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Showing posts with the label religious policing

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...

Why Malaysian Religious Authorities Keep Policing Private Lives While Corruption Operates in Public

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Why Malaysian Religious Authorities Keep Policing Private Lives While Corruption Operates in Public In Malaysia, there’s a strange imbalance that many people quietly notice but rarely say out loud. On one hand, religious authorities are highly visible when it comes to policing personal behaviour—khalwat raids, moral checks, lifestyle scrutiny. On the other hand, large-scale corruption cases, financial scandals, and abuse of power often seem slower, more complicated, and sometimes less aggressively pursued in the public eye. It raises an uncomfortable question: why does enforcement feel stricter in private spaces than in public systems? To understand this, we need to look at how authority, culture, and visibility interact in Malaysian society. First, moral policing is easier to execute. It’s immediate, visible, and straightforward. A raid, an arrest, a headline—it produces quick results that signal action. Religious authorities operate within clearly defined frameworks w...