tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post4326131671063877598..comments2024-03-29T21:49:05.495+08:00Comments on KTemoc Konsiders ........: Mafulat Muhibbah Malaysians love terrorists?KTemochttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09951253039042572381noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post-82587640651353400542017-07-12T15:00:09.799+08:002017-07-12T15:00:09.799+08:00Hai-ya, another one of those pusingx2 & cheong...Hai-ya, another one of those pusingx2 & cheong hei story!!!<br /><br />Azahari ke, Noordin Top ke, penghianat zalim ke, semua pun tak apa! Yang penting tu, ada lah mapping the Melayu tag in the mind of the world.<br /><br />Since, good one too mild to have any impacts. The bad guys come out top of the selection mah.<br /><br />Pagi Zakir Naik tu, just say it as the 3rd (3of5) progressive exhibition of the fantasied supriority syndrome lah.<br /><br />In this state, looking for champions of the race extends out to those of the same ummat (not necessary of the same race) with extreme world-view. As within the race, there r zilch contoh to exploit le!<br /><br />Note that Pendita Za'aba doesn't count due to his liberal & left-wing inclined ideology!<br /><br />Mind u, ALL these beginning to happen in the late 90s with the awakening of the ketuanan farce.<br /><br />Perhaps, more appropriately to diagnose as infeed entitlement mentality strengthen the fantasied ketuanan ego!CKhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16423926161945889390noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post-656011252993472162017-07-12T12:13:49.563+08:002017-07-12T12:13:49.563+08:00In the peace Accord, under the terms of the agreem...In the peace Accord, under the terms of the agreement, Chin Peng was one of the MCP officials who would be allowed to return home. <br /><br />That he subsequently wasn't led to, I and many suspect, the authority coming up with the excuse of an additional condition AFTER the Peace Accord had been signed, namely, his papers to prove he was born in Malaya. As I have written, the aim was domestic politics, namely, to do with the government's politicised opportunism rather than racism per se, to please the Heartland who might have forgiven (or even hero-worship) Muslims like notorious terrorists Azahari Husin and Noordin Top, and former Malay CT but not a non-Muslim like Chin Peng.<br /><br />Votes mattered and still matter.KTemochttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09951253039042572381noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post-11101435822822131522017-07-12T12:07:45.508+08:002017-07-12T12:07:45.508+08:00The constitution of Malaysia states that no citize...The constitution of Malaysia states that no citizen may be barred from entering the country. Obviously no non-citizen has the automatic right to enter the country.<br />The only additional stipulation from the Haatyai accord was that the Ex-CPM personnel who are Malaysian citizens would be allowed to return unmolested. <br />This stipulation was important , because there were Thai CPM members, and also those who were legally China nationals because they were born in China and did not meet the qualification required for Malayan citizenship.<br /><br />There would be no legal sanctions on their past CPM activity.<br /><br />Regardless of the emotional response from many Chinese, the denial of Chin Peng's return to Malaysia was steadfastly legal and subject to due process.<br /><br />Chin Peng could not prove that he was a Malaysian/Malayan citizen or would have been eligible to be one. <br />In fact, the court in the end set a very low bar for his return - he just had to be able to reasonably show that he was born in the territory of Malaya. He could not.<br /><br />That's the the simple crux of the matter and the end of the discussion. <br /><br />Of course, there were political objections to his return, given his past activities as CPM's top leader, but the fact is the Malaysian government would have been powerless to prevent him from walking through the Bukit Kayu Hitam or Padang Besar immigration checkpoint if he met the simple criteria. <br />But he could not. <br /><br />The rest is just Hot AirMonsterballhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13694084861364885645noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post-20257574570695810952017-07-12T11:46:55.192+08:002017-07-12T11:46:55.192+08:00Money laundering, is technically a crime in Malays...Money laundering, is technically a crime in Malaysia.<br />The Money Laundering Act was foisted upon Malaysia through pressure from the damned Americans after 2001, because they were concerned terrorist groups were being financed by underground, untraceable money flows.<br /><br />In reality, money laundering is a very Halal business in Malaysia, with leadership by example, right from the top...and most Malaysians would just yawn at the idea of it being a crime.<br /><br />In the 1950s until the 1980's there were no legal banking or money transfer links between Malaysia and China. Yet many older generation Malaysians had reliable methods to send money to relatives in China. They would pay an agent in Malaysia, and by some roundabout process, another agent in a town near to where the relative lived would pay out some equivalent amount in Renminbi, minus commission, of course.<br /><br />That arrangement would be technically illegal today, considered money laundering, but thousands of Malaysian Chinese and Indians made use of such facilities in those days.Monsterballhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13694084861364885645noreply@blogger.com