Thursday, February 28, 2013

Negaraku tanah tumpahnya darahku: Malays and the nation independence



  • Tun Maharezza Well..tun cheng lock...not even involved ib the fight against malayan union..
    11 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Tun Maharezza We all knew...the factor led to tanah melayu indepandent was...the malayan union factor...
    11 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Tun Maharezza Brian pang sai..r u denying..the malays r the ppl..who spark tanah melayu independancy ?
    10 hours ago via mobile · Like ·  2


  • Tun Maharezza History has proven...all were done with..the tears n blood n monies of the malays...none any from the chinaman...
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Tun Maharezza That is y...at 1 st..we..didnt include immigrant as our terms n condition for the merdeka...its the british who insist....
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Brian Tsai 3) Again, it is not necessarily about ‘race’. The majority powers are needed but nevertheless, everyone played a role in the nation’s development. 

    “Yap Ah Loy (Chinese: 葉亞來, Hakka: Ya̍p Â-lòi, Pinyin: Yè Yălái, Yale: Yip A-loi - 14 March 1837-15 April 1885), also known as Yap Tet Loy and Yap Mao Lan. He is regarded as the founding father of modern Kuala Lumpur, he developed Kuala Lumpur as a commercial and mining centre during the mid-19th century.”

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yap_Ah_Loy

    Yap Ah Loy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    en.wikipedia.org
    Yap Ah Loy (Chinese: 葉亞來, Hakka: Ya̍p Â-lòi, Pinyin: Yè Yălái, Yale: Yip A-loi -...See more
    10 hours ago · Like · Remove Preview


  • Tun Maharezza Hahaha...ah loy already dead in 1885....far before the malayan union issue in 1938
  • 10 hours ago via mobile · Like ·  2




  • Tun Maharezza We r not talking abt any founder or wht not...we talk abt...who speed our tanah melayu independancy...
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Brian Tsai 4) If the argument was about ‘history’ and ‘the tears n blood n monies of the malays’, history has also shown that it was not applicable in protecting the interest from preventing foreign power to rule over Tanah Melayu or Indonesia at that time.
    10 hours ago · Like


  • Tun Maharezza Capish ?
    10 hours ago via mobile · Like


  • Tun Maharezza Ts..tah le..
    10 hours ago via mobile · Like ·  1


  • Brian Tsai 5) The reasoning behind the extension of citizenship towards minorities is that they also played a role in the development of the nation. In addition to that, there is not a single reference provided to suggest “all were done with..the tears n blood n monies of the malays...none any from the chinaman” were even valid.
    10 hours ago · Like


  • Tun Maharezza Pang sai..tanah melayu indepandendancy...was done in good faith with our ppl own fund....

    And that is sumthing...nobody can argue barking abt !!

    Our own monies...
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Taming Sari aku da try add.. xle add dia lg.. dia da pnh kena ban seblm ni
    10 hours ago · Like


  • Tun Maharezza The reason the british wanted them is because they serve the british economic interest as labours..

    Chinaman for mining...indian for estates...

    That is y...in india...the india indepandencay...does not include the term for immigrant like ur ppl....
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Brian Tsai 6) Also, the statement “all were done with..the tears n blood n monies of the malays...none any from the chinaman”, there are reference to suggest such statements were false

    “The Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA) was a resistance movement during Japanese-occupied Malaya during World War II. It originated among ethnic Chinese cadres of the Malayan Communist Party (MCP). Some units were trained by the British. The equipment and skills gained in guerrilla warfare against the Japanese served the MPAJA in good stead when it fought Commonwealth forces during the postwar Malayan Emergency (1948–1960).”

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malayan_Peoples%27_Anti-Japanese_Army

    Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    en.wikipedia.org
    The Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA) was a resistance movement during...See more
    10 hours ago · Like · Remove Preview


  • Tun Maharezza Ts..aku kt luar..nt aku balik aku unbanned..aku pun x tau..admin mana yg ban dia bro...skang aku diluar peekna bubur the.lodge...balik nt aku.guna lappy aku la bro...
    10 hours ago via mobile · Like ·  2


  • Brian Tsai 7) Good faith would also include recognizing that minorities do deserve citizenships as they did contribute to the development of the nation.
    10 hours ago · Like


  • Tun Maharezza The anti japs army...after japan...suported pkm...n not umni....
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Tun Maharezza Those iimigrant was british slave..they dontvserve tanah melayu at all...they didnt contribute any to tanah melayu...except for themselves...

    Remember..ghee hin n hai san ?
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Tun Maharezza Remember the opium.war ? Wht dies its gave to tanah melayu ?
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  3


  • Tun Maharezza Wht does*
    10 hours ago via mobile · Like




  • Brian Tsai  Please read the reference in statement 3. Yap Ah Loy contributed to the development of Kuala Lumpur that is today, still in denial?
    10 hours ago · Like


  • Tun Maharezza Ts..asal jgn.merapu dh le eh..u kbow me...klu dh potong stim dgn merapu..aku mls layan...
    10 hours ago via mobile · Like ·  2


  • Tun Maharezza Ts..ko baca semua ulasan aku dlm wall ni bro...
    10 hours ago via mobile · Like ·  1


  • Tun Maharezza Kuala lumpur is only part of tanah melayu...not the whole tanah melayu...u fool....
    10 hours ago via mobile · Unlike ·  2


  • Brian Tsai 9) ‘Slaves’? So where’s the reference to suggest that?
    10 hours ago · Like


  • Brian Tsai 11) Anything else besides offering such ‘kind’ words?
    10 hours ago · Like


  • Tun Maharezza Those imigrant were brought in.as slaves...then the brit gave a better term foe it...

    Coolie....

No comments:

Post a Comment