View Article  Terrorism act on Perak DAP HQ
My heart sank when I read this news Perak DAP HQ Damaged By Petrol Bomb This Morning

All Malaysians must come together to condemn and deplore such action so that this would not be the start of a new trend of politically motivated terrorism. Pak Lah and Home Minister Syed Hamid must publicly condemn such act and IGP must take immediate actions to investigate the culprit.

Indeed a sad day for all peace loving Malaysians.


View Article  YB, Tolong Sign

A man came up to our office today asking for a cancellation of his local council summon - about RM30.

I told him nicely saying that if we are a good government, we have to honour the law, a crime is a crime and we must pay the penalty. Then he asked for discount, I was thinking if the summon is higher than perhaps it can be considered, but it's only RM30.

I know to some RM30 is a huge sum, but thinking that this guy here drives around in a car (proton), RM30 is probably just a week worth of petrol. He told me he is jobless, but again, I do not think his case warrant a discount. He got upset and walked away angrily.

It's kind of disheartening to know that the council has been directing people up to the EXCO offices to get signatures for discounts (In fact someone came up to our office this week telling us that the police told them to see Lim Guan Eng for a marital abuse case). I think a system need to be put into place for this sort of appeals. One way is for the councils themselves to handle appeal on their summons by setting up a small tribunal/appeal beureau.

And the Rakyat need to know, pls don't expect the MPs or ADUN to help you escape the law. That  may be the old way, but we are in a different age now. We'll look into unfair laws, but once they are laws, pls obey them and if convicted, pls go through the proper channel of appeals.

Signing Forms

Two weeks back, a young man came into our office and asked my boss to sign a recommendation to get a letter of good behaviour from Foreign Ministry to apply for working visa to Taiwan - my boss politely turned down his request because she did not know who is he and when asked to produce documents from work he could not. But none the less, she helped him to make a few calls and spent nearly an hour trying to information for this application to ease his job. Finally the guy got angry coz my boss wouldn't sign for him and stormed out of the office but not before threateningly said "I remember you Ong Kok Fooi!". - applying for letter of good behaviour? I don't think so.

The thing about signing documents by MPs and ADUNs, the people in the old system were used to BN leaders signing documents for them, rightly or wrongly. So now, everyone comes to us to sign their salary forms, their application forms, anything and everything. We would love to serve the people, but please do bear with us and provide proper identification and documenations when asking for certifying signatures and please ensure that you are not making false declaration when you ask us to sign.

 

 

View Article  Ketuanan Rakyat
The stone which the builders threw out - it's now the cornerstone!
 
Ketuanan rakyat (The People is the Master) - are we ready for it? Will we be good masters over ourselves and others?

 

View Article  MPSP Councillors Swearing-In Ceremony
I just came back from the swearing in of the new MPSP councillors. Loved what Guan Eng said in his speech:
 
The new state government and all its agency should be driven by C.A.T - Competency, Accountability and Transparency.
 
Some good points he raised in the speech for MPSP:
 
1. Disciplined adminstration with the best production results
2. Reduction of beuracracies to remove roadblocks for better service to the community and improve business process
3. Heeding the voices from various parties, especially the public.
4. Creating a cleaner, safter and more condusive municipality for business and better quality life.
5. Followups - dialogues and consultations are meaninglessness without thorough followup plans and actions.
 
Coming from a highly profit driven and competitive corporate world, I think these are good stuff and I share our CM's hope that in the end of this financial year, we'll see a more balanced report on the account of MPSP.
 
Folks, buat kerja, jangan tak buat!! (While I am writing this, a good friend, Oon called me to ask if I am free to go down to a site in Alma because he has received a complaint there but was busy attending to problems in another location. That's my Councillor man, angkat sumpah 11 a.m. this morning, already active at work at 2 p.m. - btw these folks were chosen based on their track record of community services, so there are actually veterans in servicing)
 
Photos of the darn beautiful MPSP Kenanga hall later...(sigh...to me the new Bandar Perda building is thoroughly unnecssary. but well, dah build by previous admin, must utilize kau kau - Chow Kon Yeow, what will happen to the Jalan Betik MPSP building now??)
 
View Article  There is Power Here
I was having a casual meal with a friend a few days back, and we talked about politics and power. My well meaning friend (he's a very successful businessman) gave me some advise about the "reality" of being in politics and about accumulating powers. This got me thinking again, what is power (?) and I remembered a sermon I preached at Bkt. Mertajam Gospel Centre not too long ago...
 
(Those familiar with NT Wright can see a lot of affinity, it's basically a concise Tom Wright sermon I unashamedly borrow to share with my church)
 
Our passage is from 1 Cor 1:18-31, but i am not going to share on all the verses. I want to instead draw our attention to a few themes within this passage, these themes are explained in the title to my message:

 

The Cross, Power and Wisdom

 

First a few words about epistles, or rather letters, in the Bible.

 

In many ways, they appear to us as one-sided documents. In other words, we only hear half the stories when we look into say the Pauline or Johannine letters. All of them, of course including the one we are studying right now, were written in response to a specific issue, intended for a specific audience in a specific time and situation.

 

Without the benefits of knowing the context of the letters, we will not have the pleasure of understanding fully what Paul or John or Peter meant in their letters. Some of you are right to think that that was a call to Bible Study - Friday 8.30pm.

 

Back to our passage, how did Paul ended up talking about the Cross, about Power and about Wisdom?

 

If you would read again from v10 up to v17, you will notice that Paul was making comments about, of all thing, the terrible and dreaded church politics, within the Corinth congregation. People were showing off to one another who their "sifu" was, they were grouping into camps, I follow this "tai loh" and you follow that "tai loh", they were quarelling, they were jealous of one another, they were "competiting spiritualness", they were comparing, they were trying to outsmart one another- I am from the Paul-gang (the 13th apostle!), someone else will said I am from the Apollos-gang (the great professor of NT theology!), and someone else came and say, away all of you, I am from the Christ-gang.

 

This quarrel and power play were to be the dominant concern of Paul's letter, appearing again and again, first here in chapter 1 and then again in Chap 3 and again in Chap 12.

 

It was within this context of quarrel and power-play that Paul began to invite the church to contemplate about Jesus on the Cross as the exemplar of real Power and Wisdom.

 

 

If I ask today, What sort of idea comes to your mind when you think about the Cross? From a different perspective I may receive a different answer:

 

A christian may perhaps say, The Cross is a symbol of christianity. Some place it prominently in the church as an icon, some wear it around the neck and yet some others will say that the cross is the sort of god-ordained burden we need to carry as we follow Jesus. But overall, it has a religious connotation.

 

A youngster, especially those from the rapping and hip-hop community, may wear a huge cross as some sort of accessory or fashion statement. It has a cultural connotation

 

And to a muslim, especially to those the likes of YB Syed Hood Syed Edros, UMNO MP for Parit Sulong, the cross in a former missionary school is at best the symbol of western domination, a reminder of our colonial days and at worst the symbol of a corrupted religion. Again it has a religious and perhaps socio-historical connotation.

 

But what does the symbol of the Cross evoke during Jesus' time in Palestine?

 

First of all, it was definitely not a fashion statement and definitely no one in her sane mind would wear a cross pendant around her neck. Why? Because whether to a Jew or to a Roman, and more especially so to a Jew, the Cross was a symbol of vulgarity. It was an offensive thing. In fact one historian even went to the extent to say that "you don't mention the word "stauros" in polite company" - it's not the sort of words you wanna say in front of your grandmother. It's like a curse word, a foul word in Jesus' time.

 

The Cross was an execution device, perhaps one of the cruelest, because the victim was nailed alive to a stake and left to a slow and painful death, sometimes for days before he actually dies - not because of the nailing but because of exhaustion and mental anguish.

 

But it was the pride of Caesar of Rome. To Rome, the sole and unchallenged superpower of the 1th century world, the cross is the symbol of her power. It was Rome telling to the world, We are in charge. If you don't accept our peace the Pax Romania, if you don't accept Caesar the Lord and King and curiously, the Saviour, we'll give you hell - the Cross.

 

Josephus recorded that about two centuries before Jesus' time, Rome staged a mass crucifixion of about 800 Pharisees, all nailed and left to die before their wives and children.

 

While the Jews' revered Jerusalem stood solemnly on the high grounds of ancient Palestine, the shadows of hundreds and hundreds of crucifix loomed over the great city of kings, as if taking Jerusalem and with her the Temple as hostage. Rome was saying to Jerusalem, We are in Charge. And they did it not least with the Cross, the symbol of their Power.

 

And then Paul said, the word of the cross, the message "Christ Crucified", is the power of god!

 

huh? How come the power of Rome became the power of god?

 

Many of us are familiar with the John Gospel where Jesus was brought before Pilate, Jesus in response to Pilate's cynicism famously anwered in our NIVs "my kingdom is not of this world". We were taught to read the passage as if Jesus was saying "I want nothing to do with this world". I think that is not only a great misunderstanding but also a great misfortune.

 

My kingdom is not [out] of this world (the greek word is “ek”). Jesus' kingdom is not like earthly political kingdoms and empires, built by politicians, political scientists, kings. Jesus' kingdom does not have its origin on earth, it has a divine origin, from god. But it does not at all mean Jesus' kingdom does not operate here on earth. Jesus was tremendously interested in the world, he taught us to pray "thy kingdom come, thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven". Instead of "I want nothing to do with this world", John's Jesus was more like saying "I don't play the sort of political games you play".

 

God's definition of power is not a corrupted and cruel display of muscles. God's definition of power is not the empty promises of peace and prosperity, our nearest examples are those politicians who are quick to make empty promises especially during election seasons. God's definition power is not the bullying sort, where we reject, condemn and oppress those who are weaker, those who are minorities, those who are different from us. God's definition of power is not the sort of idolatrous, self-serving political power play of Rome.

 

What was god's definition of power? Paul said it, in verses 23-24, we preach Christ crucified, Christ the power of god, the wisdom of god.

 

I always imagined myself what would I have done if I were Jesus. I believe all of us will sometimes ask ourselves questions like this, what it would be like if I were god or if I had my way.

 

1st century Palestinian Jews believed that god had promised in the ancient prophets that he will himself come back to his temple, defeat evil and become king finally.

 

During Jesus time, although they have returned from the Babylonian exiles long ago, things were not like what the ancient prophets told about. Remember what i said about Jerusalem and the hundreds of crosses. Rome still had the real power - not the Jews, not the Temple, not God.

 

So the Jews, Jesus' disciples, they were looking for a revolution, they were expecting Jesus the Jewish Messiah to be like the great king Solomon, to ride a grand stallion into Jerusalem and lead the rebels to overcome Rome's dark and cruel domination and rebuild or at least restore the magnificent Temple. To them, god HAD to work this way to liberate his people from foreign powers. That's our sort of wisdom - god logically had to work this way. 

 

But what did Jesus do? Instead of a horse, Jesus rode a donkey. Instead of inciting the crowd to violent revolution, he called them to repentance and criticized them for rejecting the things that made for peace. Instead of picking up swords, he told Peter to put down his swords because he who lives by violent means will die by violent means. Instead of rebuilding the temple, Jesus said, "away with your temple system". Instead of injuring his enemies, Jesus took on himself the blows of Rome, the punches and kicks and spitting and flogging. He turned the other cheeks, that's god's wisdom. He went the extra mile, that's god's subversive wisdom. He did not repay evil for evil, that's god's wisdom. He gave himself to the bullying of his enemies, that's god's wisdom. He did not retaliate, he let his enemies do their worst on him, that's god's subversive, counter culture, counter instinctive wisdom.

 

Jesus took on the worst that Rome, representing the kingdom of this world, can inflict on her enemies. The symbol of Rome's bullying power, the Cross. And that was god's wisdom, St. Paul was utterly aware of it. Christ Crucified, that's our message, the power of god, the wisdom of god.

 

Jesus Christ single handedly, while refusing to play the sort of political games the world plays, embodied the kind of wisdom, the kind of subversive, counter culture wisdom which God intended us to follow, a sort of life which do not seek to defeat our enemies by means of violent conquest but by means of becoming lowly servants, serving with passionate love even for our enemies. It is no accident that the climax of 1 Corinthians talks about love in chapter 13. God's wisdom cannot be detached from his nature of being Love. If you are looking for the right sort of actions today, and you don't know what to do, the best and safest bet is to do it with love and in love. James told us that however great our theology is, love ought to be the undergirding principles for actions in real life. That's not too far from Paul in 1 Cor 13. He said, while we put our trust in god and await in hope for the final Summing Up, to love should be our highest priority now.

 

To continue, Jesus embodying god's subversive Wisdom had turned the table against Rome. The symbol of Rome's greatness, the symbol of the overwhelming power of Rome became the symbol of the power of god. In Jesus conversation with Pilate, Pilate said he has the power to release him or kill him. But Jesus knew and told Pilate that the real power was not in Pilate, it was not in Caesar. Jesus gave himself freely out of a passionate love for Israel and the world. He had the power to lay down his life and take it again. How can we be sure? Because on Easter, Jesus came back to life bodily. In his resurrection, he totally emptied the Roman power from the cross. Rome the symbol of dark and cruel power play - evil itself - lost its most powerful symbol that day on the first Easter. Jesus' suprising and powerful act of coming back to life had invested the Cross with the power of new life in god.

 

You have to work this out more thoroughly yourselves in your prayers and meditations.

 

But to help you I end with a very similar story from the gospel:

 

(Mark 10:35-45)

35James and John, Zebedee's sons, came up to him. "Teacher, we have something we want you to do for us."

 36"What is it? I'll see what I can do."

 37"Arrange it," they said, "so that we will be awarded the highest places of honor in your glory—one of us at your right, the other at your left."

 38Jesus said, "You have no idea what you're asking. 

Fast forward to vs 41:

 41-45When the other ten heard of this conversation, they lost their tempers with James and John.

(That’s church politics and worldly power-play – cronyism, nepotism, jealousy, quarrel, division)
Jesus got them together to settle things down. "You've observed how godless rulers throw their weight around," he said, "and when people get a little power how quickly it goes to their heads. It's not going to be that way with you. Whoever wants to be great must become a servant. Whoever wants to be first among you must be your slave. That is what the Son of Man has done: He came to serve, not to be served—and then to give away his life in exchange for many who are held hostage."

James and John wanted Jesus to place them on his right and left when he becomes king. All of us know who actually was on Jesus' right and left when he was proclaimed King of the Jews - it was the robbers.

Lord have mercy...

View Article  The Gospel, Romans 13 and Oppositional Politics
It's easier to explain to non Christians than to Christians why I am in an Opposition party - but well, DAP is now the GOVERNMENT of Penang, how's that Church?

For one, there is always the cold, "apolitical-ness" approach which the Church in Malaysia adopted.

This is probably for most bred by the culture of fear inculcated by the BN government to maintain their hegemony beginning in the late 80s with ferocious attack of the Executive on the Judiciary which led to the sacking of the then top judge Tun Salleh Abbas (and five other judges of the highest Court) and the rape of our consitutional rights when the Executive gave orders for a "cleanup" operation which saw the silencing of idealogical and political dissents and religious minorities through the gravely unjust preemptive law, ISA.

And not least because of the fact that a majority of Christian views we receive are the loud voices of urbanite churches consisting mostly of middle class folks. Their economic and social position stiffened them to take any active part in national politics. Whatever risk they may take, it is either in secrecy under the pretext of being wise or kept minimal within a "religious" context. A number of Christians would profess readiness to suffer for the gospel, but that usually means proselytizing non believers.

And of course, in view of the above, our theology either became a reason or a coverup for our non-involvement.

I have written elsewhere about being Christian and being political, but how about being Christian and being Oppositional?

One passage which I often hear quoted against participating in oppositional acts against the ruling government is Romans 13.

Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore whoever resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment. For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad. Would you have no fear of the one who is in authority? Then do what is good, and you will receive his approval, for he is God's servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain. For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God's wrath on the wrongdoer. Therefore one must be in subjection, not only to avoid God's wrath but also for the sake of conscience. For because of this you also pay taxes, for the authorities are ministers of God, attending to this very thing. Pay to all what is owed to them: taxes to whom taxes are owed, revenue to whom revenue is owed, respect to whom respect is owed, honor to whom honor is owed. (Roms 13:1-7)

 
To put things in perspective, Rome was the super power of the day, in the 1st century. She was the economic and political force which dominates that world, much like the Great Britain in the 18th century or the United States today. Rome's imperial propaganda was the Emperor, Caesar, is Lord and Saviour and only through him the world can have peace, Pax Romania - the peace of Rome.
 
Within the dominion of this superpower (or any superpowers for that matter), there can be only one Lord, any contender would be considered a threat.
 
It was in such a context that Paul penned (or rather dictated) his seemly innocent opening to the letter to the Romans. Here's my paraphrase:
 
Paul, in the service of King Jesus, called to be an emissary, given the task to proclaim the good news of god which he promised beforehand through his messangers in the holy book, concerning his Son, who is of the royal line of David according to the flesh, and was declared to be the Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by his resurrection from the dead, King Jesus our Lord, through whom we have received grace and the appointment as emissaries to bring about faithful loyalty for the sake of his name among all the nations, including you who are called to belong to King Jesus [in Rome] (Rom 1:1-6)
 
 
This was an blatant and outright challenge of Caesar, and therefore, Rome's power. Paul was in effect saying in the heart of the Empire, there were a group of people whose loyalty was not ultimately to the Lord of Rome who claimed to be the Lord of the World, but to Jesus, another king, of the Jewish royal Davidic house who is the true Lord.
 
Epistle to the Romans was not the demure-obedient-to-the-government sort of letter most Christians would like it to be. That was just too convenient for the gospel (the euangelion, a term which incidently Caesar adopted to proclaim the news of his ascension or victory). Paul's was not a dichotomize theology where the religion and politics are separated by a thick wall of indifference and where the church ought only concern herself with the thing called "religion" and leave politics to those outside.
 
To be sure, Paul was not a politician. And he never intended to be. But the tone of his message was clear. The gospel is confrontational in all sense of the word to the power-claims of the rulers of this world.
 
Two points to consider about the gospel in relation to authority, and in our context, political authority:
 
Firstly, the gospel is oppositional to the powers that be which make absolute claim of authority. There is always the tension of earthly (super) powers against that of Christ and the gospel made it clear that in his Resurrection, Christ was proclaimed the son of god in power, the Davidic king who will rule over all the world now in parts and one day completely. Any other claims of absolute kingship is in opposition to the claim of the gospel of "Jesus is Lord". The imperial ambitions of earthly powers must submit to the eschatological reality of the lorship of god's chosen Servant.
 
Secondly, the gospel is good news to the people, most especially good news to the downtrodden. The gospel is biased, politically not least, towards the mass. It is their gospel, given for their happiness. The target audience of the gospel is the "world" because god so loved the world he gave his only Son. Because the bad news was the mass being cut off from the love of god through one man, the good news was the reconciliation of the mass to god, also through one man, Jesus. Jesus' ministry, Luke told us, was opened with the reading of the portion of Isaiah which hinged on the proclaimation of blessedness and emancipation of the marginalized mass. The gospel sought to restore not only the imago dei (image of god) in the human person, but also the relationship between humanity and god. And therefore, the gospel is oppositional to the powers which sought to inflict sufferings on the mass, which sought to deface and degrade the value of the glory of god in the living humanity. All political powers and structures which reduced humanity from the beautiful and glorious image of god to mere political serf are in direct conflict with the gospel.
 
I am no party loyalist and I do not believe in the total transformation of humanity by political ideologies alone. But I am convinced that while the power of god works in the transformation of individuals, the gospel which I believed in and proclaim compels me to be biased in the above directions. And not least because, the transforming power of god through the gospel is also at the same time a challenge to the powers that be.
 
When the Church today calls for an apolitical stance, it is a self-abdication of her responsibility as agents of the gospel in the civil sphere. We have forgotten Moses who challenged the despotic rule of Pharaoh, we have forgotten Elijah the troubler of Ahab, we have forgotten the prophets through whom the wrathful words of god's displeasure often came to the rulers and kings of their times.
 
We have forgotten the earliest disciples who went against the good will of Rome who offered amnesty for the desert of their faith in Christ. We have forgotten Polycarp who at old age refused to bulge one step in his allegiance towards Christ, the true Lord over and against Caesar of Rome. We have forgotten Ambrose who stood against the Emperor and refused to administer the sacraments to him before the Emperor perform a penance for his cruel massacre. We have forgotten the Rt. Rev. Desmond Tutu who lived out the biased of the gospel for the marginalized mass and defied the powerful overlords of apartheid.
 
When today we call for a blind submission towards the government taking Romans 13 as prooftext, we reduced the gospel from a powerful force of public transformation into merely one of the private religions vying with other religions to proselytize non believers.
 
But what of Romans 13?
 
We must firstly understand that the types of government in biblical times, whether in OT or NT, are different from that of our own times. Even within our times, there are many different forms of government and political structures that we cannot afford to take Romans 13 or the Daniel account as a one-fit-for-all political stance without being awkward if not absurd.
 
I believe that Paul, after his subversive opening greetings in Romans and proclaiming the radical gospel of "Jesus is Lord" against "Caesar is Lord", was making a point that there are sub-authorities (or Kam Weng's sphere authorities) whose powers are derivative from god's. These earthly authorities, not least political ones, are here to maintain order and facilitate daily business. In other words, Paul was asserting that the gospel is not anarchy.
 
There is no power which can be the ruling authority forever and likewise no power can be the oppositional force forever. March 8th has taught us this lesson in Malaysia. But the contention of the gospel remains, Jesus is Lord, and if Jesus is Lord, all other claims to lordship are challenges which the Church must reckoned with. This does not mean that only Christians can rule or that a non Christian government is necessarily to be disposed of. But the Church is always called to play the role of the prophet in the wilderness inviting the people to welcome the Lord, the true and loving King of the world and as we make way for the righteous rule of the true King, we can anticipate a world of justice, peace and reconciliation.
 
View Article  My Experience in Politics

What an experience!

The result has yet to come out but so far, the news is on the Net. We have won Penang! Barisan Rakyat; DAP-PKR-PAS. I hope the official result will come out soon.

All the struggles of BERSIH, HINDRAF, all the sweat and blood of our civil right leaders and our Barisan Rakyat leaders paid off. The People's voice is loud and clear, we want Change!

Throughout the last two weeks, I have experienced many news things, from strategizing on internet campaign to campaign visits at wet markets to party meetings (wow! the realpolitik is eye opening) to giving political ceramahs gulp (up to three ceramahs a night!) to becoming a polling agent and counting agent. Too many thoughts now to digest, the excitement is overwhelming me as we are all kept in suspense of the official results.


My amateruish political ceramah - this one is at Tmn Permata

Check out me guest blogging at chongeng.org on polling day stuff:

Poll Day 1: The Day http://chongeng.org/wordpress/?p=138

Poll Day 2: Clean and Fair http://chongeng.org/wordpress/?p=139

Poll Day 3: On Duty http://chongeng.org/wordpress/?p=140

Poll Day 4: Show Me the Money... http://chongeng.org/wordpress/?p=141

Poll Day 5: Back to the Battleground http://chongeng.org/wordpress/?p=142

Poll Day 6: Waiting for the Curtain! http://chongeng.org/wordpress/?p=143

Some photos of Bkt. Mertajam DAP soon-to-be wakil rakyats:


With Lydia Ong, Berapit soon-to-be ADUN at a ceramah


With Michael Tan (right), soon-to-be Padang Lallang ADUN


With Chong Eng, the comeback MP of Bkt Mertajam


 

View Article  Standing by Your Side

DAP Bkt. Mertajam Dinner 02-Mac-08

 

 

View Article  YB Lim Kit Siang - Opposition Leader

I am touched by Uncle Kit's passionate and yet no-nonsense defence of DAP's and his personal stance against the mindless political rhetorics "Lim Kit Siang-Lim Guan Eng father-son dynasty" of Gerakan heads.

The full text is available on his blog here. It was part of his speech at the DAP Penang CNY open house last Sunday. Please read it, never have I seen anything more genuine from a politician in Malaysia.

I think this summarized the not only Lim Kit Siang's struggle, but also the struggle of DAP membership, top-down:

First of all, I do not want to use the word “proud” but let me state that Guan Eng and I have nothing to be ashamed in dedicating the best part of our lives to the betterment of the nation and people to promote democracy, forge international competitiveness, fight injustice and inequality regardless of race, religion or region.

Although both of us paid a heavy price for our political beliefs and convictions, this is the expression of our love and loyalty to Malaysia!

We are not like other father-and-sons in the political arena as we are not in politics for wealth, position or titles.

We are not in politics for wealth, position or titles.

Ten years down the road, I may perhaps change my mind about DAP, but today, I put my heart and my hand with the Party because I strongly believe that "we are not in politics for wealth, position or titles" is indeed the deep sentiment of DAP's leaders and members.

Never a Party so consistent in its struggle for a better Malaysia. Never a Party so crowded with people who believe in politics for the goodness of everyone instead of self interest. Never a Party so committed to fighting "injustice and inequality regardless of race, religion or region".

I pray that I will have the courage, determination, high moral and intellect of Lim Kit Siang.

Hidup Lim Kit Siang!

 

 


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