Tuesday, 23 December 2025

Demi rakyat dan negara? Absolutely laughable!

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

No News Is Bad News

Facebook image

Demi rakyat dan negara? Absolutely laughable!

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 24, 2025: Are the above really true Muslim leaders demi rakyat dan negara (for people and country)?

If they are, why are the Malays still poor after 68 years of governance since Merdeka (Independence) 1957?

And they are still supporting the nation’s No. 1 thief/pencuri, the disgraced and shameless Najib “1MDB” Razak, who is now serving a jail sentence in Kajang Prison.

Because of Najib’s stolen and ill-gotten gains and his total mismanagement of the so-called Sovereign Wealthh Fund (SWF), 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), Malaysians are in debt for decades:

 

The above crop of leaders’ top priority is not demi rakyat dan negara but for their own selfish political agenda featuring the racial and religious bigoted Umno’s politics of patronage.

Here’s what Prof Dr James Chin posted on Facebook:

 

James Chin

MUDA is correct about the hypocrisy... but then hypocrisy is part of Malaysia's DNA.

 

Umno's proud political icon - the corrupt, disgraced and shameless Najib "1MDB" Razak who serving a jail sentence in Kajang Prison now.


No News Is Bad News reproduces below our previous post on Umno as a dying party:


Monday, 22 December 2025

The figures don’t lie - Umno a dying party

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

No News Is Bad News

Both Umno and PKR are dying politically?

The figures don’t lie - Umno a dying party

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 23, 2025: It is good to know that the racial and religious bigoted Umno is dying politically and they don’t even know it.

The figures don’t lie as Umno today has only 26 seats in the 222-seat Parliament - a far cry from the hey days when it was the unchallenged ruling elite.

If not for the political chameleon Anwar Ibrahim, Umno would not be in the Government, still wielding its influence and bullying others. So, PKR is also a dying party?

From 2013 to 2022, Umno lost about 70% of its parliamentary seats.
From 2013 to the present day, Umno lost about 42% of its state seats.

Umno can remain stubborn and not change its racial and religious bigoted political ways, and come the next general election (GE16) due in 2027 it will be a blessing to the rakyat dan negara (people and country) should Umno be politically buried like the MCA and MIC.

This is what Prof Dr James Chin posted on Facebook:

 

 

James Chin

dtosSpenro82h7am3m189lm2l0f6tm64a8l2l0270ha1h2746f5f3i8t2gi5 ·

Some people are saying I'm badmouthing UMNO when I pointed out that its brand is losing support among the Malays.
UMNO has some strong supporters who accuse me of being "anti-Malay."
To be clear, I do NOT want to be accused of spreading fake news.
I calculated the following; if the figures are wrong, please tell me, and I'll be happy to revise: From 2013 to 2022, UMNO lost about 70% of its parliamentary seats.
From 2013 to the present day, UMNO lost about 42% of its state seats. We're talking about a decade of sharp decline. 
How many of you think UMNO can reverse this in GE16? This debate is in the context of UMNO not allocating any winnable seats for MIC and MCA in GE16, and how these two parties are finally standing up to UMNO- even saying they will leave BN.
They're standing up to UMNO because, like me, they think UMNO will decline further.

#UMNO #NoFuture #NoBuyers #KetuananMelayu 

No News Is Bad News reproduces below an earlier post:

Sunday, 21 December 2025

Wipe out racial and religious bigoted politicians to save multi-racial Malaysia

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

No News Is Bad News

 After 68 years since Merdeka (Independence) 1957

Wipe out racial and religious bigoted politicians to save multi-racial Malaysia

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 22, 2025: Multi-racial Malaysians, especially those in West Malaysia, must now realise that they cannot depend and trust the corrupt, racial and religious bigoted politicians anymore for reform and their socio-political progressive and future.

Look at the corrupt Umno, how shamelessly they lobbied to “free” (read as house arrest/backdoor freedom) their disgraced and shameless former prime minister Najib “1MDB” Razak.

Is that a political party that fights demi rakyat dan negara (people and country)? More like fighting for the corrupt and politicians by stealing public or taxpayers’ money.

Yet, with o0nly 26 Parliamentary seats in the 22-seat Parliament, Umno still behaves like it is the ruling Malaysia, why?

Because Malaysia’s 10th Prime Minister (PMX) Anwar Ibrahim allows the racial and religious bigoted Umno to dictate terms in governance and policies.

That is why Malaysians are fast losing confidence in the so-called Madani Unity Government (UG).

Even the once high and mighty DAP, now with 40 seats in Parliament, the second biggest after the Taliban-like PAS, are being dumped by multi-racial Malaysians, especially in Sarawak and Sabah.

They trust the sane and intelligent Muslim leaders like Abang Jo (in Sarawak) and Shafie Apdal (in Sabah).

Multi-racial Malaysians in West Malaysia must wake up, rise to save alaysia before it is too late.

There are many reasons (education, corruption and corrupt leaders, disrespect for the Federal Constitution by racial and religious bigots, etc) why there must be total regime change come the next general election due in 2027 - to elect only trustworthy Muslim leaders like Abang Jo and Shafie Apdal in the peninsula.

Look what Prof Dr James Chin posted on corruption:

 

James Chin

Zaid, who has said a lot of nutty things, is right on this issue. All those involved in improper behaviour, are still in power or promoted. The Malaysian political system is rotten to the core, and I am not sure it can be reformed... And it will get worse. Anwar is reformati for now until GE.

And why are Malays in the peninsula still poor after 68 years under Umno and Malay rule?

 

 No News Is bad News reproduces below our previous posts:

Sunday, 21 December 2025

PM from Borneo after GE16 … why not?

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

No News Is Bad News

 Just to identify four Muslim politicians who are not racists and can truly lead multi-racial Malaysians.

PM from Borneo after GE16 … why not?

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 21, 2025: Multi-racial Malaysians who treasure national unity and harmony must unite for the next general election (GE16) which is due in 2027 before it is too late.

The only way to stop the West Malaysia racial and religious bigoted politicians from destroying the nation is to kick all of them out of the 222-seat Parliament.

They must identify the sane and intelligent leaders, especially Muslim leaders, to govern the country to progress socio-economically.

GE16 is the only chance for multi-racial voters to save Malaysia before the bigots take over the country and turn it into a Taliban-like state.

If Sarawakians and Sabahans, especially the non-Muslims and Chinese, can place their trust on Muslim leaders like Abang Jo and Shafie Apdal, why not those in the Peninsula? 

No News Is Bad News reproduces below an essay found on WhatsApp and our previous posts:

The Borneo Era Has Arrived: Sabah and Sarawak Parties Must Move into Peninsular Malaysia and Lead the Nation

Peninsular-based parties can freely contest elections in East Malaysia, influencing our governance and policies.
So why are Bornean parties confined to staying on their own soil?
It is time to reverse the situation.
PAS does not need to shout “PAS for All,” because Borneo has long practiced genuine inclusiveness. PAS also does not need to lecture us on Islam, because the Islamic leaders in Borneo demonstrate true Islamic values and principles far more sincerely and convincingly than PAS.
DAP does not need to shout “A Malaysian Malaysia,” because our people live that spirit every single day. PKR does not need to promote multiculturalism, because Borneo possesses a more mature and authentic model of coexistence.
Amanah does not need to brand itself as “progressive Islam,” because we already embody it.

MCA and MIC do not need to claim to speak for minorities, because we have already proven that we treat minorities far more fairly than the federal government. UMNO does not need to shout about Malay rights, because we too are Bumiputera, and we protect everyone based on fairness.
As the people of Sabah and Sarawak — the earliest and most authentic indigenous peoples of this land — we are its true sons and daughters, and we are equal Malaysians. Malaysia belongs to all of us.
It is time for Bornean parties to move into Peninsular Malaysia and contest nationwide elections. If we never try, we will never know.
Borneo currently holds 56 parliamentary seats, and under existing agreements, we will soon reach 35% of the total seats — granting us unprecedented political influence.
Imagine this:
Sarawak’s Progressive Democratic Party (PDP), under Tiong King Sing, challenging DAP head-on in Peninsular constituencies; Sabah’s Warisan directly taking on PKR and Amanah in their traditional strongholds.
Without Rafizi Ramli as PKR’s “chief commander,” the party could very well lose its current 31 seats.
If another 25 seats are taken from DAP and Amanah, the Borneo bloc could command 112 seats — enough to form the federal government outright.
Even if this seems ambitious, with Borneo’s 56 seats as a base and just a handful of Peninsular seats, we could already become the largest political bloc.
We would be kingmakers — or in a minority government scenario, even see a Bornean Prime Minister.
Why must the Prime Minister always come from Peninsular Malaysia?
Leaders such as Sabah’s Hajiji Noor, Shafie Apdal, or Sarawak’s Abang Johari are proven, visionary leaders.
By the next general election, Anwar Ibrahim will be over 80 years old.
Borneo has a dynamic new generation of leaders who offer hope — not the same recycled names over and over again: Anwar, Zahid, Mahathir, Hadi Awang, or Muhyiddin.
If better options exist, why limit ourselves?
Peninsular voters are widely disillusioned:
Disappointed with PH, Hopeless about BN, And fearful of PN’s extremism, radicalism, and racial politics.
They ask, “If not Anwar, then who?” But they forget — Borneo.
In Sabah and Sarawak, we practice “1Malaysia,” “Keluarga Malaysia,” and “Malaysia Madani” every day — not as slogans, but as actions.
If we can treat Sabahans and Sarawakians fairly, we can treat all Malaysians fairly. Without Sabah and Sarawak, there would be no Malaysia — we gave birth to this nation.
It is time to reclaim the nation’s lost soul.
If low-IQ clowns from PN have been able to lead the country, we can certainly do better.
We will not waste time acting as “moral police,” policing people’s lifestyles, cultures, and habits —obsessing over alcohol, socks, food, flags, signboards, or clothing.
We focus on progress.
In Sarawak, we do not merely talk about abolishing PTPTN student loans —we help students repay them.
We recognized the UEC (Unified Examination Certificate) over a decade ago, without fanfare.
Our state government’s funding for non-Muslim religious institutions and Chinese, Tamil, and mother-tongue schools exceeds the total allocation of the federal Madani government nationwide.
We do not shout about Islam like PAS does.
We practice Islam through just governance —valuing knowledge, economic development, peace, love, and compassion, as taught by God.
We see all humanity as God’s creation and do not make enemies based on differing beliefs.
When Sanusi plays the victim and blames rice shortages,
we take action —planning 10,000 hectares of mixed rice cultivation with an annual yield of 400,000 metric tons.
We are problem-solvers, not complainers.
When Peninsular Malaysia risks regression into “kampung champion” politics, Borneo looks to the world.
We place Malay, English, and Chinese as core languages to prepare for the global stage.
This is the Borneo era.
Sabah and Sarawak parties must expand, contest nationally, and lead the country.
We have the seats.
We have the vision.
We have the track record.
Peninsular Malaysians deserve better choices —if Borneo can bring hope, why continue to accept disappointment?
Let us build a truly united Malaysia, led by those who gave birth to it.
Now is the time for Borneo to lead Malaysia.
We have leaders.
We have results.
We have the unity that Peninsular Malaysia only speaks about.
They can never call us “pendatang” (immigrants).
We, Borneo, are the true indigenous people — the earliest, native, and rightful children of this land.
We existed before Malaysia did.
We made Malaysia possible.
Now we rise —not Ketuanan Walaun, not any racial or religious supremacy, but —Ketuanan Malaysia (Malaysia First).
We are neither liberal nor conservative.
We are moderate, fair, and firmly patriotic Malaysians.
We will not be “the most religious,” nor “the most racial.”
We will be —the most national,
putting Malaysia first, above skin color, above narrow politics, above personal interests.

Warisan open to ties with peninsula-based parties for GE16

FMT Reporters

The party had previously refused to collaborate with national parties at the state polls last month.

Warisan president Shafie Apdal said collaboration with parties from West Malaysia is best handled at the federal level.

PETALING JAYA: Warisan has said it was open to collaborating with political parties from Peninsular Malaysia for the 16th general election, despite ruling out such alliances in the Sabah polls last month.

Party president Shafie Apdal said he had rejected working with peninsula-based parties to form the state government in the Nov 29 Sabah election, as it wanted to uphold its principle that the state be governed by Sabah-based parties.

“I could have worked with others or made arrangements to take power. But we have our values,” he was quoted as saying by Malaysiakini.

Warisan won 25 seats in the state assembly election, coming in second to Gabungan Rakyat Sabah which secured 29 seats. GRS subsequently formed the state government with the backing of Barisan Nasional, Pakatan Harapan, and others.

Shafie said his party is not opposed to collaborating with parties from West Malaysia, but believes such cooperation is best placed at the national level, noting that Warisan is already cooperating with the federal government.

On a separate matter, Shafie said Warisan has yet to decide whether to contest the impending by-elections for the Lamag state seat and Kinabatangan parliamentary seat on Jan 24.

He said that discussions were still being held. “No decision yet. We are not sure whether Umno or other parties will contest. We have to listen to the voters first.”

Yesterday, Barisan Nasional chose Naim Kurniawan, son of the late Bung Moktar Radin, as its candidate in Kinabatangan. Bung, who was Sabah BN chairman, had represented Kinabatangan for six terms since 1999. He died on Dec 5 at the age of 66.

Saturday, 20 December 2025

Just get rid of Umno and all racial and religious bigoted politicians come GE16

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

No News Is Bad News

Just get rid of Umno and all racial and religious bigoted politicians come GE16

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 20, 2025: The racial and religious bigoted Umno is a threat to multi-racial multi-religious Malaysia’s national unity and harmony.

So are the Taliban-like PAS and Perikatan Nasional (PN) led by the unpatriotic racist Muhyiddin “I Am Malay First” Yassin.

They are so moronic that festive decorations, especially Christmas decorations, are a threat to them and their religion.

Malaysia’s socio-political progress and future are doomed if multi-racial Malaysians, who treasure national unity and harmony, do not unite and rise to kick out all racial and religious bigoted politicians and elect sane and intelligent politicians, especially Muslim leaders, to govern Malaysia.

Malaysia seriously needs leaders like Sarawak’s Abang Jo, Sabah’s Shafie Apdal, Rafizi Ramli and Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman, to name a few, and the equally sane and intelligent activists like Siti Kasim and Mariam Mokhtar.

Malaysia is in need of trustworthy Muslim leaders who truly think and govern for all Malaysians, irrespective of race and religion.

 

Come the next general election (GE16) due in 2027, get rid of all the moronic racists and religious fanatics.

This is what Prof Dr James Chin posted:

Supporters Of DAP

James Chin ·

All-star contributor

Although the federal government has intervened and overturned the restriction, the harm has already been done.

In recent years, without exception, around this time of year, certain Islamic groups or authorities issue rulings or raise objections to Christmas celebrations. What is the intent behind this?

In my view, it serves as a political signal that Christians in Malaysia remain under the absolute dominance of Muslim and must endure various limitations; even seemingly absurd ones, like the Melaka directive on decorations in halal-certified areas.

These measures appear designed to diminish the joy of Christian festivities and a show of Islam political power. If you doubt this pattern, review reports from the past few years: you'll find controversies timed for December, from warnings against Christmas greetings to restrictions on cake inscriptions, and now limits on festive displays in halal zones.

These recurring issues suggest an agenda pushed by conservative Islamic factions who want Malaysia to follow the Brunei model: a total prohibition on public Christmas celebrations. Everything must be done behind closed doors because it hurts the sensitive Muslim feelings.

Bookmark this post and share it widely.

Come December 22, 2026, expect yet another controversy surrounding Christmas in Malaysia. Remember, sensitivities in these matters seem to flow in only one direction. Ultimately, this is about exerting political power, not genuine religious concerns.

No News Is Bad News reproduces below our previous posts on the same issues:

Wednesday, 17 December 2025

Enough is enough! Come GE16, kick out all the racists to save multi-racial Malaysia

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

 No News Is Bad News

 

Enough is enough! Come GE16, kick out all the racists to save multi-racial Malaysia

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 18, 2025: Prof James Chin opines that the DAP a.k.a MCA 2.0 should not even contemplate leaving the Unity Government right now.

Chin said Perikatan Nasional (PN), dominated by PAS and Bersatu, has zero non-Malay MPs from PAS itself, and their whole vibe is heavily Islamic-centric with no political space for non-Muslims.

With a muted DAP and a NATO (No Action Talk Only) prime minister in Anwar Ibrahim, what is the difference for multi-racial Malaysians and Malaysia?

Perikatan Nasional (PN) may/could try and form a Government but will Sarawak and Sabah support a Government led by the Taliban-like PAS?

Will the non-Muslim MPs, even those in PKR, support the PAS-led Government?

 

The only way for DAP to regain the trust and confidence of multi-racial Malaysians is to leave Pakatan Harapan (PH) and the so-called Madani Unity Government if Anwar fails to act and implement reforms.

And come next general election (GE16), multi-racial Malaysians who treasure national unity and harmony must unite to give PAS, PN, PH and the racisial and religious bigoted Umno-led Barisan Nasional (BN) the boot.

United to vote for Sarawak for Sarawakians, Sabah for Sabahans and Independents like Rafizi Ramli to rid/wipe out all the racists to save multi-racial Malaysians.

In such a event, Muslim leaders from Sarawak and Sabah can be considered to be the 11th Prime Minister with the Independents comprising activists.

Fear of Malaysia becoming a Taliba-like state?

Read below a report that opines why multi-racial Malaysians should not fear such a possibility and that Sarawakians and Sabah have already taken the lead by placing their trust and confidence on sane and intelligent Muslims leaders:

 James Chin

Here's my honest take on why DAP should not even contemplate leaving the Unity Government right now. I'm basing this on the current political reality in Malaysia as of late 2025 – no sugarcoating, just straightforward reasoning.

The multiracial government dream dies without DAP: Let's be real – if DAP pulls out, the Unity Government gets reshuffled into something far less diverse. The current setup, flawed as it is, is the closest we've had to a genuinely multiracial coalition at the federal level. Perikatan Nasional, dominated by PAS and Bersatu, has zero non-Malay MPs from PAS itself, and their whole vibe is heavily Islamic-centric with no political space for non-Muslims.

PN in power would be worse, much worse, for minorities. Do you want a government where one of their leaders said Lee Kuan Yew and Lim Kit Siang are cousins and refused to back down even when the courts found she was wrong?

This will be the sort of government you will be getting, where every single issue is decided on ideological ground and where basic facts do not matter because religious dogma and hatred towards minorities are more important.

Critics are right to call out the DAP compromises. But DAP remains the most progressive party in the government.

The fault for reformati largely lies with Anwar as the PM - he's the captain steering the ship toward what he thinks will win Malay votes, often chasing the "green wave", such as presenting himself as hero to Palestine when they do not take him seriously at all.

DAP as the first officer, can't override him alone, but quitting means zero influence. Staying at least gives them a seat at the table to fight for scraps of reform, rather than shouting from the backbenches where they'd be ignored.

PN in power would be worse, much worse, for minorities. It will be all about making Malaysia a Malay-Islamic-First state. This will be the sort of government you will be getting where every single issue is decided on ideological ground and where basic facts do not matter because religious dogma and hatred towards minorities are more important.

Anwar's government isn't great - it's clueless on some fronts and Anwar's pandering to conservative votes frustrates everyone tired of race-religion politics. But PN ministers and policies would amplify the political Islam conservatism that's already creeping in at a much faster pace. Malaysia is not at Pakistan/Bangladesh levels yet, but a PN win accelerates the slide toward bigotry and theocracy.

The Unity Government, with all its warts, is the best of bad options – it slows that decline, protects some space for non-Malays and non-Muslims.

Leaving risks a power vacuum that lets the worse side win.

Bottom line: DAP leaving now would feel cathartic for frustrated supporters, but it'd likely screw over the very causes the party claims to fight for. Progressive Malaysians must push harder for the DAP to hold Anwar accountable but not at the cost of allowing PAS into power.

(These points only hold for Malaya, where the racial and religious dynamics are most intense.)

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.

Monday, 15 December 2025

Rafizi, isn’t it time for Malaysia First Movement?

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

No News Is Bad News

 

Rafizi, isn’t it time for Malaysia First Movement?

https://youtu.be/bA8g54ZyIKU?si=KkFUAzP9eTWPJvUY (DAP Becoming MCA 2.0? Ong: Chinese Voters and DAP Are Now an ‘Estranged Couple’!)

WawasanWire

4.49k subscribers

2,699 views 6 Dec 2025

In the latest political shake-up, Ong Kian Ming warns that DAP risks becoming the “MCA 2.0,” with its relationship with the Chinese community at a breaking point. What led to this decline in trust, and what can DAP do to regain support? Watch the full analysis to understand the stakes for the next elections!

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 16, 2025: With the DAP and Pakatan Harapan (PH) becoming more and more unreliable to multi-racial Malaysians, especially the Chinese voters, a posting has appeared on Facebook calling for the birth of a new political party - Malaysia First Movement.

And the post hopes that former PKR deputy president and Reformasi (Reformation) icon Rafizi Ramli will read this:

“I hope he will at least give it a thought. If nothing else, I am sure it will be food for thought.”

And the root of the problem is Malaysia’s 10th Prime Minister (PMX) Anwar Ibrahim and his political hidden agenda.

Consider the following facts:

> WHY did Anwar used his daughter Nurul Izzah to get rid of his deputy Rafizi and his loyal reformists from the PKR leadership, embracing politics of nepotism and cronyism ala-Umno;

> WHY is Anwar treating Umno better than his PKR, eg in Penang, an Umno man was appointed Penang Yang di-Pertua Negeri (Governor). Is there no one in PKR capable to be appointed Governor or a professional who has contributed immensely to rakyat dan negara (people and country); and

> SUPPORT for Umno in the last general election (GE15) plummeted to a meagre 26.7%, a historic electoral low for the racist and religious bigoted party.

With Umno being rejected by Malaysians, especially the Malays, why is Anwar “so faithful” to Umno?

The only sane conclusion is that his hidden agenda is to return to Umno and lead it. PKR can be dissolved without hesitation.

And the DAP is digging its political grave deeper and deeper by portraying itself as a political lapdog of Anwar - giving it the image of transforming itself into MCA 2.0 (View above video clip).

With 40 seats in the 222-seat Parliament, the second biggest party after the Taliban-like PAS, multi-racial Malaysians, especially the Chinese, cannot fathom or accept DAP’s meek and muted politics in the so-called Madani Unity Government (UG).

And why is UG (read as Anwar) so tolerant with the racial and religious bigots from Umno and PAS, allowing them to spew venom freely without any enforcement action?

Clearly, Anwar is keeping his options open to work with PAS and from within Umno, if and when he leads it.

Yes! The Abim and Umno DNA in Anwar is shaping Anwar’s hidden political agenda indeed.

No News Is Bad News reproduces below articles that are worth pondering for Malaysian voters:

Socio-political Issues (Malaysia)

Therealnehruism

We already have a Sabah First movement.

We also have a Sarawak First movement.

Considering that, shouldn't the time now be ripe for a Malaysia First movement?

If anybody has not noticed, the federation is unravelling.

The people of Sabah and Sarawak increasingly see themselves as Sabahans and Sarawakians, rather than Malaysians. The people in Semenanjung are also struggling to see ourselves as Malaysian first. Most of us prefer to be Malay, Chinese, or Indian according to our racial identities, rather than according to our national identity, and this racial sentiment has been intensifying, instead of relaxing in recent times.

Considering everything, isn't now the perfect time for a Malaysia First movement to enter our political landscape.

When Najib launched his “Satu Malaysia” slogan once upon a time ago, he might have had something like a Malaysia First movement in mind, but the trouble was that it was probably badly timed. Most Malaysians did not yet feel that there were “two Malaysias” or “three Malaysias” for us to understand what “one Malaysia” meant, or why it was necessary.

But a Malaysia First ideology might be well-timed now, because the federation visibly needs an ideology that can keep it together.

The Sabah First and Sarawak First ideologies—like it or not—are tearing the federation apart.

I am not saying that I don't understand or appreciate the rationale or justifications behind the Sabah First and Sarawak First ideologies. I do understand why Sabahans and Sarawakians are pushing these ideas. There is historical grievance, there is inequality, and there is the perception of colonization by Peninsular elites that might have moved them to launch these movements But regardless of whether the ideology is grounded in justice or merit, its practical effect is that it is causing the federation to unravel.

Just look at the recently concluded Sabah election where the Sabah First ideology took center stage—it wiped out all Putrajaya-based parties in Sabah.

And in the upcoming Sarawak election, I will bet RM1.30 that the Sarawak First ideology will also take center stage and demolish the Putrajaya-based parties in Sarawak in a manner equal to, or even exceeding, what happened in Sabah.

Given how powerful Sabah First and Sarawak First have become, I truly believe that it is time for a Malaysia First ideology to burst onto the scene—not to deny regional rights, but to counterbalance the centripetal forces pulling the country apart.

What would a Malaysia First ideology stand for?

Honestly, I don’t know. If I know anything about it, it is just this two things.

I don't think that it should resemble anything like the old “Malaysia for Malaysians” idea of DAP or PAP or Najib's “Satu Malaysia”, where you open everything from clinics to supermarkets to give cash handouts, to make Malaysians feel more Malaysians.

Secondly, I think that the Malaysia First idea should probably take a leaf from the Sabah First and Sarawak First concept—except that rather than being limited to those states, it would encompass the entire federation. Such an ideology might even gain early traction in Sabah and Sarawak because it could act as a counterforce to the hyper-local nationalism emerging there. Right now, Sabah First and Sarawak First have no ideological competitor. A Malaysia First narrative could be the first meaningful pushback—not by dismissing regional identity, but by offering a bigger national identity that includes it.

The federation may be fraying, but I am quite sure there are many Malaysians who are sentimentally attached to being Malaysian, and they would welcome a Malaysia First project that defends this identity.

As for who should lead such a party?

I think it should be Rafizi.

Why? Simply because there is no one else who fits the role better—and because Rafizi himself probably needs somewhere to land, now that he seems to have burned bridges with PKR.

I think Rafizi is oddly suitable to champion a Malaysia First ideology particularly because he is not tied to any other identity.

If you notice, Rafizi's identity if fluid and dynamic.

He is Malay, but he is not strongly tied to Malay ethnonationalism.

He is Muslim, but not strongly defined by religious politics.

Judging from his relationship with PKR, I doubt that he has any deep partisan inclination either.

He is part-entrepreneurial , yet he carries a whiff of socialist traits.

He is not fully for the government, although he is a part of the government, and he is somewhat of an opposition, although he is not a part of the opposition.

The fact that you can’t pin down Rafizi’s identity in a way, makes him an ideal symbol of a Malaysian identity.

If Rafizi were to declare that he is Malaysian First, I truly think that many people will believe him, simply because he doesn’t comfortably fit into any other identities. .

Shakespeare once wrote: some men are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them.

Rafizi may not have been born or groomed to champion a Malaysian First ideology, but given the timing, he might be the one that is thrust into that role by the tides of history.

If the federation is unravelling…

If Rafizi needs to go somewhere but he has nowhere else to go…

If no one will doubt him if he claims to be a Malaysian First…

If Sabah First and Sarawak First have succeeded so greatly that they have inadvertently set the stage for Malaysia First…

If Malaysians who love their national identity are waiting for someone to defend it…

If Malaysia First can give Rafizi a pathway to the top of the country—a pathway he currently does not have and could use to fulfill his own personal ambitions and aspirations…..

Then the real question may not be why should he start such a party, but why shouldn’t he?

Not every path forward is chosen out of desire.

Sometimes, the path forward is chosen because no other path exists.

And if destiny has already laid a road before us, perhaps the wisest thing is simply to walk it—as far as it will take us, in the best manner that we can.

I hope Rafizi will read this.

I hope he will at least give it a thought.

If nothing else, I am sure it will be food for thought.

#MalaysiaMadani #MalaysiaFirst #SarawakFirst

#SabahFirst #sarawakforsarawakian #RafiziRamli 

Image credit: Utusan

 

PRU15

Sokongan Melayu Kepada UMNO Jatuh Kepada 26.7% Sahaja Di Ambang PRU15, Terburuk Dalam Sejarah

November 18, 2022 1 Comment

 

Berikut adalah tahap sokongan pengundi sehari sebelum pengundian PRU15 berdasarkan kaji selidik terkini melalui kaedah panggilan telefon interactive voice response (IVR).

Pengundi ditanya gabungan mana akan diundi dalam PRU15 ini.

Kaji selidik dijalankan pada hari Rabu (16 November) dan Khamis (17 November) melibatkan 1,226 pengundi berdaftar di seluruh negara yang dipilih mengikut strata pengundi berdasarkan jantina, umur, kaum, pecahan bandar/desa, latar belakang ekonomi dan seterusnya diberikan pemberat mengikut jumlah pengundi bagi setiap strata di seluruh negara.

Margin kesilapan (margin of error) adalah 2.8%.

Kaedah sampel sebegini membolehkan kaji selidik memberi gambaran tepat yang mewakili (representative) semua pengundi berdasarkan strata masing-masing.

Dapatan-dapatan utama sehari sebelum PRU15:

· Sokongan pengundi Melayu kepada UMNO/BN berada di paras terendah di dalam sejarah iaitu 26.7%. Tahap sokongan pengundi Melayu menjelang PRU14 adalah 33.6% yang menunjukkan keadaan UMNO/BN adalah lebih parah sekarang berbanding PRU14.

· Sokongan pengundi Melayu kepada PH dan PN adalah hampir sama iaitu di antara 22% ke 23%. Tahap sokongan Melayu kepada PH kali ini adalah lebih tinggi dari PRU14 (menjelang hari mengundi).

· Jumlah pengundi Melayu yang belum membuat keputusan meningkat dari minggu lepas kepada 24%, iaitu pertambahan 4% dalam masa seminggu. Ini menunjukkan lebih ramai pengundi Melayu menukar keputusan dari mengundi UMNO/BN (minggu lepas) kepada “Belum buat keputusan” yang membayangkan peralihan undi Melayu kepada PH.

· Sokongan pengundi Cina dan India kepada PH telah kembali ke paras PRU14.

· Sokongan keseluruhan pengundi kepada PH mengatasi sokongan kepada UMNO/BN dan PN di semua peringkat umur pengundi. Peningkatan paling ketara ialah di kalangan pengundi >55 tahun (PH mendahului pada paras 36% berbanding BN – 31% dan PN – 11%), diikuti dengan kumpulan pengundi 25-54 tahun (PH mendahului pada paras 30% berbanding BN – 22% dan PN – 18%).

· Sokongan keseluruhan pengundi muda 18-24 tahun adalah hampir sama bagi ketiga-tiga gabungan iaitu dalam julat 20% – 25%.

Jika pola sokongan ini tidak berubah menjelang hari mengundi esok dan jumlah kehadiran melebihi 75%, PH dijangka akan dapat memenangi lebih dari 100 kerusi Parlimen di seluruh negara.

Oleh itu, untuk meneruskan gelombang ini, saya menjemput semua rakyat Malaysia untuk menyertai saya, Anwar Ibrahim dan pimpinan KEADILAN/PH di Ceramah Mega Grand Finale #AyuhMalaysia #KitaBoleh malam ini (Jumaat, 18 November 2022) di Padang MPAJ, Pandan Indah bermula 830 malam.

Orang ramai di luar Lembah Klang boleh mengikuti siaran langsung di media sosial.

Saya doakan rakyat Malaysia terus membulatkan hati untuk membuat perubahan demi masa depan bila mengundi esok.

RAFIZI RAMLI

No comments:

Post a Comment