Alamak! Not again!
Our 30 million rakyat are the best to evaluate how best the government had and is performing. We don't need 'shoe polishers' to inject impression.
I agree that the government of PM Najib has had its ups and downs in all policies introduced and implemented. How successful it is will be reflected on the ballot papers.
Stop bragging about success stories for others too have their own to tell and share with. What's the point of introducing too many development programs if its impact is not felt by majority of the rakyat, especially those in the rural areas.
Stop ringing your own bell but listen more to the peoples' grouses instead. The more we say 'good' to the government, the more complacent those at the top will get. You want me to spell it out?
Our 30 million rakyat are the best to evaluate how best the government had and is performing. We don't need 'shoe polishers' to inject impression.
I agree that the government of PM Najib has had its ups and downs in all policies introduced and implemented. How successful it is will be reflected on the ballot papers.
No need to ingratiate, we don't need 'kaki bodek' or 'kaki ampu'. We are blase! Unless Najib needs and appreciates them!
Stop playing balls. We have one too many already. Please concentrate on efforts to close the disparity gap, enhance the peoples' income and provide them with a more conducive environment to breath and live.As Malaysians adjust to higher petrol prices and brace for higher inflation, Deputy Finance Minister Datuk Ahmad Maslan is by far the most active minister in taking to Twitter to defend the fuel subsidy cut.In several postings since October 1, when the fuel subsidy was reduced by 20 sen, Ahmad, using the handle @ahmadmaslan, said Datuk Seri Najib Razak was the only prime minister who had brought down fuel prices.
This was the one time fuel prices went down in 2009.
That claim was made in a tweet published on October 3 with a graph that detailed how much fuel has gone up from 1990 to 2013.
The text in the graph read: “In the past, fuel was cheap and there were not that many cars = RM2 billion year on fuel subsidies”.
This was followed by another phrase which explained that the government was now spending RM2 billion a month because there were too many cars and that fuel was expensive.
The clincher came at the bottom together with a highlight of the price of fuel on September 1, 2009, which dropped to RM1.80 per litre. Next to this figure is a phrase that it went down by 90 sen.
“Najib is the only prime minister to have brought down fuel prices. When it came down did anyone thank him for doing so? Are there? Or are people acting like they forgot?”
RON 95 petrol went up by 20 sen to RM2.30 a litre on October 1 while diesel is up to RM2.20 per litre.
The rise in price was after the government decided to cut back on fuel subsidies, which according to Ahmad, would total RM21 billion this year.
Another tweet on October 3 showed that fuel prices in Malaysia remained the lowest in Southeast Asia.
Stop bragging about success stories for others too have their own to tell and share with. What's the point of introducing too many development programs if its impact is not felt by majority of the rakyat, especially those in the rural areas.
Stop ringing your own bell but listen more to the peoples' grouses instead. The more we say 'good' to the government, the more complacent those at the top will get. You want me to spell it out?