bahasa duniawi...

membina kitab menyuluh dunia Orwelliah

ada apa apa yang baru? media: TV objek: orang membaca lain-lain: nasyid penyertaan: antarabangsa - antara negara 1.Kandungan rancangan tilawah adalah 90% vokal. Aksi kurang. Sudahkah TV pergunakan segala kapasiti visual yang boleh untuk menarik penonton? 2. Nasyid dari segi muzik, tiada apa apa perubahan. Kenapa tidak dijemput nasyid antarabangsa dari Bosnia, Afrika atau Rusia? Hampir getik menengok corak persembahan yang sama. 3. Ada 90% lagi potensi untuk perelokkan tilwah. Kalau mau hubungi saya.

11 komen:

Anonymous said...

Congratulations to you Singapore on your National Day.

Your leaders have done well for your country, taking it from a backwater state to a leading economic power. You have all reasons to be proud. Sadly in Malaysia, the leaders are still bickering while the country is going down the social and economic drain.

Though some of us will still fly the Malaysia flag voluntarily on our National Day, we find it very difficult to be as proud as you, as we have so much racial disintegration, inequality and discord, which were sown over the years by unprofessionally, poor leadership, corruption and communal politics.

To all Singaporeans a happy National Day holiday. You have to cherished Lee Kuan Yew for bringing Singapore out from the pits of hell in order to enjoy the success you have today. Good on yah!

To all Malaysians, can't wish you yet but a National Day is sure to come, happy or not is up to you to decide!

As for me, I have decided to leave the Malaysia country for the sake of my family. Whether we like it or not, the government over the period of 49 years have created a "think only of myself" society.

Malaysians cannot blame Pak Lah for all those speculative things such as with their respective company. You put him there to temp him. You already knew from the past that this kind of things will happen. But you still chose to vote BN.

Irregardless of whether you vote for the opposition or not, 90% voted for BN in the last election. Why complain now?

That is it. I am fed up. I am leaving the country.

Australia has a much bigger diversity but they have all sorts of ethnicity (Singaporean, Scottish, Malaysian, Italian, English, Chinese, etc) but they are still able to govern the country with good leadership. Also, it is a larger country but the same amount of population as Malaysia.

Also note that all leaders of the developed world as they call it have highly qualified leaders to lead them. Not any Tom and Hay that marries the minister's daughter then get a deputy post in a party and move up the political world.

It is always a joy to watch their Singapore National Day celebration.

60 thousand people were fully packed in their national stadium. The security check was world class as the possible terrorism threat was never ruled out.

The patriotism was written all over everybody's face; the parade of the school band, the navy and the air force, the armed forces; the excitement and enthusiasm of the people was fantastic; the creativity of the performers; the beautiful fireworks, the whole Singapore was celebrating with great excitement; that includes people outside the stadium, overseas Singaporeans who flew back from overseas just for the celebration and also the tourists; no need to threaten; display of Singapore own designed riffles, the apache helicopters.

What is wrong with our country? My tears rolled down when I watched the TV program of the celebration of Singapore National Day; happy for Singapore but weep for our country.

Yes, it is sad to see what happened to our promising country.

Singaporeans are successful and confident people. To them it does not matter what race or culture come out first to show their tradition and culture in their National Day.

When politicians and political parties decided to mix politics with business to acquire quick and enormous wealth from their position of power and influence, the country and its ordinary people are victims.

As a multiracial religious country, we are suspicious and not friendly with non-Muslim peoples and countries. We have politicians making unnecessary and bias statements to hurt the country name and image in the world. This is allowed to happen for decades.

Something is very wrong with the government.

Yes, the little red dot down south, our separated twin, can teach us lots on racial harmony, positive patriotism, meritocracy education, globalization entrepreneurship, effective public transport, etc.

Singapore is fortunate. The first generation leaders of Singapore had a clear vision - a Singaporean Singapore - and worked towards it. They laid the foundation and they groomed future leaders of similar or higher vision.

Our nation is now in a mess. It is not a Malaysian Malaysia. Even if we want to change for the better, it is not easy. We are stuck in a quicksand of many negative practices and cultures. How can we improve when we are not empowered to remove ineffective and corrupt people, many of whom are in positions that determine the fate of our nation?

Compare the daily news in our newspapers and those in the newspapers of Singapore. Ours are predominantly on violence crimes, unfair allocations of resources, systems breaking down, racial or ethnic issues, etc - now of course on the ex-PM and current PM.

Singapore leaders took the painful and bold steps of uniting their people after independent. We did not! We have too much pride and arrogance with too little leadership in responsibility, competency and accountability.

Anonymous said...

Many of my family and friends were top scorers in their respective classes and schools and many were from some of the best schools in the Malaysia country. But when my eldest brother and his friends applied to local universities, almost none of them got their choice of courses.

When it came to my turn in the mid 1980s, I was already prepared to go overseas and did not even attempt to apply to local varsities. But many top scorers I knew not only did not get the courses of their choice, they were given courses that was beneath their intelligence.

A person capable of being a doctor was asked to go into agriculture. A person who wanted to do law was asked to study social science. A person who wanted to do economics was asked to do education.

In a number of cases I am personally aware of, those who also had appealed against not being given their choice of course were scolded by officers of the education ministry for 'being ungrateful'.

This is the hidden story that has not been told supposedly due to our 'social bargain'. There is no doubt in my mind there was near-fascist thinking within the education ministry for a number of years. My own personal guess is that it is still happening.

How is it possible that given the severe shortage of doctors in this country, only 779 places are available for medical studies in public universities? How is it possible that given the expansion of the number of hospitals in this country - both public and private - there has been not anything even near a corresponding increase in medical students intake?

My family and friends have almost all moved overseas and have not looked back since our school days. Many of us ended becoming IT engineers and doctors.

When we tell our growing children of the things we went through, they are aghast. As much as they suffer discrimination in our adopted countries, they are horrified when they discover the things that went on in Malaysia - and are still going on.

Anonymous said...

Guffaw!

So much for Malaysia Truly Asia. Give me one reason why it somehow represents "Asia" when they are all just a bunch of lazy malays sitting their fat asses in their coconut leaf kampung munching on keropok while the minority races earn money for them!

Malays are known for their "tidak apa" attitude and it goes all the way back in history even to Singapore when the lazy Sultan relinquished rights to his own kingdom to the British for a measly $2000+ bucks.

Don't focus on the money. Focus on how this so-called ruler deserted his country for a wad of notes to sit lazily with his 100 wives, concubines and banana leaf fanners in a then kampung on some deserted part of the island.

I admit Singapore has a whole side of racism that is underhanded and very strong……….but to practice, admit and continue to uphold it while throwing weak, pathetic justifications (if you can even call it one) as if the people are so STUPID really makes everyone else fume.

What is it about these bumis (son of the land in Hindi, by the way) that make them think they are somehow superior to every Asian (then to the Pakistani tribune posters attitudes) in the region?

What? Their "achievements"? Their "culture"? Their "language"? As someone have pointed out achievement wise - we all know better.

Culture wise, leave a lot to the imagination. Did you know the malay language has only 7 original words in it? The rest of that is Arabic, Hindi and a smattering of plain bad English (what the hell is "farmasi" - pharmacy, "restoran"- restaurant, and a zillion other words that are just English with horribly mutilated spelling?).

So what language? It is even written in English. Some might argue it is Jawi, but Jawi is an Arabic script of the pronunciations of their malay language that actually originated from Indonesia.

If they want to wear rose tinted glasses ("Oh, Malaysia is the most progressive country, even comparing to Singapore, Taiwan and surpassing Thailand!" Right!) and lie to themselves instead of addressing the problem and fixing it……….how do they expect to change?

You see news about how much they have "achieved" in terms of academia but common it is the same as that - they wouldn't go squat if they went independently and were judged on a regional scale.

They say they have "1st world infrastructure" but if you just steps into Thailand and road trips to Johor Baru and moves over to KL, they'd do a double takes……….

"Wait……….did I just leave the checkpoint in Thailand to Malaysia or am I still in Thailand?"

They have potholes everywhere in their roads. Theirs shops NEVER open on time, everywhere you go countless of Malaysians attempt to rip you off, especially the taxi drivers (they don't go by the meter. They charge like RM8.00 for a ride that starts at RM2.00 and probably ends at RM3.50) and those who own food establishments.

They have horrible transportation that branches out EVERYWHERE and have no hint of organization of any kind, that is, until someone other than a puffy chest, air headed malay takes over the reins.

They have litter EVERYWHERE on their roads, you see very suggestively clad girls sitting on every nook and cranny especially in Johor, probably where dirty, cheap men from Singapore come to patronize those who ply their trade in ringgit terms - but then, there is a twist - there is a policeman right at the corner!

Gee, I wonder what he is doing just 2 meters away from the obvious tartly chest popping tank topped, mini-skirt and pink fish hosed girl sitting on that high stool by the doorway of a suggestively dimmed light stairway leading upstairs while making faces at passing men?

They have dirty food stalls with flies buzzing around every corner, their banks are disorganized, one shopping center has an ATM from Bank of Malaysia, while the nearest Bumiputera Finance bank is a whopping 2 miles from wherever you are standing!

They give bad service, if you'd believe me, many of them hardly speak English and it is sad to hear and read that Malaysia's taxi drivers even rip off Malaysians!

If you have noticed the only picture anyone ever remembers anything Malaysia, is the one of the KL Twin Towers! In fact, that is the only picture you see! Why? Because that is the only thing that they have that look like its from a 1st world country!

They have starry-eyed magazines that show some unattainable, magical, imaginary high flying lifestyle that every Malaysian seem to have - but in fact wherever you walk there, it is poverty that screams its head out at you everywhere.

I could go on and on and on. Malaysia has to learn how to be humble if it wants to improve itself!

It is not to say Singapore don' t have its own problems I'd be happy to rant about, but at least Singapore has something solid (like the fact it does look like a 1st world country in many ways……….although there is lots to be said about how much it has to go to be even close to being one in terms of mentality, and so on) to lean on.

Anonymous said...

My grandpa came to Malaysia from China on 1931 with only 10 cents Malaysia money that time - he came here with nothing but only a pair of hands willing to work - he got his first job working as a construction builder and earn only a few cents a day.

My grandpa married my grandma in Malaysia and they both work hard together to earn a living and then they have babies, my dad and uncles……….during the war time, my grandpa still worked very hard to earn a living and finally, by enough feeding the family and savings - he managed to set up a small business selling the coconut sugar sweet thing - my dad managed to get into high school in Penang because my grandpa business was doing really good.

And when my grandpa die, he just left a car for my dad and the rest of his wills, he donated to the charity because he said, my dad doesn't deserved his wills because he has done nothing and he going to earn his own money.

And yes - my dad earned his own and support me to overseas university and after 3 generations……….I wonder why those malay people still need special rights and still making food at the corridor. I don't mind if they choose the life, but then they whining other races took their opportunity and blame us for causing them poor and unable to achieve anything.

I wonder why my grandpa and father can earn everything by their own hand and those malays whining we took all their things from their land. We don't steal, we don't rob the people - we just simply earn with our bare hand.

And you malay people still whining for something you impossible to achieve, and why not just wake up and get back to the reality, and work like a "real man" in this universe? We non-malays don't even care and won't spend our time here complain about the government and other stuffs you guys did - simply if we don't love this country.

Sometimes, really……….your race generation XYZ need to wake up a bit - your people still struggling about the "get it back from the non-malays" concept and don't you forget, this country is ours too!

Anonymous said...

Let us give Mahathir credit where it is due. His push for industrialisation and infrastructure development are his finest legacies. However, his failures are glaring.

He has allowed racial divisions in this country to deteriorate to the breaking point. Over the 22 years of his reign, the word 'muhibbah' went out of fashion.

He allowed corruption to flourish. Perhaps by rearing a pack of cronies, it was easier for him to implement his mega projects. Under his rule, the civil service remained corrupted and ineffective.

Another area where Mahathir has failed miserably is in education. Instead of developing world-class centres of higher learning, we are now saddled with 60000 unemployed graduates.

Mahathir is a man who believes that the end justifies the means. He destroyed the independence of the judiciary to ensure that no one could challenge his authority.

There are many lessons to be learnt from the antics of the longest serving prime minister of Malaysia.

It is really disturbing to read the comments of Mahathir especially those regarding the News Straits Times, where he calls for the sacking of its group editor just because he is non-malay.

Such racist comments coming from a highly respectable elderly politician and former prime minister for all Malaysians is very alarming and frightening. If a man of the stature of Mahathir can say such things, we dread to imagine the thoughts in the minds of his followers.

If Umno, being the dominant partner in the BN, discriminates against the minorities, then who can they turn to for the protection of their basic rights?

It would be a great favour for the nation as a whole if respectable elderly leaders like Mahathir devote their energy and time to promote harmony, peace and well-being of all Malaysians irrespective of race and religion.

The younger generation needs their invaluable moderate guidance to cultivate goodwill and racial tolerance. The last thing they need instilled in them is bigotry and intolerance.

It is an irony that Mahathir has asked Pak Lah to resign as prime minister when the latter has the people's mandate to run the government. And resign for what?

It is now for Pak Lah to go to the people and explain in every state, what has happened, what is happening and what lies ahead.

Stop the rot. Pak Lah should also make recommendations to the king to strip Mahathir of his 'Tun' title as this may have protected him against any suits.

By removing the security granted with this title, we can then reopen all the files pertaining to Cyberjaya, EPF investments, Perwaja, Petronas and all the other projects.

It is becoming uncivilised of Mahathir to pursue his 'mega outstanding projects' at the expense of the people. This from someone who used Petronas as his piggy bank.

For me, it came as a no surprise. Mahathir is one of the most potent and dangerous leaders of Asia. An opportunist who is willing to stoop low in order to achieve what he wants.

When he was at the top, he needed to safeguard his position. He used money politics. He fed Umno top brass with millions in government contracts in order to garner their support. He allowed corruption in Umno. He allowed corruption in the civil service in order to have their support.

People who went against him were jailed. Newspapers were controlled. He created multi-millionaire cronies who were (and are) willing to spend millions to ensure that he held on to power.

When he was losing support, he reverted back to his racist politics. He cried at the Umno assembly as though the party was on the brink of collapse and extinction.

Today, he shamelessly goes around criticising the present government. It is like a pot calling other black.

Anonymous said...

Lead your Malaysia country by example! Unfortunately: when no all but one of the ministers has a university degree, this example shouldn't down spiral the level of education for the next generation.

It is true that ignorance of the masses keep who is in power. Sad way of playing democracy……….

Wow you got guts! Happy to say, people are not coming back to this wretched land, having the government turn its back upon them. The last word, I heard of Bangsa Malaysia………..All they know is to talk, and then go on for the next NEP. Stupid!

Who in his sane mind to come back to a country which their lawful, taxpaying parents waste their tax on lazy people? Furthermore, the brainy-one will become the future feeder of lazy people and had his own children rights denied. Weird!

I am absolutely agree with you. Malaysia is strictly for those malay pig………..they are so stupid pig, yet the government want to aid them on their all those university places - 80% is reserved for higher education to these so called bumis (actually just the generation of the pirates originated from Indonesia).

Since the government doesn't appreciate us as talented person, then we shouldn't support this lame government anymore.

Remember! When the election comes the next time, please use your head to vote and not your emotion or your racial sentiment

A good government is one with good opposition - electing the opposition doesn't mean you against the ruling party or agree with the opposition.

There need to be balance, check and counter check. We cannot just depend on Mr Lim alone to fight!

I can relate to you in many ways. I have just found out that the best way to deal with bad things, is to turn a blind eye and ear to them. Ignore them, and they will leave you, soon enough. Allow them to spew their insults, it doesn't matter what they say anyway, it is us who are in control of our feelings and how we feel, not them.

I know you malays are pissed off too in your own way because you are too lazy and selfish to share. It is clear……….It is a hard thing to change from a lazy and selfish creature to a human. It is understandable.

If the word "democracy" has been followed properly according to the meaning, there will be no existing problems at all. Where is the freedom of speech on the Malaysia media? Why is there discrimination if people want to practice equal rights?

All of this issues leads to not democracy and racism! The word democracy is used to keep the happy image in the eye of other countries, so it won't effect the economy!

About the Polynesians person……….Yes, there were everywhere. Like Indonesia, New Zealand, Philippines, and etc. What you know? Polynesian originally from the Taiwan. Even malays are from Jawa. That makes them a native people from Polynesian island, but not natives of Malaysia.

I still believe that the people (Malaysians) are the ones who drive this country. Not corrupted politicians, racist cunts or other selfish groups. We could make changes. And changes we shall make for a brighter future. Peace out!

If you look around you, you'd see that some of our malays have distinctive Mongoloid features. Discrimination against races is disgusting, laws favoring our malays is an insult to us!

Anonymous said...

The special rights and privileges, while being implemented for the malays in full force, have also been used as a deadly weapon to suppress the non-malays. Look at the way universities allocate places to the non-malays. Look at employment ratio in the public sector from A to Z.

It is true that there have been abuses under the name of malay special rights and it is the duty of the malays in particular, and all Malaysians in general, to stop it so that the rightful malays get their rights, and the non-malays get their rights as citizens of this country.

Ninety-six percent of the education budget was spent on national schools while the Chinese and Indians only got 2.44 percent and 1.56 percent respectively. But how much of that 96 percent was taken up by the elites?

Less than three percent of the national budget is spent on the maintenance of all the Chinese new villages in the country from which more than two million people's taxes come from. Indian settlements got even less.

The non-malays know for certain how their contributions are being employed to bail out elite cronies. The amount used to bail out Renong was sufficient to cover the cardiac by-pass operations of more than one million patients (the country only operates on less than 3000 cases a year).

To say that the second class non-malays are richer than the first class malays is utter rubbish.

These special privileges and rights were once a necessity for them to move forward. Today, after many decades, they find themselves still standing in the same place.

Anonymous said...

Like many Malaysians, I was very disturbed when I heard that someone had pepper-sprayed you Mahathir. It made me think of the hundreds or thousands of Malaysians sprayed on with mace from the water cannons of the Royal Malaysian Police during your premiership and even till this day.

Stories abound and some even suggest that the spray-incident was self-inflicted. I hope you will understand where these people are coming from. They are only seriously considering all possibilities just like you did, when you said the black eye injury suffered by Anwar was self-inflicted.

And within hours of the attack you bounced back peppering the government with your snide remarks and sarcastic swipes. The powers-that-be found what you had served them, too pepper-hot to swallow. Soon after that, the information minister went into a delirium and a verbal diarrhea about controlling the Internet.

Your legacy is beginning to show, Mahathir - worms, warts and all. The chickens have come home to roost, but you refuse to allow anyone to ruffle your feathers.

In spite of the increasingly evident flaws and failures of your 22-year-old government, you deem yourself worthy enough to label the present three-year-old government half-past-six. Alas, this contradiction is more stinging than a pepper spray.

You have complained that you have been deprived of the right to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association with others. You are scandalised by the muzzled press. But all these are a great part of your legacy Mahathir, and of which you are now a privileged beneficiary.

You were so right in saying that Pak Lah should not hide behind the OSA. You should know - 22 years of such a practice is more than enough. You need not worry at all about the possibility of being detained under the ISA. It is meant only for those bold enough to suffer for what they believe in.

When Pak Lah began as prime minister, he had asked the nation to tell him the truth. Three years later the nation is asking him to tell the truth. When you retired you promised not to interfere. Now you insist that Pak Lah should resign. And both of you are slugging it out for the love of the nation!

Can there be a more exciting and entertaining moment than this? The citizens of Bolehland should just sit back and relax and watch the drama that continues in true Umno fashion - a script filled with threats, taunts, telling characters, tall tales and (political) thrills and spills and even tears. Please pass the salt and pepper!

Anonymous said...

I left Malaysia in search of a better life where I am free to think and do as I please, where nobody tells me what to think and do. I am a free spirited individual.

I have relatives and friends who now live in the United States, UK, New Zealand, Holland, Canada, and Australia - and call these places home.

If I were in your position, with all the racial discrimination back home in terms of places in the country tertiary education institutions, scholarships etc, I would be happy to pack up my bags and leave like some have done - like I and others like me, have done although for different reasons.

Life is more than just having a good job - and is not to be measured in terms of dollars and cents alone. I am not prepared to live a lie and say that I am happy when I am not.

We are among the fortunate in that we are able to exercise our freedom of choice. Others do not know what they are missing.

Freedom of speech is very important and should be upheld by every single individual be it in Malaysia or abroad. The Malaysia public has not reached the stage of speaking out their views and minds at the moment, but we have to make drastic changes for the benefit of all regardless of race and religion.

I am left speechless that now after 48 years of independence, Malaysians are still talking about the Malays, Indians and Chinese race and calling each other names, and telling each other to leave Malaysia if they don't like it.

No matter what topic writes, the posting still leads back to us versus them, Malays versus Indians or Chinese, or vice versa. Please realise that not all malays share the views expressed and not all Indians or Chinese share the same views.

Maybe some have been disappointed or rejected are using this board to vent their anger and in doing so fan the fire or racial hatred. I really object when posters say the Malays, the Indians, the Chinese, etc. This is brushing the whole race with the same slur just because of the acts of a few.

I believe that the better 'educated' people are, the lesser bigot they are. Trust the professional malays (the ones who read widely). The ones you meet or hear about are perhaps 'trained' to be professionals and not educated - they perhaps have not even touched a book from the day that they graduated.

So, perhaps you should not include them in the same category as what we have here at this forum. See, let us encourage them, the others, to get exposed to the 'elements' in the real global society and then perhaps they would turn around to create a better nation for Malaysians.

I believe the first thing that should be changed is the ridiculous race column in our forms. The day we stop filling up the form as Malay, Indian, or Chinese and etc……….we will be truly Malaysians.

Now you know the reason I left Malaysia. Every race has a place in Malaysia. No Malaysian should feel he/she is a second class citizen. Just because the NEP provide privileges to the malays does not make the malays first class citizens. Remember this is just a privilege, not a right.

The right is to vote, own land, make money, live a peaceful life, do business and buy properties. Nobody can take that away from the citizens.

When you talk about emigration, there is more to it than just economics - and affirmative action policies.

It is our choice - and we are happy for it.

We still have roots back in Malaysia. We are thankful that as a result of their discriminatory policies, we are leading happy and fruitful lives in countries like the United States - where we are free, and I mean free.

Anonymous said...

Let me know what should we do now?

In general, our "leaders" (I don't recognize them as my leaders) are wasting our time and placing Malaysia to great risk in term of global competitiveness.

They are treating Malaysia as "own firm" and both previous leaders, current leaders and future leaders are all talking nonsense and doing "shit" for the sake of their own and cronies. What they have done for us so far? Our daily life has been burdened with tone of pressure day after day - I think 2020 will be tougher.

If our "leaders" are capable and having the intention to bring prosperity to plebeian and not their own, 50 years are more than enough!

Malaysia, a country with such an abundance resources should do better than Singapore but we are now far behind Singapore.

Somebody is saying Pak Lah should step down as prime minister but for me who become prime minister is not so important unless the prime minister is come from another parties. As long as BN people become prime minister, the results will be the same. Even another 100 years will still be the same.

We got to denial the 2/3 majority of BN in this coming election and we need a new government in another 10 years or earlier.

Kid, we can't afford to waste our time further, we must kick BN out because we "love" Malaysia.

Anonymous said...

Hantu Raya mana yang masuk kat sini? Tak hilang Melayu di dunia cayalah !