November 29, 2012
With the 13th GE looming, Najib has made as
many pleas as he has made promises of change, assuring the rakyat that
corruption, nepotism and cronyism would be a thing of the past.
It
is the rule of karma that life’s lessons have to be learned in one way
or another. And it is here that politicians make the slip, refusing to
accept the humility that life brings.
This is the case with the federal government politicians who are
stubbornly set in their ways, declining any help from providence to
better themselves.
And so the Barisan Nasional politicians remain corrupt, sexist,
philanderers, and homophobic; regrettably with no rebuke coming from
their boss, Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak.
One would have thought the humiliating defeat in the 2008 general
election would have mellowed the BN leadership – but far from it, with
the politicians turning from bad to worse.
Take the case of Deputy Education Minister Mohd Puad Zarkashi. A
thorough let-down when it comes to “nurturing” the young minds, Puad
seems confused between his duty as a deputy minister and that of a
politician, often playing the role of the latter.
On Sept 20 this year, Puad started an “attack” on the lesbians, gays,
bisexuals and transgenders (LGBT) of this country when he first agreed
to launch a manual asking parents and schoolchildren to “beware” of
“such people”.
He then followed it up, saying the ministry was committed in curbing
the LGBT phenomenon and later said school counsellors could help weed
out LGBT tendencies in students.
Recently, he commented that the Pakatan Rakyat alliance is akin to a
“gay marriage”, clearly taking a knock at Pakatan’s de facto adviser
Anwar Ibrahim’s alleged sexual orientation.
Clearly, Puad, the BN MP for Batu Pahat, is a self-proclaimed
homophobic and one coming from the BN camp. Would the rakyat welcome
such a politician in their midst?
Then we have the “I am influential and powerful” politician, Nazri
Aziz who serves as Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department. He has
no qualms that his son Mohamed Nedim, who was once involved in a brawl
at a upscale condominium, has full access to an almost half-a-million
ringgit worth Hummer belonging to the son of a controversial timber
tycoon Michael Chia.
It was alleged that the tycoon had “gifted” Nazri and Mohamed Nedim a
sports car each plus RM3 million to go with it. Would the rakyat
consider Nazri for yet another term in politics?
Meanwhile, what does BN do in the face of such accusations? It simply acts dumb.
Refusing to mellow
The 2008 general election has failed to mellow the federal government
under the BN flagship. On the contrary, the shocking defeat has made
the federal government bitter and angry at having lost the “right” to
continue to plunder the country’s riches.
Four years later and with the next general election looming, BN is
beyond desperation in wanting to recover its “losses” and regain the
prime states it lost to Pakatan.
That is all there is to BN’s struggle in wanting to win the 13th general election – extreme desperation.
The absolute decision on who is the best to lead this nation and its
people rests in the hands of the rakyat and for the sake of their
well-being and survival, the choice made has to be right if not perfect.
In this regard, there is little reason left for the rakyat to place
their trust in the BN government; after all, it has been this very
government that has been looting the nation’s coffers post-independence
and continues to rob the country of its riches.
The daylight robbery by BN is endless and Najib continues to act dumb
in the face of these accusations and that of his alleged role in the
Scorpene submarines purchase.
With the national polls looming, Najib has made as many pleas as he
has made promises of change, assuring the rakyat that corruption,
nepotism and cronyism would be a thing of the past.
However, trusting BN to clean up its act would be foolish, given the
crooked politicians in its midst that continue to cheat and lie to the
rakyat.
Onus on people to change
Onus on people to change
In October last year, Wanita Umno chief and former Women, Family and
Community Development Minister Shahrizat Abdul Jalil feigned ignorance
when the role of her family in the National Feedlot Corporation scandal
was revealed.
Now it is former Home Minister Mohd Radzi Sheikh Ahmad who has denied
any knowledge of the human trafficking offences carried out by the
company, SNT Universal Corporation Sdn Bhd, of which he is a director.
The police suspect the company, ironically a government-appointed
agent in the 6P amnesty programme, of exploiting and abusing hundreds of
foreign workers, mainly Bangladeshis.
Just what gives such politicians the audacity to take the rakyat for a spin, using lies after lies to cover up their acts?
Would it then be worth the while to give the politicians under the BN
banner the benefit of the doubt, hoping that they would have learnt
their lesson and mended their ways?
Post-independence, the rakyat had placed its trust and faith in the
BN leadership believing that it had the people’s best interest at heart.
The truth, however, unfolded over the years, bringing with it the
realisation that the rakyat was at best collateral damage in the
political tussle for power.
To pin one’s hope on BN would be akin to committing hara-kiri,
bearing in mind the dishonesty with which the party has ruled the
country.
Change is imminent but unlike BN which relies on lip-service to balm
the rakyat’s woes, the onus now is on the people to bring about the
change, as they did in 2008 by putting BN “in its place” via a
humiliating defeat in the national polls.
As for BN, it is pointless to go around begging for a second chance
because judging from its incorrigible practices, the leadership has no
plans to change for the better, what more repent.
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