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MALAYSIA Tanah Tumpah Darahku

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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

DASAR EV YANG GOBLOK. ORANG RAMAI RUGI. SIAPA BENEFIT? MESTI ADA GENG YANG UNTUNG BESAR.

 



TUESDAY JOKES - 316

 

Gunung Stong Waterfalls, Jelawang, Kelantan, Malaysia

A man enters a barbershop for a shave. While the barber is foaming him up, he mentions the problems he has getting a close shave around the cheeks.
“I have just the thing,” says the barber taking a small wooden ball from a nearby drawer. “Just place this between your cheek and gum.”
The client places the ball in his mouth and the barber proceeds with the closest shave the man has ever experienced. After a few strokes, the client asks in garbled speech.
“And what if I swallow it?”
“No problem,” says the barber. “Just bring it back tomorrow as everyone else does.”

 

I don’t like cell phones. I’m never sending another text message as long as I live because I don’t like a phone that tries to predict the words I’m trying to send to people. Cause I move quickly. Last week I ended up sending a text that read, hey baby, I had a great night. I hope you have a home day. But I meant to text, you should get tested.

Q: Why do blonde nurses bring red magic markers to work?
A: In case they have to draw blood.

A pregnant woman gets into a car accident and falls into a deep coma.
Asleep for nearly six months, she wakes up and sees that she is no longer pregnant. Frantically, she asks the doctor about her baby.
The doctor replies, “Ma’am, you had twins! A boy and a girl. The babies are fine. Your brother came in and named them.”
The woman thinks to herself, “Oh no, not my brother — he’s an idiot!”
Expecting the worst, she asks the doctor, “Well, what’s the girl’s name?”
“Denise,” the doctor says.
The new mother thinks, “Wow, that’s not a bad name! Guess I was wrong about my brother. I like Denise!”
Then she asks the doctor, “What’s the boy’s name?”
The doctor replies, DeNephew.

 

An old man went to the college that he went to when he was a youth. He knocked on room number 3 of the hostel and said:
“May I come in. I lived in this very room thirty years ago when I studied in this college”.
A young man opened the door and let him in.
The old man examined the room, fondly remembering everything.
He said, “The same old room, the same old wooden table, the ventilator, and the same old window that opens to the garden. And the same old bed.”
When examining it he found a young girl under the bed.
The young man got alarmed and said, “Don’t mistake me. She is my sister. She dropped her earring and is searching for it.”
The old man said, “And the same old story…”

 

Teacher: “What is the difference between ‘Tea’ and ‘Tee’?
Student: “The first one is a drink and the second is an incorrect spelling.”

“Give me a sentence about a public servant,” said the teacher.
The small boy wrote: “The fireman came down the ladder pregnant.”
The teacher took the lad aside to correct him. “Don’t you know what pregnant means?” she asked.
“Sure,” said the young boy, confidently. “Means carrying a child.”

 

George was planning on going out with “The Boys” when his wife told him that he wasn’t leaving the house.
George’s Wife: “The last time you went out with your friends you got so drunk that you puked on your shirt.”
George: “But Honey, I promise that I won’t drink a drop of alcohol all night!”
So, after begging his old lady for an hour, George got the OK to go out with the guys as long as he stayed off of the booze.
George met up with the guys at a local bar and proceeded to get shit-faced. After about 3 hours of guzzling liquor, George blew chow all over his shirt.
George: “Shit! The old lady is going to throw my ass out of the house for getting drunk and puking on my new shirt!”
Bill, George’s best pal, gave drunk ass George an idea of how to keep from getting in trouble with the wife.
Bill: “All you got to do is have a RM 20 bill in your hand when you walk through the door. Then, when she accuses you of barfing all over yourself, just tell her that some other drunk puked on you and that he gave you 20 ringgit to get the shirt cleaned.”
So, when drunk ass George walked into the house with money in hand, his wife was waiting for him in the living room.
George’s wife: “I knew that your drunk ass would spew bile and booze all over that new shirt!”
George: “Honey, let me explain! This drunken fool at the bar puked on me and gave me 20 ringgit to have it cleaned.”
His wife snatched the money out of his hand and observed that he was holding two RM 20 bills.
George’s wife: “Is that so? Then where did the other 20-ringgit bill come from?”
George: “Oh, that’s from the guy who shit in my pants.”

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Brickbats hurled at DAP-led Penang for wanting to gazette Hungry Ghost Festival as state heritage

According to State Tourism and Creative Economy Committee chairman Wong Hon Wai (PH-Paya Terubong), all the items – once gazetted – can subsequently be recommended for national gazettement under the National Heritage Act 2005 before being considered for international recognition under UNESCO’s Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Amid DAP’s purported shaky grip on Penang given the PAS onslaught especially on the mainland, the Hungry Ghost Festival surely makes a viable  political bullet for the Islamic party and its diehard supporters to troll the former.

This can be seen from the barrage of insults levelled at DAP-led Pennag for wanting to uplift the stature of a so-called pendatang (migrant) heritage on the Sinar Harian’s Facebook page.

“Having only just landed in Tanah Melayuu less than 200 years ago, already thought of making their custom a state legacy,” berated one opposition-slant rightist.

Others insinuated against allowing too much room for the so-called pendatang folks who were brought in by the British imperialist to flex their influence.

But eventually the Hungry Ghost Festival’s conflict with Islamic teachings makes it an ideal platform to go on the offensive against DAP.

“The DAP is truly a party of evil ghosts and demons,” mocked one commenter with another considered it as “a gift for Penang Malays who are lapdogs to DAPig’s🤣”.

As such, Malays are reminded of their misstep by having voted for the Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalition in the previous general election. “There’re various ways indeed for this tribe to change Penang’s identity,” rued one opposition-slant netizen.

Therefore, it is only timely that the Malays unite as a political force to unseat DAP or “better still if the state has a Malay ruler”.

At the end of the day, one commenter was spot on that “the tribe really care about their own race, they don’t switch their vote support and so on”.

“I want to add this to the upcoming election. It really shows their efforts to take care of the interests and culture of their own race. I hope the Malays can learn from this example. Don’t be divided until the votes, too, get divided.” 

- focus malaysia

College student charged with stabbing 19-year-old to death

 Hazim Muhammad, also 19, is charged with the murder of Nurfisya Zulkifly, who was allegedly stabbed 61 times in Ketereh, Kelantan.

Muhammad Hazim Muhammad
Hazim Muhammad being escorted by police at the Kota Bharu court complex. (Bernama pic)
PETALING JAYA:
A college student has been charged in the Kota Bharu magistrates’ court with the murder of 19-year-old Nurfisya Zulkifly, who was allegedly stabbed 61 times in Ketereh, Kelantan, on April 30.

Hazim Muhammad, 19, nodded after the charge was read before magistrate Rais Imran Hamid, Berita Harian reported. No plea was recorded as murder cases fall under the High Court’s jurisdiction.

Hazim was charged with killing Nurfisya between 11.40pm on April 30 and 12.20am on May 1 at Jalan Pengkalan Piah in Ketereh.

The charge under Section 302 of the Penal Code is punishable by death or 30 to 40 years in prison and whipping, upon conviction.

State prosecution director Wan Azimah Yaacob led the prosecution, assisted by deputy public prosecutors Nadzir Abdullah and Ahmad Naabil Asri. Hazim was represented by lawyer Alias Ibrahim.

The court fixed July 2 for mention. - FMT

Dzulkefly: Ending contract doctor era a critical first step, but not a final solution

 

KUALA LUMPUR: The Health Ministry aims to fully digitalise all public healthcare facilities by 2029 to eliminate bureaucracy and the burden of paperwork.

Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad said he acknowledged that the heavy workload and mental pressure faced by healthcare workers required a comprehensive overhaul.

"We want doctors to return to their core duty of treating patients. The ministry's focus is no longer just providing explanations, but finding thorough and effective solutions.

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"We are improving this system to be more attentive, to uphold dignity, and to restore the pride of every healthcare worker in this country," he said in a statement.

Dzulkefly said ending the contract doctor era was a critical first step, though not the final solution.

He said since 2023, more than 14,000 medical officers had been appointed to permanent positions, with another 4,500 permanent posts to be offered this year.

"This is the government's fiscal commitment to ensure our young doctors have a stable future," he said.

He added that through amendments to the Medical Act 1971 (Act 50), the ministry was strengthening the parallel pathway and local specialist training.

"With a target of 13,000 specialists by 2030, we want our experts to be valued and to remain serving in their own country.

"My commitment and that of the ministry is clear: to end the contract doctor era. We are building a system that is sustainable, humane, and resilient for future generations," he said. - NST

New proposal seeks restrictions on DMs for under-16s

 

KUALA LUMPU: Restrictions on direct messaging (DM) functions and profile search capabilities for users under 16 are being viewed as the most effective digital shield against cyber predators in Malaysia.

The measure has been described as a critical component of the proposed age verification system, following Ops Cyber Guardian by the police last month, which uncovered nearly half a million files containing child sexual abuse material (CSAM).

Malaysian Cyber Consumer Association (MCCA) president Siraj Jalil said safety features blocking DM functions and profile searches by unknown accounts would serve as a "gatekeeping" mechanism, creating a clear digital boundary between adult and child profiles.

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"Through this mechanism, search functions and direct messages from unknown accounts can be automatically blocked, preventing cold-contact attempts by predators before any conversation even begins," he told Bernama.

He also described the findings of Op Cyber Guardian as a warning that children's digital safety had reached a critical level, making the government's move to restrict social media access for those under 16 and introduce mandatory age verification an urgent paradigm shift.

Siraj said mandatory verification could also eliminate the anonymity that has long shielded cyber sexual offenders.

"By requiring official documents or biometric verification, every account would carry identity accountability and a valid digital trail, serving as a psychological deterrent as the risk of detection and arrest rises significantly," he said.

Age verification, he said, would compel platform providers to adjust algorithms to block sexual, violent or harmful content from being shown to underage users.

He said the initiative would also strengthen enforcement of existing laws by providing verified data to assist police investigations.

At the same time, it would close technical loopholes involving fake identities and place greater due diligence responsibility on platform providers to ensure the country's digital space remains safe and credible, he noted.

However, senior lecturer at Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology, Dr Mohd Izuan Hafez Ninggal, cautioned that the effectiveness of the system would depend entirely on how it is implemented.

He said existing self-declaration verification methods were easily manipulated by users or predators posing as minors, as they only required false birth dates and uploaded supporting documents.

"Predators usually do not rely on the age displayed on a profile, but instead use direct communication to obtain the victim's real information.

"This raises concerns when restrictions are imposed on users under 16 while predators can still operate as legitimate users," he said.

Mohd Izuan also stressed the need for a clearer legal framework to ensure platform companies are fully accountable for algorithm controls and the integrity of their digital spaces.

On March 31, Communications Minister Datuk Fahmi Fadzil said the government would proceed with plans to restrict new social media accounts for children under 16, with implementation expected as early as mid-year.

Earlier, on March 7, Deputy Minister Teo Nie Ching said the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) was studying various age verification methods ahead of the proposed under-16 social media age limit. - NST