‘Another unsung hero from our anti-colonial struggle in the 1950s and early
1960s has left us. Unlike the victors of history, Said Zahari, age 88, went
quietly as he had done for the most part of his life, be it when he was
fighting against the British for Singapore’s independence or when he sat in
prison for 17 years under Lee Kuan Yew’s rule.
His calm demeanour belied a spirit of steel that saw him bear the cruelty of
long imprisonment without trial and yet not for a moment compromising on his
principles to seek release from incarceration.
Pak Said had publicly called Lee Kuan Yew “a political coward”. He had said
only a coward would resort to jailing his opponents instead of taking them in a
political contestation of ideas and letting the best man win…’ By Dr Wong Souk Yee
Wong Souk Yee wrote a tribute on Said Zahari posted in the TRE. Said was
among the Malay intellectuals of the era when PAP was fighting tooth and nail
with the Barisan Socialis, the left leaning political party then. Said was in
the same company as those arrested during Operation Cold Store and served the
second longest detention of 17 years after Chia Thye Poh, strongly committed to
his cause and like Chia Thye Poh, would not denounce his belief throughout his
detention.
Said was tri lingual, fluent in Malay, English and Mandarin, an asset most
feared in the political arena. He was also the editor of Utusan Melayu.
One by one this first generation of political leaders will fade to oblivion
only to live forever in the history books of Malaysia and Singapore.
Chinatown hawker centre. Hawker Centres are a national heritage, selling a wide variety of food at very reasonable prices. They are spread across the whole island and is part of the Singapore way of life.
4/15/2016
China’s peaceful rise
Jean Pierre
Lehmann, emeritus professor of international political economy at IMD,
Lausanne, wrote an article on the above in the ST on 9 Apr. His story centres on the rise of
international powers starting with the Portugal, Spain , the Netherlands,
Britain, France, US, Japan and The USSR.
He traced the history of these powers and the use of violence and wars
as an intrinsic part of their ascents. War and violence as parts of conquest
and world domination were inevitable before a new power took the pole position.
And now comes China. Would China’s rise as a super power be peaceful, be an aberration and not in the mold of the western powers, predated by wars and violence? The western narrative has constantly harped on a belligerent and expansive China that would swing its big clubs at everyone on its way up, like the western powers. China would be like one of them, no exception. So beware, China is coming.
China today is the Number Two super power after the US. In a way, China has risen, peacefully, without the need for wars and conquest. This alone would have been enough proof that a super power can rise without resorting to violence. China is what it is today, without the need for conquest but by trade and commerce. Is this enough to assuage the western thinkers and media to accept China as a risen power, peacefully?
The other notion, China is not there yet. It has to overtake the USA and this last step would force the issue and a war with the Americans. And in Lehmann’s view China has the right to engage in wars. It was the victim of aggression when major powers came to being. China should follow the same pattern in the rise of a super power, through war and conquest, to challenge and defeat the incumbent super power, the USA.
However, according to Lehmann, ‘if China succeeds in achieving a peaceful rise to great power status – that is, dispensing with war, pillage, slavery, conquest and exploitation – it will be the first rising great power to have done so.’ This could be a welcoming outcome if China is left alone to continue in what it is doing for the last 30 plus years. Unfortunately this may not be the case. The Americans are in the way of the peaceful rise of China with its confrontational approach towards China, the pivot to Asia, building anti China trade and military alliances, escalating and precipitating armed conflict, particularly in the Korean Peninsula and the South China Sea. Today it is reported that the Americans would be conducting sea and air patrol in the South China Sea, not freedom of navigation, as if the South China Sea belongs to the American Empire. Here it is not China challenging the Americans to a show of force. It is the Americans that are standing up to China, confronting China and putting up obstacles to contain China’s rise.
Though the American patrol is only a token show of force, it is a bad precedent. China could ignore this little insect, but in principle it is bad. What the Americans are doing, violating other country’s sovereignty and economic zones, China could do the same. China could announce conducting air and naval patrol in American economic zones as well. Both sides can play the game of bully. The American’s blatant flexing of military muscle to exert control of the South China Sea and in the Korean region should not be ignored by the world community.
In Lehmann’s view, the world must work with China to achieve this historical aberration, that a super power can rise to the pole position without having to go the disastrous and destructive road of war. China’s march towards the Number One super power status, to eclipse the Americans through economic means, economic development could be a possibility and only a matter of when. It is in the interest of the rest of the world that they work with China for a peaceful rise instead of following a confronational course set by the Americans.
China has risen and will continue to rise peacefully as an economic and military super power. The main protagonist against such an eventuality is the intent of the Americans and its bellicose policies towards China. China is no western nation, has its own culture and values, and is not seeking conquest and colonization. It is a super power more in the economic sense and would grow to be a bigger economic power, without having to control and colonise any country like the western powers did.
China is not seeking war, and war is unnecessary in the Chinese model to be the greatest power on earth. The world can and must work with China for this to happen, peacefully. The world must not allow the Americans to force an issue with China leading to a conflict of epic proportion and destruction. The Americans too knew that a war with China is inconceiveable. China knows that too and is trying to avoid a collision course with the Americans.
If good sense prevails, the peaceful rise of China will be a welcome aberration in the history of humankind.
And now comes China. Would China’s rise as a super power be peaceful, be an aberration and not in the mold of the western powers, predated by wars and violence? The western narrative has constantly harped on a belligerent and expansive China that would swing its big clubs at everyone on its way up, like the western powers. China would be like one of them, no exception. So beware, China is coming.
China today is the Number Two super power after the US. In a way, China has risen, peacefully, without the need for wars and conquest. This alone would have been enough proof that a super power can rise without resorting to violence. China is what it is today, without the need for conquest but by trade and commerce. Is this enough to assuage the western thinkers and media to accept China as a risen power, peacefully?
The other notion, China is not there yet. It has to overtake the USA and this last step would force the issue and a war with the Americans. And in Lehmann’s view China has the right to engage in wars. It was the victim of aggression when major powers came to being. China should follow the same pattern in the rise of a super power, through war and conquest, to challenge and defeat the incumbent super power, the USA.
However, according to Lehmann, ‘if China succeeds in achieving a peaceful rise to great power status – that is, dispensing with war, pillage, slavery, conquest and exploitation – it will be the first rising great power to have done so.’ This could be a welcoming outcome if China is left alone to continue in what it is doing for the last 30 plus years. Unfortunately this may not be the case. The Americans are in the way of the peaceful rise of China with its confrontational approach towards China, the pivot to Asia, building anti China trade and military alliances, escalating and precipitating armed conflict, particularly in the Korean Peninsula and the South China Sea. Today it is reported that the Americans would be conducting sea and air patrol in the South China Sea, not freedom of navigation, as if the South China Sea belongs to the American Empire. Here it is not China challenging the Americans to a show of force. It is the Americans that are standing up to China, confronting China and putting up obstacles to contain China’s rise.
Though the American patrol is only a token show of force, it is a bad precedent. China could ignore this little insect, but in principle it is bad. What the Americans are doing, violating other country’s sovereignty and economic zones, China could do the same. China could announce conducting air and naval patrol in American economic zones as well. Both sides can play the game of bully. The American’s blatant flexing of military muscle to exert control of the South China Sea and in the Korean region should not be ignored by the world community.
In Lehmann’s view, the world must work with China to achieve this historical aberration, that a super power can rise to the pole position without having to go the disastrous and destructive road of war. China’s march towards the Number One super power status, to eclipse the Americans through economic means, economic development could be a possibility and only a matter of when. It is in the interest of the rest of the world that they work with China for a peaceful rise instead of following a confronational course set by the Americans.
China has risen and will continue to rise peacefully as an economic and military super power. The main protagonist against such an eventuality is the intent of the Americans and its bellicose policies towards China. China is no western nation, has its own culture and values, and is not seeking conquest and colonization. It is a super power more in the economic sense and would grow to be a bigger economic power, without having to control and colonise any country like the western powers did.
China is not seeking war, and war is unnecessary in the Chinese model to be the greatest power on earth. The world can and must work with China for this to happen, peacefully. The world must not allow the Americans to force an issue with China leading to a conflict of epic proportion and destruction. The Americans too knew that a war with China is inconceiveable. China knows that too and is trying to avoid a collision course with the Americans.
If good sense prevails, the peaceful rise of China will be a welcome aberration in the history of humankind.
4/14/2016
Free parking is a subsidy, what about free air?
Minister of National Development
Lawrence Wong today (April 11th) said that free parking in some car park spaces
are not “free” and are in fact subsidies from the government.
“Free parking is not free, it’s a
subsidy to the motorist, paid for by non-motorists.”
This is an example to prove that
Singaporeans are daft. Only super talent can like that. It requires a very high
level of intellect to reason why free parking is a subsidy.
What about free air? Is free air also a
govt subsidy? What else that is free is govt subsidy? Sunlight? Haze free air?
What would opposition parties say?
Food for thought.
Singapore paying the price for decades of failed education policies
This verdict is
controversial of course, depending on how one
measures success and failure of our education policy. If one measures it
in our uniquely Singapore ways, like dignity is measured by how much one’s
income, and education is measured by how many straight As, then we are very
successful. We produced probably the most straight as in the world on a per
capita basis. Even the new International Baccalaurette programme that was introduced
recently, our students are acing the exams every year since it started.
Students that used to score average grades would now get full scores possible.
Producing straight As
and more straight As is a matter of moderation, a process that allows the examiner
to move the scores of the students left or right of the median grade for
whatever they set out to do. It is scientific or mathematical in a way, but
whether the students deserves the As is subjective.
What is apparent
today, after a few decades of producing straight As students is that the flaws
are showing. We are getting a bunch of very brilliant parrot that could
regurgitate everything perfectly. But when ask to think, they began scratching
their heads, what is that? And in the industries, the lack of thinking talents,
people who walked around on two legs and can think, is simply not there. And
that is why so many foreigners from God knows where are here and touted as
talents because, despite their dubious academic records, they could talk and think
and run circus around our duds, the unthinking parrots.
Sure we have many very
brilliant Singaporeans here and abroad. The really good and bright people would
not be subdued and made stupid by a stupid education system. They would shine
under any system or no system. But for the rest, the elite parrots and the
masses, the inability to think, and the unique ability to receive and to be
taught to repeat what they were told is getting to a very frightening stage, to
a point when you tell them eating shit is good, drinking shit water is good,
and they will eat and drink with gusto.
The daft Sinkies, not
invented by me, I just regurgitate this phrase, like unthinking parrots do, oh,
unthinking parrots never used this phrase in their vocabulary, will accept everything
they are told to be good. I have recently wrote an article about the things the
daft Sinkies were made to believe in. Some of the daft things that Singaporeans
would swear to be good are: we are too small, not enough political talents, so
cannot afford to have two political parties, when one opposition candidate is
voted to become an MP the country will collapse, they dismissed the wisdom of
not putting all their eggs in one basket, that power corrupts, and instead
believe in one party is best for a democracy and nothing is better than ownself
checks ownself.
The idiocy of the
unthinking reaches a climax when I read this comment in the TRE.
‘Mr Lee Kuan Yew is
not only founder father of spore, he also a war hero. Country everywhere always
celebrate and remember war hero and their found father.’
This is a comment
posted by someone calling himself True Blue Singaporean. The only consolation
is that he is a fake, or at best a new citizen. And everyone reading his comment
will know he is not even writing in Singlish. This guy even advised
Singaporeans to read our history to verify his claim. With no due disrespect to
LKY, I don’t think anyone in govt would dare to glorify him with this war hero
title, not even in a state of drunken stupor.
The stupidity of
Singaporeans is now legendary. Go ask those PMETs that are now driving taxis
and working as temp workers, who replaced them and made them redundant and they
would not have any clue. They would not want to know why someone from the 3rd
world with dubious academic qualifications and experience is more suitable and
qualified to do his job. He simply accepts the fact and his fate, that he is no
good even if he is the product of a world best education system. He is just not
taught to think, to be smart, to be smarter than fakes and cheats, so getting
cheated is only something deserving in his case.
Not to worry, daft
would not make a scene and will disappear into the wilderness, quietly. Oh, he
is trainable and very willing to be trained, to become a low skilled worker
despite his experience and qualifications as PMETs. This must be a special
asset of these daft Sinkies. In Singapore you can literary trained old dogs
with new tricks. Just tell them to go for training, for what they don’t care,
to be better or worse, they don’t mind. Tell them training is good, like put
all the eggs in one basket is good, and they will nod their heads in agreement.
And they can’t even
fall back on their life long savings in the CPF when they lost their job or
when they retired. The money is kept by the govt for them, for their future
well being. And they accept this fate as well.
4/13/2016
I like Yaacob Ibrahim
Long long
time ago, there was a city in SE Asia brimming with banks and financing
institutions. Local brand names like Chung Khiaw Bank, Tat Lee Bank, Keppel
Bank, OUB, Far Eastern Bank, Malayan Banking, Industrial and Commercial Banks,
International Bank of Singapore, POSB, OCBC, UOB and DBS were common features
of the banking landscape. Now only UOB, OCBC and DBS are left standing. The
rest of the smaller banks were merged or absorbed by the three big banks. Many foreign banks also started business here
in a crowded financial industry.
In the past
there were many big local names, heading the local banks, Ng Kee Choe,
Elizabeth Sam, Theresa Foo, Wee Cho Yaw, the late Lien Ying Chow, late Lee Seng
Wee, Lee Hee Seng, Peter Seah, etc etc. Today there is only one Singaporean left
helming a local bank, and he is lucky that he is not replaced by foreigners.
What happened to all our banking talents? No more, cannot find, all got no
skill sets?
Who is
responsible for this mess? This thing did not happen overnight. Someone is
sleeping or deliberately let it happened. This is not only a national shame, it
is undermining our talent pool in banking and finance. No one responsible for
it? Cannot name anyone or else no one would want the multi million dollar job?
Now you know
why I said I like Yaacob? He is rolling out a programme to train 1,200 IT
professionals from 160 that they are producing. (Correct me if I get the
numbers wrong). Yaacob wants to build a Singaporean core in IT. Never mind, don’t
ask him why we were not training IT professionals and why he is cramping this
training programme. It is not his fault.
No one knows whose fault, cannot mention one.
Good job
Yaacob. Please train more Singaporeans quickly before the whole industry landed
in foreigners’ hand and all our infocomm security put at risk, in the hands of
foreigners. Quick, quick, not much time left. And no need to go to Parliament
to kpkb why got no IT talents in Singapore, no banking and finance talents, not
enough doctors, no Singaporean talents to be politicians, and not enough of
local academics.
Just do it.
Get the butts off the chair and start working.
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