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Re-delineation of constituency: A Voter's perspective

Posted: 24 May 2013 12:13 PM PDT

cpy1989 
 
My presentation is based on the fact that Sabah & Sarawak state should hold 1/3 of the seats in the Federal Parliament & all states should have proportional representation in the parliament.

As for population, it is taken by total Malaysian population, rather than voting population, as I do not have any data on voting population. 

Peninsular
 
148 seats
 
     
 
State
 Population (m)% of Total Population (m) Seats Round up   
Selangor 5.46 22.2% 35.81915 36  
Johor  3.35 14.85% 21.97695 22  
Perak  2.35 10.42% 15.41667 15  
Kedah 1.95 8.64% 12.79255 13  
KL  1.67 7.40% 10.95567 11  
Penang  1.56 6.91% 10.23404 10  
Kelantan  1.54 6.83% 10.10284 10  
Pahang  1.5 6.65% 9.840426 10  
Terengganu  1.04 4.61% 6.822695 7  
Negeri Sembilan  1.02 4.52% 6.691489 7  
Melaka  0.82 3.63% 5.379433 5  
Perlis  0.23 1.02% 1.508865 2  
Putrajaya  0.07 0.31% 0.45922 0  
Total  22.56 100.00% 148 148  
       
State  Population (m) % of Total Population (m) Seats Round up  
Sabah  3.21 55.63% 41.16811 41  
Sarawak  2.47 42.81% 31.67764 32  
Labuan  0.09 1.56% 1.154246 1  
Total  5.77 100.00% 71 74  
       
       
       
       
       
       

Source: see here

 

Vernacular education in Malaysia

Posted: 24 May 2013 12:09 PM PDT

http://mobiletemp.cdnmy.com/images/paper/utusan20091229-2.jpg 

Oh, how good it is to study in the SJKCs and SJKTs.

The many students who dropped out of the SJKCs especially the Chinese students, and also those who drop out of the SJKT, end up going into crimes. 

Mansor Puteh 

There are many who are often confused when they say 80,000 Melayu are enrolled in SJKCs. Earlier it was said to be 60,000 Bumiputera students.

But the truth is that the so-called Bumiputeras are mostly those who are the so-called 'Sino-Bumiputeras' of Sabah and Sarawak.

There is no such a thing called the Sino-Bumiputeras. They are Chinese, since their fathers are Chinese and mothers Natives of the two states. They just want to claim Bumiputera rights which they are not entitled to get.

Of the real Melayu, there are at the most 12,000 in SJKCs.

Unfortunately analyses by many on this matter do not take into account the failures of those Melayu (Malays were British subjects), how all of those who had studied in the SJKCs finally enrolled into the Sekolah Kebangsaan including the Chinese who did not dare to go to universities in Taiwan or Hong Kong and even China where the medium of instruction is Mandarin.

They cry and complain if they are not given places in the universities in Malaysia where the medium of instruction is Melayu.

And of the many Melayu who had studied in the SJKCs, how many finally get to go to university, or even excel in the secondary school? How many get a string of As for SPM and STPM? Virtually none that Dong Zong could be proud of to show.

And of the many Melayu how many who are experts in Mandarin and who had gone to study history to decipher the ancient Ming Dynasty manuscripts to reveal more historical facts surrounding the history of the Melaka Sultanate? None.

And this one fact will startle you: The many students who dropped out of the SJKCs especially the Chinese students, and also those who drop out of the SJKT, end up going into crimes.

They cannot be absorbed into the workforce in the private as well as the public sectors. Therefore, they have to sell counterfeit DVDs in the pasar malam, or paste stickers on public properties, creating the third sector - 'Crimes Sector'.

Get the facts from Bukit Aman and ask for the profile of the petty crimes and those who are involved in the vice trade and illegal entertainment outlets in the country, and the bottom line is that they are all dropouts of SJKCs and SJKTs.

Those who have higher morals amongst the dropouts take up petty trading in the pasar malam or sell telephones and doing other things.

Can Dong Zong be described as a chauvinist group? How many times do their leaders encourage assimilation? Do they ever attend Merdeka and Malaysia Day parades or watch them?

Do they speak in Melayu? Do they allow their children to mix with the other non-Melayu children?

And no Chinese companies actively asked for Melayu with proficiency in Mandarin as an advantage, to work for them.

I hope the NST can organize a public forum with Dong Zong and ask them to speak in Melayu. They won't accept it. In fact, they even send their press releases to TV3 in Mandarin as were shown on television themselves.

Vernacular education in Malaysia (Mandarin and Tamil) is based purely on the large number of Chinese and Tamils (not Indians) that are still in the country.

The position won't be tenable in the future if the size of the communities shrinks and with the empowerment of the Melayu in the economy and politics of the country.

It is estimated that by 2050 the population of the Melayu will be 80%. If this happens, there is no way for anyone not to be able to speak in Melayu.

In fact, if the government was insistent, there will not be that many non-Melayu who are eligible to get driving licenses since the written tests are conducted in Melayu, when most of the Chinese and Indians are not even capable of reading what is written in the tests.

How many of the Chinese and Indian taxi-drivers could truly pass these tests?

It is a shame that NST is offering Rita Sim a special column to express her support for vernacular education, when all that she does is to use it as a propaganda platform, spouting predictable and one-sided views on the matter.

The vernacular Mandarin or Tamil newspapers won't have any column that extols the virtues of the Sekolah Kebangsaan over the vernacular ones.

It is also pertinent to note that of the Chinese and Indian groups, on Mandarin and Tamil are favored or championed by them.

But how come the other Chinese and Indian groups such as Hokkiens, Cantonese, Malayalees, Punjabis, Telugus and so on do not demand the establishment of their own schools in Malaysia?

The problem is that their numbers are too small for them to make such demands.

So the main factor here is 'numbers'. This means if the numbers of the Chinese and Indians in Malaysia shrink in time, vernacular schools will also become irrelevant even to the Chinese and Indian communities.

In Singapore, the government said the Indian community there said they did not want the establishment of Tamil schools.

Lastly there are at least 30% Melayu who have Chinese ancestry including all of mine. Therefore, one can say most of the Chinese in Malaysia of an earlier time had rejected China and being Chinese.

The Chinese today are those who aim to create a colony in Malaysia and not wish to assimilate.

In fact, according to a book written by a Chinese in Indonesia, any Chinese who left Chinawas considered to be a traitor. And if he returned to China, he would be arrested and sentenced to hang.

If he chose to leave China, he should adopt local ways.

That is why the Chinese who went to Indonesia at the same time as those who came to Tanah Melayu assimilated with the Jawa (not Javanese), it is said 80% of the Jawa is said to have Chinese ancestry. No wonder, many Jawa today have Chinese features, including many from the Jawa royal families.

Therefore, what I am saying here is that the issue concerning vernacular education in Malaysia and the others surround it, have not been fully discussed or debated.

 

Open Letter to the Home Minister

Posted: 24 May 2013 11:59 AM PDT

https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQbtZu7q58kyH7imX7N-diDlgCb5p_zHfjzMf92GlmX_wuw_wCAog 

In business one sells ones products not by running down ones competitor, one sells ones product by highlighting its advantages and its virtues. By far this is the best and proven method of sale. 

Stephen Doss, Social Media Chambers of Malaysia

Dear Dato' Seri Dr. Ahmad Zahid Hamidi,

I write to you as someone who has followed your political ascension from Ketua Pemuda UMNO to your current position as Minister of Home Affairs.

As a young University student, I watched with pride when you took on the then President of UMNO and Prime Minister of Malaysia Dato Seri Dr Mahathir Mohamad on the issue of cronyism and nepotism at the 1998 UMNO General Assembly. At the time it was unthinkable for someone so low the ladder in politics to take on the all-powerful Dr Mahathir.

Over the years I have noticed that you have mellowed in speaking out on issues that someone like me (young urban middle class) would hold dear and value. Young individuals like me yearn for a level playing field as we lack the connections and cables that the connected and family members of politicians and businessmen have access to.

I was not surprised with the results of the 2008 elections, even less with the results of the 2013 general elections. The more the leadership in BN speak less about the issues that are of concern to the urban middle class electorate, then it is only natural that you begin to lose the support of that electorate. The correlation should be by now painfully obvious to those who seek the truth.

There are two ways in which political parties and politicians can react to sliding support among the masses, they can either seek to halt and reverse the declining support, or they can seek solace within their comfort zone or cocoon of ignorance until it is too late.

Sir, I don't need to tell you that the most important issues today affecting the urban populace is education, security and cost of living. Issues that although as important to all Malaysians, probably more so those who live in urban centres.

Dear Dato Seri, although UMNO may have won the majority of the rural votes cast, it lost the popular vote, I know you will say that this is irrelevant in a country that practises a First Past The Post system, but that would be fooling oneself into thinking that all is well, especially when you know that the urban demography is a demography that is the most educated, most critical in their thinking and the most discerning, probably a key demography any political party worth their salt will do their best to court as they key supporters.

I am glad that the key portfolio of the Home Ministry is now yours, I am sure you of all people will be aware that different times call for different measures, no longer will Malaysians be easily subdued, easily persuaded, or easily fooled by half measures. Nothing less than sincerity of intention and purpose, easily detected through action will do.  The days of saying one thing and doing another and getting away with it are over, in no small measure thanks to the alternative media which is free from state censorship.

In business one sells ones products not by running down ones competitor, one sells ones product by highlighting its advantages and its virtues. By far this is the best and proven method of sale. I firmly belief if your Ministry can reduce the anxiety of the people who depend on your Ministry to feel safe, then you would have won half the battle. Security is a bigger issue in the urban centres than in the rural constituencies, solve these problems and you will win their support. The ball is in your court not with the opposition.

Dato Seri, I look forward to this national reconciliation process as announced by the Prime Minister, I am sure that you will lead the way as one of his most trusted lieutenants, I assume that reconciliation here means reaching out to all Malaysians even the ones who didn't vote for the BN.  

Leave the days of sledge hammer politics to a generation past, a generation who benefited from the absence of the alternative media, who could get away with murder because people did not have access to information.

No government in the world will blame the electorate for choosing freely who they wish, neither would they achieve anything by doing so. I pray that God give you and the leadership of this country the wisdom and ability to win any election in future in a free and fair manner. Respected for the work that you do, for upholding democracy and trusting the electorate.   

I am sure whether we like the form of democracy or not in this country we all still love this country, having been born here we would wish to die here. As a fellow Malaysian I wish you all the best and hope to see you do great things through your Ministry. Say and do the morally right thing and we will be with you.

Sir I sincerely hope that you do well in the next general elections, I would hate to see you do well in UMNO but fail at the next general elections.

Your sincerely

Stephen Doss

Advisor

Social Media Chambers of Malaysia


 

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