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Wednesday, February 3, 2016

If ‘clowns’ deserve respect, what about the rakyat?



YOURSAY | ‘What about the leaders respecting the law of the land?’
Kit P: You can't get more ridiculous than making a cartoon a police case. These guys should spend more time going after real terrorists and real crooks.
No wonder IS is making dangerous inroads in the country. The Royal Malaysian Police (PDRM) is very much focused on other things.
The Mask: Mr Policeman and Mr Tinju, let me teach you a little about the art of war. If there is small fire with no chance of spreading by itself, let it be. No one will notice.
But if you start putting out the fire the wrong way, it will spread and become uncontrollable. Why can’t you people just ignore such issues? They will die a natural death.
Incidentally, the image of the PM (locally and internationally) is already at rock bottom. Let him at least make the rakyat laugh and forget the scandal that goes with him.
Swipenter: In the circus. the clown is a much loved character, but not the clowns in the Great Putrajaya Circus.
Franco: Respect? What about the leaders respecting the law of the land? What about the respect for the people, the citizens of this nation? Respect should be earned, not demanded.
Looking at the entire circus that is going on in the country and the so-called circus ringmaster and his bunch of clowns, they do not deserve any respect. They should have first respected the people and not insulted our intelligence, i.e. all Malaysians.
Secondly, they should have not jeopardised the future of this country and the future of our children and children's children.
Wira: Being ridiculed is a risk every politician must be prepared to take. Otherwise, if you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.
Hamzah Paiman: What happens if 26 million people posts such caricatures? Are they all going to be hauled up and charged?
Do we have enough prison cells in Sungai Buloh to accommodate all of them? Just wondering.
Bert: Not only are the cartoons giving us a good laugh, but the standard of English shown by some of the cyber troopers is also very ticklish.
Lone_Star: It looks like, smiles like, wear lenses like, has ruby red lips like but is he a ‘badut’ (clown)?
It is definitely not our donee extraordinaire, he should be surrounded by the 2.6 million bintang-bintang.
SelangorKu: All of us do miss the good old days. We were all united as one nation, one people. Then politicians divided us to be bumiputeras/non-bumiputeras and now Muslims/non-Muslims.
Our football standard is a reflection of Malaysia's deterioration in politics, economy, morals, etc. We used to beat South Korea and Japan in our annual Merdeka Football tournament.
After seeing the show ‘Ola Bola’, I was pleasantly surprised that the patrons in the cinema applauded with pride when the show ended.
It’s time for us to get rid of corruption, nepotism, race and religious supremacy - Malaysia will once again be a great nation. I'm still proud of being a Malaysian.
Pisasu 7: Mokhtar Dahari and Santokh Singh came from Setapak, Soh Chin Aun from Alor Gajah and R Arumugam from Port Klang, all almost like villages then.
That was the multiracial Malaysia that was destroyed. And now The Clown is running the circus.
Meanwhile, a South Korean, Son Heung-min, is playing for Tottenham Hotspur, which is vying for the top four in the English Premier League, and we used to whack the South Koreans.
Headhunter: See, when there is no dirty politics and stupid politicians involved, Malaysians of all races can rise to the occasion.
Let all the government-linked companies (GLCs) and civil service be multi-racial and you will see excellence hit the roof because of keen competition and rapport among them, like the good old days before they screwed it up.
P Dev Anand Pillai: Yes, the scenario in ‘Ola Bola’ is what this country used to be before corruption, ethnic fanaticism and lethargy started to invade Malaysian sports.
I was a there as a young person admiring our great sportsmen and footballers during that time, it inspired our youth to take up some kind of sports and strive to our highest in it.
But sadly, that is our past. We can come back to that level if we put our minds to it, it will remove the 'parangs' from today's young men and give them some hope that they, too, can achieve something in life.
Pahatian: Our national motto 'Unity is Strength' doesn't apply any more. Our unity now is always about Malays must unite, all Muslims must unite, and nothing about all races must unite.
It will take generations for us to go back to those good old days. -Mkini

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