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4 comment(s). Last comment by connot2323 2014-04-03 18:00
Posted by connot2323 > 2014-04-03 15:42 | Report Abuse
hmm, I wonder....Does the Malay swing in the ‘Kajang vote’ spell doom for Umno?
http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/does-the-malay-swing-in-the-kajang-vote-spell-doom-for-umno
Posted by connot2323 > 2014-04-03 15:50 | Report Abuse
Damn this MCA????
Wanita MCA chief might be unwittingly inviting the curse unto herself
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Posted on 03/04/2014 - 15:01
theantdaily team
READERS’ COMMENTS: Such curse only reflects on her wickedness and her evil mind. It should not have come from any fellow human being in this time and age, more so a politician.
A woman with such evil intention should never be allowed to lead. As a leader, one is supposed to practise good deed, good speech and good thought. You may not agree with your opponent but that does not justify the casting of a curse on him and his family.
She is obviously a lost soul who needs guidance. Someone should lead her to the right path to repent and seek forgiveness from the Almighty for her evil deed.
Until then she should stay out of politics and the public eyes. – Conscience
Tan Sri Lai: Always remember that when you point one finger at others, at least three other fingers are pointed at yourself...and when you curse others for whatever reason the same curses will bounce back to you at least three times over!
ChangMing Chew: I wonder what evil spirit rode this old and wicked sow, that she might spew out such filth. Does she think that being MCA Wanita chief makes her a Chinese empress? Last I heard, Qing and Ming dynasty laws are no longer in force anywhere in the world; Malaysia is not a tributary state of China, but rather Malaysia is a democracy underpinned by a constitution which protects our fundamental rights.
Further, the irony is her decree might very well entail her own execution. Most Malaysian Chinese are no more than 5th generation at best. Most are probably 3rd generation. I am sure there are some people in the PKR who are related to her. She might very well be called for execution herself by virtue of having a relative in the opposition of Nth degree, with N equal or less than 9.
Francis Ho Yun Kiong: Only idiots will make such comment without verifying the authenticity of such rumours...She has shamed all the women of Malaysia.
Tony Mettananda Chuah: Hei Heng, would you like yourself and your whole family to be cursed with "nine familial extermination"? Remember you'll receive what you give.
Christopher Yau: Is cursing people’s families now an MCA culture?
James Tan: She certainly makes Chew Mei Fun look like an angel. One wonders what school she comes from.
Ambalaka: “However, she defended her action and said that DAP’s Nga Kor Ming and other Pakatan members need not react to her statement if the claims were not true.”
If she did say the above, can I give her a slap for sleeping with my husband, and if that is not true she should not react?
Natalie Yap: Cursing people is bad enough...and she is cursing her opponents' families! Really "well educated"!...Our nation is getting hopeless with such "Chinese"!
Ong Lee Boon: DAP and PKR, so powerful to influence China officials? MCA, you better close shop for 10 generations.
These comments are based on the article “Heng’s ‘curse’ of exterminating Pakatan families angers Chinese community”.
http://www.theantdaily.com/news/2014/04/03/wanita-mca-chief-might-be-unwittingly-inviting-curse-unto-herself
Posted by connot2323 > 2014-04-03 15:56 | Report Abuse
Posted by connot2323 > 2014-04-03 18:00 | Report Abuse
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CS Tan
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This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
Posted by connot2323 > 2014-04-03 13:55 | Report Abuse
Political change in the air Koon Yew Yin | April 3, 2014 The multi-racial support for Pakatan Rakyat and PKR is not only strong but growing. COMMENT MalaysianIn the run-up to the Kajang by-election on March 23, I was honoured to be asked to speak in support of the PKR candidate, Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail. In my address to the crowd which I kept short, since I was sharing time with Azizah, Anwar Ibrahim and other Pakatan Rakyat political leaders, I chose not to speak on the political issues which should influence the way that the Kajang electorate should vote. Instead, I focused on my personal experience with the MCA and explained why a vote for the MCA candidate was an exercise in futility. That night was a memorable one for me. Firstly, it was the first time that I have ever made a speech from the roof of a truck. Secondly I did not expect the crowd of enthusiastic supporters cheering the speakers to run into the many thousands gathered there. To be honest, when I made the trip from Ipoh to Kajang, I had expected election fatigue with the by-election coming so soon after the 2013 national elections. Instead I saw sheer energy and commitment – from the top political guns to the volunteer party workers and all the way to the people gathered patiently in the padang. Most important, I felt a tremendous sense of camaraderie among the multi-racial crowd. I had been afraid of the sense of racial unity and solidarity in the opposition, given Umno’s latest attempts to play the divide and rule game in Selangor, focusing on the Allah issue. I was also concerned that the PKR’s and Pakatan’s credentials as a multi-ethnic and multi-religious party and coalition may have been eroded by the propaganda BN war. I can honestly say that what I saw took me by surprise – the multi-racial support for Pakatan and PKR is not only strong but growing! I left the rally that night fully convinced that if Kajang was an example of the political sentiment in the country, we will definitely have a change of government during the next elections. As it turned out, Azizah won the by-election with a handsome majority despite her campaign being heavily outgunned by the big spending and no-holds barred campaign of the BN. Perhaps because the national spotlight was on this single election and the result in Kajang did not threaten BN in any manner, there have been few reports of dirty tricks attempted by the BN to ensure a victory for its candidate, MCA vice-president Chew Mei Fun. Beware of dirty tricks ahead Today, the BN coalition is in power despite receiving only 47% of total votes cast in the 2013. elections. During the next elections, we can expected that percentage to fall down even further. I am confident from what I witnessed in Kajang that the majority of Malaysians – Malays and non-Malays; East and Semenanjung Malaysians – want political change and have the stamina to outlast the BN. But at the same time, we must be fully prepared for an even more unfair, unprincipled and unethical election the next time round. In fact the conviction of Anwar on the second sodomy charge and Karpal Singh on the sedition charge can be seen as the opening shots by the BN for the next national GE. The two charges are nothing else but pure political persecution aimed at removing two of the most charismatic and potent opposition leaders and sowing dissent in the ranks of the PKR and DAP. Much have been written by the international media on these two trumped up charges which have led the United States Department of State to issue a press statement expressing concern in the following way “The decision to prosecute Mr Anwar and his trial have raised a number of concerns regarding the rule of law and the independence of the courts. In this high-profile case, it is critical for Malaysia to apply the rule of law fairly, transparently, and apolitically in order to promote confidence in Malaysia’s democracy and judiciary.” BN’s miscalculation Anwar’s conviction was arrived at with unprecedented and indecent speed by the appeal court judges; hence triggering Azizah’s nomination in Kajang. If the government thinks that this will finish off Anwar and PKR politically, it has miscalculated. During the Kajang by-election campaign, ordinary people I spoke to were incensed that the government would stoop so low to using our courts of law to kill off the two highly regarded and veteran politicians. The subsequent PKR victory showed the extent of the voting public’s anger with this dirty trick. In the months and years ahead, I am sure that Anwar’s sodomy 2.0 conviction will prove to be a rallying point for Malaysians outraged with the way in which the courts of law are being treated as political courts to score points by the BN government against the opposition. BN may appear to have won the court victory; they will find out that they will lose the war. http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/opinion/2014/04/03/political-change-in-the-air/