Fags-
While Malaysian law continues to outlaw sodomy and its religious tenets oppose homosexuality, the “gay” agenda is already making inroads. For example, Marina Mahathir, the daughter of Malaysia’s Prime Minister, has publicly called for an end of discrimination based on sexual orientation. She is well known as a leader in many non-governmental organizations such as the Malaysian AIDS Foundation.
In the early 1990s, a group called the Pink Triangle Malaysia was organized for "providing HIV/AIDS education, prevention, care and support programs, sexuality awareness and empowerment programs for vulnerable communities in Malaysia". These filthy brute beasts simply won’t obey. As our pastor Fred Phelps says occasionally to this effect, the AIDS epidemic could be solved over night with one thing: Abstinence.
It was reported on January 26, 2008, that Miri, Malaysia was the host for a drag queen contest involving 24 countries, entitled “Drag Queen Miss World.”
On November 1, 2008, 70 fags were arrested by police for engaging in gross indecent acts at four “disguised” workplaces. Stay tuned for more information.
Clearly, the fag camel’s nose is in the tent.
Divorce –
Divorce rates are rising in Malaysia. A 2007 paper entitled “High Rate of Divorce in Malaysia; a Social Ill in Malaysia: Causes and Remedies” discusses this topic in considerable detail. This paper reports a 20% divorce rate in that country, a statistic shocking to its leaders. Reported causes of this rising divorce rate include drugs, poor parenting, pornography, economic challenges and a general decline in cultural mores.
Abortion –
Abortion is illegal in Malaysia. A recent article, though, discussed how those laws are regularly circumvented. Quoting there from:
“Kuala Lumpur, 22 Jan. (AKI) – Young Malaysian women are bypassing the country's anti-abortion law by taking abortion-inducing pills sold in maternity clinics nationwide.
“In a media investigation that generated widespread controversy in the predominately Muslim country, Malaysian weekly 'Kosmo!,' said women can obtain the pills from their gynecologist, by simply stating that they missed their period.
“A pack of 'Cuci benih' pills– which means ‘seed solvent’ in Malay – costs less than two dollars.
“Malaysia made pregnancy termination illegal in the 1960s. Abortion is now permitted only for health-related cases, although it is believed that some clinics perform it illegally for a fee of about 870 Malaysian ringgit, or 260 dollars.
“Quoted by the weekly only by their first names, some young women claimed to have opted for the more discreet pill because of the high price charged by the illegal clinics and the heavy social stigma associated with an abortion.
““I'm forced to do this, I have no other choice. I'd rather have abortion in a clinic but I don't have enough money for it," 23-year-old Lili told the magazine.
“"I'd rather do this than to be beaten up by my father for ruining his reputation."”
Sexual trafficking (report from http://www.state.gov/g/tip/rls/tiprpt/2008/105386.htm)
Malaysia is a destination, and to a lesser extent, a source and transit country for women and children trafficked for the purpose of commercial sexual exploitation and men, women, and children for forced labor. Malaysia is mainly a destination country for men, women, and children who migrate willingly from Indonesia, Nepal, Thailand, the People’s Republic of China (P.R.C.), the Philippines, Burma, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Vietnam to work, some of whom are subjected to conditions of involuntary servitude by Malaysian employers in the domestic, agricultural, construction, plantation, and industrial sectors. Some migrant workers are victimized by their employers, employment agents, or traffickers that supply migrant laborers and victims of sex trafficking. Victims suffer conditions including physical and sexual abuse, debt bondage, non-payment of wages, threats, confinement, and withholding of travel documents to restrict their freedom of movement. In addition, some female domestics from Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Cambodia, Vietnam, Burma, Mongolia, and the P.R.C. are forced into commercial sexual exploitation after being deceived with promises of jobs or after running away from abusive employers. Individual employment agents sold women and girls into brothels, karaoke bars, or passed them to sex traffickers. Some Burmese registered with the United Nations as refugees, a status not recognized by the Malaysian government, are vulnerable to being trafficked for forced labor. To a lesser extent, some Malaysian women, primarily of Chinese ethnicity, are trafficked abroad for commercial sexual exploitation. Also, a few Malaysians, specifically women and girls from indigenous groups and rural areas, are trafficked within the country for labor and commercial sexual exploitation.