Malaysia Plain Blog
Malaysia Rata
A weblog about life / politics/ impressions of Malaysia through the eyes of a foreigner




Malaysia UTC+8 hours
Monday 30 June, 2008
25 Jumada al-Thanni 1429AH

A weblog by Albert. From my home in Yan Kedah. I reside here since 1992. See here to know where Yan is.

« June 2007 »
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
          1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30



archive
- last 10 entries
24/06- bn representatives in the dewan
23/06- subsidy country
20/06- firefox 3.0
19/06- profitering.
14/06- grab your cookies...
14/06- pure discrimination
13/06- progress in hospital (3)
10/06- rm 4.00 a liter?
10/06- penang taxi's
10/06- a responsible husband....

  2008 (81)
  2007 (191)
  2006 (265)
  2005 (139)
  2004 (120)
  2003 (76)

categories
- All categories
- general
- politics Malaysia
- Penang
- Yan Kedah
- travel abroad
- TV
- religion
- internet / computers
- travel Malaysia
- environment
- foreign
- consumer affairs
- food
- living

links
Albert's Personal Pages
Pondok PHP (scripts)
Oon Yeoh Transitions
Jeff Ooi Screenshots
Malaysiakini (news)
Malaysia Today
Religeous Policeman
Kick de Fella
Lim Kit Siang
Mob's Crib

foreign news links
Al Jazeera English
Asia News Network
Bangkok Post
BBC Asia Pacific
Bloomberg
Channel News Asia
Herald Tribune
Jakarta Post
Manilla Times
Nation Thailand
Straits Times Sing
Time Asia
Yahoo Asia News



blog search
Search:
Survey
Are you happy with the election outcome
   
Could have been better for the opposition.
Very happy.
So so.
Unhappy.
I dont care about politics
This WebLog is licensed under a Creative Commons agreement!

   SYNDICATION
  RSS 2.0 (XML) RSS 2.0

  ATOM 0.3 (XML) ATOM

  RSS 1.0 RSS 1.0



Current World Population:

Its getting full....Please stop breeding!















Weather image composition of SE Asia
Satelite weather photo of SE Asia

Map of central Georgetown Penang







Valid CSS! Valid HTML 4.01 Transitional
Blog category: all categories. - June 2007
Click here to return to June-2008, all categories.

 Now almost nobody can fly! - by @lbert
  Posted:29/06/2007 - 15:32 - in category: general
Did you notice lately that Air Asia is slowly but steady screwing all their prices up?
Ansd than on top of that their crazy cheating advertisements "now to Jakarta for 59,95" and so on.
The same goes for Firefly cheating just the same.
Their actual ticketprice is about RM 100 more expensive than advertised (thus more than double in general).
But Mas/Firefly and Air Asia can get away with it it seems.... no action taken (as usual).
And on a return ticket twice the administration charge is charged!. Actually for what do you need and administration fee if i book the ticket myself do the payment print the voucher. They do nothing at all, so why we have to pay?
No consumer organization who protests (do they exist?).
I am really getting sick of this cheating.
Alternative? NONE!! Prices of MAS are so crazy that you wonder who can afford them.
Result?....Cronies can fly, the rest...start walking.

| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Don't meddle in internal affairs - by @lbert
  Posted:28/06/2007 - 22:14 - in category: politics Malaysia
No one can meddle in Malaysia's internal affairs that is what you hear over and over.
So was the reply to Mr Rommel who was talking about the NEP in Malaysia.
Well probably only outside pressure is the thing that might end the NEP, since non Malay Barisan government members only care about their positions and wallets, and not the welfare of the country.

If their would have been no outside interferance South Africa still would have its apartheid!
And at that time outside interferance was huge, companies pressured to close down (Makro, Unilever, Philips) and the likes.
But after a while they had to give in and Apartheid was a thing of the past!
Hopefully for Malaysia things like the above would not be needed, but i have my doubts the NEP will be abolished without severe outside pressure ever.
Afterall Malaysia's cronie system depends on it!
But keep in mind that foreign companies do not have to depend on Malaysia! Plenty of other places to go to, that is why FDI in Malaysia is thrinking.
| Permalink | 3 comments | Add Comment |

 What a fruitcake! - by @lbert
  Posted:27/06/2007 - 12:08 - in category: TV
WWF wrestler the Canadian Chris Bennoit last night strangled his wife and 7 year old son.
After that he hung himself.

He must have had real severe braindamage of all his years of fighting. What a fruitcake!
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 EEC and NEP - by @lbert
  Posted:26/06/2007 - 22:52 - in category: politics Malaysia
On the EU representatives remarks on the NEP:
As expected Krishamusdin was furious , and so was the DPM.
But they all forget one important thing:
Malaysia needs the EU, the EU does not need Malaysia!!
Think about that Krishamusdin before you open your big mouth.
There was a very interesting letter by Feroz Qureshi, a foreigner who has "worked and lived in Malaysia, about it in Malaysiakini you can find it here.
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 EU Envoy Blasts NEP - by @lbert
  Posted:22/06/2007 - 03:29 - in category: politics Malaysia
From Associated Press:
EU Envoy Blasts Malaysia's NEP.

Europe's top envoy to Malaysia Thursday urged the government to roll back its affirmative action policy for majority Malays, saying it is discriminatory and amounts to protectionism against foreign companies.
In unusually frank comments that ignored diplomatic niceties, Thierry Rommel openly criticized Malaysia's 37-year-old New Economic Policy, or NEP, that gives a host of privileges in jobs, education, business and other areas to ethnic Malays.
"In a dominant part of the domestic economy, there is no level playing field for foreign companies," Rommel, the ambassador and head of the European Commission Delegation to Malaysia, said in a speech to local and foreign businessmen.
Ethnic Malays and other indigenous groups, known as Bumiputras, comprise more than 60 percent of Malaysia's 26 million people. The government says they have a disproportionately low share of the corporate wealth compared to the minority Chinese, and need the NEP to increase their standard of living.
The government did not immediately respond to Rommel's comments.
Rommel said the government is using the NEP as an excuse to practice "significant protectionism of its own market," including the automotive sector, steel, consumer goods, agricultural products, services and government contracts.
Malaysia claims these are "infant" industries that need to be protected but "in reality .. it is the Malay-centered Bumiputra policy that drives protectionist policies," Rommel said.
As part of the NEP, all public-listed companies are required to allocate 30 percent of their shares to Malays. Companies without Malay directors or employees are excluded from lucrative government contracts. Employers have quotas for hiring Malays.
Eric Reuter, sales and marketing director of freight forwarder ABX Logistics, said the Belgium-based company has a 51 percent Bumiputra partner and is required to work with local companies on government-related projects.
The limitations have eroded his profit margin, he said.
"We cannot be as flexible as we want to be and chances that corruption comes into play is higher. It is an interruption to the free market," Reuter told The Associated Press.
Besides foreigners, minority ethnic Chinese and Indians also see the NEP as a discriminatory tool. Many Malays also have complained the policy has benefited only a few well-connected people.
NEP was started in 1970 when the Malays' corporate ownership was 2 percent. The aim was to raise it to 30 percent by 2010, from 19 percent now. Chinese, who form a quarter of the population, control 40 percent of corporate wealth.
Rommel stopped short of saying the NEP should be scrapped but told reporters separately: "We (in Europe) have bitten the bullet on a number of sensitive issues, why can't you?"
He warned the NEP could "lead to problems" in free trade negotiations between the EU and the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, of which Malaysia is a key member.
The two groups agreed last month to launch free trade talks, which could raise ASEAN's exports to the EU by up to 20 percent, Rommel said.
Senior officials are expected to hold their first meeting in Vietnam next month, he added.
Well we already know what the answer will be... Europe is meddling in Malaysia's internal affairs.
| Permalink | one comment | Add Comment |

 Stupid, stupid - by @lbert
  Posted:21/06/2007 - 17:24 - in category: politics Malaysia
Stupid, stupid, stupid.
Even journalists covering the Dewan Rakyat proceedings could not recall how many times Minister in the Prime Minister�s Department Mohd Nazri Abdul Aziz repeated this word, according to Malaysiakini.
The Minister was having a dispute with Lim Kit Siang over corruption.

He even said that Singapore was not a real country.
Can this minister look in the mirror and see how stupid he is?
And he is also not a real minister because he does not know how to behave!
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Minimum wages - by @lbert
  Posted:20/06/2007 - 21:52 - in category: politics Malaysia
Minimum wages.....The labour union is asking for RM 900-.
That is about 200 Euro's.
Now have a look at minimum wages in europe (as far as they exist).
Flabergasted? Look at the difference between the highest and the lowest.
4 east european members are even getting less than 200 Euro's

Graph taken from the Dutch newspaper de Telegraaf.
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Chinese BMW lands in Europe - by @lbert
  Posted:19/06/2007 - 17:00 - in category: general
The first chinese 'BMW's landed in Europe.
This car the Brilliance M2 with a 2.0 liter petrol engine and as big as a BMW 5 series or Peugeot 607 is selling in Belgium for around RM 80.000 including VAT.(VAT around 16% i think)
That is roughly 30-40% cheaper than BMW or Peugeot.
The manufacturer is Jinbei in Shenyang, they also assemble BMW in China.
The car went through German safety tests without any problems.
A car like this probably can be sold in Malaysia for RM 60-70K.
And the car seems to be superb according to tests in Germany.
Wow that would be a killer for Proton......
So don't look down on chinese cars anymore, they have grown up.
The company website here
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Progressive Bank Negara - by @lbert
  Posted:19/06/2007 - 11:27 - in category: general
Bank Negara issued new design rules for cheques.
To my surprise i see that all measurements are in INCH!!
Has BNM forgotten that Malaysia went metric some 20 years ago? Or are they still sleeping up there.
Look here for the layout.
| Permalink | one comment | Add Comment |

 In Memory of Ghandi. - by @lbert
  Posted:18/06/2007 - 11:54 - in category: general
The United nations have declared the birthday of Mahatma Gandhi ( 2 october ) as from now on being the day of nonviolence.

It was Mahatma Ghandi who with a non violent campain ended the British kolonial supremacy in India. He was killed by a Hindu fanatic in 1948 who called him to liberal to muslims.
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Indonesia Prattler - by @lbert
  Posted:17/06/2007 - 10:00 - in category: foreign
It was Jakartass's blog that pointed me to a new blog in indonesia, Indonesia Prattler.
A blog that describes the lives and work of people on the lowest end of the social scale.
But the pride they put in their jobs is amazing.
This blog is definite a must read.
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 RI pushes ASEAN - by @lbert
  Posted:15/06/2007 - 11:15 - in category: foreign
RI pushes for human rights, democracy in ASEAN Charter
JAKARTA (Jakarta Post):
Indonesia is continuing to insist on the inclusion of articles on human rights and democratic values in the ASEAN Charter, currently being drafted by representatives from the grouping's 10 member countries.

Well it is already opposed by Singapore, Bankok and Myanmar (of course)
Thailand's military junta, has reportedly expressed opposition because the inclusion did not acknowledge transfers of power by undemocratic means, such as military coups.
And for the rest...how many democratic (real democratic) countries are there in Asean?
Right only 2, Indonesia and the Philipines, Thailand was kicked out of this league because of the military coup.
The rest of the ASEAN Members all have oppressive laws, no press freedom, and no respect for human rights.
ASEAN is just like a LAT relation (Living Apart Together) and it will probably take another 100 years before it is an organization which has cloud. Until now it is just like a kopi-tiam lots of talk and no results.

The full Jakarta Post article here.
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Cheap touch and no go - by @lbert
  Posted:14/06/2007 - 15:41 - in category: travel Malaysia
According to Samy Velu:
Smart TAG will cost only RM50 for the next three months in conjunction with the 50th Merdeka Day celebrations.
The normal price for a unit is RM100.
The price for a Touch 'n Go card will also been halved to RM5 during the period.

Why would you buy this shit card?
Afterall you altogether give them millions in advance. What do you get in return? Absolutely nothing, you get punished if you do not use your card for 6 month or so, they will deduct RM 5.00 for every 3 month you do not use it. That is the thank you for surrendering your money in advance.

Do not use Touch n Go, just pay manual and let them pay their extra staff, maybe they learn a lesson that way. Or if not necessary do not use Plus Highways at all.
If you drive off peak, taking federal road can save you a ton every year.
It saves me at least RM 500.00 taking the federal roads instead of Plus.

Watch out next year you get screwed again when they raise toll rates.
Look at Penang bridge.... how many times did they get back the money already?
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Freedom of religion?? - by @lbert
  Posted:14/06/2007 - 08:44 - in category: religion
Again the freedom of religion has been proven.
The jabatan hal ewal orang asli demolished a small church build on orang asli soil.
This under the argument that it was build on state land.
Yes if these orang asli would have converted to islam of course permission would have been given in no time, even if it was build on state land, but they converted to christianity so that seems to give the organization in charge of orang asli affairs all the right to demolish a church, well a great way to take care of your job, who the hell these people think they are?
Sons of the soil demolishing the church of 'real sons of the soil'!
Great another Malaysia boleh!
| Permalink | 2 comments | Add Comment |

 Floods and house construction - by @lbert
  Posted:13/06/2007 - 22:24 - in category: general
Preventing flash floods or flooding.
Well there are some easy rules that have to be followed (and are mostly NOT followed/neglected by the authorities and developers, because they are to busy filling their pockets.)

1. Do not chop everything flat before you start a housing project.
Leave the 100 year old trees, create green around them. What is the use of all those RM 2.50 stupid palm trees they plant when almost completed?
2. Plan the project properly, most projects have no planning at all in relation to the rest of the town around it. It is just a taman here and a taman there. Than afterwards they think about roads which are not there or to small.
3. Do not tar every road in a housing project! One of the most important things.
The main roads can be tarred, all other roads including pathways should use clinkers (pavement bricks).
Than during rain lots of water can go into the soil, and also maintain the ground water level so that no sinking of soil occurs.
4. Proper ponds to catch excess rain in case of extreme rainfall.
5. Stiff penalties for those who clog drains or throw dirt in it.
6. Proper drainage planning from the 'taman' to the main water exits.

Than necessities for modern houses:
1. Isolation under all roofs (Can you imagine that 80% is still build without isolation? Yes some have a layer of aluminium foild but no rockwool underneeth.)
Isolation will bring down the temperature of rooms under the roof by 10-20%!
Save a ton in aircon costs.
2. Windows that close properly so that aircon is not used to cool down the outside world.
3. Houses in town should actually have double walls when central aircon is used.
Also double glass is advisable.
This will save you 30-40% on aircon costs (and electricity will only go up!)
4. Deliver a house with a proper kitchen, not a RM 15.00 aluminium sink that is fitted somewhere.
Houses should be build so, that you do not have to spent 30-100.000 for renovation.
This is ridiculous and only happens in Malaysia.
5. Taps toilets and fittings should have quality and should not be so lousy that they have to be replaced within 1 year.
6. Sufficient sockets should be provided. What can you do in a kitchen that has only 2 sockets?

Contractors should be forced by the government to adhere to the standards above.
Now they are only obcessed by profit, and their average profit on a house is at least 30-40% (here up north)
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 How to report a wedding. - by @lbert
  Posted:13/06/2007 - 11:16 - in category: politics Malaysia
The view of Mindy Adams a Asia Media writer.

How to report a wedding
Mindy McAdams examines the directives journalists in Malaysia were given and the ways in which the Malaysian press is muzzled

By Mindy McAdams
AsiaMedia Contributing Writer
Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Malaysia's prime minister denied the rumors months ago, but Malaysian blogs persisted in claiming that he would remarry. When he confirmed his wedding plans at a June 6 press conference, he explained his earlier denials by saying, "All the dates mentioned were wrong...that's why I said it was just a rumor. It took some time...I needed to consult my children, needed to find the time. I was too busy going here and there."

The marriage carries no scandal. Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is a widower, married only once before, and his wife died in 2005. His new bride has been divorced for 15 years. He is 67; she is 53. Both are Muslim and she was born and raised in Malaysia.

In spite of the apparent simplicity of the marriage, the national government thought the occasion required a special directive to the news media.

Journalists were called to the Office of the Prime Minister and given their orders by Kamal Khalid, head of communications for the prime minister's office: Keep the wedding story low key. It will be a private affair. Rely only on the official announcements issued by the state-run news agency, Bernama. Don't go digging into the background of Jeanne Abdullah, the future wife of the prime minister. Do not refer to the bride as a divorcee (which she is) or to the prime minister as her brother-in-law (which he is, or was; Jeanne's first husband was the brother of Abdullah's first wife). Above all, do not use any information from the Internet.

In other words, the government told the press to use only government sources in reporting about this prominent national event.

The wedding took place three days after the announcement, on June 9. Members of the press were not permitted to attend.

Lapdogs instead of watchdogs

The case of the prime minister's new wife hardly strikes fear into the heart of Western journalists. No reporters were detained, arrested or mistreated in any way. That's how it is in Malaysia, most of the time. Most journalists live a safe life because they never, ever bite the hand that feeds them.

The pre-wedding stories followed the text of the press conference Abdullah gave on June 6. The online stories posted on June 10 by the English-language dailies The Star and The New Straits Times read almost identically -- right down to the concluding quote from Jeanne's daughter Nadene about her mother's pre-wedding jitters. Both print and TV journalists in Malaysia are very well trained. They do as they are told.

"I can tell you, self-censorship is an obsession for the editors," Steven Gan told me in an interview in June 2005. The editor of Malaysiakini, an online-only news site, Gan had worked as a reporter and columnist for The Sun, a print daily, in the 1990s.

He explained how the system works.

Fresh new reporters come to the newsroom with real enthusiasm. Then they start to be retrained by the editors, who know, for instance, that you are not supposed to ask certain questions and not embarrass the VIPs.

The phone call comes to your editor before you even get back to the office after a press conference. Your editor is waiting for you. He says: You shouldn't have asked that question. He says: You can't put that in your story.

"Things like that happen all the time," Gan said. Other journalists told me the same thing, but no one else would go on record with me. My one other on-record interview was with a news editor who later phoned me and asked me not to use any of it, except the parts where he discussed the public's distrust of the Internet.

"It's very much learning from the editors," Gan said. "For a while there, you'll resist. You'll ask them: How come you took off this sentence? Why did you rewrite my story? And then, you start getting tired of it. You start writing the way they want you to write.

"Basically, if you want to play it safe, you censor everything," he said.

Forbidden topics

Most outsiders see Malaysia as a peaceful country, not a place where jackbooted thugs break down doors in the night and drag people off to prison. But on Jan. 20, 2003, police raided Malaysiakini's offices, confiscating 19 computers. The youth wing of the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), the ultra-powerful political party, had filed a complaint claiming that Malaysiakini had published a seditious letter concerning the special rights of the ethnic Malays.

Malaysia has a democratic government. The nation has a bicameral parliament and there is no president. Malaysia's king is the head of state but fulfills only ceremonial duties. The prime minister is the head of government and his wife is the de facto First Lady of Malaysia.

The government abides by the rule of law. The law (specifically, the Sedition Act of 1948, as amended in 1969) says certain things must not be questioned: the national religion (Islam), the national language (Bahasa Melayu), the conditions of Malaysian citizenship, the privileged position of ethnic Malays and the natives of Sarawak and Sabah, and the status of the Malay rulers, who are the hereditary leaders of nine of Malaysia's 13 states.

To an American, one of the strangest things about Malaysian law is the prohibition of public discussion about race. The Sedition Act prohibits any action that promotes "ill will and hostility" among the different races in Malaysia. This prohibition goes far beyond any "hate speech" laws in the United States and blankets the entire culture with a smothering effect. I found that almost everyone I met would discuss race with me, a foreigner, but I found no open discussion of race in the newspapers or on television.

Imagine a press and broadcast system in which the central hinge of politics and economics can barely be mentioned.

In Malaysia, political parties divide along racial lines, as do political favors and entitlements. Everything and everyone is identified as Malay or Chinese or Indian. (Yes, these are "races" in Malaysia.) There are even further layers of racial complexity defining the status of non-Muslim natives of the two Malaysian states in East Malaysia. The roots of the law go deep into religion, language, centuries of seafaring trade (and immigration) around the Malay Peninsula, the British colonial practice of "divide and rule," and even the carving-up of Borneo in the 1960s.

The prohibitions in the Sedition Act apply to individual members of the working press as well as to their employers, the news organizations. As a result, there is no true public discussion of many issues. Malaysians share their opinions only face-to-face, via SMS and, increasingly, in (mostly anonymous) blog comments.

According to Gan, and other journalists who declined to speak on the record, members of the public feel quite cautious about being identified with any negative remarks they might post online.

"It's not a matter of being arrested. It's not getting a promotion, being victimized, being fired," Gan said. "A lot of our readers are civil servants." Naturally, that means your career is at stake if you step out of line; the same is true for the journalists.

Yet arrests are not unheard of. In the most infamous example, which took place on Oct. 27, 1987, and is known as "Operasi Lalang," 119 people were arrested under the Internal Security Act, which permits detention without charge at the discretion of the home affairs minister. The government licenses of three newspapers were revoked, forcing them to shut down for months. What spurred the government to close newspapers and imprison intellectuals and "educationists"? A public protest concerning the appointment of non-Mandarin educated officials to posts in vernacular Chinese schools.

The tension of silence

I went to live in Malaysia in 2004 to learn about the future of online journalism. Instead, I learned about controls on the press and how they work, both within and apart from the letter of the law. I learned about aspects of race and identity that differ from those in my own culture. I experienced a shadow of colonialism that coexists with an ancient history and an earnest hope for future development.

The nation practices a kind of super affirmative action, with no consideration for merit or need. So there are wealthy Malaysians enjoying very generous financial benefits they do not require, while some poor Malaysians, not racially favored, go without. There are students with high test scores who are not given a place at a good public university, while students with lower scores get in. All the privileges, or lack thereof, are based on your race, your parents and your religion.

Race, as I said, is the hinge of Malaysian society.

In Malaysia, the races don't tell one another what they think about the race issues. The media don't bring the resentments and the grumbling out into the air and the sunlight. These things are discussed only in safe places, outside the public eye, with your own kind -- or with foreigners, like me. And members of each race imagine (or rather, feel certain) that they know exactly what the other races are thinking. And how can they?

In Malaysia, the rationale for all this silence, the laws that make public discussion and debate impossible, the requirements for holding your tongue, for "Operasi Lalang," the raid on Malaysiakini, all come down to one thing, one day: May 13, 1969.

On that day, riots erupted in Kuala Lumpur, the capital. Blood spilled in the streets. Some describe massacres, men swinging parangs (machetes), scenes from a civil war. People who were children then can still remember their parents' fear; they remember being kept home, indoors, with the shutters closed tight. The story of that day, repeated again and again -- even to me, a foreigner -- has always been distorted, changing with each telling, except for the crucial point: The riots were race riots.

Chinese killed Malays, and Malays killed Chinese.

It's never entirely clear who started it, or why (and a new book by former Member of Parliament Kua Kia Soong, May 13: Declassified Documents on the Malaysian Riots of 1969, says the riots were actually a coup attempt orchestrated by a faction inside UMNO), but that doesn't matter. It's a complicated story that goes far back beyond that one day. That doesn't matter either. What matters, as with any legend, any ghost story, is the warning: It could happen again!

Never mind that 38 years have passed, the wealth and education level of Malaysia have increased tremendously since then, and the world has changed. No, a day of bloodshed more than a full generation ago -- when the nation was just 12 years old, when the amputation of Singapore was still a raw wound -- serves to justify one of the most repressive (but not oppressive) media law systems in the world.

Madam Prime Minister, Jeanne Abdullah, was born and raised a Catholic. She converted to Islam for her first marriage. She's not "pure Malay," either. She's Eurasian.

The views expressed above are those of the author and are not necessarily those of AsiaMedia or the UCLA Asia Institute.
| Permalink | one comment | Add Comment |

 Preserving the language?? - by @lbert
  Posted:12/06/2007 - 16:35 - in category: general
Why all the silly arguing about preserving bahasa Malaysia?
If a language is a spoken language, than it will evolve faster than you think.
New words are adopted, older words lose their meaning or change meaning.
If have been 15 years+ out of Holland and in those years the language changed at lot. Last time i went back i had to ask for the meaning of some words.
But this is all evolution that you cannot stop, whether you like it or not.
Not even a 'dewan pustaka dan bahasa' can stop the malaysian language from changing.
Just accept it and live with it, afterall what is wrong if english words are used?
Or do you have to be so puristic as to translate every new term into bahasa Malaysia.
Even bahasa Indonesia is making less fuss, they adopt and change without any problem.
And both languages are 'systhetic' because they comprise of a combination of old malay, pasar malay, portugese, dutch and chinese.
So it is already a hotpot mix.
| Permalink | one comment | Add Comment |

 Fund managers showing interest again in Malaysia - by @lbert
  Posted:10/06/2007 - 13:53 - in category: general
Malaysia is back on the radar of top foreign fund managers who have been impressed with the Government�s pro-business approach, said Second Finance Minister Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop.
Nor Mohamed, who met 30 fund managers at an investment dialogue here organised by Goldman Sachs and CIMB, said he had the overwhelming feeling that US fund managers were a lot more interested in Malaysia now.

Should he happy about this? Do not forget that all those so called interested fund managers will drop Malaysia in a split second when anything goes the way they don't like.
So first they jack up the market and afterwards do not expect them to have consideration when they let it crash!!
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Malaysia's muzzled press. - by @lbert
  Posted:07/06/2007 - 08:05 - in category: general
Editors from the mainstream media were summoned for a briefing on the wedding of the PM. Briefing by 4th Floor info chief, Kamal Khalid.

The instructions, in a nutshell:
No run-up stories on the wedding.
No interviews with Nori, KJ, relatives, close friends..
No reference to Jeanne as a "janda" (divorcee) or Pak Lah's biras (in-law).
Use only releases by the PM's department or the PM himself.
No Press to wait outside Sri Perdana this Saturday.
Event to be reported by official media only.

Thus...no bloggers allowed.

These 'commands' are outrageous and ridiculous. If the PM wants a private event, fine, he can have it. But you cannot muzzle the press this way, this is outright browning out before anything is published. Who the hell they think they are?
| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |

 Finally Bahasa MALAYSIA! - by @lbert
  Posted:04/06/2007 - 11:59 - in category: general
Finally the government woke up from the dream imposed by Dr.M. ZAM announced it, from now on bahasa melayu will be bahasa Malaysia!!
Finally Malaysia has got back its national language. High time at the 50th year of independence.
NOTE:
Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, who was the Education Minister in 1986 when initiating the change, had been blamed for dropping the term Bahasa Malaysia in favour of Bahasa Melayu

| Permalink | no comments | Add Comment |


| next page
| show all | |

All views are personal. I do not take any stand for or against any political party / group or whatever. I just express my feelings on the subjects, they might be harsh sometimes, but you are free to give your comments
( if you are frank enough to give a real email address).
-- All email links of comments (if displayed) are protected against email grabbers, the email address is only made visible in the browser --
-- It is send as a hex notation. --


PointOfView Version 7.1. Go here for the code.
Last modified on: 31-03-2008 04:01:29
This page has been viewed 54,652 times since June 2003.