I think it’s a great thing. 100,000 is not enough.
The US should have nuked Tokyo and then turned the emperor into ashes. They didn’t.
Japan is now a modern day colony of the US. Your overlords fucked you with the Plaza Accord & now you can’t rate hike or sell UST’s without Uncle Sam in your face. That’s the price of losing the war where your kind were mad genocidal sushi munching sliitty eyed g0ok cunts.
Mahathir Mohamad has been using this narrative for decades: that Malays are perpetually under threat, and only Malay political unity can “save” the country. But the reality in 2026 is far more complicated — and far less dramatic — than the apocalyptic picture he paints.
Malaysia is not “slipping from Malay hands.” Malays still dominate every major pillar of state power: the civil service, police, military, monarchy, Islamic institutions, and the vast majority of political leadership. The Prime Minister himself is Malay. To suggest Malays are on the verge of extinction politically is simply not grounded in reality.
What has actually failed is not “Malay unity” — but the old politics of fear.
For years, leaders across the political spectrum sold the idea that Malays must unite against non-Malays, liberals, secularists, DAP, the West, or whoever the enemy of the week was. But younger Malaysians increasingly care about governance, corruption, wages, education, healthcare, and cost of living — not endless racial paranoia.
Ironically, Mahathir himself helped create the political culture he now laments. During his long years in power, UMNO-era patronage politics enriched elites while many ordinary Malays remained economically insecure. Huge scandals, cronyism, weakened institutions, and race-based dependency politics did not strengthen the Malays in the long run — they weakened public trust.
His statement also reveals a troubling mindset: that the country belongs to one race. Malaysia does not “belong” exclusively to Malays, Chinese, Indians, Orang Asli, Sabahans, or Sarawakians. It belongs to all citizens. The Constitution already protects Malay special position, Islam, the monarchy, and Bahasa Melayu. Those safeguards are not disappearing tomorrow because Malays are politically divided.
The bigger danger to Malaysia is not the lack of Malay unity. It is the constant weaponisation of ethnic fear to protect political relevance.
A mature nation cannot keep functioning on existential panic every election cycle. If Malay politics keeps revolving around “we are under siege,” instead of fixing corruption, education, productivity, brain drain, and institutional decay, then the community risks becoming trapped in permanent insecurity despite holding immense political power.
Mahathir’s statement sounds less like a national warning and more like the frustration of an old political era losing its grip on public imagination.