See? People in their circle says they are trying to build a micronation.
Tell me why shouldn’t I, as a Malaysian care or freak out???
Just because there are power dynamics and money, yall can whatever experiment you want on ‘backwaters near Singapore’?
Be for real
So now it's Malaysia and not an island off Singapore?
"Because to put it very plainly: we have invested 100M+ MYR in Malaysia, while creating jobs for dozens of Malaysians"
Dozens. 🤡
Now address your stance on Zionism and Israel.
Looks like it is true Network School is Singapore incorporated. However, Singapore tax works based on residency and not registration. Unlikely for them to pay tax in Singapore. But surely, they are not paying Malaysian tax either as Forest City is a tax haven!
I read on threads that NS is actually registered to a company in s'pore so they are paying tax there. If that's true, m'sians defending them are clowns.
Malaysia doesn't need your investment if you use your so-called "school" as a backdoor gateway to get Zionists to enter the country.
Typical of Zionists, you're spinning the facts. The issue is not illegal aliens as you claimed, it's the allegations that dual citizen Zionists are present.
Can you actually state for the record that not a single individual in your "school" hold an Israeli citizenship on top of whatever citizenship and documents they used to enter Malaysia?
Network School ni bukan satu kerajaan pun. Tapi cara cakap macam negara superpower yang bawa trilion pelaburan sampai nak beri kata dua macamlah kita ni tak boleh hidup kalau dia tak datang. Belum conquer seluruh pulau dah besar kepala. Tak sedar diri pulau tu tanah kita.
You’re not so indispensable that Malaysia’s future depends on whether you stay or leave.
Even some of the world’s top scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs who have chosen to work in Malaysia have never claimed that the country owes them special treatment or that talent mobility should dictate national policy.
Malaysia should never make decisions out of fear that someone might leave. A nation’s education and talent policies must serve the long-term interests of its people.
If we are serious about becoming a technology and innovation nation, we need to double down on developing local talent, strengthening our national schools, and having the conviction to invest in competent Malaysians. Foreign talent should complement and strengthen our ecosystem—not become the basis upon which we shape national priorities.
A confident nation builds institutions that outlast any individual. It does not negotiate its sovereignty or its education system because of dollars and cents.