this post was submitted on 29 Apr 2026
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Fuck Cars

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The FMT report specified other proposed budget cuts of RM664 million from the Treasury, RM647 million (Home Ministry), RM571 million (Rural and Regional Development Ministry), RM508 million (Digital Ministry), RM508 million (Defence Ministry), and RM466 million (Education Ministry).

Reuters reported that the directive issued today by Treasury secretary-general Johan Mahmood Merican said the government’s public subsidy bill was expected to reach RM58.4 billion this year, far surpassing the RM15 billion originally allocated under Budget 2026

Nurhisham Hussein, an economic adviser at the Prime Minister’s Office, said recently that Malaysia’s fuel subsidy bill soared to RM6 billion last month, before climbing to RM7 billion this month, amid the US-Iran war. This works out to RM2,300 every second

All that just so people can sit in their car idling for 1 hour of doomscrolling.

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[–] psx_crab@lemmy.zip 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

You're absolutely right about what a joke of a country it is in a transit point of view, but i'm just not sure what's the threshold of "functioning" are for each person. For someone coming in from, say, singapore, the public transit in kuala lumpur is laughable, but from my perspective of someone who lived in kuala lumpur about 20 years ago, comparing the transit to where i live now it's day and night. I can go places in Kuala lumpur with the combination of train and walking, and we do walk a lot back then, but here? Cycling is simply faster than bus.

Is it functional? I think yes. Is it bad? Absolutely. I think your issue with the transit system is the bus from what i read here, and i do fully agree with that. But if you live near train station and work/going places near train station, it would be the cheapest and best way to travel, and for that it's absolutely functional.

[–] Subscript5676@piefed.ca 1 points 3 days ago

The definition makes the argument here really. If being functional means that the system is functional for only a select few, then to the select few, sure it's functional, but to everyone else, it's not. If public transit is meant to be "public" and not just a "transit", then a system functional only to a few isn't what I can consider to have met expectation of its own definition. I'm certainly being strict about it, and you are free to keep your perspective; I'm not here to change it. I used to live in an area outside of Selangor where buses vanished after being virtually nonexistent, and public transit in KL & Selangor hasn't given me the slightest bit of sense that it's reliable, even before I experienced a better system elsewhere in the world.

Some part of my reason of outright calling it non-functional is political: I've set the bar higher than just having a system that works for those lucky or rich enough to live near a train or bus station. Imagine if you don't have access to the benefits of a public policy or system that only a few seem to enjoy, and these few people go around and tell others that the system is being functional. I'm not sure if that'll sit well with most people, especially when it's something that is or is close to a basic right.