis on the latter.

In the past, “sensitive” issues involving temples or churches almost always meant that the Muslims had the upper hand. They knew that they had the power to do as they pleased.

Those who destroyed temple idols escaped scot-free because the perpetrators were alleged to be of unsound mind. Crosses on churches had to be moved.

Religious artefacts removed

At my mission school in Ipoh, the Convent of the Holy Infant Jesus (aka Main Convent), it was alleged that under orders from a former education minister, religious artifacts from the school chapel were removed without prior notice.

The nuns were unable to save the statues and many religious and historical items, which date from when the school first opened over a century ago. Workers dumped the items onto the back of a lorry and then, onto a landfill.

Article 11 of the Federal Constitution states that “every person has the right to profess and practice his religion” but local councils and politicians have different interpretations from us.

Just think about the havoc wreaked if mosques had to endure the same tribulations.

On March 25, Anwar erroneously claimed that the Dewi Sri Pathrakaliamman Temple had been built without permission, that it was an “illegal building” and that the nation should follow the rule of law.

His aides failed to advise him that the temple was built in 1893 and that the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) did not exist then.

In his insistence that everyone observes the rule of law, will the prime minister investigate how Jakel managed to purchase the land via closed tender?

Double standards

Many Malaysians are aware of the alleged close ties between Jakel's owners and a former first lady. They know too that during the disgraced felon Najib Abdul Razak’s tenure, tracts of prime land in KL were sold in allegedly suspicious transactions.

First, the authorities declared the temple illegal. We then discovered that the land had been quietly sold off to a high-profile crony company.

Arrogant PMX

Whilst we are distracted by the turf wars over this temple, the irregularities about Jakel's purchase of the land will probably be swept under the carpet.

Anwar then had the cheek to urge Malaysians to live in harmony. After all the angst, anger and breakdown in communication of the previous weeks, the prime minister failed to appreciate that his presence at the mosque's groundbreaking ceremony on March 27 was highly provocative.

Displaying his usual arrogance, Anwar then claimed “victory”, all in the name of Islam and a two-tiered system of justice.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 3:33 PM   0 comments
Jalur Gemilang: Patriotism can never be mandatory By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, March 31, 2025

Religion is the Last Refuge of the Desperate–The Malaysian Insider

Malaysiakini : How do you teach kids?

The Education Ministry is now making it mandatory for school kids to wear the Jalur Gemilang badge. The thinking behind this diktat is - “The Education Ministry plays a key role in inculcating patriotism and love toward the country among students and educators.”

My question is this, what are the ideas behind the badge that the Education Ministry wants to inculcate? Everyone is supposed to be equal before the national flag, right? But does reality reflect that?

Deputy Education Minister Wong Kah Woh asks, “How do we teach our children to take pride in being Malaysians? How do we educate them to unite under the Malaysian flag?”

That is a good question. How do you teach kids that some kids cannot do certain things as “equal” citizens of this country? How do you teach kids that other kids have special privileges that cannot be questioned?

How do you teach kids that they are barred from certain educational institutions? How do you teach kids that there are quotas for their educational aspirations?

How do you teach kids that their religious beliefs are open to demonisation even though laws that prohibit that kind of behaviour are enforced against them if they are perceived to step out of line, but not against others?

How do you teach kids that there are political parties that cater for a specific race or that political operatives will say that it is their duty to defend a specific race and religion even though everyone is supposed to be equal before the national flag?

Defining patriotism

So, when it comes to symbols, the ideas behind those symbols are important. Whether you choose to imbue those symbols with power is entirely up to the individual, but the reality is that only the state has any power when it comes to enforcing ideas behind the symbol.

Enforcing “respect” towards a symbol has always seemed fascist to me. After all, if you have to force people to respect symbols, what does this tell you of the “need” of some people to disrespect what is supposed to be a symbol which represents all that we are supposed to believe in?

Here is another thing about patriotism. It is about people and not allegiances to totems. And in this country, mired in the toxic politics of race and religion, can the Education Ministry define patriotism that would make sense to children who are living in a polarised world?

Here is a great example of how patriotism is about people. In fact, this letter is a blueprint as to what defines patriotism and how the state has trampled on egalitarian sentiments that used to define patriotism in the military and, yes, in this country.

Close to a decade ago, Persatuan Patriot Kebangsaan (PPK), under the aegis of Arshad Raji released a statement on the enrolment of non-Malays in the military.

Here are five important parts:

(1) For such fighting men of valour to function, there has to be genuine love and care between the commanders and personnel. Everyone has to feel needed and important. The accomplishment of the mission is the ultimatum.

(2) The government’s affirmative policies of the 1980s had seeped into the military administration. Strange sayings like “orang kita” (our people) have crept into the minds of military commanders. Slowly and surely, the commanders saw some of those under their command as half-brothers or stepsons, unlike the “all are equal” mindset of previous years.

(3) Yearning for a merit-based promotion system, the non-Malays would not mind if their Malay subordinates were promoted if they were really deserving. Perceived as incapable by many non-Malay officers, there had been a haphazard promotion of officers very much undeserving of their roles and ranks.

(4) Needless to say, a mediocre officer given promotion and command would breed mediocrity and substandard results. Further, numerous deserving Malay officers of merit were also adversely affected. Malay officers who were promoted based on their merits earned an endearment of loyalty and respect from the non-Malays.

(5) Starting from the late 1980s, the military had become increasingly religious-centric, and non-Malays felt ever more alienated. The officers’ mess life and the lives of soldiers became very much dictated by religious sensitivity. This eventually affected esprit de corps and comradeship negatively in multi-racial military units.

So what can we learn from this letter? Patriotism is about one’s empathy for his or her brethren regardless of race and religion. Equality encourages such sentiments. Politics, race, and religion nullify such sentiments and create a toxic environment.

Does anyone really think that a flag on a badge is going to create a sense of simpatico amongst kids?

Well, as the prime minister says, it is free, so just wear it. That is how much Madani thinks the Jalur Gemilang is worth.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 3:50 PM   0 comments
ARCHIVES


Previous Post
Indian Soldiers
World War 1
Links To Rangers
Military Related Links


End of a Saracen
East Malaysian
Warriors
Blow Pipe
xxxx
xxxx
Lieutenant Colonel
Zulkapli Abdul Rahman
Click Here
Lieutenant Colonel
Harbhajan Singh
Click Here
Heads from the Land
of the Head Hunters
Heads
20 Harrowing Images
Vietnam War

Creme De La Creme-Click here

Killing Time
Before Deployment

Lt Col Idris Hassan
Royal Malay
Regiment
Click Here

Also Known as
General Half Track

Warriors
Dayak Warrior
Iban Tracker with
British Soldier

Showing the
British Trooper
what a jackfruit is!!

Iban Tracker

A British Trooper training
an Iban Tracker

Iban Tracker

Tracker explaining
to the British Soldier who
knows little about tracking

Iban Tracker
Explaining to the
British Trooper the meaning
of the marks on the leaf

Iban Tracker
Aussie admiring
Tracker's Tattoos

Lest We Forget Major Sabdin Ghani
Click Here
Captain Mohana Chandran
al Velayuthan (200402) SP
Ranger Bajau
ak Ladi PGB
Cpl Osman PGB

Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
Photobucket
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Advertistment
XXXXXXXX
Powered by

Free Blogger Templates

BLOGGER

google.com, pub-8423681730090065, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 <bgsound src=""> google.com, pub-8423681730090065, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0