Welcome Jeff Ooi to DAP – let it be a catalyst for more bloggers to take political stand


Welcome Jeff Ooi to DAP

Welcome, Jeff Ooi, Malaysia’s pre-eminent blogger to DAP and Malaysian politics!

Jeff has created waves in the Malaysian blogosphere. We await a tsunami from him in the political arena.

Jeff’s statement of the reasons for joining the DAP is an eloquent expression of patriotism of a Malaysian, illustrating that patriotism is an integral part of all Malaysians and not the monopoly only of those who hold office or high positions. This makes the 50th Merdeka anniversary particularly significant.

Recently, one political upstart said:

“It is the law of the jungle and we need to take action against one ‘monkey’.

“I think the other ‘monkeys’ will also get scared.

“They are not above the law.”

This upstart was referring to Malaysian blogs. Apart from his loyal following, he will not find much agreement from bloggers.

It is regrettable to see the use of such derogatory language and the debasement in the standard of public discourse.

Many however will agree if his description is applied to public and political life, especially with regard to corruption, crime and public accountability and transparency where the rule of law appears to have been replaced by the law of the jungle.

There will also be considerable agreement as to the identity of such “monkeys” in the law of the jungle of public life and politics.

But will any action be taken against one “monkey” so that the other “monkeys” will also get scared and the country can begin to see the restoration of integrity, efficiency and effectiveness in public and political life?

I do not want to use the “monkey” language but this will be one of the challenges of Jeff Ooi, together with others in the political arena, to fight back the creeping law of the jungle and to restore the rule of law in Malaysian political and public life.

It has been said that Jeff Ooi’s decision to join the Opposition is a loss to blogging.

It should not be so. It should be a gain to both politics and blogging in Malaysia, enriching both.

I will like to see more politicians taking up blogging and more bloggers entering politics.

After all, blogging particularly socio-political blogging is not an end by itself but a means to an end and a time must come when bloggers must decide whether they should “dirty their hands” and make the transition from advocacy of their political ideals in cyberspace to enter the political terrain to be able to directly translate their ideals into action.

There is the perception that politics is dirty. It it is not politics that is dirty.. Politics is an honourable calling demanding conviction, passion, selflessness and sacrifice. If politics is regarded as dirty, it is the politicians who make politics dirty. Let bloggers get directly involved in politics to cleanse and rid it of “dirty”, unscrupulous and unprincipled politicians!

This welcoming party for Jeff Ooi to is significant both for Malaysian blogging and Malaysian politics.

It coincides with the 50th Merdeka anniversary celebrations which should be a milestone to assess both our achievements and failures in five decades of nation-building so as to chart the nation’s course for the coming decades. It also takes place in the midst of a “war on blogs” declared by the powers-that-be, demonstrating that the those in power have not come to terms with the influence and implications of the new media.

We are at the end of the fourth year of the Abdullah premiership which had received the unprecedented mandate of 91% of parliamentary seats in the 2004 general election. There is now a full-blown crisis of confidence over the lack of political will of the Prime Minister to honour his reform pledges and agenda to lead a clean, incorruptible, efficient, accountable, trustworthy and democratic administration which is highly competitive to face the challenges of globalisation with world-class institutions like world-class civil service, world-class police, world-class universities, world-class judiciary, world-class Parliament, etc staffed by towering Malaysians.

But we have yet to make a real start in this direction while in many instances, we have regressed and gone backwards.

We, including bloggers, have to pick up the pieces. I call on more bloggers to emulate Jeff Ooi to make the 50th Merdeka anniversary a catalyst for a political commitment to create an united, progressive, democratic and just Malaysia where all Malaysians are proud of the country and can walk tall in the world.

I look forward to see Jeff Ooi and other bloggers taking their places in the next Parliament and State Assemblies to create a better Malaysia for ourselves, our children and our children’s children.

(Speech at the “Jeff Ooi’s Welcoming Party” as member of DAP in Petaling Jaya on Tuesday, 31st July 2007 at 11 am)

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  1. #1 by undergrad2 on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 7:37 pm

    “I would love to see some prominent Malays joining DAP.” dawsheng

    That can only if the DAP is driven less by ideology and more by political pragmatism. I leave you to consider what ‘political pragmatism’ means.

    But does it mean the DAP will have to sacrifice the very principles they stood for when it started?? Well, it is all about public perception, about ‘old’ principles dressed up to look new.

    DAP must evolve and adjust to new situations. It cannot afford to be static. It must roll with the blows or be rolled over by the blows.

  2. #2 by undergrad2 on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 7:38 pm

    oops happen omitted

  3. #3 by greatstuff on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 7:41 pm

    That fellow human being ho refers to others as “monkeys” has indeed got a hugely inflated opinion of himself, an is likely the sort who would treat his fellow human beings as primates, tossing them bananas as and when he likes. Such a fellow is an arrogant sort, looks down on most people, considering himself to be a superior species, and would abuse his power (if ever in a high political position) by becoming something of an Adolf Hitler. Such a person must be voted out before he puts Malaysia on E-Bay and auctions it off to the highest bidder!

  4. #4 by dawsheng on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 7:47 pm

    Pragmatism??? Like DAP having a Malay leading the party? Or else how it is going to form a govt ever? The way I see it now, DAP = MCA + MIC + DAP. It is still race based politics although it says its not, I hate to disagree.

  5. #5 by raven77 on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 7:54 pm

    The DAP must seriously start looking for suitable Malay candidates. Looks like with the last few candidates, DAP’s long term policy is to forever play second fiddle to this government…..with a strategy of this nature, they would have counted themselves out as serious politica governors……….and we voters will rightly only vote for them in seats where we feel we need a firm oppostion candidate……..this party cannot grow.

  6. #6 by bystander on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 7:58 pm

    dawsheng, you are beginning to sound like Jeff. Just because someone has a differing view, doesn’t mean he is wrong and you have to insult that person. it shows how small minded you are and you are no better than UMNO trying to curb an individual rights to free speech and expression. Pl stick to your view on Jeff and brag about him if you are his supporter. That’s your right and you can be different. I wont hold it against. Dont be so immature and childish. But dont hold it against for being different. Dont be like UMNO.

  7. #7 by bystander on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 8:01 pm

    Sorry dawsheng. maybe you are one of those UMNo cybertroopers like RPk says. Are you?

  8. #8 by Jefus on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 8:17 pm

    I have been reading his blog screenshots for sometime. I have seen him in his dark times and happy days. There were times he bared his soul for all to see. He gets critisised and he defends himself well I would say.

    The quality about him, reading the threads above that did not come out and I must add, is his shining quality, is that he is a bloodhound when he gets on a case! His investigative instincts are excellent! We need this quality in the parliament.

    The vehicle he chose, DAP, some may disagree as some feel Jeff transcends race and may not sit well with some. But this is only the start of his politcal journey.

    Its a brave start, Malaysia needs a strong thinking oppostion party as we all know what the ruling party is. Its not about Jeff, friends its about Malaysia.

  9. #9 by requiem87 on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 8:51 pm

    is undergrad2 a cybertrooper ?? i’ve been suspecting him for quite sometime…

  10. #10 by dawsheng on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 8:52 pm

    “Just because someone has a differing view, doesn’t mean he is wrong and you have to insult that person.” bystander

    You said it and I agree.

  11. #11 by dawsheng on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 8:53 pm

    “is undergrad2 a cybertrooper ?? i’ve been suspecting him for quite sometime…”

    That will be the joke of the year..

  12. #12 by dawsheng on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 9:13 pm

    bystander Says:

    July 31st, 2007 at 20: 01.06
    Sorry dawsheng. maybe you are one of those UMNo cybertroopers like RPk says. Are you?
    ………………………………………………………………………………

    Naa… I am a transformer fan!

  13. #13 by Educator on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 9:13 pm

    Jeff Ooi can be abrasive some time. Politics could blunt his sharp edges. We cannot deny that he is learned, intelligent and “wow!” in his investigative style. It’s up to Hon. Mr. Lim to lead him to the correct political path. Good luck Jeff!

  14. #14 by cklife on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 9:17 pm

    Undergrad2 sounds like an anti-DAP.

  15. #15 by lchk on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 9:22 pm

    Undergrad2 a cyber-trooper?

    I don’t think so as he doesn’t attack Mr LKS needlessly or post with reckless abandon.

  16. #16 by undergrad2 on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 9:55 pm

    Having individuals like Jeff Ooi stand in the GE under the banner of the DAP, could be a tacit acknowledgment of the kind of pragmatism that is needed to help the DAP evolve into the kind of political party which together with a Malay-based political party could reasonably hope to replace the present national coalition that is also facing problems of survivability.

    It remains to be seen.

  17. #17 by undergrad2 on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 10:02 pm

    It is obviously a feather in the caps of those who eased his entry into the DAP. But his proposed candidacy in any of the constituencies regarded as DAP stronghold is bound to generate resentment among die-hard and loyal DAP members, both young and old alike, who see his entry as a threat to their own future.

  18. #18 by undergrad2 on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 10:05 pm

    New members who stood on a platform of ‘change’ for change sake, should be given their baptism of fire by making them stand in Malay dominated constituencies. He should be made to earn his stripes like those who come before him.

  19. #19 by jigsawpuzzle on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 10:28 pm

    Yes, I hope Jeff Ooi learns some respect and control his temper. He at times appears to be OVER confident and highly arrogant with his views and draconian control over his blog.

    We had some tiff over some issues as well over some things in his blog and u would be shocked to see how shallow this man can get. I still keep his emails. Dissapointing and shocking indeed.

  20. #20 by AhPek on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 10:55 pm

    Whatever tiff you may have had with Jeff Ooi you must not lose sight of the fact that if he were to stand as a candidate for DAP it is he you must cast your vote if you believe strongly a vote for MCA or MIC or Gerakan (for that matter any component party of BN) is a vote for corruption,NEP,racial fanatism,relirious fanatism and for the big bullying tactics of UMNO.Otherwise you are only a big pretender!
    Let us recap what Mendela says. “devilmaster said in Malaysia Today//BN only managed to secure 64% of the total votes. But they managed to get 92% of Parliament seats because of rural areas, some with only 3000-4000 voters only.”.
    This is done by a process called gerrymandering areas in the urban areas with say 70000 people are delineated as a constituency and a rural area with only 5000 to have one MP.This is skewed to favour Malay-based party specifically UMNO and it is done throughout the 22years of Mahathir’s rule. This is only possible because of the two thirds majority of BN.How to undo this?An impossible and very likely never because to break the two thirds majority the total opposition MPs must be 72. At present opposition is only 13 or 14.
    I would even go so far as to suggest DAP to look into the possibility of forming some form of coalition with PAS even tho I am fully aware of what happen to Kit Siang,Karpal Singh and others.But you really don’t have a choice if you want to beat this gang of thieves.

  21. #21 by Jonny on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 11:03 pm

    No one is perfect 100%. Even a Mr. Clean is not Clean 100%.

    We need more MPs who have otak and can do execution work and less monkeys in parliament.

  22. #22 by jigsawpuzzle on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 11:14 pm

    I do not trust Jeff Ooi at the moment. At one point, he is used to bash Tun M, and then lately, he started to ampun him.
    You can see his recent article (First They came, dated July 25) where he made it a point to specifically state that Tun M had retired by the time these things occured.

    Seems like a flip-flopper to me. However, because of my dislike of the DACING government, I hope DAP and the rest of the opposition is able to give them a huge scare in the next election.

  23. #23 by Libra2 on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 11:15 pm

    bystander said, “would vote for DAP but not Jeff. He is abrasive, offensive, obnoxious and thinks too highly of himself to become an opposition politician who is receptive to rakyats problems. Too many tiffs with too many ppl”.
    I agree with your description of Jeff but I would still vote for him because I support DAP. Jeff, would be still better than any BN stooge.
    Unless Jeff changes, he will not last long in the DAP.

  24. #24 by sonicwall on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 11:33 pm

    Kit

    Please consider recruiting RockyBru to join DAP since He has already taken his stand: “I will walk with Jeff”.

  25. #25 by dawsheng on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 11:37 pm

    Jeff Ooi is Jeff Ooi because he is Jeff Ooi. Does he have twin brother or something??? DAP wants him!

  26. #26 by dawsheng on Tuesday, 31 July 2007 - 11:53 pm

    OK! Some of you guys out there are flawless, congratulations! Anyway, this is not a beauty contest or something like that, you are in the wrong blog I guess. Is what Jeff Ooi can do that matters, he had done it without DAP, he now wants to do it with DAP. Obviously someone here thinks he is better than Jeff Ooi, if that is true, than soon it will your debutaré in this blog.

  27. #27 by Godfather on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 12:06 am

    Look, like some of you, I’ve had my differences with Jeff Ooi, but I’d vote him any time over any monkey from BN. Over time, Jeff will understand his limitations and he will be the better for it. Remember, our mission is to vote out the thieves and any blogger monkey is better than any BN monkey.

  28. #28 by Jeffrey on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 12:25 am

    YB,

    It is evident that everyone here has got his/her points and way of looking at things and from what I can see there is no consensus. The proportion of voices expressing misgivings here, whether fair or not fair, versus those of support cannot be gauged by mere arithmetic of postings here because it may well be the case that many falling within the category may reserve their comments in an occasion of an auspicious announcement as such that was just made.

    All I can say is that you have benchmarked sovereignly the highest ideals of politics of which your political career has exemplified and set the standards to which DAP is consequently also identified with – “Politics is a honourable calling demanding conviction, passion, selflessness and sacrifice”.

    This is very well said. In sum, it is character – it is even more important than intelligence – and we are reminded, now more than ever, that it is dearth of these qualities amongst our ‘clever’ politicians that we find ourselves in the quagmire and morass we are in presently….

  29. #29 by Jeffrey on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 12:27 am

    Sorry for typo error in 1st para – it should be “many falling within the FORMER category….”

  30. #30 by Jeffrey on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 12:41 am

    “…//….Let bloggers get directly involved in politics to cleanse and rid it of “dirty”, unscrupulous and unprincipled politicians!…//…”

    This is an interesting concept because it prima facie decides that bloggers are ok in terms of “conviction, passion, selflessness and sacrifice” to rid politics of “dirty”, unscrupulous and unprincipled politicians!

    Now that Rocky Bru was mentioned, why do we leave out the irrepressible RPK? :)

  31. #31 by ihavesomethingtosay on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 12:55 am

    “Look, like some of you, I’ve had my differences with Jeff Ooi, but I’d vote him any time over any monkey from BN.” – Godfather Says:

    Second to that man, don’t ever want animal farm in Malaysia again.

  32. #32 by undergrad2 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 1:16 am

    “Look, like some of you, I’ve had my differences with Jeff Ooi…. Over time, Jeff will understand his limitations and he will be the better for it. Remember, our mission is to vote out the thieves and any blogger monkey is better than any BN monkey.” Godfather

    I will vote for anything that moves except anything that is dead and dying and more of the same – which is how I’d describe BN today.

    As for Jeff Ooi the man, I tend to agree with jigsaw’s brief assessment of the guy.

    I still think the DAP should give him the baptism of fire and let him stand in a BN or Malay dominated constituency. That would please the hardliners among the leadership of the party who see themselves as having been bypassed by a relatively young upstart.

  33. #33 by undergrad2 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 1:26 am

    Jeffrey,

    Everybody loves to hate the politicians. The engineers and doctors have their talent which they use to good effect for the benefit of their communities. I hesitate to mention lawyers i.e. the next group of people everybody loves to hate.

    It is not peculiar to Malaysia. The story is the same everything else. Everybody loves to hate the politicians (and lawyers). Why is that so??

    Kit says politics is not dirty but it is the politicians who make politics dirty i.e. assuming the two can be separated.

  34. #34 by undergrad2 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 1:27 am

    sorry everywhere and not everything

  35. #35 by undergrad2 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 1:32 am

    “If a thief confronts a victim and the victim is a politician, instead of asking him to ‘Give me your money’, should he say ‘Give me my money’?”

    What d’ya think of that??

  36. #36 by firehawk on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 1:45 am

    undergrad2 says ///I still think the DAP should give him the baptism of fire and let him stand in a BN or Malay dominated constituency. That would please the hardliners among the leadership of the party who see themselves as having been bypassed by a relatively young upstart.///

    absolutely agree with you.

  37. #37 by sotong on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 7:37 am

    ” BN secured 64% of votes but 92% of seats “.

    If true, representation in Parliament and election are grossly unfair.

    Fair election and representation are most important in a democracy system. How long has this been going on?

  38. #38 by patriotic1994 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 7:42 am

    One word for all that against Jeff joining DAP: Enough of talking. Show your action.

    If you think you can make a different to the country, do now. Why just talk? Be it good or bad, as long as show the action, it is something different.

    If you can talk one word, you do one action. If you can talk two words, you do two actions.

    Not all political parties are perfect. But it is only associate with politics then you can do something, in Malaysia. Look into Malaysia’s perspective. Get yourself involved in more real life experience in the country. Offer your service to government. Try. You will know it is not the same in other country.

    Jeff has my 100% support no matter which political party he goes. My IC address is in Perak. But now I stay in Puchong. So I will change my IC address and make sure I can vote for him. That’s the action.

  39. #39 by Bigjoe on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 7:49 am

    Jeff Ooi joining DAP is more against the BN than actually as a long term asset to the opposition. The fact that he vascillated indicate a person that takes too long to make up his mind about the principles and challenges of which the DAP stands for. I have no doubt Jeff agrees with DAP in principles but in politics? Its a rough world out there in political sea and the DAP is not without its ills and broken promises. Its not a place for those that are not willing to pay a heavy personal price, its not about idealism so much.

    Lets hope Jeff does not dissapoint us.

  40. #40 by Jan on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 7:49 am

    Before you vote for him did you ask yourself why he left Gerakan? I thought leap frogging politicians are opportunists and the most despised among them.

  41. #41 by undergrad2 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 7:55 am

    “Before you vote for him did you ask yourself why he left Gerakan?”

    Maybe they failed to promise him a party nomination and a constituency he could stand for in the coming GE – and DAP could and have??

  42. #42 by undergrad2 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 7:58 am

    Hardliners loyal and dedicated with many years of service aren’t going to take this lying down. A newcomer with no track record within the Party being promised special treatment?

    I see a coup coming!

  43. #43 by kay78 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 7:59 am

    kit siang, out adword on your blog lah, and text-link-ads. this can get some funding the the party!

  44. #44 by AhPek on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 8:09 am

    ‘If a thief confronts a victim and the victim is a politician,instead of asking him to “Give me your money.”, should he say “Give me my money.”.Undergrad2.
    Great and an improvement to it can be “If a thief confronts a victim and he is an UMNO politician he will say ‘Look, where is my money. Give it back to me.”.

  45. #45 by sotong on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 8:53 am

    The increasing political awareness of non Malays and the slow but important spread of accurate, complete and meaningful information to the people will force the government to change…..but when?

    Hope the damges done in the past decades are not permanent and its impact could be minimised and change not too late……..with the PM sleeping as claimed by many.

  46. #46 by oedipus on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 9:21 am

    all in all, i think majority if not all of us welcomes jeff ooi into the political arena of malaysia under DAPs’ banner.

    welcome jeff!

  47. #47 by palmdoc on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 9:23 am

    The only monkeys I am aware of are the corrupt power seekers, not the bloggers. For those monkeys at the bottom of the corrupt pile, before you start the climb, do take a good look up the tree. [deleted]

  48. #48 by raverus on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 9:34 am

    Godspeed, godspeed!

  49. #49 by ENDANGERED HORNBILL on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 9:53 am

    Jeffrey, your comments on character above cleverness is punctilious to a fault. Say that again:

    “In sum, it is character – it is even more important than intelligence – and we are reminded, now more than ever, that it is dearth of these qualities amongst our ‘clever’ politicians that we find ourselves in the quagmire and morass we are in presently….”

    Now, let’s look at BN MPs. Save for a handful like Toh Kin Woon and ……(I have great difficulty adding to the list!). Like Marina Mahathir said in her blog, we’d all be ashamed to encourage our children to adopt BN politicians as role models!

    Now, the storm in a tea-cup over Jeff Ooi’s abrasive style….well, one basic point many missed out is that the message and the medium is always tailored to the audience. So Screenshots represented the heart-cry of a civic-minded citizen who sees so many absurdities and wrongs wreaking havoc on the socio-economic fabric of the country. The damage went unnoticed by literally millions of ‘sleeping’ Malaysians and with the mainstream media locked in complicity with the corrupt powers that be, damage and collateral damage went unimpeded and with impunity. Tell me, I would forgive Jeff is his style was abrasive. I would have been similarly outraged if I was taking the heat and burning at those frontiers.

    Now that Jeff Ooi has launched himself into the political arena, he would be the first to understand that his message and audience would need some tweaking even though his medium would remain largely unchanged. I guess henceforth his language would be more ‘parliamentary’ and the ordinary folks would not be so ruffled…but opposition BN MPs would, as usual.

    All said, Jeff is a very good guy and would be able to contribute effectively and meaningfully to a robust DAP seeking to raise its voice above the din in Parliament.

    As to Undergrad 2′s suggestion “I still think the DAP should give him the baptism of fire and let him stand in a BN or Malay dominated constituency”, I don’t think Jeff would fear this at all. On the contrary, I perceive he would relish a good fight, even in Pekan or Kepala BAtas, Sg Siput or where is that Ong Ka Ting’s seat – Johore? OKT is from Perak and perhaps lives mostly in the Klang Valley, why is he running scared to a safe seat in Johore? OKT should contest in Ipoh Timur if he has ‘brass balls’, to borrow Jeffrey’s terminology made famous by Undergrad2.

  50. #50 by requiem87 on Wednesday, 1 August 2007 - 10:03 am

    What are your purpose of quoting :-

    “Hardliners loyal and dedicated with many years of service aren’t going to take this lying down. A newcomer with no track record within the Party being promised special treatment?

    I see a coup coming!”

    trying to incite hatred and chaos within the party ??

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