“Let us embrace moderation…”, says Najib
May 17, 2011
Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak at Oxford University: Let us embrace moderation
“Our choice is clear. Come together in action for a future of justice, freedom, hope, compassion and goodwill for our children or it will be replaced by a future of injustice, tyranny, hopelessness, cruelty and hate. Because the real divide is not between East and West or between the developed and developing worlds or even between Muslims and non-Muslims. It is between moderates and extremists of all religions. Together, let us embrace moderation as the best course of action and for the best way forward.”–Najib Tun Razak at Oxford University
Distinguished guests, Ladies and Gentlemen,
Good evening.
Let me first thank the Rt. Hon. Jack Straw for his kind words of introduction; Dr Farhan Nizami, a respected scholar, whom I have known for many years; and all of the representatives from the academia, business and diplomatic communities who are present here today.
I am immensely pleased to join you as a guest of Oxford University, where earlier this afternoon I had the chance to meet some very talented young students and to visit the future OCIS building, an inspirational environment, which blends Islamic and Malay traditions with your own rich Oxford heritage.
It is an enormous honour to be here in the renowned Sheldonian Theatre, which has echoed with the words of so many luminaries over the years. Every year, dozens of Malaysians travel to Oxford to study, finding a home away from home in the Oxford University Malaysia Club. The Khazanah-OCIS Merdeka Scholarship, established in 2006 to mark the 50th anniversary of Malaysian independence, have boosted the numbers.
And with the Malaysian Securities Commission and OCIS now collaborating on the study of emerging issues in Islamic finance, the bonds between our two countries will be further strengthened.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Diversity, dialogue and peaceful co-existence are important themes in Islam. In the holy Quran, Allah SWT expounds that, the very reason He creates human beings into distinct nations and tribes is as a blessing so that humanity may embrace and celebrate their diversity. When then, did Islam and extremism become synonymous? When then, did perpetrators of hate and terror hijack the religion of peace and compassion? How did acts of extremism by a few minorities of Muslims come to be seen as a reflection of Islam and its followers? Such vile misrepresentations are a source of great anguish to me and to the vast majority of Muslims.
When four young men headed south from Yorkshire one morning in July, six years ago, maybe they thought the home-made bombs they carried in their backpacks made them “real Muslims”. Maybe they thought that by blowing themselves up, they were acting in accordance with the will of Allah, that they were following the teachings of the Quran. How wrong they were.
I would like to emphatically state that those who strap explosives on their bodies and blow themselves up are not martyrs. They do not represent Islam. Unknowingly, they are misguided into committing a grievous sin. So too, all those who preach hate and stoke the fire of intolerance in leading to this most blasphemous act, they too are as guilty as the perpetrators.
Our heart goes out to their victims who are innocent, defenceless civilians going about their daily life. Islam never condones such a vile act. Neither is it part of the teachings of Islam.
In fact, Islam abhors suicide; as stated clearly in the Holy Quran, Chapter 2 verse 195 which reads: “do not throw yourselves with your own hands into destruction”. Therefore, suicide is impermissible under any circumstances.
Life in Islam is a sacred trust from the Almighty whose fate shall be determined by His will alone. It is pertinent to note that under the five higher objectives of Islamic law or “maqasid syariah” the first and foremost concern is the protection and preservation of life.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
A world free from terrorism is possible. It is not beyond our reach. It needs men and women of goodwill among the faithful of all creeds; it requires a vanguard of the moderates, it demands us to stop being a silent majority and to start reflecting the courage of our conviction.
We must address the underlying causes of global violence. Merely going after specific individuals, dismantling their organisations, disrupting their finances and discrediting their ideologies is far from enough. We must be able to differentiate between the symptoms and the root causes. Only then, can we achieve a lasting solution.
It would be too easy to say that the solution to Islamic extremism is simply for more Muslims to speak up and to speak out. Yes, it is our responsibility, but it is not ours alone. Just as Muslims need to make their voices heard, so do the Christians, the Jews, the Buddhists, the Hindus and the Atheists who are sickened by intolerance, violence and terror and need to make their voices heard. We need to hear the concerted voices from moderates in all countries and from all walks of life. And when we do, the prize of peace is there for all to see.
But while one man standing in the road is a nuisance, a mere distraction, ten men standing together are far harder to ignore. And if those ten become a hundred, a thousand, a million, a billion even, they become a force so big, so strong and so united in their common cause that those who espouse hatred will face a very simple choice.
They can join us, or they can remain where they are and be crushed by the force of our collective will.
So it is for people who cherish moderation, dignity and justice everywhere to stand firm, and stand proud, to dissipate the pull of terror and to deny those at the margins a foothold in the middle ground ensuring that frustrations, wherever they are felt, are heeded and that voices, wherever they speak out, are heard. Quite simply, we cannot allow this moment to be overtaken by extremists, with those who shout loudest gaining the most.
That is why we are all here this evening to foster not a clash of civilisations but to further an understanding, and perhaps even a celebration of our difference and, at the same time, of everything we share. Modernisation and moderation must go hand in hand. Our dialogue must continue.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Allow me to relate the Malaysian experience. Providence and history has endowed us with a nation-state that epitomises the very essence of diversity. Malaysia is blessed not only with ethnic diversity but also of culture, language and religion. Since independence in 1957, with the exception of the May 13 tragedy, Malaysians have lived in relative peace and stability.
In Malaysia, Islam is synonymous with moderation, inclusiveness and good governance. Sixty percent of Malaysians are Muslims, the other forty percent profess a variety of faiths i.e. Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and others. Although the Malaysian Constitution provides for Islam as the religion of the Federation, it protects the right of all Malaysians to practise their religion in peace and harmony.
In light of this diversity, national unity continues to be the overriding objective. Since assuming the office of Prime Minister in April 2009, I have continued to make this overarching goal the top priority of my administration through the guiding philosophy of 1Malaysia, emphasising People First, Performance Now.
In managing our plurality, we have decided on integration as opposed to assimilation. Malaysians accept their diversity. We do not merely tolerate each other but we also embrace and celebrate. By leveraging the robustness and dynamism of our diversity, we have created a foundation for our national resilience.
In the short span of fifty years, Malaysians have managed to transform from a low-income agricultural economy dependent on a few commodities into a diversified modern industrial upper middle-income nation. The United Nations Development Programme currently classifies Malaysia as a high Human Development Index nation.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Islam is practised as a way of life in Malaysia. The Government advocates a path of Wasatiyah or justly balanced moderation whether in formulating and executing domestic policies or in conducting international relations. Let me put this in perspective so that there will be no room for confusion or misinterpretation.
I would like to stress that the principle of moderation is not new in Islam. Wasatiyah, is a recurring theme in the Quran. Verse 143 Chapter 2 states: “We have made you into a community that is justly balanced”.
The Quran goes further that with moderation, there must be justice and justice presupposes knowledge and freedom. It is therefore important to remember that education, coupled with democratic principles of freedom, allows us to choose what is good and virtuous. It is only logical that moderates choose a path that is true and right. Moderates must defend and promote these ideals. What is false or misleading should be rejected and expunged.
Moderation is also advocated in Christianity. If I may quote from the Bible, Philippians Chapter 4 verse 5 which says: “Let your moderation be known unto all men”
This essentially calls for all Christians to live their daily lives in moderation and not do anything in excess. Judaism also calls for the middle road. The Torah teaches that moderation in life and etiquette, in character and traits, as well as in one’s lifestyle is a way of life’ in the truest sense of Jewish customs. In Taoism, the principle of moderation is considered a critical component of one’s personal development and forms part of the three pillars of its teaching.
There is no such thing as a liberal Islam or an extremist Islam, a conservative Islam or an enlightened Islam, a jihadist Islam or an appeasing Islam, a modern Islam or a medieval Islam. There is only Islam, a complete way of life. Being moderate cannot in any way be equated to a wimp, unprincipled, weak or appeasing.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
In following the best Islamic tradition, Malaysia shall not waver from supporting what is right and just notwithstanding whether the cause is championed by the Islamic world or beyond. We shall not retreat in the defence of the weak and the oppressed whatever their creed or colour.
We will not be silenced from speaking the truth.We are now all too aware of the dangers of terrorism and violent extremism. From the 9/11 attacks, to the Madrid and Bali bombings, to the destruction caused here in London, many live in continuous fear of losing their lives at any given moment.
As chapters of the history of terrorism and extreme violence are still being written, its plot pivots around a single question – Why do people take such extreme measures to the extent of taking another’s life or even their own? I am sure that many here are aware of some of the more common factors that lead people to commit such atrocities.
It has often been cited that lack of economic development and education has led some people to turn to extreme measures like terrorism. In other cases, it is despair and a sense of utter hopelessness. Humiliation is another wellspring. While most have acknowledged these factors, if we observe more carefully, we will find that some terrorists come from well-off families and are very much educated.
In most cases, it is a combination of these factors that terrorism continues to persist. For them, terrorism is the pursuit of political goals through other means. They also hide behind the mask of religion in pursuit of their goals. Some really believe that other religions and civilisations represent the enemy and that there is no place for peaceful coexistence.
For them, the world is a zero sum game where one side can win only at the expense of the other. They propagate this to get others to fight and die for their cause. Thus, in a peculiar way, the role of religion has ironically, increased the scale and lethality of the terrorist threat considerably.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Terrorism and extremism are serious challenges. Overcoming them requires clear thinking based on an objective assessment of the situation. One real and symbolic cause looming large as a rallying cry for global extremism is the unresolved Middle East problem, the plight of the Palestinian people. It has haunted the global conscience for far too long. Every peace-loving nation which seeks a better world must work towards an everlasting resolution based on the principles of a viable two state solution and equitable justice for all involved.
Malaysia unequivocally supports the struggle of the Palestinian people for an independent, sovereign and viable homeland of their own under the umbrella of the United Nations Security Council Resolutions. The world owes the Palestinian people a debt of honour; the people of Palestine have suffered for far too long. The Palestinian people have been expelled from their land, their homes destroyed before their very eyes; they have been humiliated and subjugated while the world watched.
Oppressed and denied their most fundamental right to life and liberty with dignity and hope have led to tragic and heart wrenching consequences. It is time to put real action in place of grandstanding and mere rhetoric.
In supporting the Palestinian and other righteous causes, Malaysia will not support violence against non-combatants, civilians, women, children, the aged and infirm. In short, those who cannot defend themselves whatever the justification. Some argue that desperation has led to unorthodox methods of warfare. To them I would urge to heed to principle of Islam that the end never justifies the means.
That is why, at the United Nations in September last year, I called for a Global Movement of the Moderates that would see government, intellectuals, religious scholars and business leaders across the world take a united stand. For it is the spirit of Wasatiyah moderation’ or balance’ that must now prevail all around the globe.
There is no doubt that the scale and speed of the events unfolding across the Arab world in recent months has at times felt almost overwhelming. But amidst the chaos and the confusion we should not lose sight of the fact that these countries and peoples now face a fateful choice the choice between extremism and intolerance that closes in to fill the void and a peaceful, democratic moderation that will grant them more freedom of expression, not less.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
In the words of Samuel Johnson, society cannot subsist “but by reciprocal concessions”, and that is how modern, multi-racial, multi-religious and multi-cultural Malaysia not only subsists but develops and grows. Far from encouraging “different cultures to live separate lives, apart from each other and apart from the mainstream” Malaysia’s integration and inclusivity has always been the key formula for success.
But if my stance is idealistic, it is hard-headedly realistic. Many great Islamic scholars have been concerned with how Islam with its religious, cultural, political, ethical and economic world view can help solve some of the biggest challenges we face today. These are questions that interest me how moderation can solve the problem of extremism but also, in more unexpected ways, how it can help us through the global economic crisis.
It is no coincidence that institutions working to Islamic principles survived the worst of the economic crisis. Islamic finance puts the public good ahead of individual gain. And it is perhaps worthy to note that Islamic bank would not have been permitted to spend and lend so much more money than it actually possessed.
The Islamic world is already showing that it can be an economic force.Malaysia is the world leader in Islamic finance. Malaysia is also the world leader in the issuance of sukuk or Islamic bond with 60 per cent of it originating from Malaysia.
The great potential of Islamic finance is not hard to see. There are more than one and a half billion Muslims living in countries around the world. There are more than 400 Islamic banks in over 50 countries, including right here in the United Kingdom.
In this regard, I believe we should look closely at how the structures of Islamic finance can support the new global economic architecture that is emerging. Indeed, in place of excess Islamic finance offers moderation and transparency. In place of greed, Islamic finance offers fairness.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Moderation is not an alien concept to mankind. Neither is it only theoretical in nature. It is a real living principle that can be gleaned from the exemplary conduct of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) that after years of being persecuted, harassed and oppressed by the pagan Quraishites, he started his reign of Mecca later, with dignity, forgiveness and compassion.
Moderation can also be seen from the conduct of Nelson Mandela who after being incarcerated for 27 years, 18 of those spent in an eight by eight foot cell, allowed only one letter and one visitor every six months. After he was released and when asked by journalist Sir David Frost “how is it that you got through 28 years, you were wrongly incarcerated, and you’re not bitter?” Mandela answered, “David, I would like to be bitter, but there is no time to be bitter. There is work to be done”.
In his inaugural address as President in 1994, Nelson Mandela eloquently put forth the ringing clarion call:
“Let there be justice for all. Let there be peace for all. Let there be work, bread, water and salt for all. Let each know that for each body, the mind and the soul have been freed to fulfil themselves.”
It is testimony to his sense of moderation and his leadership that there was no bloody retribution in South Africa for all the evils and injustices perpetrated against the black majority during the apartheid regime.
Again, moderation was manifested in the works of Mahatma Gandhi, the father of non-violent struggle, who freed a nation through his faith in the inherent goodness of man.
Moderation is also reflected in the struggle of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. In his dream for a more equal America, he appealed to its highest ideals of using non violent means following in the footsteps of Gandhi rather than debasing his struggle by stooping to the low of his opponents.
In the case of the United Kingdom, cast your mind back, if you will, to the darker days in Northern Ireland. In the wake of the Good Friday Agreement, extremists on both sides of the sectarian divide tried to plunge the country back into violence. But the massed ranks of the moderates, from both the nationalist and loyalist communities, stood up as one and uttered with a single voice a firm, resounding “no”:
No, they did not want to be cast back into the shadow of the bullet and the bomb.
No, they were not prepared to sacrifice the new prosperity that came with peace.
No, they would not let the vicious actions of a few dictate life for the many.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Edmund Burke, the philosopher, was quoted to have said, all that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
Our choice is clear. Come together in action for a future of justice, freedom, hope, compassion and goodwill for our children or it will be replaced by a future of injustice, tyranny, hopelessness, cruelty and hate. Because the real divide is not between East and West or between the developed and developing worlds or even between Muslims and non-Muslims. It is between moderates and extremists of all religions. Together, let us embrace moderation as the best course of action and for the best way forward.
Thank you.
Great Speech, but meaningless considering what is happening at home. The Prime Minister cannot deal with PERKASA and UMNO right wing elements and he talks about moderation.
The speech writer must be congratulated. As far as the PM is concerned, given developments at home, he is just blowing hot air. Nobody at Oxford believes him.
Gobala - May 17, 2011 at 7:49 pm
Mr PM, nice words,soothing to the ears when you are with a foreign audience. Back home rampant corruption, decaying institutions,abuse of power in particular by the police and judiciary, an opposition leader being sodomised in court for years, your unanswered relationship with the poor Mongolian lady Altantuya, fanatics like Ibrahim Ali spewing filth in the so called defence of Islam , totally igorned !! Spewing hipocracy abroad and the cheek of it all, all at taxpayers expense !!!
ken - May 17, 2011 at 7:55 pm
It simply amazes me how this chap can say these things not really believing in what he says. Does he think that we the urban population are a set of fools.This is obviously not for the Malay kampong folk, for a start, they havent a clue where oxford is. Najib please be real and we will respect you but not vote for you.
Brian - May 17, 2011 at 8:26 pm
So, what is he going to do about the loud mouthed Malaysian fascist/Nazi rabble-rouser who tries to imitate Benito Mussolini?
Phua Kai Lit - May 17, 2011 at 9:14 pm
hai…hai…hai…brother din…you pun dah kena turn over ke???? hehe…too many past histories ke???
eshmaelajenoor - May 17, 2011 at 9:55 pm
The GDP of Malaysia has increased by 15 times since independence but our wages has at best increased by 4-5 times. If wages had kept pace no need for subsidies at all.
Anonymous - May 17, 2011 at 10:06 pm
Najib is telling all NON-UMNO Malaysians to embrace moderation.
Better listen, you unpatriotic folks who don’t vote for UMNO.
frank - May 17, 2011 at 10:10 pm
Semper, the Fartalyzer will go off scale with all the drivel, gaseous methane, H2S, mercaptans, cadavarine and what not – emitted by this FLOM (First Lelaki of Malaysia). Forget about the durians!
They say that some people really love the smell of their own farts. This is a classic example! Speech writer from Apco?
C.L. Familiaris - May 17, 2011 at 11:36 pm
At best, his speech is a joke. He talks about everything nice and proper but he does the opposite. This guy have no credibility at all.
He’s actually worse than Ibrahim Ali. At least Ibrahim talks and behaves like a scumbag and doesn’t pretend to be an angel.
Wonder how much Malaysia has to pay Oxford for Najib to stand in front of the crowd to read that piece of paper.
sceptic - May 17, 2011 at 11:37 pm
Najib can rant all he wants about his compassion and moderation to the world. If only they know the truth about his Regime in Malaysia and how the people have to suffer for his extremism in everything. Some people just have no shame and dignity. Podah!!!
Sheild37xs - May 18, 2011 at 12:23 am
CL Familiaris- FLOM is like a duck. Eat and shit at the same time in the same pool of water.
Yes it will be difficult to have a Malaysian version of Fartalyzer-too many iterations to consider sometimes flipflopping and back pedalling.
semper fi - May 18, 2011 at 1:14 am
* words are cheap, Mr Prime Minister, and;
* action speaks a thousand words, act against Perkasa and Ibrahim Ali and we just might believe what you said!
Sentinel - May 18, 2011 at 1:36 am
Best describe as ” Cakap Tak Serupa Bikin”.
But it is a good speech. Same as those by that certain prince from the Silver State.
johanssmKhunPana - May 18, 2011 at 5:45 am
Najib, can you speak louder? We can’t hear you here in Malaysia. Louder please, LOUDER. We still can’t hear you
semper fi - May 18, 2011 at 7:36 am
Let us embrace the first family…of which the lady of the house has ambitions of decking her cranium with the tiaras of the sultans.
Vincent Tan’s rag, the one offered free since no one will buy it, had a pic recently of her husband at a do in the UK shaking hands with some kids with the caption “COMMON TOUCH.”
The brainwashing began some time ago. Now keep repeating the mantra and soon BLanders will have a newly minted royal house.
Mr Bojangles - May 18, 2011 at 7:39 am
Let us embrace moderation — Najib
I have yet to hear anybody say “Let us embrace extremism”.
Mr Bean - May 18, 2011 at 8:58 am
Mongkut Bean
I thought I saw you greeting and shaking hands with FLOM in NYC when the couple met business leaders and members of the community.
semper fi - May 18, 2011 at 10:21 am
I have always supported good governance or attempts towards that goal. If Najib can deliver his ETP and NEM and national unity, he deserves not only my support but those of all Malaysians. Right now as UMNO President, he must first deal with right wing and conservative elements in it.
I do not profit from supporting anyone. All I seek is to promote good government. For example, I think Penang and Kedah are doing okay, but Perak is problematic and I am not sure about Selangor. That is a personal opinion. You are welcome to disagree.–Din Merican
dinobeano - May 18, 2011 at 11:14 am
Right wing, Left wing – no difference Datuk.
Our resident Northrop consultant will tell you nowadays, there’s only the only thing that counts is the Stealthy Flying Wing – like the B-2 Spirit Bomber i.e. One wing.
We cannot even perceive the direction the FLOM flies, as ‘they’ jet all over the world to take care of ‘funny business’. All stink bombs. The only thing we sense is the rotten cadaverous smell. We are not interested in getting FDIs and selling our countries bones (since the flesh has already been stripped bare by the ‘Entitled’ hubris). We want to know how to survive scrounging around for our ‘daily bread’ while preventing the massive outflow of capital and brain-power. The goons think that we can survive by bread alone, while they sarcastically provide us with their version of ‘Word of God’!
We have chimeric defense systems, which try to integrate a mish-mash of parts from Russian, French, UK, German (Ah.. bits and pieces from all over Europe), US and God knows where. That’s why while the rakyat are facing stagflation, FLOM and allies are still doing this:
http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/2011/05/18/malaysia-on-defence-shopping-trip/
Good governance needs a Vision and Fire in the Belly – not “Fire in the Hole”!
C.L. Familiaris - May 18, 2011 at 11:45 am
Forget the msm which only bodek and sing praises of what Najib says and does, but, with so many credible blogs carrying so much comments (ugly and negative, but, truthful and frank about what he does, has done, and should in future do), doesn’t it awaken him to the fact that he cannot remain unaware to what is being perceived of him and his character, and, his position as PM? We are talking about and referring to a large segment of educated Malaysians who are both, critical and demanding of people in high office, who cannot be hypocrites – saying one thing and doing another. No. Najib cannot be unaware that helluva lot of Malaysians expect the utmost from him. He simply cannot think and imagine that all Malaysians are still padi planters, fishermen and living in tree tops!!!
FochAvenue - May 18, 2011 at 12:02 pm
Dear Dato Din
Talk about Sigmund Freud and his observation on
“psychological projection”.
To the corrupt, everyone can be bought with money.
To the racist, everyone else is a racist.
They haven’t heard of “Robespierre the Incorruptible”? Or Nelson Mandela the great healer of a sick apartheid South Africa?
Phua Kai Lit - May 18, 2011 at 12:04 pm
Bare faced liar!
Unfit to be PM
Bobby - May 18, 2011 at 12:13 pm
“Since assuming the office of Prime Minister I have continued to make this overarching goal the top priority of my administration through the guiding philosophy of 1Malaysia, emphasising People First, Performance Now” Jibby.
Poorah. 1Malaysia or 1Jibby, 2Keris and 3Rosie? That’s more like it, pinkie lips…
Tok Cik - May 18, 2011 at 12:24 pm
Tok Cik,
Actually, we face a dilemma, not Mahathir’s Malay Dilemma. Our choice is between the government we know and a new and different government with promises of good things. I have spent lots of time thinking about governance and I have come to the tentative conclusion that it is our political system that stinks. Power continues to corrupt and absolute power does it absolutely.
Machiavelli, Bacon and others have written about it hundreds of years ago. Philosophers have debated about the nature of Man. Until we can devise a political system that can truly contain human excesses (greed and lust for power) and devise one that can serve people, we have to make do with limitations of the system as is. What do you think? –Din Merican
dinobeano - May 18, 2011 at 1:07 pm
Dato’,
Don’t think the political system in Malaysia will ever change. So i guess we should just let BN rule forever. Najib can just talk but i think we should get used to Malaysian Klu Klax Klan being the voice of UMNO. It’s going to be that way when muhyiddin takes over.
didi - May 18, 2011 at 1:23 pm
A change in the political system, Din? Unless I am daydreaming a change will never come – not now not ever. We have to drag these parasites from their seats of power if we ever cherish change.
It’s not gonna be easy but try we must for the sake of the coming generations. I don’t want my cucus and cicits to curse and swear at me when I am dead and gone.
Tok Cik - May 18, 2011 at 1:56 pm
The future is bleak and signs are already there. Prices of necessities are already beyond the reach of many. Once the diesel subsidy is gone, I wonder how those at the bottom half of the social ladder gonna make ends meet.
Tok Cik - May 18, 2011 at 2:03 pm
Dato’, the way to contain absolute power is too follow USA where the President is there for only two terms. Period. Than new blood and ideas come in and there is no onset of corruption. Two terms for PM that’s it, not 22 years. Whats that? 22 years. Insane.Every Middle Eastern country that is fighting back for their power and thats becasue their leader has been there for over 20 years. On the other side of the coin most western country has their leader changing every so often to prevent abuses. Even then some get it wrong, so are we surpised M’sia is in this condition. Umno has never had to face consequences of abuse and ultra vires use of powers.
kathy - May 18, 2011 at 3:38 pm
Maybe PM is trying to tell some Umno factions from far away, you know abit like those who live overseas and are afraid to go home and say it openly for fear of their liberty being lost. So PM speaks from far away because with fresh air in the UK he can think clearer away from the confusion . We hope anyway. We live in hope , constantly.
kathy - May 18, 2011 at 3:58 pm
I have spent lots of time thinking about governance and I have come to the tentative conclusion that it is our political system that stinks. Power continues to corrupt and absolute power does it absolutely.- Dato Din
You hit on the nail. Our political system sucks and stinks.
As I said before, the root cause for the stinking political system is because we were forced to embrace race-based politics and ALLOW RACE-BASED POLITICAL PARTIES TO RUN AND RUIN THIS COUNTRY since INDEPENDENCE.
Anybody worth a cell in his brain knows that when race is the foundation of political mandates it is a recipe for disaster. Man as a primate is a tribal animal.
The ONLY Malaysia can come out of this hell-hole of our political system is for the VOTERS, and I mean including our Malay makciks and pakciks in the rural heartland to come to the realisation that race politics is not the answer to THEIR problems as our over half a century of experience has shown.
This protracted propaganda of UMNO supported by MCA and MIC of creating “FEAR OF OTHERS” has blindsided our rural folks and the wool is being tight in their eyes by the likes of Perkasa and racist radicals in Utusan Malaysia and UMNO.
Until and unless we constitutionally ban the right of RACE-BASED POLITICAL PARTIES, Malaysia’s political system will cotinue to stick for many long years to come.
Racial and religious strife is just staying below the surface of the artificial calm. Most other countries, like Somalia, Sudan, the Balkans, even Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka, Southern Thailand, Southern Philippines, have seen the surfaces of these ugly racial and religious politics.
It is to the credit of the liberal Malays, the less chauvinistic Chinese and the less parochial Indians that Malaysia withstood UMNO’s racial policy onslaught of the last 40 years and tolerated to the extreme the high-handedness of the pseudo-Malay right wing Mahathir’s regime whose rhetoric are ultra-rightist yet succumb to the cronyism of the Chinese towkays and Indian elites.
frank - May 18, 2011 at 4:37 pm
Good try, Semper.
Mr Bean - May 18, 2011 at 6:39 pm
correction
Until and unless we constitutionally ban the right of RACE-BASED POLITICAL PARTIES to exist, Malaysia’s political system will continue to STINK for many long years to come.
frank - May 18, 2011 at 7:56 pm
I know there are well meaning liberal Malays who want to see reforms of some sort. People like that UMNO blogger, Sakmongkol AK47 and also Aspan Alias are still thinking UMNO is the answer to Malaysia’s political stability.
You don’t bring in sentimentalities when the hard truth is that RACE BASED POLITICAL PARTIES are NEVER the answer to a multiracial country wanting to move several notches up to a member of a civilised international community. Worse still, is to allow RACED BASED POLITICAL PARTIES to rule this country.
For all the good writings and ideas, Sakmongkol AK47 suffers from delusional sentimentalities… an attempt to be objective yet talking within a narrow tunnel of tribal outlook. He cannot bring himself to the conclusion that RACE-BASED POLITICs AND RACE BASED POLITICAL PARTIES (include UMNO) is a throw-back of the past and they appeal to the lowest dominator of human values, just short of the values in the law of the jungle.
Writings of Bloggers like Sakmongkol AK47, despite his intelligence, erudition, and deep intellect, cannot be taken seriously, however much one tries to. Such bloggers write with one eye closed to the realities of the politics of the day in Malaysia.
frank - May 18, 2011 at 8:08 pm
correction
He cannot bring himself to the conclusion that RACE-BASED POLITICs AND RACE BASED POLITICAL PARTIES (include UMNO) is a throw-back of the past and they appeal to the lowest denominator of human values, just short of the values in the law of the jungle.
frank - May 18, 2011 at 8:19 pm
I think i like the ‘Law of the Jungle’ as it is, frank. It drives evolution where the predator has to contend with the defenses of their prey. It’s a natural law based on survival. Over here, we have a very human melodrama of ‘Excess’.
I would put it to you that the political intrigues plaguing this country are ‘unnatural’ or artificial, evil and sinful. The result of greed, lust and elitism. It is tribal only in the sense of ‘Entitlement’ and the tools utilized is as old as Mankind itself. Provoking unfounded fears of the future and spreading rabies. This is the duty of “intellectuals” – who become prophets of their own doom.
The ‘Sin’ implied here is not strictly moralistic. It means missing of the mark, disharmony, imbalance and deformity. It is the result of Inbreeding, Mal-education and BTN-ization. That is why we need to purge the ‘Mal’ and ‘My’ designation that has been imposed on our airplane tickets and other personal identification paraphernalia.. At the moment there are so many things wrong, that we are beyond exasperation.
Therefore, i urge His Lembekness FLOM, to call for a referendum as soon as possible.
C.L. Familiaris - May 18, 2011 at 9:38 pm
Oh, i forgot! The SHAME.., we face!
Otherwise known as ‘Loss of Face-Water’..
C.L. Familiaris - May 18, 2011 at 9:45 pm
Semper,
When Dato and Datin come to NYC in the summer, I will be there to shake his hand. But he will not know it.
Mr Bean - May 18, 2011 at 10:29 pm
Folks,
Change will come to Malaysia when the Malays want it. Right now the rest can only step back and say “Ready when you are.”
Will the Malays be ready for change? Will there be a time when they can step forward and say, “We are ready” ?
Answer: Not in your life time, nor mine nor Dato’s nor anybody who can read this. You gotta be so delusional as to think that you’re Elvis and has not left the building.
Mr Bean - May 18, 2011 at 10:39 pm
Change? Not necessarily.
Certainty, definitely. At least for the interim moderate term. There are such things as being ‘hung’ too long, you know. Ask David Carradine..
Nothing’s certain, nor cast in stone. That’s why the call for action, not ‘lembekness’.
C.L. Familiaris - May 18, 2011 at 10:52 pm
Najib’s pink lip service! That’s just it! There has never been any sincerity. Bean is right no change in our lifetime!
The Simple Man - May 19, 2011 at 12:44 am
Will the Malays be ready for change? -Mr Bean
Mr Bean, as a legal wise owl, you should know that generalisation and stereotyping is bad and dangerous.
This is one of the faults of Ibrahim Ali and the racist elements in Utusan Malaysia and UMNO.
There are Malays who are willing and pushing for change… are they the majority or minority. If you look at the 2008 GE results, if not for Sabah and Sarawak, UMNO and the other race-based parties MCA and MIC would have been in the Opposition for the first time in Malaysian history.
So Malays ARE ready for the change…
What you must have emphasised is whether the RURAL Malays are ready for SUSTAINED CHANGE? That would have been a more intelligent question to ask instead.
frank - May 19, 2011 at 2:02 am
I will be there to shake his hand. But he will not know it.-Bean
Wow this is better than David Copperfield. When are they going to NYC?
semper fi - May 19, 2011 at 3:18 am
You missed the thread. Scroll back.Dato and Datin were at the U.S. Embassy when he got news about Anwar having a case to answer. Very stealthily added so you would miss it.
Mr Bean - May 19, 2011 at 4:27 am
Frank,
What I was referring to is the singularity of the event i.e ‘change’. ‘Change’ can only come to Malaysia when the Malays want it because they constitute the majority.
Right now many are happy counting their change.
Mr Bean - May 19, 2011 at 4:57 am
It is hard to reconcile Najib’s articulated vision of moderation, from his seemingly artful neglect of this vaunted ideal in his dealings at home: the scurrilous scandals and the irrepressible excesses of ‘protected’ racial and religious bigots, and constant baiting of our battered minorities.
It is foolhardly on his part to assume that his audience do not know what is happening in UMNO and his politics of survival. We need bold leadership to deal with the likes of Ibrahim Ali, the man who declared jihad against Christians and pro-Mahathir elements who are working towards his political demise.
After two years in power, Najib has to be inept and clueless. Take charge and gives us a sense of where you are headed. Right now, we think you, Najib, are sinking in political confusion and dragging the country along with you.
Ahmadi Hussein - May 19, 2011 at 5:41 am
Najib gives this lofty speeches from New York to Oxford about moderation but is he practising them? No!
A clear example back home is Ibrahim Ali. A bigot filled with hatred who spew violence against the minority, and is condoned by the Najib administration. I suggest Najib stop hoodwinking the West on moderate Islam when he can’t rein in a loose cannon in his own backyard.
Black Mambo-Jumbo - May 19, 2011 at 5:43 am
Malaysia is “synonymous with moderation, inclusiveness and good governance”, said PM Najib Razak.
I beg to differ. You can fool some of the people some of the time but you cannot fool thinking Malaysians. Moderation? Your government forbid Christians from using the word ‘Allah’, claiming it is exclusively for Malaysia’s Muslims.
Inclusiveness? You are the ring leader in the immoral and unscrupulous power grab in Perak by using the government bureaucracy, security instruments and judiciary. Why? Your government cannot accept that the rakyat of Perak had rejected Umnoputras.
Good governance? You have the decency to say this. Your government used of all the instruments of state to persecute Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim. That’s good governance?
I wonder how much donation Umnoputras are giving Oxford University this time.
Beng Chai - May 19, 2011 at 5:45 am
The nation is crying out for firm action and we get more sweet-smelling words. The Perkasa goon, Ibrahim Ali al-Kataki, and Utusan Malaysia are mocking Najib. If he does not act to rein in the troublemakers, Najib is going to suffer the same fate as the lame Abdullah Ahmad Badawi from Kepala Batas, ending up with a Tunship and an advisory or gaji buta job.
Malaysians must learn that we must never elect compromised leaders. Such characters will not be able to make hard decisions in tough times and cannot assert leadership because of the baggage they carry. The only thing moderate about Najib are his words. Sad but true.
Gobala - May 19, 2011 at 5:51 am
never elect compromised leaders….. Gobala
Yes but who if not Najib? Name me one person in UMNO/BN that is not compromised? Even Anwar has been caught in a compromising situation.
semper fi - May 19, 2011 at 1:52 pm
was ‘it’ after the petra ‘turnaround’ and you were ‘called up’ by the authority when you become mellowed…or were you mellowed by ‘them’…..
eshmaelajenoor - May 19, 2011 at 7:54 pm
I dream a dream called Wasatiyah where there would be no Article 153.
http://wp.me/p1ChLd-3q
There was a time when men were kind, their voices was soft, and their words inviting.
There was a time when love was blind, and the world is a song, and the song is exciting.
There was a time when it all went wrong.
I dream a dream in time gone by, when hope is high and life is worth living.
I dream a dream that love would never die, I dream that God will be forgiving.
I dream a dream called Wasatiyah where there would be no Article 153.
Article 153 is the abusive tool that has allowed the ultra right wing of UMNO robs the Malays their dignity, and place the rest in chains for the elite few.
We are told that the Malays needed help then, and the Article is now God’s gift to the faithful Malay Muslims, just as what prophet Mohammed pbuh proclaimed in the year 630/9, when different tribes from different parts of Arabia came to the Prophet to negotiate their relationship with the Muslim community,
“If a Jew or a Christian becomes a Muslim, he is a believer with his rights and obligations. He who holds fast to his religion, Jew or Christian, is not to be turned from it. He must pay the poll tax…”
But there was a time when the Prophet voice is more inviting, when the Prophet arrived at Medina in 622-624/1-3 and established the ‘Constitution of Medina’, which
… click http://wp.me/p1ChLd-3q for more …
katasayang - January 21, 2012 at 1:21 pm
Najib, The Illusionist.
Sheild37xs - January 21, 2012 at 4:12 pm