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How Malaysians Use Race to Explain Everything Except Their Own Behaviour

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How Malaysians Use Race to Explain Everything Except Their Own Behaviour Malaysia is a country deeply shaped by race. Politics, education, business, language, food, and even daily conversation often revolve around racial identity. It is discussed so frequently that many Malaysians no longer notice how naturally race enters almost every topic. A traffic incident becomes racial. A business dispute becomes racial. Academic success, job opportunities, crime, customer service, social attitudes—everything somehow circles back to race. Yet in the middle of all this discussion, one uncomfortable pattern remains largely ignored: many Malaysians use race to explain problems while refusing to examine their own behaviour. This is not to deny that racial issues exist. Malaysia’s history, policies, and political system have long been influenced by ethnic divisions and inequalities. These realities are genuine and cannot simply be dismissed. However, the problem begins when race become...

Malaysians Love Moral Policing Online

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Malaysians Love Moral Policing Online There’s something uniquely Malaysian about opening your phone for five minutes and accidentally walking into a full-blown moral court session. No judge. No jury. Just thousands of self-appointed Inspector Sahsiah™ ready to deliver verdicts faster than your nasi lemak gets cold. Welcome to Malaysian social media—where everyone is a saint, a scholar, and a part-time enforcement officer… as long as there’s WiFi. You post something harmless—maybe a couple dancing, someone wearing “inappropriate” clothes, or a random stranger minding their own business—and suddenly, the comments section turns into Mahkamah Netizen . “Tak malu ke?” “Mana maruah?” “Ini bukan budaya kita.” “Report please.” Relax, boss. You’re not defending national security. It’s literally a 15-second video. But that’s the thing—Malaysians don’t just scroll. We invest emotionally . We zoom in, analyze, screenshot, and then deliver moral commentary like we’re auditioning ...