Since Independence, ordinary Malays were told:
“You are the special race.” “You are protected.” “This system was built for you.”
But look around👀
Public sector.
Retail.
Agriculture.
Basic services.
The sectors dominated by Malays are also among the lowest-paying sectors in the country.
Salary Cap:
Public sector → RM2.8k–RM4.5k
Retail → RM1.9k–RM3.0k
Agriculture → RM1.7k–RM2.8k
Basic services → RM1.7k–RM2.5k
Meanwhile, the political elites grow richer every election cycle while ordinary rakyat fight over subsidies, rentals, PTPTN, fuel, groceries, and survival.
For 60+ years, race and religion have been recycled like old campaign posters.
When corruption explodes: “Race under threat.” Sultan ditunggang UMNO and PAS.
When the economy weakens: “Religion under attack.” Sultan ditunggang UMNO and PAS.
When leaders fail: “Protect the institution.” Sultan ditunggang UMNO and PAS.
DAP, MCA, and MIC come into play by provoking issues to ensure non-Malays, especially Chinese voters, will always vote for them and maintain the status quo.
Fear becomes strategy.
Emotion becomes a weapon.
Loyalty becomes currency.
And the saddest part?
Many young Malays inherited anger before they inherited opportunity.
Angry at the wrong people.
Bitter toward fellow citizens struggling under the same system.
Distracted from the real issue: a political class that mastered survival while ordinary people remained economically trapped.
The question was never: “Who owns the country?”
The real question is: “Who actually benefited from independence?”
Because if the majority still struggles with:
low wages,
weak upward mobility,
dependency politics,
brain drain,
shrinking confidence,
and rising living costs,
then something in the model clearly failed.
Not Malay failure.
System failure.
A generation raised to feel powerful politically while remaining economically insecure.
That contradiction is the real crisis Malaysia refuses to confront.
Young Malays must decide:
Remain permanent emotional voters, or become a generation that demands competence, dignity, education, innovation, and accountability.
Because history already proved one thing:
Politicians who survive by dividing the rakyat will never build a nation strong enough to compete with the future.
To be honest Malays are not happy with non-Malays because of the majority Malay is low wages with "the special Race" tag.
That's why we must choose "Parti Bersama Malaysia"
We can break the barrier.
Health is not a luxury — it is the foundation of a strong nation. Education, security, and economic growth all depend on a healthy population.
Book Online
In 1997, Steve Jobs came back to Apple and canceled 70% of the product line.
The engineers whose projects just died?
Three feet off the ground with excitement.
“They finally understood where in the heck we were going.”
He spent 20 minutes explaining how he was going to bring Apple back:
On focus:
"We looked at the product road map going out for a few years and said a lot of this doesn't make sense."
"There's way too much stuff and not enough focus."
"We got rid of 70% of the stuff on the product road map."
"You're going to see the product line get much simpler. And you're going to see the product line get much better."
On inventory:
"We've got two to three months of inventory in our manufacturing pipeline. And about an equal amount in our distribution pipeline."
"So we're having to make guesses four, five, six months in advance about what the customer wants."
"We're not smart enough to do that. I don't think Einstein's smart enough to do that."
"So we're going to get really simple. Take inventory out of those pipelines. Let the customer tell us what they want. And respond to it super fast."
On marketing:
"To me, marketing is about values."
"This is a very complicated world. A very noisy world. We're not going to get a chance to get people to remember much about us. No company is."
"So we have to be really clear on what we want them to know about us."
On brand neglect:
"Apple is one of the half dozen best brands in the whole world. Right up there with Nike, Disney, Coke, Sony."
"But even a great brand needs investment and caring if it's going to retain its relevance and vitality."
"The Apple brand has clearly suffered from neglect in the last few years."
On what not to do:
"The way to bring it back is not to talk about speeds and feeds. Not to talk about megahertz. Not to talk about why we're better than Windows."
"The dairy industry tried for 20 years to convince you that milk was good for you. It's a lie. But they tried anyway."
"Sales were going like this." [Down]
"Then they tried 'Got Milk.' Sales went like this." [Up]
"Got Milk doesn't even talk about the product. It focuses on the absence of the product."
On Nike:
"The best example of all. One of the greatest jobs of marketing the universe has ever seen is Nike."
"Nike sells a commodity. They sell shoes. Yet when you think of Nike, you feel something different than a shoe company."
"In their ads, they don't ever talk about the product. They honor great athletes. That's who they are."
On Apple's identity:
"Our customers want to know: who is Apple? What do we stand for?"
"What we're about isn't making boxes for people to get their jobs done."
"Apple at its core is that we believe people with passion can change the world for the better."
"Those people crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones that actually do."
On death:
"For 33 years, I've looked in the mirror every morning and asked: if today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I'm about to do today?"
"Whenever the answer has been no for too many days in a row, I know I need to change something."
"Remembering that I'll be dead soon is the most important tool I've ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life."
"Almost everything—all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure—these things just fall away in the face of death."
"You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart."
On time:
"Your time is limited. So don't waste it living someone else's life."
"Don't be trapped by dogma, which is living with the results of other people's thinking."
"Don't let the noise of others' opinions drown out your own inner voice."
"Have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become."
"Everything else is secondary."
"Stay hungry. Stay foolish."
This 2 hour Harvard interview with Lee Kuan Yew, the man who turned Singapore from a tiny island into one of the richest nations on Earth, will teach you more about leadership, discipline, and nation-building than most business books ever will.
Progenitor cells shows potential in repairing retina cells. For those who may suffer from Retinis Pigmentosa, it could be helpful to try the following:
Everyone needs a regular eye exam, even young kids. They can make sure you're seeing as well as possible and find diseases such as glaucoma, that have no noticeable symptoms. It's important to spot eye issues early on, when they're easier to treat.