This keeps me wondering...



Alright, I know this is a bit too big and might be annoying for you.
However, the reason being is I'M ANNOYED BY THIS!

Yeah, you got me right.
Assuming all of you out there can read Chinese.
If you can't, here's the summary.

It's the 49th Malaysia Day and bla bla bla... *cutting the crap off*
All this while Malaysia has been taking an non-confrontational approach (apparently it's part of our culture), and that's how Malaysians can survive in a peaceful and harmony country.
And in this letter, the "non-confrontational approach" is defined as the approach whereby sensitive issues are not discussed openly, aggresively and continuously.
A part of that, it's also requesting the people to think whether the "confrontational approach" that some of us have chosen is actually the best way to improve the people's right. (I wonder what happened to "rakyat didahulukan"

Pffft! Can someone kindly explain to me what on earth is that.
I'm confused.

1. Confused the fact that I'm being told how I should react when I'm stuck in a condition when I'm not satisfied with it. (actually gave me the idea that if I have problems and I can just sit down a side and keep quite about it. And *poof* bye problems) - I'd love to live in that "Bolehland".

2. Confused with why is it in Chinese. Apparently this is the first copy I've seen. (getting it from a friend who can't read Chinese, despite having a Chinese name - it's common in Malaysia, not rare). Therefore, to my understanding, to be fair and square, assuming that it's distributed to all Malaysians, it should be in our national language, Bahasa Malaysia. (I just can't stop thinking the fact that it's targeted to a specific group - perhaps I'm just thinking too much. Hmmm...)

Someone out there, if you're kind enough, enlighten me please.
Perhaps I'm just a "katak di bawah tempurung" who just can't see a bigger and clearer picture.
Perhaps I'm just capable of looking from a small context and others are capable to look at it from a wawasan con