How E-cigarettes or vapes destroy Malaysia.




The attitudes of politicians in Malaysia are no way to be found slow and soft. 

You can see them bickering nothing in the parliament. Of course, at the state assembly is nothing better. 

How the government should do ? 

Nothing much to say. You can see the leader, PMX, day in and day out only talking about religion. Taxpayers' money is sent to the people thousands of kilometers away for nothing. 

Religion is the opium of the mind. Once he was the leader of the religion student in University Malaya and also the leader of the religion body. 

Comparing to the country in down south of Malaysia peninsula. Singapore, never be soft to bow to the pressure to hang the drug traffickers. 

You can search the net to read how many times, the police has arrested the drug pushers but you hardly read the prosecution of the drug addicts and pushers. But stealing of a tin of milo went to jail for 3 months but drug pushers heard nothing from the police, the AI also can give you the data: 

 Yes, there have been several cases in Malaysia where individuals, often in situations of hardship, have been sentenced to around three months in jail for stealing Milo products. 

These cases have drawn significant public attention and debate regarding the proportionality of the punishment. 
Examples of Court Sentences
  • A single father in Kota Kinabalu was sentenced to three months in jail in April 2022 for stealing 18 1kg packets of Milo. He stated he planned to sell them for money to support his child.
  • Another man was sentenced to three months in jail in January 2025 for stealing 12 packets of 1kg Milo, along with other items, valued at over RM600.
  • A couple who stole 19 packets of Milo to fund dialysis treatments was sentenced to 28 days in jail and fined in August 2024.
  • In contrast, another woman was sentenced to 14 months in jail for stealing two packets of Milo in 2022, a sentence widely criticized for its severity. 
Legal Context
The specific charge in these cases is often under Section 380 of the Malaysian Penal Code for theft in a building, which carries a potential penalty of imprisonment for up to 10 years and a possible fine. The variation in sentencing depends on factors like: 
  • The value and number of items stolen.
  • Whether it was a first-time or repeat offense.
  • Mitigating factors presented to the court, such as financial desperation or family dependents. 
These sentences have sparked discussions about the justice system's approach to crimes committed out of poverty compared to high-profile corruption cases. 
Repealing 377 penal code, can reduce the crime. 

https://riverofrainbow.blogspot.com/2025/03/repeal-377-penal-code-reduce-drug-users.html

Only 5 countries in the world still maintaining this outdated penal code. The government is wasting the taxpayers' money. using the police unnecessary for the investigation. The Rafizi Ramli case of extortion is one of the example. 

https://malaysiakusayang.blogspot.com/2025/09/377-penal-code-and-rafizi-ramli-and.html

The rest you think of it and see how you can fish the information from the special programe from CNA. 

E-cigarettes or vapes. Originally marketed as a safer alternative to smoking, they are now vehicles for much deadlier substances than nicotine – synthetic drugs. Also known as “Kpods”, “Zombie Pods” or “Mushrooms”, these vape pods are adulterated with drugs like, like ketamine, etomidate, methamphetamine and opioids. Drug-laced vapes are quietly sweeping across Southeast Asia, mostly used by the young. Across countries like Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and Singapore, authorities are struggling to crack down on the Kpods crisis. The challenge is that Kpods are indistinguishable from normal vapes, which makes detection difficult in countries like Malaysia, where vaping is legal. Insight investigates what Kpods are and where they come from.


00:00 Introduction 01:17 First puff of drug-laced vape 02:33 How vaping exploded globally 04:48 K-pods: vapes laced with drugs 11:28 How syndicates operate and hide the trade 17:05 Legitimate vape shops feel effects of drug-laced vapes 23:44 Health risks: overdoses, lung damage and deaths 26:22 Children and teenagers caught in crisis 30:37 Schools and parents struggle to respond 33:32 Crackdowns across the region 36:43 Changing chemical compounds in synthetic drugs 39:13 Education and rehabilitation



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