The 10 mistakes of Mahathir Mohamad
Former premier Mahathir Mohamad has criticized every prime
minister of Malaysia from the late Tunku Abdul Rahman to the current
leader Najib Razak, sparing no one except of course, himself. Mahathir
has also criticized other world leaders including UK’s Tony Blair and of
course George W Bush, the 43rd president of the United States. So far
none of his local peers have swung back at him, which is not surprising
considering that several are already dead and only Najib and 5th prime
minister Abdullah Badawi are alive. As for the international leaders,
they have largely ignored Mahathir’s existence, which only adds to his
frustration, but there is nothing he can do to them. However, he can
make life miserable for his successors here, and this he is already
doing.
When Mahathir retired in 2003, after 22 years as
PM, there was talk about his ‘great’ legacy and he was even called Bapa
Pemodenan or Father of Modernization. Some 9 years after his retirement,
the excesses and sheer ill-judgement of his economic, social and
political decisions have come back to wallop the nation with a backlash
stronger than the ferocious tsunami of 2006 that devastated much of
South Asia. At 87, Mahathir is now reviled by most Malaysians, blamed
for the massive corruption that may soon bankrupt the country if no
remedial economic action is taken, and for the apartheid-scale racial
fissures amongst the various ethnic groups in the country.
NEP (NEW ECONOMIC POLICY)
Just pick the New Economic Policy, which was the brainchild of the
policymakers of the 1960s but which he abused to the maximum. This abuse
alone is enough to ensure that he will stay in the Malaysian Hall of
Villains rather than in the Hall of Fame which he still thinks he
belongs in. His peers with better memories including former Finance
minister Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah said last week that the NEP was never
meant to create or to be used to incubate a class of Malay capitalists,
but to address poverty and to raise the level of Malay participation in
the economy. It was never meant to be abused by the government of the
day to handpick a select group of Malay entrepreneurs, load them with
sharply-discounted government deals and then expect them to prosper and
create enough economic ripples to help lift the rest of the community.
This was Mahathir’s first and major mistake. But was it really a
mistake? Doubters and critics point to the enormous wealth he
accumulated for his cronies and proxies through the money-making schemes
hatched under the guise of the NEP, and by privatizing government
assets to favored Malay entrepreneurs, one of whom is the disgraced
former MAS chairman Tajudin Ramli. Not able to deal with the ‘instant
success’ or the stress of big time business, many succumbed to debt
during the 1998 Asian financial crisis. Tajudin and friends like Halim
Saad fell from hero to zero, losing enormous amounts of money and
requiring massive government bailouts.
Cronies but the masses get nothing
The second mistake Mahathir, in his foolishness, made was to pool the
major part of the nation’s wealth in the hands of a few. This time he
included non-Malays millionaires such as Vincent Tan, Robert Kuok and
Ananda Krishnan. Tan has just announced his retirement, Kuok unhappy
with the worsening racial system in the country has chosen to stay Hong
Kong, while Ananda is wanted by the Indian authorities for allegedly
having corruptly wangled a telecoms licence to buy into Aircel. This
pooling of wealth in the hands of a few inevitably left the ordinary
Malays and Malaysians with just a few crumbs to share amongst
themselves, a slow-boil situation that has blown up to today’s red-hot
disputes about social and economic fairness. Not only is there not
enough money for scholarships, education, healthcare, employment and
welfare for everyone, even the Malays who have been repeatedly told by
Mahathir’s Umno party that they will get priority, have left in the
lurch.
Malays now form 50% of the poorest 30% lowest
income earners in the country. As for the non-Malays, of course, they
have felt the pinch more. Many have been forced to go overseas to work
and to study. That’s right, educational and employment opportunities are
scarce for the non-Malays in the country. Again, the only group that
benefited were the elite in the Umno party, their families and cronies.
So Mahathir – despite his self-praise – was in fact rather shortsighted.
Money was far more important to him than he cared to admit.
Trusting the wrong people
The third mistake that Mahathir made was choosing the wrong people for
the wrong jobs. He also trusted the wrong people. All of the Malays
tycoons that he picked had no real business savvy but were merely the
trusted aides of former Finance minister Daim Zainuddin. That is why
guys like Tajuddin, Halim, Rashid Husein of RHB Bank, Mohd Noor Mutalib
and Abdul Rahman Maidin of MRCB fared poorly in the end. Some have even
been hauled to court to settle debts. Only Daim Zainudin remains
‘filthy’ rich. His nominees ended up owning all the various banks and
business enterprises meant to be transferred into Umno Baru. Somehow, as
the Umno legend goes, Daim managed to secure these for himself. This
was obviously a huge letdown for Mahathir. Instead of ‘tricking’ people
over to his point of view, for once, he had been had!
Set Malaysia off on the borrowing habit
Mahathir did not foresee that the National Debt could be as high as it
is today, having ballooned to over RM450 billion. Despite several
‘begging’ trips to Singapore and Brunei, he was politely rebuffed. In
the end, he borrowed from overseas by issuing bonds and ‘stealing’ every
spare sen from Petronas, EPF and the other Government-Linked-Companies
to fund his mega projects. Throughout his 22-year rule, Mahathir never
saved a sen for Malaysia for a rainy day. And this was his fourth
mistake.
Weak grasp of economic principles
Mahathir is
just an ordinary doctor; a general practitioner and not a specialist.
His understanding of economics is as rudimentary as the average
Malaysian. His idea of increasing the equity of the Malays is so
simplistic – use the GLCs. Mahathir’s vision of doing business is by
profiteering through controlling shares in as many companies as possible
without considering the possibility of losing money. Sad to say, real
life businesses involves losses, not just profits.
Mahathir’s economic policy was not based on any solid foundation and had
never been tested in any country before. It was based on his opinions
and viewpoints. If these had been any good or worked, many countries
would have already implemented similar ideas centuries ago. Even
established capitalist and communist economic systems have come under
fire and economic collapse is a norm these days, part of a man-made boom
and bust cycle. Several economists have even urged nations to revert
back to gold-based currencies, an ancient and established type of
monetary system, so what are Mahathir’s child-like economic concepts by
comparison? His fifth mistake is therefore his skewed understanding of
the economy. It led to the controversial de-pegging of the ringgit from
the US dollar and the overnight closure of the CLOB share market trading
in 1998 – two events that investors have still not forgiven Malaysia
and Mahathir for.
Dictator syndrome
Mahathir’s ego and
unconscious desire to be a dictator is his sixth mistake. He amended
the constitution to weaken the Agong and the Sultans and then made sure
that the law and enforcement bodies obeyed him. He sacked the Chief
Justice Tun Salleh Abbas and closed both eyes when judges were openly
bought by those who had money. It would be tough for Malaysians and
their investors to fully trust the judiciary system again. This is why
the Umno-BN has lost its integrity and the people their faith in the
coalition. Malaysians will always distrust whatever Umno-BN does even if
it may be well-intentioned.
Racist policies
To
prevent the disintegration of his policies and his misdeeds from being
exposed, Mahathir had to resort to his favorite racial politics. He had
to convince the Malays that what he had done was necessary and in their
interests. He kept for himself the great jewels and gave out the small
chips so as to convince the Malays that the war against the other races
was real. The non-Malays had to be kept back. Thus the budget
allocations for places like BTN or the National Civics Bureau where
Malay graduates and civil servants were openly taught to be suspicious
of the other races. But not all the Malays bought it. Such teachings
were against Islam and also against universal values. The Malays were
left confused, while the non-Malays totally sidelined. So being racist
is Mahathir’s seventh mistake.
Corruption
If Mahathir
and Umno have been successful in making sure Malaysia achieves developed
nation status by 2020, why does the record show so many serious faults
to date. There are only eight years to go but the economy is still in a
shambles with the national debt soaring, racial and religious harmony in
disarray, and the political situation worsening with Umno-BN now openly
resorting to physical violence to stop the opposition from holding
their rallies.
The education system is also leading nowhere,
healthcare is getting worse and more expensive, the much-touted and
corrupt 1Care already rejected before it can even come on-stream, law
and order is still questionable, mismanagement and graft more entrenched
than before in the Umno-BN government. Instant of all cylinders kicking
in, and culminating into the realization of Vision 2020, Malaysia may
go bankrupt instead. Not fighting corruption, but perpetuating it is
Mahathir’s eighth mistake.
Meddling with the running of the country
The majority of the Malays are poor and still need government help
despite 55 years of Umno “successes“ (read failures). The non-Malays
have been patient enough and have given Umno enough chances. They have
waited until the third generation after the nation’s independence in
1957 and they are now fed-up with Umno-BN. The same too is happening
with the Malays. Those not in the direct line of the Umno gravy train,
and this would be the great majority, are getting fed-up too. More have
voted for the opposition and will continue to do so.
When
Mahathir realized that things were turning sour, he handed over the
baton to Abdullah Badawi, thinking that he could still control the
running of the government by ‘remote control’. But when things were not
carried out as he had wished, Mahathir forced an ouster and replaced
Badawi with Najib. Granted, the disorganized Badawi was in no capacity
to lead Malaysia but Najib is just as incapable too. All through,
instead of giving a helping hand, Mahathir continued to meddle with the
running of the country. Interfering with the running of the country and
disallowing the current leaders to put in solutions that suit the era is
Mahathir’s ninth mistake.
Causing trouble in Umno and pushing Mukhriz up the ladder
Yet Mahathir stubbornly refuses to accept or to admit to his mistakes.
This is one man who refuses to face up to reality. He is not really
interested in the welfare of Malaysians at all, not even the Malays or
Umno. He only wants to save his face and to make sure that his son
Mukhriz will become prime minister no matter what deals he has to
execute with the current batch of Umno warlords to effect this. Ruthless
and completely selfish, Mahathir would think nothing of creating chaos
just to fulfill that ambition. After all, he could de-register Umno just
to stay in power. Imagine what he won’t dare to do to get Mukhriz in as
Umno president. But it is this incessant interfering and trouble-making
in Umno that will be his tenth and last mistake. Mahathir will doom
Umno, and in imploding, Umno will very likely take Mahathir down for the
count.
COMMENTS FROM READERS:
He will be
remembered as one who presided over the period that brought astronomical
corruption, nepotism, financial losses, racism and apartheid to
Malaysia. Some politicians are righteous, infallible, great and
God-like…only in their own distorted & deranged minds. From an
impartial, democratic, transparent 3rd country. We see too clearly. Let
me ask him & UMNO leaders, with their undemocratic antics and
multi-billion squander and losses, how long would he and UMNO leaders
last in US, UK, Can, Aus & NZ before being brought to court? 55
years or 5 weeks?
What has the ex-Malaysian PM got, to be proud
of? Has he left a Malaysian legacy respected, successful and
uncorrupted like his next door Singapore? True religion, humanity and
morality have no room for plunder & racism. It’s only him glorifying
himself, the World Community hasn’t a rice grain of respect for him.
Lim Guan Eng is a million times more respected. Malaysia has neither
transparency (non-corruption) nor real human rights, neither freedom of
the media nor true democracy. The blacks are only 14% of US population,
if Obama can be US President, an Indian can be a Malaysian PM…think
about it! How tragically you’ve been treated. Alan Newman, NZ
Many people talk of Mahathir’s legacy. What legacy? Proton has been a
failure. After 20 years of existence and protection, at huge costs to
the nation, they are barely able to produce original designs. They had
to spend hundred of millions in 1996 to acquire UK’s Lotus to overcome a
lack of in-house engineering capability. They are still not able to
penetrate the US market, the world’s most lucrative car market. It has
not spawned an auto industry, unlike the Korean car industry which grew
from the bottom up, making and supplying parts to Japanese auto-makers
long before making their own cars.
Perwaja Steel has been a
failure. Set up to realise Mahathir’s heavy industries policy.
Loss-making till today. Riddled with corruption, inefficiency and lack
of direction. Unsalvageable. DRB-Hicom has been a failure. Another one
set up to realise Mahathir’s heavy-industries policy. Couldn’t even run a
decent bus service. What has it achieved, and, what does it actually do
nowadays? Renong has been a failure. Set up to realise Mahathir’s
policy of conglomerates, copying Japan’s sogososhas (conglomerates).
Gets involved in everything. Builds a highway, then charges so much for
it that, today, it’s possible to fly up to Penang for less than driving.
Starts up a telco, spends billions on fibre optic cables running up and
down the country, then gets into financial trouble.
MAS has
been a failure. Cornerstone of Mahathir’s privatisation policy. He had
the audacity to arm-twist enough people to grant loans to an individual
to buy the airline. That much trust he has in that one person. That
single action exposes, more than anything else, his poor judgement.
People who has worked or associated with MAS knows that its internal
problems have existed for decades – inefficiency, corruption, racism,
favouritism, abuse of power. Because MAS’ competition is international,
these problems are cruelly exposed. Yet when Tajuddin Ramli took over,
he decided to spend RM20 billion ringgit to expand the fleet. Shouldn’t
you solve the internal problems first? Of course, we now know that he
failed miserably. Now, who picked him for the job?
Commonwealth
Games Village has been a failure. Mahathir’s pride – symbol of his
“Malaysia boleh” call. Now a target of vandalism – missing chairs,
tiles, etc. Have to spent millions on maintenance every year.
Occasionally used for political gatherings and pesta. A definite ‘white
elephant’. Bakun Dam has been a failure. What was Mahathir thinking of?
The project is just not justifiable. And the proof of that must be Syed
Mokhtar Al-Bukhary’s proposal to sell half the electricity generated to
his (proposed) aluminium smelting plant. Imagine – you have to build an
aluminium smelting plant in order to justify building that dam!
The 1998 financial crisis. This must be Mahathir’s greatest failure. In
the years leading up to the crisis, the KLSE Index reached 1,400 points
and property prices was going through the roof. Labour and skills
shortage led to ever higher salaries. New car models led to ever higher
car prices. Interest rates went up to historical highs. But rumours and
speculation fueled ever higher stock prices. Profits from stocks moved
into more stocks, then moved to property, and then moved back to stocks.
Everyone was speculating and no one was working. It was the height of
lunacy. Obviously the economy was overheating. A responsible leader
would have engineered a soft landing. Cool off the economy. But Mahathir
did the opposite. He announced even more mega-projects, in the midst of
other projects ongoing at that time. He even spoke about us running a
zero per cent inflation on the back of 10 per cent growth …
indefinitely.
We were already running 22 consecutive months of
deficit. The ringgit became indefensible. When you spend so much more
than you earn, in the long run, you become very vulnerable. True enough,
the crisis struck the country. But Mahathir did an even more
irresponsible thing: he sacked Anwar, triggering a political crisis.
Mahathir’s policies and actions leading up to the crisis, and during the
crisis, have shown him to be irresponsible and incompetent. Mahathir
should be condemned for his failure to avert the crisis, rather than
praised for his actions to “cure” the crisis. On the eve of his
departure, Mahathir defended his legacy. He said, amongst other things,
that the failure of Perwaja was due to “mismanagement”, not the failure
of the heavy-industries policy. Mahathir is only half-right. The failure
of Perwaja, and all the rest, is due to both mismanagement and policy.
Both of which can and must be blamed on Mahathir. Why? A powerful leader
must take the blame for such failures, if he/she were to take the
credit for other successes. It is a well-known fact that most of the top
management of these companies were hand-picked, or at least vetted, by
Mahathir.
It is also well-known that Mahathir has a fondness
for micro-managing his pet projects. It is common for corporate
directions to be influenced by him. For example, when Tajuddin owned
MAS, Mahathir used it as a pawn to aggressively push his South-South
agenda. MAS started flying to all the unprofitable routes: Argentina,
South Africa, Turkey, Mozambique, etc. Tajuddin obviously cannot say
“no”. But to offset losses, MAS ingeniously lobbied for higher domestic
tariffs, citing “loss making” domestic routes (as if the
Mahathir-approved Argentina flights weren’t loss-making). But now, or
course we know that even domestic routes can make money as shown by
AirAsia.
Mahathir’s heavy-industries policy is grandiose, not
reality. Why start with such huge projects? Those of us who have worked
umpteen years in large organisations would know the complexity and
difficulty in running such huge and complex operations. A car
manufacturing operation consists of thousands of complex processes. Has
to be done right all the time. We have no history of such manufacturing.
Why not start with something less complex and with less risk ? Malaysia
does not need to own a car industry. We do not need to own a steel
industry. We do not need to own an electrical appliances industry. We do
not need to own a software industry. What do we need? We need to focus
on petro-chemicals, tourism, oil palm and other agricultural outputs,
food products, wood products, rubber products, cruise and merchant
shipping. We need to go downstream. We need to undertake research and
development in those areas. We need to use satellite imaging to detect
spread of pests in oil palm plantations.
We need to automate,
create uniquely designed vehicles for use in the plantations to increase
efficiency. To create the best clones. To write software for managing
plantations. To make plantation management a sought-after career in this
country. To pay our plantation workers decent salaries, not one that
depends on the weather. To create thousands of middle- and end-products,
from cooking oil, margarine, coffee, to Vitamin E extracts. If we do
need a role model, perhaps it should be Nestle and Ikea, not Mitsubishi
and Kawasaki. Because at the end of the day, it makes more sense for our
country to capitalise on our natural advantage, historical strengths
and intimate understanding of oil palm, wood and food, rather than steel
and cars. There lies Mahathir’s greatest mistake.
While he
focused on this beloved heavy industries, Mahathir ignored other
industries, calling them “sunset industries” amongst other things. The
term “sunset industries” was fashionable then but you don’t hear it
mentioned these days. People now know that there is no such thing as a
“sunset industry”. If you check out the website of the state of
California, you will find that agriculture is the second largest
industry in the state, a place that has the highest concentration of
high-tech industries in the world. Of course, California has
Mediterranean weather suitable for certain crops, and producers turn
that into a very lucrative business (helped by high technology,
excellent marketing, sustained research and cheap Mexican labour).
Sounds familiar? The amount of time, money and effort that Mahathir
wasted on his failed pet projects could have been used to modernise and
expand Malaysia’s agrifood industry and turn the country into a major
producer and exporter in this part of the world. Our country has so much
natural wealth. All we need is to add our intellect, some discipline,
lots of unity, a dash of hard work, and plenty of common sense, to
succeed as a nation. And yes, some humility. We don’t need a car
industry, a failed steel company, Twin Towers (which isn’t even the
tallest anymore), an empty stadium, giant dam, ‘Malaysia boleh’, and
seldom-used race-track. Mahathir has shown us what not to do. Let us all
learn from his mistakes. Let’s not repeat it. That’s the
legacy.....Comment by GH Kok
Mahathir is a person who
would rather destroy the whole nation in his efforts to avoid being
proven wrong than accept the fact that he made many mistakes that have
cost and will continue to cost the whole country dearly. Criticism of
others comes easy to him, but he can’t take it himself. Certainly he can
make life miserable for his successors and no one has yet been able to
deal with him as he deserves. If there is any person, other than Daim
Zainuddin, who deserves to be imprisoned under the ISA for economic
sabotage and endangering the security of the nation, it is Mahathir. The
New Economic Policy was definitely abused to the maximum by him and a
selected group of cronies in UMNO, chief of whom of course was Daim
Zainuddin, the man who singlehandedly siphoned out the most of
Malaysia’s wealth and caused the country and many of its institutions to
suffer massive losses.
Mahathir and Daim never really allowed
the NEP to address poverty and raise the level of Malay participation in
the economy, except for the few (themselves included of course) whom
they selected and were able to collaborate with them at the expense of
the vast majority of Malaysians (especially Malays) whom they were able
to dupe. There was no mistake in the deliberate pattern in which
Mahathir & Daim systematically accumulated their own enormous wealth
and for their cronies and proxies “through the money-making schemes
hatched under the guise of the NEP”. This was plain looting that they
managed to disguise and control through their tight grip on power and
the regulatory apparatus of the government. The so-called privatization
(in fact piratization) of government assets to a few favoured Malay
entrepreneurs was actually a sham.
In reality it was not so
much that they were “not able to deal with the ‘instant success’ or the
stress of big time business” that many succumbed to debt during the 1998
Asian financial crisis. They were only proxies for Daim and Mahathir,
who had managed to convince them that what they were doing was in the
national interest and the interests of the Malays and UMNO in
particular. Under Daim’s and Mahathir’s directives, they facilitated the
stripping and looting of the very businesses that they were supposed to
nuture, supposedly for the purposes of maintaining the power of UMNO
and its hold over the nation but actually to enrich Daim and Mahathir
(whether they realized it or not).
They were rewarded
handsomely for their roles in these schemes, but ultimately at the
expense of their own credibility and capacity. It would prove impossible
for them to make enough to cover the money siphoned out of these
businesses by Daim and Mahathir, thereby necessitating the massive
government bailouts. This coupled with the pooling of wealth in the
hands of a few “left the ordinary Malays and Malaysians with just a few
crumbs to share amongst themselves”, but not many realised it at the
time (which was really borrowed time), since Daim and Mahathir were able
to mask what they were doing through the creation of artificial and
shallow economic booms and progress (especially through the use of
petroleum revenues stolen from Sarawak and Sabah).
Indeed it
has now blown up to today’s red-hot disputes about social and economic
fairness, but there are still many especially in UMNO/BN, who refuse to
see or cannot see the real cause of the dire situation that Malaysia is
in today. The more delusional among them even go to the extent of
denying that Malaysia is on the brink of bankruptcy, which is where the
doings of Daim and Mahathir in particular and UMNO in general have put
us all. So now we find, in times of rapidly rising prices and costs of
living but without commensurate income, that “there is not enough money
for scholarships, education, healthcare, employment and welfare for
everyone, even the Malays who have been repeatedly told by Mahathir’s
Umno party that they will get priority”. It is not so much that Mahathir
chose the wrong people for the wrong jobs or that he trusted the wrong
people. Mahathir and Daim worked together to pick people who could be
manipulated, coerced, intimidated or blackmailed into doing things that
suited their evil plans. Many of these people were hauled to court to
settle debts not really of their own doing or making but incurred at the
behest of Daim and Mahathir or as a result of their schemes.
The result of course is that “only Daim Zainudin remains ‘filthy’ rich”.
Mahathir was not really had, since he was together with Daim a
significant beneficiary of all these schemes, but he may not have
realised the full extent of what Daim had siphoned off and that this
combined with his own grandiose schemes would place such a great burden
on the nation. The self-deception of a megalomaniac like Mahathir and
the mass deception that he perpetrated on the Malaysian people is
something that all Malaysians will be paying for through their nose for
the forseeable future. Mahathir could have foreseen that the National
Debt would become as high as it is today (over RM450 billion) if he had
really bothered to count the cost of all the nefarious schemes that he
and Daim implemented. Mahathir was never responsible enough to think
about the future and the consequences of any of his and Daim’s actions.
That he never saved a sen for Malaysia for a rainy day could generously
be seen as a “mistake”, but should rather be seen as gross criminal
neglect and dereliction of duty (if he really had any sense of duty).
Mahathir had no real economic policy to speak of. His economic policy
was based on his tentative opinions and speculative viewpoints, not
forgetting his and Daim’s own exploitative shenanigans and crooked
schemes. His “skewed understanding of the economy” was more a character
defect than a mistake. Mahathir’s ego and conscious desire to be a
dictator was also not a mistake but a defect of character. Mahathir.
Daim and UMNO/BN never lost their integrity since they never had any in
the first place. As a result they could hardly be well-intentioned,
except in a kind of “by the way” manner.
UMNO has always been
racist. Its very name betrays its racist origins and nature, so much so
that its membership abandoned its own founder when he tried to change it
into a multi-racial party. Mahathir exploited this to the fullest. He
was both a product of UMNO’s racism as well as a proponent and ideologue
of it. UMNO Malays generally didn’t take much convincing that what
(Mahathir and Daim and their other leaders) had done was necessary and
in their interests. They have kept themselves deceived until today in
spite of all the evidence that they choose to ignore, mainly because of
their own racial and racist hang-ups, to the extent that many of them
(Mahathir being chief of them all) deliberately suppressed their real
(Indian) racial origins to become more Malay than the “real” Malays
themselves.
Corruption was tolerated and exploited by Mahathir
himself to maintain his power in UMNO and over the nation. While
pretending to be “clean, efficient and trustworthy” (“bersih, cekap,
amanah”), he allowed those he wished to control to get trapped in their
own web of corruption so that they were not only no threat to him but
could be made to do whatever he wanted. That corruption has now spread
so wide that it threatens the very fabric of the nation and UMNO has not
been able to come to grips with it. In fact UMNO seems to be quite
comfortable wallowing in it at the expense of the nation.
ONLY THING MAHATHIR DID MARVELLOUSLY IS TO DESTROY MALAYSIAN
TAMIL COMMUNITY. FROM A MIDDLE CLASS SOCIETY (80%) TO THE MOST
MARGINALISED, POOREST COMMUNITY IN MALAYSIA. AT ONE TIME THIS COMMUNITY
OWNED MORE THAN 20% OF THE ECONOMIC PIE OF THE NATION... REDUCED TO LESS
THAN 1.1% WHILE CHINESE COMMUNITY MAINTAIN 40% AND MALAYS ACCORDING TO
THE GOVERNMENT 22% BUT ACTUALLY MORE THAN THAT. HE INTRODUCED THE
DEGRADING, DISGRACEFUL, RACIST "BIRO TETANGGA NEGARA" COURSE WHICH CALL
US TRAITORS, DRUNKARDS, SLAVES, SERVANTS, TROUBLE MAKERS, DON'T KNOWN
OWN FATHERS' NAMES, DIDN'T DO ANYTHING TO DEVELOP THE NATION ETC. HE
ACTUALLY STRIPPED US NAKED TO OUR UNDERWEARS ONLY. THE LUCKY 20% OF OUR
COMMUNITY MADE IT UPWARDS. HE CREATED 450,000 STATELESS INDIANS NEARLY
90% TAMILS. THE TAMILS SUFFER A LOT OF INJUSTICES, UNFAIRNESS DUE TO
THIS MORON FROM KERALA MALAYALEE FATHER. A good example of this moron
without HUMAN feelings was he abandoned his Kerala Malayalee Father back
at his home village in Kerala as this evil minded felt his father being
around would affect his political advancement....
I think not bad cause you commented on the truth but missed some point on the kebenaran tersirat. Personal wealth is always prevail other or rakyat or country debts. Why should i care ? Eat or save for myself while I still can cause if you don't others will. We all acted as a perfect human being cause if anyone is given the same opportunities the same thing will happen just a matter of sooner or later or how much or how little. Many thought it is alright to lupa diri cause it happened without they themselves aware of it. But many thought they didn't lupa Tuhan by acting in that manners out of their ignorance. Lets all pray for goodness of all cause only genuine prayer can perform miracle.
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