This is not a debate, but a discussion to promote communication between each other. Love and Peace! 要离开同温层打开眼界,你当然需要Surfshark VPN啦 只需要一个账号订阅,就可在电脑,电视啊,手机,等无限数量的设备上运行,追剧都不是问题。 现在输入BBKNetwork就可以获得83%的折扣以及免费3个月的使用哦, 赶快点击下方简介的链接领取吧! surfshark.deals/BBKNetwork
@@loganwong3012 lai aa..join Islam, you truly be safe!
@金月光翟 Жыл бұрын
我的老婆说谁说女人一定跑输男人,她和我一起跑,输的一定是我,科学证明了什么?😂😂
@林勇-l3n Жыл бұрын
@@金月光翟 因为你追她跑如果她跑得慢被你追上就会有“出人命的风险”
@fairuzazmi Жыл бұрын
Thank you BBK for the opportunity. Really appreciate this very much.
@BBKNetwork Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr Fairuz!
@fairuzazmi Жыл бұрын
We had great time together ❤
@zhu002 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Dr Fairuz for sharing your thought. Sila datang lagi, ya. 🙂
@tanchengs5502 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr Fairuz! I learnt a lot from you in this episode! 👍👍
@knock-knockwhosthere9933 Жыл бұрын
Very courageous 🙆🙇🙏
@izdiharsahalan Жыл бұрын
Terima kasih atas perbincangan topik ini. Kita sebagai rakyat Malaysia harus adil antara setiap kaum. Walaupun kita mempunyai perbezaan bahasa agama dan kaum.
@izdiharsahalan Жыл бұрын
@Kenji Hansolo kita perlu buat kek yang lebih besar
@ngjinchuan853 Жыл бұрын
that's all is because humanity. try to switch the Phenomenon which is malay only 30% and non malay is 70% and their have a priority to non malay. will majority non malay sound out the 'sensitive' issues? Be the sinner ? will you benefit from ?or just keep silent is the best way?
@aonaon221 Жыл бұрын
@@izdiharsahalan tapi bang, pernah tak fikir kenapa kek kita tak besar? Budak A dapat 11A SPM dan budak B dapat 6A SPM tetapi budak B pula dipupuk sebagai ahli professional hanya kerana perbezaan warna kulit dan kepercayaan budak A. Sekiranya budak-budak yang kurang layak untuk dipupuk sebagai ahli professional, maka daya saing negara kita akan semakin mundur sebab bakat orang yang berbakat itu sudah dikorek oleh negara lain (US,UK, AUS, CN, SG) dan yang tertinggal hanyalah orang yang kurang bijak tu. Vietnam baru dialami peperangan 50 tahun yang lalu tetapi ekonomi mereka sudah hampir sama dengan kita ni. Sampai bila baru kita nak menghadapi dan menangani punca kek kita yang semakin kecil ni?
@tanchangshung Жыл бұрын
Kalau Malaysian dilayan secara adil, mengiktiraf usaha warganya. Malaysian akan komited dan bersungguh-sungguh dalam bidang mereka masing2, sama-sama bikin kek yang lebih besar. 😊
@mancode3864 Жыл бұрын
@Kenji Hansolo well said.. Socialism or communism can only make everyone equal by making everyone poor. China's economy boomed when they embraced capitalism.
@fcqyy Жыл бұрын
Im a Malay, just wanna say that thankgod my parent sent me to SJKC back then. there’s alot of benefit and advantage knowing Mandarin, i even have a Chinese bestfriend. So lucky being a Malaysian that have a multi races. We can learn more about each other
@LoC28C Жыл бұрын
I do hope that more Malays think like you. From what I have heard that is going on in the Sekolah ke kebangsaan and the SKJC I feel that in the SJKC really push for unity and diversity whilst the sekolah kebangsaan promotes Malay supremacy. I really hope I am wrong.
@triggerfinger7831 Жыл бұрын
I mean, I like the idea too but if all the student goes to SJKC or SJKT, who would go to the SK school? Maybe it would be better to not have SJKT at all? Not hating the Chinese and the Indian but with that way, all race will be able to enjoy the same education environment and growing up learning about each other.
@LoC28C Жыл бұрын
I hope you all don't get me wrong, I am not promoting any school type. I just hope that all the national schools should promote more unity amongst all students rather than promoting Malay Supremacy. In that way one day soon, Malaysia will be truly united as a nation. This feels so badd becuase after 60 years of forming Malaysia, we are still talking about uniting each other. All thanks to the politicians who want to hold on to power with their divide and rule politics.
@subonium Жыл бұрын
so do u got a chance to use mandarin in any jobs and have good salary?
@fcqyy Жыл бұрын
@@subonium well yes, back then when i worked as a Telemarketer, the company offered me extra RM500 as a minimum allowance :)
Dr. Fairuz mentioned the experience in Ireland (which has the experience of being a minority), but as Wee said, Chinese and Indians are Malaysians too, not foreigners. That's what the government must consider to give equal rights to each Malaysian , but not based on their skin colour or religion. This is an era in which each race can fight for themselves in economic / society independently. It is an undeniable fact if the policies continue to award benefits according to racial groups.
@weddd11 Жыл бұрын
Strongly agree with Mr Ainul that it is the "inequity" caused by lack of big cake, i.e. if the country focuses more on educational resources allowing more students to get the same educational qualifications, forming an equivalence between supply and demand, students will benefit.
@Knightofdota Жыл бұрын
He mean we are outsider, we deserve this.
@andrewng602 Жыл бұрын
@@Knightofdota exactly and im lucky that im out of this shithole
@@Knightofdota No, it's just that the examples given are biased and his purpose is actually to speak about the helplessness of being a minority group.😅
Democracy is very precious, that is why we get to discuss all these topics. I think this kind of discussion is really meaningful and let everyone starts to think about Malaysia! Good content must be supported! BTW, I do not like the word of Bahasa Melayu, but should just rephrase it into Bahasa Malaysia. I tell myself like that so I will really treat Bahasa Malaysia as my national language.
@TerryKeoh Жыл бұрын
@@一支老油条 Yea, so that's just what I am telling to myself haha.
@julianho6791 Жыл бұрын
So language is melay language it come from culture of Malay ethnic… but see Malaysia is a country that only appears after 1963… it is a country not a language. Bahasa is normally from culture of some ethnic.
@Kai99097 Жыл бұрын
Just because it’s our national language, it doesn’t make it less of a language that is derived from the Malay culture and ethnicity Think about this, Americans speak English, the British people speak English Though sometimes you may heard that people in America refer their language as “American” but most of the time they still refer it as “English” So it doesn’t make it less of a national language It’s cool to be progressive, but we might not want to change this and that just for the sake of it
@hellocloud2387 Жыл бұрын
@@TerryKeoh bahasa melayu is from Melayu. In indonesia, Sundanese speak bhs Sunda, Javanese speak bhs Jawa. And bhs melayu in malaysia is different from bhs Indonesia. U dont say mandarin is cantonese, right?
@gloeug7971 Жыл бұрын
@@hellocloud2387 just curious... isn’t it known as Bahasa Indonesia? With different dialect from Sudanese or Javanese ... maybe I shouldn’t say it as a dialect but more of the place the language derive from.. say like Kelantanese or Johorean or Terengganu and many more. ? Even Chinese have different dialect but many have lost it as Chinese school only uses Mandarin as their medium, other than B.M and English . To me, it’s such a lost art of language such as the Sanskrit and many more. I guess that is progression ? There will be things or language left behind... to progresss to the future .just my 5 cent worth... peace.
@NCC_NO-COMMENT-CHANNEL Жыл бұрын
Congrats BBK, this might be your 1st video to expand in Malay market. Keep your hard work and let Malay and non Malay understands each other more.
@shalalalala-s4i Жыл бұрын
I’m a Chinese Malaysian but I really enjoyed making friend with malays , they are super friendly!!! Luv them ❤
@triplekkoh Жыл бұрын
As a Malaysian who got similar grade as Choong Han, i went to the JPA scholarship interview and had the similar experience. We were interviewing for the chance to study overseas but the interview session required us to debate in Malay (which dont make sense because we are not going to use Malay as a language to study abroad) and the participants were also not having same SPM results to start with. As a Chinese, I fought so hard in SPM to try to get a chance to get the scholarship, but due to the policy, those who have worse grade got the scholarship. This is the first time in my life where I feel the country that i love so much sees me differently due to my skin color. And i think this is the main reason why people leave the country to seek better opportunities for themselves out of Malaysia. I dont speak for all the Chinese Malaysian, but I do think that what we want is simply, treat us equally. May Malaysia grow stronger and better. Edited comment: Oh yeah, thanks to private sector for giving me scholarship to finish my tertiary education without spending a single dime. The private sector steps in to help us when the country cannot help everyone EQUALLY. Thank god for that.
@tyekherloon5204 Жыл бұрын
If "hak istimewa" still exists in the policy Equality won't come forever
Malay is the national language, I don't see any problem as language is just a tool of communication. But the quota based on race instead of merits is unfair unfortunately
@horngjau Жыл бұрын
Same here I experienced the same thing when interviewed with JPA. I thought I was simply called up to fill up the pool.
@doglover9349 Жыл бұрын
@@tyekherloon5204 the sad truth is it will last forever... Unless we have someone like Mr.Lee Kuan Yew to rule this country... As a realist, I don't expect the law can be modified , but our economy can be enhanced
@GaryWee111 Жыл бұрын
Ini memang video yang sungguh menarik, terima kasih BBK menjemput rakan-rakan berbeza kaum dan bangsa untuk berkomunikasi tentang pandangan yang tak sama. Malaysia boleh keranamu! Malaysia perlu video yang hebat macam ni.
@叙利亚局势研究员 Жыл бұрын
猴言猴语
@YY-05 Жыл бұрын
Yup, hope Malay community have a one chanel like BBK can help know about Malaysia race news or other can help Malaysia all the race be lovely things
@bernachyjr2059 Жыл бұрын
@@叙利亚局势研究员are you Malaysian?
@yourmother97609 ай бұрын
@@叙利亚局势研究员 你这样讲什么意思?
@whysen8245 ай бұрын
@@叙利亚局势研究员 sohai是不是?
@itssimonwai Жыл бұрын
As a Malaysian living overseas, this is by far one of the best debates / discussion around Malaysian politics , including people from different background to have a fruitful-healthy perspective on this topic. Kudos to this channel ! well done on carrying out this forum to have a more un-biased view on the current Malaysian political and demographic landscape👏👏
@cys0310 Жыл бұрын
影片给我的感觉,其实马来嘉宾心里也知道(或真的不知道)马来西亚确实有很多法令或者政策是偏向于马来人的利益,可是又不能直接承认,所以给了很多不切实际的例子,例如国外公司的偏袒,祈祷室太小对穆斯林的忽视,来尝试说服华人嘉宾其实马来同胞也一样被差别对待,没有优势。 但这些例子都是以foreigner(外国人)的角度去解释,对于主持人针对马来西亚国民的问题是不贴切的。除非他们真的把华人当作是foreigner(外国人)的角度去思考这个问题,那答案就不一样了。 不过还是要谢谢马来同胞的分享,毕竟他们也勇于发表自己的意见,让大家更清楚他们的观点。love peace, no hate
The quota system is unfair for non-Bumi, and in the long run (after decades) it is actually discriminating the Bumi. The system made it looks like as if the Bumi needs help because they are not competent enough. I don't know about others but my Malay friends who study just as hard to achieve full A, hated the system. Their efforts often get disregarded because "bantuan kerajaaan", they are frustrated and they can't blame others who think this way because it is what it is. How to prove that you can stand on your own when your mom keeps holding you, and when people tease you for being weak, you can't even defend yourself because your mom never let go. For me, the quota system is discriminating everyone who is capable.
@ganlida Жыл бұрын
Well said - “The quota system is discriminating everyone who is capable”!! Meritocracy - let the right people do the right things - should be the way to make the “CAKE” bigger!
@AkiraYC88 Жыл бұрын
@@ganlida Exactly. At this point I think the quota system is just there to mock the capable Bumi.
@ahmadilzaimanyusof4155 Жыл бұрын
Agree
@chinkang3566 Жыл бұрын
My son had a Malay classmate at IMU. He ranked second in the whole class but many students thought that he got the scholarship because he is a Malay and not by merit.
@suelingyap6103 Жыл бұрын
This is why msia never progress...sad.
@lawtraf8008 Жыл бұрын
As a foreigner living in Malaysia, I really appreciated this conversation. I have to say from my experience living in Malaysia, I would say Indians are the most discriminated and Malays are the friendliest and more open to people.
@iamurmakteh Жыл бұрын
I m sorry to say, chinese malaysians r never satisfied. They only makeup r only 26% of the population n it is impossible 100% of them r straight As students n smarter than malays.
@ameliatheressa1911 Жыл бұрын
Both indian and malay very open to work together or be friends..chinese depends they like to stay with their own..especially those chinese ed..I experience this during my studies in UM..workplace also like that
@umiismyname4142 Жыл бұрын
chinese aren't too open as they were taught just to mingling with their own kind. hurt but its the truth
@richardgoh8725 Жыл бұрын
Behind the friendliness is the dagger.
@kookies1430 Жыл бұрын
@@umiismyname4142sad but trueeee
@tianchen Жыл бұрын
There have been studies proven that poverty is not related to race but access to quality education. Education opens new opportunities for all social classes. Politicians love to use racial issue and trigger hatred to gain easy support, and avoid talking about their failure in providing quality education to all people from different social classes, hence we must choose and elect leaders who can being progress to our nation.
@jack19677 Жыл бұрын
Majority not educated enough to understand this.
@lingl8754 Жыл бұрын
The majority of private service speaks english whereby government in malay.The vast differences all due to education system that make level usage power of understanding became conflict.Learning humbly from neighbor country their upgrade rakyat into international platform is best choice towards better Malaysia.
@yjc5931 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for doing this! It’s so intriguing to finally see someone trying to discuss more topics like this. Support from US.
@sabrinamz1276 Жыл бұрын
This was on my recommendations from KZbin. Even though I'm not Malaysian but a Singaporean and a Malay. It's quite interesting to see the discussions being made in the video, I guess now I can understand how Malaysian culture works. May I give a suggestion, can we do a comparison between Singaporean Chinese versus Malaysian Chinese and Singaporean Malays versus Malaysian Malays ?
@jameswang362 Жыл бұрын
Seconded. Discuss things like what they think of each other.
@chewengliang Жыл бұрын
That's a good one , I'm Chinese malaysian but working in Singapopre too
As a Malaysian Chinese, i think this is a very good title and great discussion. And I hope that next time we can have Indian friends invited too, I believe this will be greater if we can have more races to discuss together as Malaysian. Thanks for the topic.
@hyukkie718 Жыл бұрын
One of the best episodes among the series, well done BBK. I really enjoyed the discussions from all the guests, and personally would like to see more topics from different races, instead of all the time two sides of guests all from the same ethnic.
@weiwentan2908 Жыл бұрын
Really appreciate this kind of content. It encourages us to bridge the gap between different social backgrounds and understand each other better. Well done BBK!
@ViksterG Жыл бұрын
This conversation needs to be expanded and opened to all the races and people of Sabah and Sarawak. It is vital to have a civil discourse.
Hi, BBK Network! Thanks for this wonderful video that I came across randomly. I just wanted to say that this video is so needed and I am glad that these guests were chosen because they were extremely respectful of one another (how Malaysians should be). I hope you could come up with a similar video soon, perhaps to include our fellow Indians and our Sarawakian and Sabahan bumiputera brothers and sisters. I would also suggest to add Malay subtitles so Malays could also enjoy this educational video! Overall, good job!
Personal opinion, BBK had done what gov supposed to do long time ago. Having open discussion with leaders from different levels and races from different states or cities, it may bring to meaningful outcome and provides various perspectives. Most importantly, it shows government actually do care about us! Ironically, even there's a money laundry or scandal behind 1Malaysia, I truly support the concept and I myself experienced that unity when I was serving PLKN. Regardless of races, ethnicity and religions, we are anak Malaysia!
@luqmanfirdaus9706 Жыл бұрын
Saya kurang setuju dengan Dr baju merah tu sebab comparison beliau bukan "Apple to Apple", beliau bagi pandangan pasal Irish dengan EU, memang kita akan 'dipinggirkan' berbanding orang mereka sebab kita bukan orang sana tapi Cina dan India adalah orang kita, bukan orang asing jadi mereka tak patut dipinggirkan di negara mereka sendiri. Sekadar pendapat peribadi.
@jack19677 Жыл бұрын
Bagus. Setuju
@helenng3150 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for saying this loud.
@leongkern674611 ай бұрын
Terima kasih atas kenyataan ini abang, you perfectly represent only with thinking deeper, we will find the truth
@isoroku19454 ай бұрын
Betul !
@jiannrong6103 Жыл бұрын
To be honest, as local uni graduates, we don't feel much discrimination among the races. You finish your assignment, you study hard, you get high marks, otherwise everyone still the same. The only time most of us will feel discriminated is when this so called quota for scholarshipsor education opportunities applies.
@jack19677 Жыл бұрын
That's the discrimination we talking about
@esphilee Жыл бұрын
Which University?
@keanhoongchoo4952 Жыл бұрын
Disagreed, ur skin colour make you study much harder than other in order to have the ticket to local U.
@Soon_HappyLeaf Жыл бұрын
I’m also from Local U, I don’t see the opportunity to get your choice of degree or university is equal, especially when you are study in local U, you will see our level is different(not all but majority ). For most of the good result of Bumi will trend to get opportunity to study in oversea with subsidiary . Also due to the matriculation (90% for Bumi, 10% for other) vs Stpm standard is different, make us even more difficult when come to get your first choice.
@someonefailedcalculation Жыл бұрын
@@琥珀可爱的 lolz china have only 1 race. in msia have multi race. hw can u compare with china haha
@刘添恩 Жыл бұрын
The last conclusion made by the lawyer really switch my mind to another level of thinking or level of perspective toward the Race Issue in Malaysia~ Really nice discussion topic!
@jeremyswee Жыл бұрын
建議可以做一集 "English-speaking Chinese vs Mandarin-speaking Chinese", 因為作為一個从砂拉越來到吉隆坡打拼多年的雙語華人,我發現這裡的華人基本上因著語言分化的現象蠻嚴重的。很期待可以看到更多這樣的交流,加油!😊
@worldphenomena8312 Жыл бұрын
This will be so interesting and you have the exact same ideas as me. But the thing is that Mandarin-speaking Chinese who are able to speak fluent English are actually kinda already counted as half English-speaking Chinese in my opinion. If BBK wants to invite a typical English-speaking Chinese and a typical Mandarin-speaking Chinese, Mandarin-speaking Chinese will be able to understand English but maybe cannot express their opinions spontaneously while most typical English-speaking Chinese can't or are only able to understand a little bit of Chinese which is not enough for a discussion. Unless there is a translator from BBK so it can help each party to know each other's minds while guests can express their opinions using their mother tongue.
@seanchen9265 Жыл бұрын
I suggest invite JinnyboyTV
@jeremyswee Жыл бұрын
@World phenomena Couldn't agree more! I think ideally it would be interesting to have a mix of the typical English-speaking Chinese and Mandarin-speaking Chinese with those who can speak bilingual but are more culturally Mandarin oriented and those who are more westernized in the discussion. But I guess you're right, the first obstacle we ought to overcome would be the language barrier. It might be fun if the moderators can do it in bilingual as well, haha
@jeremyswee Жыл бұрын
@Sean Chen that would be pretty cool! It's so rare to see crossovers between local KZbinrs from the English scenes and the Mandarin scenes, sometimes I wonder if I live in two disconnected worlds at the same time, haha.
@seanchen9265 Жыл бұрын
@@jeremyswee JinnyboyTV is ideal because he understood the young (english speaking chinese) and he is a father now. So he indeed should be invited. Plus he discussed heavy topic on his podcast.
Re to the language part. As a Chinese female, I participated in quite some rakan muda programs during high school and NS then. growing up in a very mandarin speaking bubble, I was always excited abt these programs as I can finally get to know ppl from diff races. Though me and the Malay members speak Bahasa, there’re lots of Malay dialects and gag terms that I couldn’t get it during small talks. I think that’s a friction for me to build a deeper and unofficial connection with them. Until now it’s still my regret that most of these amazing ppl I met didn’t’ accelerate into a long term friendship after the programs ended.
@lancewood1410 Жыл бұрын
When i was young, i had a malay family as next door neighbours. Still have muslim friends for the past 30 years and currently a malay colleague for the past 13 years. Sabah and sarawak can show the peninsula the REAL meaning of One Malaysia.
@easter887410 ай бұрын
LOLOLOL sabah sarawak also get bumi rights
@lancewood141010 ай бұрын
@@easter8874 yes it's 'Bumiputra' rights unlike 'Malaya' right.
@zhu002 Жыл бұрын
Tahniah kpd @BBK Network telah berjaya mengadakan satu dialog antara kaum ke-atas isu yang mungkin agak sensitive tapi juga begitu penting bagi kesefaman antara kaum. Ini lebih bermakna dan lebih bermutu klau dibandingkan perbahasan di parlimen yang sering kali berkecoh. 祝賀@BBK Network 成功的舉辦一個跨種族對話。 問題可能有點敏感但對跨種族理解非常重要。與時不時像馬戲團的國會辯論相比,今天的討論顯得更有品質和意義。 Congratulations to @BBK Network for successfully holding an inter-racial dialogue on an issue that may be quite sensitive but also very important for inter-racial understanding. This is more meaningful and a quality discussion if it was compared to debates in parliament which are often noisy and circus like. It takes courage to do this episode!! 👍👍👍
Im Singaporean Chinese. Im very concerned by the lack of mixing and segregation among the different races in Malaysia. I always see groups of Malay, Chinese and Indians in their own racial.grouping...never see the 3 different races hang out together or go out together. I think in Singapore, the chinese, malays and indians are more comfortable mixing and going out with each other. My best friends are malay. Maybe its because we have a common education system, unlike Malaysia which has many different kind of schools and systems. Another reason is due to national service where every Singaporean male has to serve 2 years in the uniform services like army and police. We learn more about each other race during the 2 year NS and this helps in building unity in the country during adult hood.
@goldkwi Жыл бұрын
then again, some of our Singapore Army units are Indian and Chinese only. The unit that I support happens to be one of them. Our cookhouse has no halal option btw
@yangerek78 Жыл бұрын
Not sure what u meant living comfortably ? U must able to speak ' mandarin' even for a janitorial job and so on. Judging by your comment it is obvious u just assume or just take in what u being told by others
I kinda like this discussion bcause sometime i always curious what other races thinking abut each other in every aspect . So thank you for this kind of informatic content to us !
@knock-knockwhosthere9933 Жыл бұрын
Need more smtg like this. Clear the air out. Sometimes it's just prejudice set by precedent brought forward or just honest misunderstanding. This is how we explain our respective truth and perspective to one another. This is an open book debate.
@Harrislee716 Жыл бұрын
Really a brilliant episode to understand the needs and thoughts of two different ethnic groups in Malaysia. Its really insightful (never had a chance to really know much about Malay community even though i was raised in a penang kampung with lots of malay friends) , but I would love to see Indian friends to be part of such discussion. -from a malaysian chinese
@alexkok4652 Жыл бұрын
You guys should put Malay subtitle as well. Since this video is for each and anyone of us in Malaysia 😊
@richardgoh8725 Жыл бұрын
Tribal Language?
@joanneheng4475 Жыл бұрын
Why can't they understand English??
@richardgoh8725 Жыл бұрын
It is all about creating a Malay Land called Tanah Melayu. Essentially, Melayu is only a tribe of the rainforest used by the colonist together with the USA imperialist to isolated China. Prosecute the Chinese and held apartheid over 60 years. Today tribalism remain the persistent hold on Malaysia but still want the benefit of engaging with China.
Well done BBK. The conclusion is really a good one. Credit must be given to the last speaker. A "fair" government is needed to see to fairness for all Malaysians alike. I think we had voted the right government led by PM AA with the concept of MADANI . Managing a country is just like managing a family. To be able to live with harmony and peace, the family income must be big enough to cover all needs for every family member. Hence, to have "fairness" , our country must work for a bigger "cake" . Do you think what type of leaders can do this job? The ulamas who are trying so hard to become government???
@ahwei2k Жыл бұрын
Support BBK! Great content!
@onlysin530 Жыл бұрын
Congratulations and thank you BBK! It's a solid first step of breaking the bubble, as a Chinese I actually tried finding if there're any similar Malay talk shows on YT but not sure where to start. It's an eye opener listening perspective from different people with different walks of life. Some encounter certain degree of discrimination on their daily lives, some felt it while in overseas. Their opinions and life experiences invokes many ideas and perspective that was never considered. Ultimately, we just want to stay at a better place. To make life better for us, and our children.
@knock-knockwhosthere9933 Жыл бұрын
Recently got one podcast channel Keluar Sekejap from former UMNO members KJ and SH. Just try to remain objective as they were politicians attached to certain party prior to this,😅 hence the bias might potentially exist.
Senang sekali mendengarkan pembahasan yang sangat konstruktif antara suku Melayu dan Tionghoa di Malaysia! Salam dari seorang Tionghoa Indonesia di Jakarta 🫡
one point that i agreed the most is about switching to other languages that people do not understand and it happens a lot especially among Chinese, that they simple just turn around to other Chinese during group discussion and speaks mandarin
@carolpang4034 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for having this discussion, and being honest, open and respectful.
@weilinooi2783 Жыл бұрын
For me, im sure everyone would like to all Malaysians are having the equal opportunities and to achieve this, like what one of the guests mentioned we need to elect those who can perform and get non-Malays involvement in gov sector. Blaming and stick in the comfort zone doest help to improve our country. Thanks BBK for doing this meaningful program. Hope more people can see this video and spread the vibes to all Malaysians. Malaysia Boleh!!
@sayfolman7752 Жыл бұрын
If You Can Speak And Wrote National Language Fluently Government Sector Door Open Widely For You, Because In The End This Is Malaysia, Not Chinasia, Indiasia,Because You Have To Deal With Majority That Speak National Language😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I’m a bidayuh+chinese and my wife is malay also I have lots of Iban family member. So literally I interact with 4 races. The only things I can say is different races was brought up in different ways so in order to live in harmony, learn each other culture just the general not into the detail. With that we can avoid misunderstanding and be respectful to each other culture.I agreed speaking other languages we don’t understand bring awkwardness. But because of that it motivated me to learn their language which i can speak 8 languages now😅
@mitapi8095 Жыл бұрын
Im Malay and i've worked in a small company in KL where there are 3 Chinese staffs and im the only Malay. The boss is Indian but when the boss is away honestly i do feel left out when they only communicate in mandarin in the room, and only speak english to me when there is a specific thing to say. This is not about feelings but when they sometimes have long discussions about the projects in mandarin, I may now have less information about the projects than they all do after their discussion. I understand its more comfortable to speak in our own mother tongue but in such settings, maybe at least use English 😅 I seriously dont mind if people speak in their mothertongue at workplace but when it comes to work that involves a person on the team not speaking a certain language, for the sake of productivity...please 😊 If there are foreigners on that team that cant speak malay than i will speak english instead of malay...so i dunno why 😅 Maybe just my workplace or is it common?
@knock-knockwhosthere9933 Жыл бұрын
Ur workplace sucks man. Why need to cater to the other 3 Chinese staffs who are weak in English. 😑 We don't even need to talk about the Malay language. If they are comfortable with English, I'm pretty sure the boss will use English because he's an Indian.
@flaxenRdn Жыл бұрын
Good point.
@huiteng4768 Жыл бұрын
I’d say ppl are just too comfortable with their surroundings. I’m Chinese who speaks mandarin concepts young. I mix up with non Chinese friend since primary school so I can speak Malay pretty fluent (prasan sikit la hehe) 😂 when I have malay friends and Chinese friends working together, I always ask my Chinese friends to speak in languages that the Malays understand so they don’t feel left out. I believe your Chinese colleges and my Chinese friends too are just too comfortable to use own mother tongue and trust me they don’t have bad intentions ❤️ they are just used to speak in mandarin. I still remember having English classes in uni, i m the only Chinese in that group, others are Malay. I tried to speak nicely to them asking them to speak in English since it’s English class, but they don’t even listen to me 🥺 same thing, they are just being too comfortable in speaking Malay until they don’t want to speak in other languages
@knock-knockwhosthere9933 Жыл бұрын
@@huiteng4768... That's why there's always both side of the story. Sometimes the Malay speaks in Malay but the Malay is so 'broken' the other race don't get it at all but they ain't mad though. If the conversation is none of ur biz then so be it. Why mad though. However when it comes to being professional like working on a project together, then everyone should be on board speaking the same language when they all are capable to.
@ellyzabeth6526 Жыл бұрын
normal scenario in university class/tutorials, common sense to not speak other language when with other people in same room/ during discussion. that's why the root of our problem is bahasa became our barrier. 😊
@nouraaz27 Жыл бұрын
This is actually a really good discussion session. And i love all my fellow Malaysians
@hilmiyusof6368 Жыл бұрын
I come from SBP background. My SPM result was considered below average in 2004. Luckily I got accepted to Join ALAM, received my Diploma and later worked onboard merchant ship. Several of my friends, junior and senior who got excellent SPM results were given opportunities to study abroad. A lot of them came back to work and served in Malaysia. Only a handful that I know, continued to stay overseas. My suggestion is stricter and fairer selection of candidates for scholarships given by the government or private sector. Students from B40 parents should be prioritized. The other thing is those government scholarships should be like a bon. Either they return to Malaysia and serve or pay back. Otherwise we lost someone like Amalina. If they pay back, we get a win win situation. The government can send more students abroad for further studies using money from their predecessors.
@Dansoo Жыл бұрын
This was easily the best episode you guys have made ! Good job and keep up the good work ! Especially appreciated the fact that English was used to ensure no one was left out. I think the battle with "equal rights" in Malaysia will be a forever continuing one, just purely based on the fact that Malaysia is a very unique country. People like to say the US or whatever other country is also very racially diverse, but they seem to forget that in Malaysia we are not assimilated. Chinese people can still speak Chinese and have education in Chinese, and the same goes for Malays and indians as well. That alone is something that sets us apart from other nations and is one thing that people tend to forget. As a Chinese I'm naturally more inclined to align my values to those who say the Chinese are being discriminated and that we don't have more opportunities, but if I'm being honest the same goes for both Malays and Indians as well. We just don't realize it because we all mingle with the same race so we tend to have very narrow views of what kind of country Malaysia actually is. It was really after I started befriending a malay person in Japan that I opened my eyes to the reality of the situation in Malaysia. They raised a very good point in the video which is equality may not be the solution as we all come from different backgrounds and have very different advantages, so the best thing to do is to respect each other and try our best to fit ourselves in other people's shoes, and only then can we reassess whether or not that particular issue is an issue in the first place. Bottom line is treat everyone nicely guys, Malaysia is very much a miracle of a country, so let's try our best to be nice to each other, and elect leaders who have good track records so we can assure our country will move forward, regardless of their race !
@jefriabdullah9143 Жыл бұрын
100% agree with what you said
@pennychin2261 Жыл бұрын
Some Malays may think that hire a mandarin speaking ppl is a discrimination against other races. But speaking another languages is a skill, it shouldn’t be classified as racist. Country policy never stops anyone from learning any languages. But Dasar Ekonomi Baru is a racist policy from top down.
@knock-knockwhosthere9933 Жыл бұрын
I'm poor in Mandarin so I only review job hunting from English language platform. I never see any job ad that say speaks Chinese only. I only sometimes see requirement such as "speak Chinese is an added advantage" which is always place as the last condition. The jobs available usually request the job seekers to converse in Malay and English as their main requirement.
@gomarat Жыл бұрын
True that, plenty of Chinese don't even speak Mandarin. Why do they single out the Malays? What about banana Chinese? It's funny how some of the Malays try so hard to find proof that they are discriminated against in the private sectors when the reality is that meritocracy is not racism. Even if it's true that the Malays are indeed discriminated in the private sectors, using this to justify NEP is akin to a kid saying that some other kid also steal so that make it okay for him to steal too. Lol...so two wrongs make a right?
@rohnjonathan7675 Жыл бұрын
but what the guest in the video is trying to say even they can say, they also can't be employed... I think this is the thing that they even more frustrated...
@ostinong Жыл бұрын
NEP cuma taktik murahan yang dipakai oleh politician untuk memanipulasi kaum terbesar di Malaysia bagi mendapatkan sokongan pada masa itu,ia tidak sesuai untuk zaman sekarang.The worst part of it is the quotation in Education.polisi sebegini akan menyebabkan Malaysia kehilangan pelajar yang lebih cemerlang yang mungkin mendapat kecapaian yang lebih tinggi dalam pelbagai bidang,justeru akan melemahkan daya persaingan negara Malaysia di peringkat dunia, mereka masih tidak perasan di akhirnya Kita semua secara keseluruhannya akan merasai buah pahit kegawatan ekonomi negara sendiri
@MrJackthong Жыл бұрын
In order to gain better treatment and political policies from the government, different ethnic groups in Malaysia often find themselves compelled to portray themselves as victims. As a result, there are instances where the government must adopt a tough stance and play the role of a fair arbiter to balance the sense of victimhood among the various ethnic communities.
@nivla9791 Жыл бұрын
Love this open discussion and sharing of situations which so many of us felt. I was a little stunned when the female host defended her question "When I speak a language you don't understand, means the conversation don't involve you..." That's just plain obnoxious. Agreed totally with the guest, when u are with people who don't speak your language, just speak the common language everyone knows. Simple and respectful.
I strongly agree with Mr Ainul about the equal right statement.. I think government should put more effort to attract more non Malay to participate in public sector.. same goes to the people who are non Malay should support their child to join the public sector too.. If our country want the real patriotic and equal right, we have to participate to each other sector.. the first step should start from our government.. Only then no one will be excluded
@Davyjones5454 Жыл бұрын
I’m glad these sensitive topics can be discussed openly. Malaysia is heading on the right direction even if slowly.
I really din expect we are now able to discuss about this topic publicly and freely now... Good job guys
@xiiaowai7472 Жыл бұрын
少數優質頻道
@sweehuiyap Жыл бұрын
I like what one of the interviewers has mentioned: “The baseline is we are all Malaysians.” Having equal right should be the basis for all Malaysians. What some of them have experienced overseas e.g. in Ireland is clearly a resident versus a foreigner, a Malaysian, an Indonesia or a Thai who is a foreigner will experience the same in Ireland, so this shall not be placed together for discussion on “equal rights” for Malaysians.
@yy-3732 Жыл бұрын
@BBK Network Congratz ! I think u guys did a good start for having this kind of conversation in future. However there is few things to be improved such as giving equal opportunity to speak at both sides or having a Malay host as well so that everything looks equal if u know what i meant ... Another thing is there is no question of what is the actual rootcause of this inequality now and how to make more equal in future for each races. I think Malay have their actual own concern which not able to speak about since nobody is asking the right question but i am sure they have a solution for it. I hope to see more of this topic is being brought out in future content.
@guynextdoor84edward Жыл бұрын
I suggest bbk also do interviews/surveys but around Malaysia, don't just limit to Bandar people, you need views from the rural or countryside people. From your survey, you gather the statistics and use that to make forums and get ppl to make educated guess and discuss.
@seanchen9265 Жыл бұрын
True. Not critical enough yet. Need a part 2 with different ppl
@cozyinbed Жыл бұрын
This series, along with english subtitles, has been very interesting and entertaining. It covers sensitive topics that many people want but afraid to discuss. Please make more
@nahlene1973 Жыл бұрын
Yeah as I Chinese from China, after watching this, I suddenly felt we in China know so little about our Southern neighbours. I feel so grateful to watch this and learn a bit about the social reality in Malaysia. (by the way, your avatar is freaking scary buddy.)
@cozyinbed Жыл бұрын
@C L. yep, there's a lot of stuff going on down here. Its fun to look into. (晚上小心点 😈)
@uji2503 Жыл бұрын
@@nahlene1973 You're from China? That's interesting. Come to Malaysia sometime. It's fun here.
@nahlene1973 Жыл бұрын
@@uji2503 Yeah our news mostly only cover Singapore, Vietnam and Philipines, we hardly ever see any news on Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and other SE Asian nations. However given such a high volunme of mutual trade and ethnic Chinese in the region, I think the public should definitely learn more about the region, bound closer and develope better together.
@sonnymak6707 Жыл бұрын
The fact that we can this kind of conversation means we ve come a long long way.
@hannsng2464 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Well discussion
@dharvinar.k4750 Жыл бұрын
A very refreshing content and honestly we need more of this. As a malaysian Indian I can relate to both ends of this video however I wish they had Indian representatives as well as sabahans and sarawakians to compare and discuss about this matter. Because although sabahans and sarawakians (ethinic groups) are Bumiputera do they get equal rights? And also I think as Malaysians we are far more similar than we think. Also all of the representatives here are either well known figure or a figure in a higher standard of society.So it wouldve been a more inclusive discussion if there were more people from different social background such as b40, m40 group of people, students and the youth. I think equal rights and equal oppurtunities are two different things. However in Malaysia we use the term "rights" to give more oppurtunities to one race compared to the others. The Malay representitives said " Oh when i was slightly better performing than the other candidates suddenly it became a matter about EU citizens only" and thats what most non-malay goes through in Malaysia in government factors and malays experience this in private factors that predominantly owned by different race. The quota system destroys any room for talent and growth as it gives more important to our race rather than our capabilities. Im not asking the government to just hand out the oppurtunities but give us a somewhat equal base so everyone can try their best at having a better oppurtunity. Very well done discussion keep it up. Also regarding speaking one language in presence of others is a matter of respect rather than feelings. It shows that you care about the people around you and willing to put your comfort down a little to accomodate others.Its okay if you want to expain something in your mother toungue but you need to translate the matter into english or the common language so the person in the group does not feel left out. Once again video well done.
Meaningful topic and Chanel, from discussion to know each other
@yinitialize4930 Жыл бұрын
Education plays the most important role in eliminating social discrimination, but if the teachers are by themselves discriminators, then that is a big problem.
@stingyghost Жыл бұрын
哇这期劲爆!必看!支持!
@AMOS2809 Жыл бұрын
From young I've live with them. I find there's no problem. I love them. So many times when we've problem they stand with us. I appreciate it. Thank you.
I must say Mr.Ainul got my respect for being able to see the bigger picture in terms of the future, if we , strive to chase the equality, its already heading to the wrong way cause we have diff strength and weaknesses , if we malaysian can perform what best in each race leading our country to a higher level, those would'nt be problem already
Being a Malaysian in Ireland and being a Malaysian in Malaysia is 2 different things. Hope u understand 😊
@jack19677 Жыл бұрын
That's our jpa scholar 🤓
@XmZH123 Жыл бұрын
I couldn't brain what he said. The context of a foreigner being discriminated in foreign land and a Malaysian being discriminated in Malaysia are so different! He is not even getting the logic right and comparing apple to apple.
@gemmywhi3711 Жыл бұрын
They call the wrong people. Should have call a Malay who studied in sjkc or smjkc baru ngam.
@lawtraf8008 Жыл бұрын
@@XmZH123 Irish who are not of Irish descent are discriminated in Ireland. That's how it is everywhere. When you're a citizen of a country that is not your original native land, you're always discriminated.
@whybotherha1021 Жыл бұрын
@@gemmywhi3711 i was study at sjkc smkjc.. kena palau dengan chinese, even when i try to be friend with them, even my mom was a school teacher there. How? im malay and after that im out go to smk. But when i go to smk, my experience there is totally different, the chinese study there been treated like normal... why? Even they have samseng gang with chinese as leader there . It is truly funny that time when I compare my experience in SJKC. With the experience I can tell in order all to get bumis is by to close down sjkc, sjkt and only smk.This should start from early age.
@lovesoundsong Жыл бұрын
When speaking about discrimination in EU in terms of job opportunities, that’s between foreigners and local and I don’t see it as discrimination as it’s to protect their citizens to earn a living first. So it cannot be compared to discrimination between Malaysian who are locals whereby different race who are Malaysian are being discriminated who are not foreigners. Just like foreigners trying to get a job in Malaysia will also be screened based on the policy set up whereby locals are prioritized which are basically happening in all countries trying to protect their citizens to have a job and let foreigners take job that can’t be handled by the locals.
@lovesoundsong Жыл бұрын
It’s a bit out of topic. hope to have another round please. Good job everyone and thanks for being bold to have these kind of peaceful conversations that will break the bubble to bring unity.
@lovesoundsong Жыл бұрын
When it comes to obtaining a larger cake, it requires a long-term investment in nurturing talents within the country. Many countries offer scholarships with the expectation that talented individuals from around the world will study in their respective countries and contribute to their development. By building up the country's talent pool, we can attract investors, thereby expanding the opportunities. Unfortunately, Malaysia has seen a significant outflow of talents as they seek better prospects abroad. Take the case of Ms. Choong Han, who possessed exceptional academic achievements but did not receive a scholarship. Furthermore, those we send abroad represent our country, acting as ambassadors. Even if we aim to support less academically inclined students, they face stiff competition from talented and high-achieving students who are less likely to receive opportunities based on privilege alone. Therefore, it is crucial for us to decide whether we genuinely desire a greater future for our country or if we continue to engage in internal conflicts driven by the pursuit of privilege, status, and wealth, which are often untouched subjects for our politicians.
@lawtraf8008 Жыл бұрын
In EU, citizens who aren't of native descent are discriminated. Even tho they are citizens of the country, their race lead to them being discriminated just like in Malaysia. That's how it is everywhere.
@XyxYxy-nc5kl Жыл бұрын
Im Malaysian working in EU. To be honest, I’ve never felt any race discrimination when it comes to job hunting or even at workplace. There are many companies that runs 3/4 interviews before they decide if you are the right candidate. Maybe he was just disappointed that he couldn’t get the job and blame it on race/ skin color. In fact, I felt more discriminated when I was applying for job in Malaysia. lol
@weechenglim5959 Жыл бұрын
I loved this show so much and glad that all of the invited guest shared their best view ! Personal experience to multiracial communities ,actually Malaysia is way better than other Western countries ,only Singapore demonstrated better than Malaysia …other countries still living at surface level from my experience
@muhammada2445 Жыл бұрын
Bcs u are chinese in singapore lol. Go ask the malays from sg😂 i got friend from sg now he live in johor soon to be malaysian(now pr) he said sg just the same as malaysia minus the currency lmao.
@rohnjonathan7675 Жыл бұрын
@@muhammada2445 mind to say why your singaporean friend said same?
@Edwin-fk4yy Жыл бұрын
bcos you are the "majority" on the tiny island nation. I still remember what the late LKY said in his NDP speech in the 1980s, " Singapore is NOT READY for an Indian Prime Minister" I believe even until TODAY. Well, do you think it sounds "Discriminatory" to the " minority" on the island nation?
@rohnjonathan7675 Жыл бұрын
@@Edwin-fk4yy but no matter how you say, when you comparing Malaysia with Singapore, you will think Singapore already much much better... there is no country in this world really have no discrimination... at least they don't put any discriminatory law on their constitution
Sedikit orang melayu je yang educated? 🤔 Awak cakap macam dekat belakang orang melayu dan tiada adab. Memang pelik tak pernah dengar orang melayu atau india maki kaum lain macam ni.. Only the chinese in malaysia yang backstab a majority race in a country macam ni.. Confirm awak tak kenal pun ramai orang melayu. Some chinese teach themselves that they are really the superior race, but can't even employ basic manners. Please don't pollute our thousands of years of malay politeness and adab.
@gifow Жыл бұрын
其实本来就应该用马来语沟通,这样才更有说服力,然后打上英文和中文字幕。
@tengchang7703 Жыл бұрын
有没有可能这几个华人,或者说大部分华人的马来文没有好到可以聊这么深的内容?
@jack19677 Жыл бұрын
@@tengchang7703 女主持的马来文很溜。男的不行
@bensonpang5973 Жыл бұрын
Thank you bbk for having this session, i hope all malaysian getting close to other races, i feel guilty, when they bring out the issues "who have 10 contact numbes in other races" to be honest, i dont have..
@yeongvoonkang1966 Жыл бұрын
Time to make some new friends then, not too late to start
@mmwastronaut3298 Жыл бұрын
cant blame, malaysia society is very special which all the races communities are big enough even if you stick with your community, you can live well. I would not say this is good, but we have to take some affords to assimilate into other races communities, but then the language barrier is big for certain people.
@muhammadaiman6713 Жыл бұрын
@@mmwastronaut3298 hmm.. say malaysia national but dont know the common national language.
@analiese00 Жыл бұрын
i like this topic, cause if the communities can share opinion and what actually happened, the misunderstanding can reduce.
Great content produced by this pair of smart malaysian youtuber...magnifying the race issue in malaysia. Suggest to watch it as it may give you some enlightenment 🎉 Says NO to discrimination!
@gemmywhi3711 Жыл бұрын
For the JPA issues, even if you got excellent results, they stillwant to see your eloquently in BM. Cause its JPA (Jabatan Perkhidmatan Awam) scholarship. They expect you to come and serve the country in public sector after your studies.
@cls727110 ай бұрын
This is the kind of dialogue that Malaysians need. We don't need to shout down each other but rather sit down and discuss how we may all move this country forward, over a cup of teh tarik.
@calvins.9544 Жыл бұрын
1. My mother tounge is cantonese. My hometown is in Sabah and my paternal grandmother is half Dusun and half chinese ethnicity, the rest of ancestors are of chinese ethnic. I have very few Malay and Kadazan friends during my childhood up to secondary school. I had 2 Indian and many chinese good friends during that period. Today, I have a few good Indian, Malay and chinese friends. 2. My school going children now have best friends who are Indians, Malays and chinese. Very few Kadazan, Iban or Dayak friends because of geographical factor. They despise racism as they learn in KZbin, Instagram and Tiktok that racists are not cool and it is ugly. They are still teaching me on how to be a hardcore non racist even though i consider myself not a racist. 3. In a group setting, it is rude not to speak in a common language that is understood by all unless you really cant speak the common language at all. Full stop. It doesnt matter whether the topic involves any particular person in the group. 4. Some job really require certain language proficiency and it should not be viewed as discrimination but a requirement. To let out your property based on race is a form of discrimination. Race based employment is simply disgusting. Full stop. 5. In some foreign countries, you do not enjoy the same right simply because these countries public policies protect their citizens based on their nationality. Fair and square. We should protect our citizens too. 6. More of certain race in the public sectors could be due to the income expectation and not because of unwillingness to serve the country. It is unfair to justify different treatment to certain race simply because of this. A capable and responsible government should find more ways to increase the current income level of the public sector. 7. Gender physical differences are very apparent and this is exactly why society stresses on womens right. These differences are genetic and not due to different race, culture or religion. There is no scientific proof that certain race is of superior capabilities. 8. Size of cake is important but still it should not justify discrimination. Public policy should instead be made geared towards increasing the size of its cake by competing with foreign countries. Competing among family members wont increase the size of the cake but affect their relationship. When family members are not united, sooner or later they will have no cake to eat. If we have smaller cake, we eat lesser together and if we have bigger cake we enjoy more together. 9. Not everything should be based on meritrocarcy. Western capitalism favors on inherited wealth. One should not be deprived of their economic rights just because they are born into certain inherited family background. Public policy should be made to help those that need helps. The society should be made to feel that they are all being treated as fairly as possible. 10. Every member of the society should inculcate the culture of also thinking for others rather than always on ourselves. School and family should teach the youngs on this. Give rather than always receive. 11. Race and religion based politics is the No.1 factor in dividing the people. 12. To improve relationship we should first be able to communicate with each other. Therefore everyone should at least make effort to master the common language which is Bahasa Malaysia, the official common language and English the unofficial one. 13. Looking down on people based on their wealth or profession is simply disgusting. 14. Government should sincerely find and inculcate more commonalities or culture among the people, for example the culture of being hardworking, the fusion of different food and many others. The nation needs to be told to having and achieving a common clear goal together. 15. School and family should teach on how to respect different races, culture, languages and religions, sincerely.