Sunday, 14 December 2025

Abang Jo - Truly a role-model smart, intelligent and sincere Muslim leader for all Malaysians

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Abang Jo - Truly a role-model smart, intelligent and sincere Muslim leader for all Malaysians

https://www.tiktok.com/@johnnysoon9393/video/7582207721030667540?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc 

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 14, 2025: View the above video clip and form your own judgment whether Malaysia sorely needs such a smart, intelligent and sincere Muslim leader for multi-racial Malaysians.

He is Sarawak’s current premier Abang Jo.

Sarawakians, irrespective of race and religion, especially the Chinese place their trust in such a Muslim leader who is truly a leader for all Malaysians, unlike the racial and religious bigoted politicians (aplenty) in West Malaysia.

Is it any wonder that Sarawakians united solidly in support of Sarawak for Sarawakians to oust all Peninsular-based politicians, parties and those Semenanjong-loving politicians.

Sarawak is the only state to ban the racial and religious bigoted Umno youth chief Dr Akmal “Dr Ham/I Am Malay First” Saleh’s Umno and the Taliban-like PAS from setting political ground in the country.

Although the Sabah For Sabahans political rally cry did not achieve the same success as Sarawak For Sarawakians, the Sabahans, especially the Chinese community, gave their overwhelming support and trust to the Shafie Apdal-led Warisan.

In so doing, Warisan won 25 seats and even the popular vote after dumping all eight candidates fielded by the Chinese-dominated DAP.

Clearly, the Chinese voters are saying they trust a Muslim leader like Shafie than the DAP!

 

No News Is Bad News reproduces below our previous post on the political dilemma of multi-racial Malaysians:

Saturday, 13 December 2025

Sarawakians, Sabahans have shown how they can rely and trust sane and wise Muslim leaders

Share to help stimulate good governance, ensure future of people & M’sia

No News Is Bad News

Sarawakians live peacefully and harmoniously under Muslim leader Abang Jo.

Sarawakians, Sabahans have shown how they can rely and trust sane and wise Muslim leaders

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 14, 2025: Multi-racial Sarawakians have already done away with racial and religious bigotry policies.

They, especially the Chinese voters, have placed their trust on their premier Abang Jo, a Muslim, to live without fear or favour.

The Chinese in Sabah, in their 17th Sabah Election, also showed that it is better to trust a Muslim leader who is a truly a leader for all, instead of the Chinese-dominated DAP.

They overwhelmingly gave their ballots to Shafie Apdal’s Warisan, dumping all eight DAP candidates, and Sabahans also gave Warisan the popular vote.

So, why should multi-racial Malaysians in the peninsula fear a Muslim leader or party or Government in the next general election (GE16) due in 2027?

As long as the Muslim leader is sincere and truly a leader for all Malaysians, irrespective of race or religion, multi-racial Malaysia will be in good hands.

Only the moronic racial, religious and lazy bigots will shamefully continue to indulge in racial and religious bigotry politics and demand for the tongkat (cane) to survive.

No News Is Bad News reproduces below a news analysis titled Why a Hypothetical 100% Malay-Bumiputera Government Isn’t the End for Non-Malay posted by The Coverage for all to ponder:

News

Why a Hypothetical 100% Malay-Bumiputera Government Isn’t the End for Non-Malays

7 December, 2025

 

There’s a lot of buzz in town about the possibility of DAP pulling its support from the government. In this hypothetical scenario, PKR might join forces with UMNO, Bersatu, and PAS to form a 100% Malay-Bumiputera government. Certain groups are trying to stoke fear among the non-Malay community, but they fail to grasp the psychology of the modern generation. In the olden days, this tactic might have worked—the older generation believed we needed representatives from our own race in the cabinet to protect our interests. But today is a different era.

We’re willing to move beyond racial lines. Look at how we threw our support behind Warisan, led by a Malay Muslim, even at the expense of the dominant Chinese-led DAP. The same applies to Sarawak’s GPS under Abang Johari Openg, despite him being a Malay Muslim. We’ve even dethroned Chinese leaders like Ong Tee Keat in Pandan in favor of a Malay Muslim like Rafizi Ramli.

In Duyong, the non-Malay community backed Noor Helmy over candidates from their own race. And in Sabah, we’ve supported PAS’s Aliakbar.

The old myth that we need politicians of the same race to fight for our rights is just that—a myth. Especially when, as non-Bumiputera, we started with no special rights to begin with. What we truly need are leaders who will serve and treat us fairly, regardless of their race or religion.

Now, what about the ultra-Malay segments who might celebrate this as a victory? It’s an early, premature celebration by shallow-minded folks who don’t understand the laws of nature, politics, and human behavior. On the surface, it looks like a unified 100% Malay-Bumiputera government.

But dig deeper, and it’s actually Malay political parties restricting and counterbalancing each other’s growth.

What does that mean? If they unite, they’re forced to maintain the status quo, benefiting the current incumbents but stifling expansion.

Let’s break down the numbers: PAS holds 43 seats, UMNO 26, Bersatu 31, and PKR 31, totaling 131 seats. But only about 100 of those are truly secure (from UMNO, Bersatu, and PAS). Most of PKR’s seats are in urban mixed areas that rely on DAP’s core supporter base—they might not hold all of them. Even if all these parties combine, they might not dethrone DAP, not because DAP is invincible, but because its urban majority seats like Bukit Bintang, Cheras, and Kepong are rock-solid. Even if all Bumiputera votes consolidate, they couldn’t overtake DAP in those areas.

As the Chinese proverb goes: “One mountain can have only one tiger.” On the surface, it’s a 100% Bumiputera government, but behind the scenes, you’re putting tigers like Anwar, Mahathir, Muhyiddin, Hadi, and Zahid in the same arena. It’s only a matter of time before they start clashing and eliminating each other. Some might ask what I mean by Malay parties restricting one another. If the status quo remains unchallenged, it prevents UMNO from returning to its former glory—they’ll be stuck at 26 seats. It halts PAS’s “green wave,” leaving them at 43 seats. This creates a stalemate and stagnation for all Malay-Bumiputera parties. How can they grow when they can’t contest against each other?

PAS also can’t push its Islamic agenda to turn the country into an Islamic state. It’s a myth that only non-Malays oppose this—the UMNO, PKR, and Bersatu Malays have different DNA, psychology, and worldviews from PAS. If UMNO wanted an Islamic state, they could have done it during their heyday with a two-thirds majority as Malaysia’s largest undisputed party.

What PAS fails to understand is that not all Malays share their religious views on politics and administration.

Sooner or later, these parties will try to dominate one another. Each will plot to become the No. 1 Malay party. If Hamzah and Muhyiddin can fight within the same party, why is it abnormal for rival parties to scheme for ultimate dominance?

For stability, they’ll need the 56 MPs from Borneo. If they abandon this block, it’s risky—the 56 could align with DAP’s solid 40 seats and Amanah’s 8 to form a new government anytime. With 56 from Borneo versus PAS’s 43, Bersatu’s 31, PKR’s 31, and UMNO’s 26, Borneo becomes the kingmaker in this coalition. The moderates and progressives will call the shots.

This is what true Bumiputera check-and-balance looks like: parties counter-influencing and restricting each other. PAS won’t be able to ban alcohol, not because of DAP or non-Malay MPs, but because the Borneo Bumiputera won’t allow it—doing so would collapse GPS in Sarawak. That’s why a PAS candidate in Sabah even lodged a report denying plans to ban alcohol.

Not only is this their ceiling since they can’t contest each other, but it also limits their growth and puts everything in stalemate.

Yet UMNO won’t stay silent for long—their entire DNA is rooted in feudal elitism and a dominance mindset. They can’t accept being the smallest Malay party at just 26 seats.

And since non-Bumiputera are out of the government, those seats are no longer a conflict of interest. Non-Bumiputera will no longer be the election scapegoat, punching bag, or weaponized issue.

By then, it’ll be Bumiputera versus Bumiputera, outcompeting each other: left vs. right, conservative vs. progressive, religion-ahead-of-race vs. race-ahead-of-religion, B40 vs. M40 and T20, and the list goes on.

Even if this scenario doesn’t unfold today, it will eventually—perhaps 50 years from now, when the non-Bumiputera population shrinks to just 15% and becomes irrelevant in the voting arena. It’ll still be Bumiputera vs. Bumiputera, driven by the laws of human nature, politics, greed, dominance, power, and money.

As for PKR? There’s nothing to celebrate. Their 31 mixed urban seats are the most fragile and vulnerable in this combo, likely making them the smallest party in the Bumiputera coalition. It’ll also mark the end of any future prime minister from PKR. With non-Bumiputera out of the equation, whoever rises to the top in each Bumiputera party automatically wins big.

So, each party will see fierce internal killings to climb the ladder—just like UMNO in its glory days, or what’s happening in Bersatu now.

Everyone fighting for positions, candidacies, and more, because internal victory means a shot at PM. It’ll create a Game of Thrones among the Bumiputera parties.

And it won’t stop at the top. Once the non-Malays are no longer in the cabinet or government, the real war will begin over every single slice of the pie:

· which party controls which GLCs and their multi-billion-ringgit empires,

· who gets the powerful minister portfolios,

· who heads the government agencies, statutory bodies, and regulators,

· all the way down to who becomes Ketua Kampung, penghulu, JKKK chairs, and every small contract and perk that comes with it.

There are only a limited number of chairs at the table. Not every ambitious MP, division chief, exco member, or warlord can be satisfied. When the “enemy” (non-Malays) is removed from the equation, the knives will turn inward even faster—pure Bumiputera musical chairs with real money, real power, and real blood.

What do non-Bumiputera have to lose? We already have nothing to begin with, always relying on ourselves. Even having our own race in the cabinet changes little—we’re still blamed and used as punching bags by aspiring politicians and parties. DAP pulling out won’t impact millions of non-Bumi; just a few will lose positions. In fact, it might finally shift the entire political conversation from “Bumi vs non-Bumi” to “Bumi vs Bumi” fighting to dominate and devour each other. Game of Thrones Season 1 among them will begin eventually. It’s not a matter of if, but when.

And Here’s the Biggest Silver Lining Most People Miss

When the non-Malays are completely out of the government, the real true colours of Malay politicians will finally be exposed – not to us, but to their own community.

For decades, the narrative has been drilled into the Malay heartland: “Melayu terancam! Islam terancam! The Chinese are the root of your poverty!” They were told the enemy is the non-Malays – that if only we remove the non-Malays, everything will be fair, just, and prosperous for the Malays.

But the moment a 100% Bumiputera government is formed, that entire lie collapses in plain sight.

The ordinary kampung folk, the B40 Malays, the PAS supporters, the Perikatan die-hards – they will finally see with their own eyes:

· The rich and elite Malays will keep getting richer.

· The poor Malays will stay poor, or get even poorer.

· Government projects, contracts, GLCs, and billions in wealth will still flow to the same handful of elite Malay families, cronies, and political warlords – just like before.

· Their own leaders will stop fighting for them. Why? Because there is no longer a “non-Malay enemy” to rally against. No more “Cina yang halang kita!” to shout from the stages. When the votes are already 100% locked in, what slogan is left? The campaign fire will die overnight.

Sooner or later, the realisation will hit like a thunderbolt: “Rupa-rupanya selama ini kita dipergunakan sahaja. Kita dijadikan senjata untuk lawan orang bukan Melayu, supaya segelintir ahli politik Melayu boleh naik kuasa dan kaya raya untuk diri dan keluarga mereka sendiri.

Rupa-rupanya ini bukan perjuangan bangsa dan agama – ini perjuangan pangkat, jawatan, wang, dan kemewahan peribadi.”

Even the most hardcore PAS supporters will wake up: “Rupa-rupanya 100% kerajaan Melayu-Bumiputera pun hudud tak dapat, negara Islam pun tak jadi. Sebelum ini kita ingat orang bukan Melayu yang halang – rupanya bukan!”

That moment of mass awakening among the Malay grassroots will be the most powerful, most irreversible change of all. The spell will be broken forever.

And that, ironically, might be the greatest gift a DAP withdrawal could ever give to this country – forcing the Malay community to finally see their real oppressors have never been the non-Malays sitting in Putrajaya. The real oppressors have always been wearing the same songkok and speaking the same language as them.

Let the 100% Bumiputera government come if it must. The faster it comes, the faster the lies die, and the faster a new, class-based, fairness-based politics can be born – for all Malaysians, regardless of race or religion.

What do non-Bumiputera have to lose? Nothing. We never had the privilege to begin with. But Malaysia as a whole might finally gain something priceless: the truth.

But for the country as a whole, it might finally deliver something priceless: the complete and total death of the oldest political scam in Malaysia.

A 100% Malay-Bumiputera Government is not the end for non-Malays. It will be the end of the lies, the stigma, the conspiracy theories, and the slander that Malay politicians have been selling for decades: that the Chinese are the cause of Malay poverty, that the non-Malays are the ones blocking Malay rights and Islam, that everything will be paradise “once we get rid of them”.

When that paradise fails to appear, when the same elites keep the billions and the kampung keeps the crumbs, when hudud still doesn’t come and the poor still stay poor, the Malay grassroots will finally see the truth with their own eyes.

The spell will be broken forever. The greatest era of racial fearmongering in Malaysian history will finally come to its natural, humiliating end.

So let them have their 100% Malay-Bumiputera Government if they want it so badly. It won’t destroy the non-Malays. It will destroy the biggest lie they’ve been feeding their own people for seventy years.

And that, more than anything else, will set everyone free.

One More Thing the Fearmongers Conveniently Forget

They keep shouting “If DAP leaves, the Malays will finally be united under one strong Bumiputera government!”

Really?

DAP can’t even sit at the same table with MCA and MIC for five minutes without fighting over Chinese schools, UEC, or vernacular education – and that’s within the same race.

Yet somehow we’re supposed to believe UMNO, PKR, Bersatu, and PAS – four parties that hate each other’s guts, that have spent the last 10 years accusing one another of betrayal, corruption, heresy, and selling out the Malays – will suddenly hold hands and sing Kumbaya forever just because DAP is gone?

Please.

UMNO calls PAS kafir harbi in private. PAS calls UMNO munafik and sekular. Bersatu calls UMNO kleptokrat and PKR liberal. PKR calls Bersatu pengkhianat and PAS taliban. They needed court cluster cases, sheraton moves, and backdoor governments just to tolerate each other for a few months.

Itu bukan perpaduan ummah. Itu perpaduan sementara elit-elit Melayu yang nak sakau habis-habisan atas nama Melayu dan Islam.

The moment the common enemy (non-Malays) is removed, the gloves come off even faster. The looting will still happen, but now there’s no one else to blame.

So let them have their so-called “100% Melayu” government if they want it so badly. It won’t destroy the non-Malays. It will destroy the biggest lie they’ve been feeding their own people for seventy years.

And from the ashes of that lie, maybe – just maybe – a better, fairer, and less hypocritical Malaysia can finally rise.

Source of racial and religious bigots' tongkat (crutches) mentality

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Source of racial and religious bigots' tongkat (crutches) mentality

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 14, 2025: Why are the racial and religious bigots bent on threatening national unity and harmony by spewing hatred to divide multi-racial Malaysians?

That’s because they feel inferior and awfully not confidence in themselves.

But for the bigoted politicians, they exploit this lack of confidence for selfish political gains for their riches and benefit.

And the source of this lack of confidence is stated in the Reid Commission and memoranda submitted by the Malay Rulers (see the above image).

This gave birth to the tongkat (crutches) mentality which lazy bigots deem are their birth rights - depending on the Government for advantages in life over others.

So, are the crutches to be provided forever? This means, forever, they will never have to compete with others, thus remain dependent and inferior forever?

No News Is Bad News reproduces below an article believed to have been penned by one Engku Nasrun in Bahasa Malaysia, posted on Facebook and translated into English and shared in WhatsApp:

Below is a faithful, full English translation of the text by one -
Engku Nasrun’s original Malay reflection posted a message on Facebook, listing 12 heartfelt reflections from non-Malays.
Within a short time, the post went viral, being shared nearly 50,000 times.

This moderate, considerate, and courageous Malay brother, Engku Nasrun, cited example after example of the tolerance, respect, and restraint shown by other ethnic groups toward Malays, and questioned rally participants:

“Exactly where are we being threatened?
Must we quarrel over every little thing?
Why must we be so extremely racist?”

1. Non-Malays and non-Muslims wake up every morning to the sound of our dawn prayers.
Have they ever reacted angrily or caused trouble because of it?

If churches were to install loudspeakers so everyone could hear Christian sermons every Sunday, what would happen?

Jihad!


2. Every Friday, we are the most “powerful” — cars belonging to worshippers line the roads near mosques, causing traffic congestion.
Non-Muslims can only accept it.


3. When we buy houses, we enjoy bumiputera discounts.
But non-bumiputera are also Malaysians — do they get discounts when buying homes?

Is this Malay privilege,
or racial segregation (apartheid)?


4. Outstanding non-Muslim, non-bumiputera students struggle desperately to enter universities — some even pawn belongings or borrow from loan sharks just to pay university or private college fees.

But for us Malays, it’s fine — we have UiTM and MARA colleges.

Remember, non-Muslims are also Malaysian citizens.
And after they graduate, we also benefit from the taxes they pay.


5. Many non-Malay, non-bumiputera parents send their children to private colleges or overseas to study. As a result, these children gain broader exposure and knowledge.

When they return, they work hard and get promoted faster.

Yet at this point, many Malays complain that they are being marginalized, shouting that it is unfair and blaming the government for not helping Malays.


6. Back in school days, if we spoke English even a little, some people mocked us, calling us “Westernized” — as if it were wrong.

Who were the ones mocking us?

The very same group that now claims their dignity has been insulted.


7. 
We have been independent for 58 years.
Chinese, Indian, Malay, and other ethnic groups have lived together for decades.

Yet now in the 21st century, some among us still know nothing about other cultures.

If we want others to respect us, we must first respect them.


8. We do not care about other people’s cultures, yet we expect others to follow and understand ours.

How can that be right?

Those who are culturally insensitive are actually us.


9. Other ethnic groups are afraid to joke about anything related to Malays, worried they might offend us or cause dissatisfaction.

Ironically, we are the ones who often claim to be “offended” for no reason.


10. We constantly emphasize “purity,” insisting that food must be sacred — even placing “Halal Only” stickers on office refrigerators.

Yet look at how Indian friends are perfectly fine seeing us eat beef in front of them.

But if someone eats pork in front of us, we feel disgusted.

Yes, pork is forbidden for us to eat — but is it really necessary to react as if merely seeing it makes us nauseous or want to vomit?

We can look at human private parts without feeling disgusted — isn’t that also forbidden?



11. If a church is built near a Malay residential area, we say the cross makes us uncomfortable and threatens our faith.

So the church has to give in and remove the cross — how pitiful.

But if we build a mosque in a non-Muslim area and someone protests, we would immediately talk about jihad.

We behave like spoiled, overindulged children — it’s truly embarrassing.


12. Quarreling at every turn, shouting jihad at every turn — why must we be so racist?

Look at our leaders:
• Yang di-Pertuan Agong: Malay
• Sultans: Malay
• Prime Minister: Malay
• Deputy



Saturday, 13 December 2025

Sarawakians, Sabahans have shown how they can rely and trust sane and wise Muslim leaders

Share to help stimulate good governance, ensure future of people & M’sia

No News Is Bad News

Sarawakians live peacefully and harmoniously under Muslim leader Abang Jo.

Sarawakians, Sabahans have shown how they can rely and trust sane and wise Muslim leaders

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 14, 2025: Multi-racial Sarawakians have already done away with racial and religious bigotry policies.

They, especially the Chinese voters, have placed their trust on their premier Abang Jo, a Muslim, to live without fear or favour.

The Chinese in Sabah, in their 17th Sabah Election, also showed that it is better to trust a Muslim leader who is a truly a leader for all, instead of the Chinese-dominated DAP.

They overwhelmingly gave their ballots to Shafie Apdal’s Warisan, dumping all eight DAP candidates, and Sabahans also gave Warisan the popular vote.

So, why should multi-racial Malaysians in the peninsula fear a Muslim leader or party or Government in the next general election (GE16) due in 2027?

As long as the Muslim leader is sincere and truly a leader for all Malaysians, irrespective of race or religion, multi-racial Malaysia will be in good hands.

Only the moronic racial, religious and lazy bigots will shamefully continue to indulge in racial and religious bigotry politics and demand for the tongkat (cane) to survive.

No News Is Bad News reproduces below a news analysis titled Why a Hypothetical 100% Malay-Bumiputera Government Isn’t the End for Non-Malay posted by The Coverage for all to ponder:

News

Why a Hypothetical 100% Malay-Bumiputera Government Isn’t the End for Non-Malays

7 December, 2025

 

There’s a lot of buzz in town about the possibility of DAP pulling its support from the government. In this hypothetical scenario, PKR might join forces with UMNO, Bersatu, and PAS to form a 100% Malay-Bumiputera government. Certain groups are trying to stoke fear among the non-Malay community, but they fail to grasp the psychology of the modern generation. In the olden days, this tactic might have worked—the older generation believed we needed representatives from our own race in the cabinet to protect our interests. But today is a different era.

We’re willing to move beyond racial lines. Look at how we threw our support behind Warisan, led by a Malay Muslim, even at the expense of the dominant Chinese-led DAP. The same applies to Sarawak’s GPS under Abang Johari Openg, despite him being a Malay Muslim. We’ve even dethroned Chinese leaders like Ong Tee Keat in Pandan in favor of a Malay Muslim like Rafizi Ramli.

In Duyong, the non-Malay community backed Noor Helmy over candidates from their own race. And in Sabah, we’ve supported PAS’s Aliakbar.

The old myth that we need politicians of the same race to fight for our rights is just that—a myth. Especially when, as non-Bumiputera, we started with no special rights to begin with. What we truly need are leaders who will serve and treat us fairly, regardless of their race or religion.

Now, what about the ultra-Malay segments who might celebrate this as a victory? It’s an early, premature celebration by shallow-minded folks who don’t understand the laws of nature, politics, and human behavior. On the surface, it looks like a unified 100% Malay-Bumiputera government.

But dig deeper, and it’s actually Malay political parties restricting and counterbalancing each other’s growth.

What does that mean? If they unite, they’re forced to maintain the status quo, benefiting the current incumbents but stifling expansion.

Let’s break down the numbers: PAS holds 43 seats, UMNO 26, Bersatu 31, and PKR 31, totaling 131 seats. But only about 100 of those are truly secure (from UMNO, Bersatu, and PAS). Most of PKR’s seats are in urban mixed areas that rely on DAP’s core supporter base—they might not hold all of them. Even if all these parties combine, they might not dethrone DAP, not because DAP is invincible, but because its urban majority seats like Bukit Bintang, Cheras, and Kepong are rock-solid. Even if all Bumiputera votes consolidate, they couldn’t overtake DAP in those areas.

As the Chinese proverb goes: “One mountain can have only one tiger.” On the surface, it’s a 100% Bumiputera government, but behind the scenes, you’re putting tigers like Anwar, Mahathir, Muhyiddin, Hadi, and Zahid in the same arena. It’s only a matter of time before they start clashing and eliminating each other. Some might ask what I mean by Malay parties restricting one another. If the status quo remains unchallenged, it prevents UMNO from returning to its former glory—they’ll be stuck at 26 seats. It halts PAS’s “green wave,” leaving them at 43 seats. This creates a stalemate and stagnation for all Malay-Bumiputera parties. How can they grow when they can’t contest against each other?

PAS also can’t push its Islamic agenda to turn the country into an Islamic state. It’s a myth that only non-Malays oppose this—the UMNO, PKR, and Bersatu Malays have different DNA, psychology, and worldviews from PAS. If UMNO wanted an Islamic state, they could have done it during their heyday with a two-thirds majority as Malaysia’s largest undisputed party.

What PAS fails to understand is that not all Malays share their religious views on politics and administration.

Sooner or later, these parties will try to dominate one another. Each will plot to become the No. 1 Malay party. If Hamzah and Muhyiddin can fight within the same party, why is it abnormal for rival parties to scheme for ultimate dominance?

For stability, they’ll need the 56 MPs from Borneo. If they abandon this block, it’s risky—the 56 could align with DAP’s solid 40 seats and Amanah’s 8 to form a new government anytime. With 56 from Borneo versus PAS’s 43, Bersatu’s 31, PKR’s 31, and UMNO’s 26, Borneo becomes the kingmaker in this coalition. The moderates and progressives will call the shots.

This is what true Bumiputera check-and-balance looks like: parties counter-influencing and restricting each other. PAS won’t be able to ban alcohol, not because of DAP or non-Malay MPs, but because the Borneo Bumiputera won’t allow it—doing so would collapse GPS in Sarawak. That’s why a PAS candidate in Sabah even lodged a report denying plans to ban alcohol.

Not only is this their ceiling since they can’t contest each other, but it also limits their growth and puts everything in stalemate.

Yet UMNO won’t stay silent for long—their entire DNA is rooted in feudal elitism and a dominance mindset. They can’t accept being the smallest Malay party at just 26 seats.

And since non-Bumiputera are out of the government, those seats are no longer a conflict of interest. Non-Bumiputera will no longer be the election scapegoat, punching bag, or weaponized issue.

By then, it’ll be Bumiputera versus Bumiputera, outcompeting each other: left vs. right, conservative vs. progressive, religion-ahead-of-race vs. race-ahead-of-religion, B40 vs. M40 and T20, and the list goes on.

Even if this scenario doesn’t unfold today, it will eventually—perhaps 50 years from now, when the non-Bumiputera population shrinks to just 15% and becomes irrelevant in the voting arena. It’ll still be Bumiputera vs. Bumiputera, driven by the laws of human nature, politics, greed, dominance, power, and money.

As for PKR? There’s nothing to celebrate. Their 31 mixed urban seats are the most fragile and vulnerable in this combo, likely making them the smallest party in the Bumiputera coalition. It’ll also mark the end of any future prime minister from PKR. With non-Bumiputera out of the equation, whoever rises to the top in each Bumiputera party automatically wins big.

So, each party will see fierce internal killings to climb the ladder—just like UMNO in its glory days, or what’s happening in Bersatu now.

Everyone fighting for positions, candidacies, and more, because internal victory means a shot at PM. It’ll create a Game of Thrones among the Bumiputera parties.

And it won’t stop at the top. Once the non-Malays are no longer in the cabinet or government, the real war will begin over every single slice of the pie:

· which party controls which GLCs and their multi-billion-ringgit empires,

· who gets the powerful minister portfolios,

· who heads the government agencies, statutory bodies, and regulators,

· all the way down to who becomes Ketua Kampung, penghulu, JKKK chairs, and every small contract and perk that comes with it.

There are only a limited number of chairs at the table. Not every ambitious MP, division chief, exco member, or warlord can be satisfied. When the “enemy” (non-Malays) is removed from the equation, the knives will turn inward even faster—pure Bumiputera musical chairs with real money, real power, and real blood.

What do non-Bumiputera have to lose? We already have nothing to begin with, always relying on ourselves. Even having our own race in the cabinet changes little—we’re still blamed and used as punching bags by aspiring politicians and parties. DAP pulling out won’t impact millions of non-Bumi; just a few will lose positions. In fact, it might finally shift the entire political conversation from “Bumi vs non-Bumi” to “Bumi vs Bumi” fighting to dominate and devour each other. Game of Thrones Season 1 among them will begin eventually. It’s not a matter of if, but when.

And Here’s the Biggest Silver Lining Most People Miss

When the non-Malays are completely out of the government, the real true colours of Malay politicians will finally be exposed – not to us, but to their own community.

For decades, the narrative has been drilled into the Malay heartland: “Melayu terancam! Islam terancam! The Chinese are the root of your poverty!” They were told the enemy is the non-Malays – that if only we remove the non-Malays, everything will be fair, just, and prosperous for the Malays.

But the moment a 100% Bumiputera government is formed, that entire lie collapses in plain sight.

The ordinary kampung folk, the B40 Malays, the PAS supporters, the Perikatan die-hards – they will finally see with their own eyes:

· The rich and elite Malays will keep getting richer.

· The poor Malays will stay poor, or get even poorer.

· Government projects, contracts, GLCs, and billions in wealth will still flow to the same handful of elite Malay families, cronies, and political warlords – just like before.

· Their own leaders will stop fighting for them. Why? Because there is no longer a “non-Malay enemy” to rally against. No more “Cina yang halang kita!” to shout from the stages. When the votes are already 100% locked in, what slogan is left? The campaign fire will die overnight.

Sooner or later, the realisation will hit like a thunderbolt: “Rupa-rupanya selama ini kita dipergunakan sahaja. Kita dijadikan senjata untuk lawan orang bukan Melayu, supaya segelintir ahli politik Melayu boleh naik kuasa dan kaya raya untuk diri dan keluarga mereka sendiri.

Rupa-rupanya ini bukan perjuangan bangsa dan agama – ini perjuangan pangkat, jawatan, wang, dan kemewahan peribadi.”

Even the most hardcore PAS supporters will wake up: “Rupa-rupanya 100% kerajaan Melayu-Bumiputera pun hudud tak dapat, negara Islam pun tak jadi. Sebelum ini kita ingat orang bukan Melayu yang halang – rupanya bukan!”

That moment of mass awakening among the Malay grassroots will be the most powerful, most irreversible change of all. The spell will be broken forever.

And that, ironically, might be the greatest gift a DAP withdrawal could ever give to this country – forcing the Malay community to finally see their real oppressors have never been the non-Malays sitting in Putrajaya. The real oppressors have always been wearing the same songkok and speaking the same language as them.

Let the 100% Bumiputera government come if it must. The faster it comes, the faster the lies die, and the faster a new, class-based, fairness-based politics can be born – for all Malaysians, regardless of race or religion.

What do non-Bumiputera have to lose? Nothing. We never had the privilege to begin with. But Malaysia as a whole might finally gain something priceless: the truth.

But for the country as a whole, it might finally deliver something priceless: the complete and total death of the oldest political scam in Malaysia.

A 100% Malay-Bumiputera Government is not the end for non-Malays. It will be the end of the lies, the stigma, the conspiracy theories, and the slander that Malay politicians have been selling for decades: that the Chinese are the cause of Malay poverty, that the non-Malays are the ones blocking Malay rights and Islam, that everything will be paradise “once we get rid of them”.

When that paradise fails to appear, when the same elites keep the billions and the kampung keeps the crumbs, when hudud still doesn’t come and the poor still stay poor, the Malay grassroots will finally see the truth with their own eyes.

The spell will be broken forever. The greatest era of racial fearmongering in Malaysian history will finally come to its natural, humiliating end.

So let them have their 100% Malay-Bumiputera Government if they want it so badly. It won’t destroy the non-Malays. It will destroy the biggest lie they’ve been feeding their own people for seventy years.

And that, more than anything else, will set everyone free.

One More Thing the Fearmongers Conveniently Forget

They keep shouting “If DAP leaves, the Malays will finally be united under one strong Bumiputera government!”

Really?

DAP can’t even sit at the same table with MCA and MIC for five minutes without fighting over Chinese schools, UEC, or vernacular education – and that’s within the same race.

Yet somehow we’re supposed to believe UMNO, PKR, Bersatu, and PAS – four parties that hate each other’s guts, that have spent the last 10 years accusing one another of betrayal, corruption, heresy, and selling out the Malays – will suddenly hold hands and sing Kumbaya forever just because DAP is gone?

Please.

UMNO calls PAS kafir harbi in private. PAS calls UMNO munafik and sekular. Bersatu calls UMNO kleptokrat and PKR liberal. PKR calls Bersatu pengkhianat and PAS taliban. They needed court cluster cases, sheraton moves, and backdoor governments just to tolerate each other for a few months.

Itu bukan perpaduan ummah. Itu perpaduan sementara elit-elit Melayu yang nak sakau habis-habisan atas nama Melayu dan Islam.

The moment the common enemy (non-Malays) is removed, the gloves come off even faster. The looting will still happen, but now there’s no one else to blame.

So let them have their so-called “100% Melayu” government if they want it so badly. It won’t destroy the non-Malays. It will destroy the biggest lie they’ve been feeding their own people for seventy years.

And from the ashes of that lie, maybe – just maybe – a better, fairer, and less hypocritical Malaysia can finally rise.