Tuesday, June 20, 2006
This Confounds Me

Singapore News »

Time is GMT + 8 hours
Posted: 20 June 2006 1938 hrs

PAP has the people's support because of leadership renewal: PM Lee
By Channel NewsAsia's May Wong in Auckland, New Zealand





AUCKLAND, New Zealand : Voters get bored with old faces and want fresh ideas, so it is critical that the People's Action Party (PAP) bring in new talents in order to continue to move forward.

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong says its ability to do that has been one reason why the PAP has been able to keep the people's support, adding the party can never have enough people to be in succession for political office.

Mr Lee was speaking to reporters as he wrapped up his official visits to Australia and New Zealand.

Mr Lee said he sought the views of the New Zealand's Prime Minister Helen Clark on leadership renewal.

And she related that she too faced difficulties.

"If you don't have new faces and it's the same face, the same team, after one or two elections, people will get tired of you. They'll want a change to a new team. So if we want to continue to move forward, then our team has to change, even though the logo is the same. That is critical," said PM Lee.

Mr Lee says the government is working with the post-65ers on the team to reach out to the new generation of voters.

He understands that the government will lose touch with the party if it stays unchanged. So Mr Lee says scouting for new talents is extremely important.

And Mr Lee learned more about Australia and New Zealand's political systems during his visits there.

He cited how the governing party sets itself apart from the opposition by disagreeing in almost everything.

With that example, Mr Lee explains why it is only natural the PAP differentiates itself from the opposition parties, such as giving HDB priority to PAP wards.

"It's necessary because without that, the system cannot work. This is because if everything is the same, then the opposition will say that it doesn't matter, they (PAP) will have to take care of you anyway. So vote for us and you're going to have a PAP government," said PM Lee.

"If you look at how other country's electoral systems work, parliamentary democracies and different circumstances, I think you'll have a better appreciation of where we're different and what our advantages are and how we can keep it," he added.

Before heading back to Singapore on Wednesday, Mr Lee also met members of the business community and Singaporeans operating companies in New Zealand.

- CNA /ls

This article did not so much enlighten as it did reinforce many of my misgivings about the culture of governance in Singapore.  Take this excerpt:

"...Mr Lee explains why it is only natural the PAP differentiates itself from the opposition parties, such as giving HDB priority to PAP wards.

"It's necessary because without that, the system cannot work. This is because if everything is the same, then the opposition will say that it doesn't matter, they (PAP) will have to take care of you anyway. So vote for us and you're going to have a PAP government," said PM Lee."

I took the liberty of deciphering this rather cryptic remark, and if anyone feels I err in my interpretation, do feel free to disagree.  But it sounds to me like PM Lee is saying that the PAP must be different from the opposition, hence gives HDB priority to PAP wards.  Otherwise, there would be no difference between voting for the Opposition and voting for the PAP.  That is why voters in Aljunied would be able to vote for the Opposition and still have the PAP in power.

Wi
th all due respect, there are some comments I feel need to be made about this mentality.

1.  There are many ways the PAP can distinguish itself from the Opposition without the use of preferential upgrading.  Off the top of my head I refer to: sound economic policies, care for the residents, knowledge of their needs, amount of time spent in the grassroots, gentlemanly conduct, detailed plans for the future -- gee, sounds like what's needed to get a party voted in for any democracy.  Using upgrading as a carrot, or perhaps a stick, depending on which way you look at it, does indeed distinguish the PAP from the Opposition -- but on what grounds? Does it make them different because they are necessarily a better team fielded, or because they have access to manymanymanymany money in budget surpluses? Should the results of general elections be dependent on who has a better plan for the residents, or who has access to more cash?

2.  There is nothing wrong with the people voting in the Opposition because they feel secure that the PAP will remain the ruling party.  If the people decide they want a strong, intelligent party in power and yet have opposition members in parliament to act as a check for the ruling party's decisions, and to provide transparency to the processes of Parliament, what, pray tell, is wrong with that? Even if we suspend our disbelief and for one moment suspect that if the PAP does not use upgrading as a threat, Singaporeans will vote an Opposition party into power and that party will somehow bungle things up and ruin everything we have slogged to build in the last 40 years, then hey -- we will learn, and the results of the next election will be different.  I don't believe for an instant that Singaporeans are too dumb to choose the government that best brings improvements to their welfare.  I also don't believe that the PAP will run away, tail between their legs, if they happen to lose an election.  I have far more faith in them as a party.  They'll be back the next election stronger than ever.  But all that is if we even suppose the remotest chance of the PAP being defeated in the polls with the present line-up of Opposition candidates.

3.  Such policies
do not help democracy, they distort itA democratic election should be won on the basis of what will be done with budget surpluses, not who has access to them.  We should go to the polling box thinking: tomorrow, if these surpluses were in the hands of Low Thia Khiang, would he accomplish more for Singapore with them than if they were in the hands of Eric Low? We shouldn't be thinking: oh no, Low Thia Khiang will not have any surpluses to deal with, therefore even if he has better ideas he will never be able to implement them.  The plans that these men have for the future should be the determinant in deciding who should be elected into power. 

The Singaporean sys
tem has many such distortions.  For instance, government-affiliated individuals are at the helm of our press.  This compromises the daring and willingness of journalists to report against the PAP during elections in particular.  Our knowledge of the outside world today is severely limited to what we hear and read in the media.  Little wonder then, that Denise Phua can be so shocked by the amount of anti-PAP content on the Internet.  It is the only medium so far where government involvement has been minimal, leading to the  emergence of outlets for groundswell opinion.   To her, or to anyone little exposed to the Internet, it would seem that the PAP has an infallible mandate, and that all is well and dandy in our sunny city-state.   That is a distorted impression, because of the government-weighted material and the monopoly that SPH holds over our media industry.   That's why in other liberal democracies, the arguments stand for an independent press and the separation of powers.  It's not some alien Western concept that we should reject as being un-Asian and non-Singaporean, it is a thoroughly sensible check and balance mechanism meant to guard and enrich democracy from such distortions.



So there.  I'm sorry if I'm being repetitive, but I just felt there are some statements which should not go unchallenged and simply taken at face value as the God-given truth.  Yes, it is true that Singapore is a unique democracy, and in some ways are the better off for it.  I consider it a blessing that we have a strong, smart party in power.  But the question is if they will continue to form our government because of how strong and smart they are, or because they have managed to surround themselves with distortions of the system that are friendly to themselves, such as a government-influenced press, and access to manymanymanymany money to be used for the upgrading of HDB flats.  I'm really disappointed that they're going to persist in that policy.  Singapore's money or PAP money? To treat it as money to be used to further the PAP's political interests is only going to alienate voters from the party.  I like to think we don't only want 'fresh young faces' -- we want fairness as well.

Depressing.


Posted at 09:07 pm by gaylegoh
Spoken (30)  




Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Singapore: World-Class?

The matches are kicking off, and Singaporeans have their eyes -- and wallets! -- peeled on the various flags that comprise the competitors of Germany 2006.  Like most people, I'm excited at the onset of World Cup fever.  But as I watch the oceans of spectators painted in their national colours, waving their countries' flags and roaring out their national anthem, a little voice in the back of my head makes its ugly appearance once in a while, asking that guiltily uncomfortable question: So...where's Singapore?

In 1999, the Goal 2010 project was launched with great aplomb.  It stated in no uncertain terms that its aim was to secure World Cup qualification by the year 2010.  A mere four years after, the project was scrapped -- it was renamed 'Football Excellence', a far less catchy and ambitious moniker.  Since then, the issue of World Cup qualification has been rather waffled over, with the stance morphing into its present, "Qualifying in 2010 would be nice, but there's still 2014 and 2018!" To this end, we have resorted to our all-time favourite tactic: recruit foreign talent.  Creatively entitled the Singapore Foreign Talent Scheme, it has thus far gained us Daniel Bennett (England), Mirko Grobovac (Croatia), Egmar Goncalves (Brazil), Itimi Dickson and Agu Casmir (Nigeria).  The extent of its success is disputable, considering our latest exit from the Asian Zone qualifying rounds of the World Cup where we lost 5 out of 6 rounds.  Not a heartening result, and one that distances us further from our dream of Goal 2010...oh sorry, I mean, Football Excellence.

Elsewhere in our sporting scene, however, we have perhaps had more success.  The Committee on Sporting Singapore in 2001 set themselves the target of being one of Asia's top 10 sporting nations by the magic year, you guessed it, 2010.  There, our efforts to lure in foreign talent seem to be paying off a little better.  Li Jiawei (China), Ronald Susilo (Indonesia) and Jing Junhong (China) are memorable examples.  But it seems each time these talents score big for Singapore, their achievements are overcast by debate on their suitability to represent Singapore because of their previous nationalities.  Understandably, questions will always arise such as: where do their loyalties lie? To themselves? Is that why they changed nationalities -- so they can play internationally where previously in their homelands they would not have qualified? For the lucrative contracts? Is that why Agu Casmir ran off so quickly after he was dropped from the national squad, not exactly nursing a broken heart? After all, he hastened to sign up with Indonesian club Persija Jakarta.  But take heart, he bears Indonesia no loyalty either; he went AWOL to go for trials in Russia, England and Canada instead.  This is the man to whom we gave $50 000 as an 'incentive' after we won the Tiger Cup win in January 2005.  By the way, he spent every cent.  Are these the actions of someone loyal to Singapore and appreciative of the privilege of representing our nation?

I guess those are the questions which cause me to be helplessly sceptical when I read about foreigners' achievements for our nation.  There's a lot of taint and doubt to overcome in those circumstances.  But I've never been a bigot nor xenophobic.  I realise that our very country is built on the backs of immigrants, 'foreigners' streaming into Singapore to seek better opportunities for themselves, not for the sake of some nationalist abstraction.   Those immigrants are in fact our ancestors.  And today, Singapore continues to be a bastion of free opportunity.   I just find myself struggling to appreciate that emotionally as well as intellectually.   Perhaps it is a success for nation building that I feel affronted when we buy talents who have no affinity to our country aside from the flag they have emblazoned on their sports jackets.   I continue to tell myself that each and every foreigner, besides being under the label of 'foreign talent', is also a person unto him/herself, with different motivations for their desire to represent our country.  Some of them are in it for the money, others are here at least partly because they have lived here for a longtime and developed a real appreciation -- perhaps even a love? -- for Singapore. 

I think that's what's really important.  Not where you were born, not the colour of your skin, not the number of digits to your salary, but whether or not you really are a proud representative of the Republic of Singapore.  Foreign-born and local talents alike can aspire to this.  I know I do.  Come July, five teenagers will be debating in Wales as Team Singapore.  I don't imagine this will gain much attention.  Debates are far less invigorating to watch than soccer matches.  No debate ever got thousands of feet stomping, the drums banging, the voices soaring.  But -- wow.  We will be Singaporean.  And we will do our level best not to disgrace that.  The prospect of sitting at a table with the Singaporean flag draped over it is as thrilling as it is humbling.  When the World Cup Finals are being screened in Cardiff on the evening of 9th July, that little voice that asks 'where's Singapore?' will be answered by a louder voice saying 'Singapore is right here: now do her justice'.

It is time for our 110% to be given.  Singapore has a decent track record in the Worlds Schools Debating Championships, having reached the semi-finals in South Africa 2001 and the finals in Peru 2003.  Jonathan Pflug was ranked Best Speaker of the tournament -- effectively making him World No. 1 -- in 2001, and in 2002 Rohini Singh was ranked 2nd.  To my knowledge the Singapore team has never ranked below number 10 since we first took part in 1995.  We have beaten nations with millions more native speakers and talents to their name, so we're not half bad.  WSDC is admittedly a small tournament comprising of 37 English-speaking nations.  It's not earth shattering.  But we really will do our best to live up to our predecessors.

We will be leaving at the end of June for two and a half weeks.  For that duration, and for the two weeks or so until we depart, I won't be posting so much.  Happy World Cup viewing, and in your free moments, perhaps just one or two of them, spare a thought, a good wish or a prayer for a Singaporean team somewhere out there in that big wide world, competing under our national flag.   And regardless of whether we win or do badly, I promise you the spirit of love for Singapore under which the tournament will be undertaken is world-class.

As for 2010, who knows what it will bring? Perhaps we'll qualify for the World Cup.  Perhaps we'll be one of Asia's top 10 sporting nations.  Perhaps not.   Singaporeans always want results, results, results.  How many bronzes, silvers, golds? Got A*, or just A? Why just A? Stupid is it?!

Relax lah.  We don't need medal tallies to make ourselves feel good.  They would be nice, yes, but the objective of having Singapore represented in international competition has ever been to empower us with a sense of identity and passion to want to see our country do well.  As long as we hold on to that, as long as we don't let our quest for medals supercede our quest for identity, as long as we don't sell our souls in our bid to let anyone and everyone play for Singapore if they can wield a racquet or kick a ball, I frankly don't care what's happening in 2010.  It's enough to be assured that in four years, we'll still be Singaporean -- and proud to be.  Though I've rambled a lot in this article, for which I apologize, that's the most important message I have for today.

Singapore boleh.

Posted at 02:03 pm by gaylegoh
Spoken (38)  




Monday, June 12, 2006
News Brief

I've been insanely busy these last few days, particularly with the pace and intensity of training picking up.  I apologize for the irregularity of posts -- unfortunately things can only get worse from here.  Here are just a few thoughts on a couple of issues before bedtime then.

Potong Pasir and Hougang to receive lift upgrading by 2015

Today's Sunday Times article citing Mah Bow Tan's statement on upgrading marked a definite improvement from Goh Chok Tong's lament that the two opposition wards will become 'slums' in the 1997 General Election.  On behalf of the government, Mah issued the promise that all constituencies will have lifts that stop at every floor by 2015.  It will be interesting to see if this is a 'pledge' the government will keep.  It irks me though, that the campaigning tactic of preferential upgrading, i.e. PAP wards first, will continue to be practiced.  If the IPS analysis of GE 2006 has shown us that people value fairness of governance and checks and balances far above the issue of upgrading, then why is the PAP still hanging onto such an anachronistic approach? Not only is it alienating and ethically suspect, it also seems counter-productive to the criteria that Singaporeans cite as paramount in their election of a government. 

On the other hand, this also means that in GE 2011, Hougang and Potong Pasir residents will have this promise to remember: regardless of which way they vote in 2011, their lifts will be upgraded by 2015.  So even though I note with regret the fact that such tactics will persist, I also view the press statement with some optimism -- if Singapore remembers this promise in the next GE, it means that if lift upgrading is used as any kind of threat, it will be a phantom menace.  :)

MOE to consider bringing in native speakers as English teachers

Generally when the government announces when it is 'considering' doing something, it's usually an oncoming inevitability (remember 'considering' the casino issue?).  Bringing in native speakers is a step which may be a thorny issue, seeing as foreigners will be 'usurping' locals in the sensitive role of teaching our young.  But I think on the whole, it will help us far more than it will harm us, particularly if we manage to retain our standards in grammar and spelling, i.e. written English, while simultaneously improving on what's most important -- our standards of spoken English.  We perform better than most American students for the former, I believe, but we lose out dreadfully when it comes to the spoken word.  Hopefully native speakers will help our children become more confident communicators with strength and clarity to the articulation of their opinions.  Furthermore, we would do well to incorporate not just personnel, but also their expertise and opinions with regards to the teaching of the English language, and to use that input to revise the curriculum to allow for more discussive and participatory lessons which start from an early age.  The formative years are essential to building high standards of communication.

On a more personally indulgent note: I suppose I'm one of those Singaporeans who want to have their cake and eat it too, but I'll be severely nostalgic if one day, my presently-unborn, then-to-be six year old kid runs in the door and goes, "Mommy, mommy, check it out, I had this totally awesome day!" I'm a sentimental sucker for Singlish and I have no qualms in using it in my everyday communication.  I hope it shan't ensue that we'll have to sacrifice it like we did dialects in order to achieve 'world-class' English usage.  Perhaps a hybrid accent may be birthed, or a schizoid situation where a Singaporean can switch from Singlish to proper English at will, which is what I presently do.  It all depends on the breadth and depth to which the government decides to reform how we learn and use the language.  But regardless of what happens, Singlish for me will always mean the apologetic "sorry hor, uncle" as I fumble in the dark backseat of a cab for loose change; the bright relief of being myself when I encounter a fellow Singaporean in a foreign land; the intimate smile that can only be exchanged between speakers of the same language; the common idiosyncracies of the tongue -- the winsome dialogue between countrymen.



And on that note, goodnight!

Posted at 01:08 am by gaylegoh
Spoken (42)  




Wednesday, June 07, 2006
Upgrading: Hougang and Potong Pasir

An online petition was recently brought to my attention.  It calls for upgrading to be afforded to Hougang and Potong Pasir with some impassioned pleas I truly felt moved to read.  To show your support, click here or visit:


In this light, I am re-posting an article I wrote on April 13th regarding upgrading.  I also strongly urge everyone to press for upgrading to be given to the residents of these two constituencies.  GE 2006 saw them standing up for something they deemed more important than lifts, playgrounds and shiny paint.  They have shown us the meaning and possibility of democracy superceding economic bully tactics.  They have given us a glimpse of sheer joy in our politics in celebrating the return of Chiam See Tong and Low Thia Khiang to their constituencies.  They have stayed with those who have a heart for serving them well, not quit for better opportunities elsewhere, and in so doing perhaps have shown us more of the Singaporean spirit than can be found in our NDP parades and Social Studies textbooks.

Now what are we going to do for them in return?

The PAP has promised to re-look its tactics and consider a 'softer' approach.  This is an excellent time for them to back up their words with action.

Debunking Myths - 13/04/06

First of all, kudos to MediaCorp for airing the TV forum between journalists and MM Lee Kwan Yew last night, a forum that was memorable in particular because one fellow actually said "We just think the PAP is playing by unfair rules and is power crazy, what do you have to say to that?".  I found that vastly amusing and it was a nice cap to my day.  Unfortunately I proceeded to become irritated when the issue of Hougang and Potong Pasir arose and we heard the same, tired old argument in response from MM Lee about how a party has the right to favour its supporters.

What truly irks me many a time is how the PAP obfuscates and convolutes matters with their dogmatic legalism and seemingly rational rhetorical sophistry.  This hides the heart of the matter and twists it into something else -- into self-serving, small-minded, petty manipulation of words to make it seem like they really are perfectly justified in everything they do.  Let's look at what they've been saying about why they can effectively deny Potong Pasir and Hougang upgrading.

A party has the right to favour its supporters, just like a business would.

The reason why a business would favour its supporters is because of self-interest.  The business, or indeed most other institutions, believes that it can achieve its own goals most effectively if it rewards those who are in favour of their organisation.  The government is crucially and fundamentally different.  Out of all institutions, it should be the one least characterized by self-interest.  This is because the first and foremost duty of the government is to serve the people.  A political party who is willing to sacrifice the interests of the citizens of the country in order to maintain its own political grip over the nation has shattered and perverted its priorities.  Such a political party is not one who gains its mandate through a willingness and dedication to all Singaporeans.  It is a political party who gains its mandate through favouritism and discrimination, alternating according to whichever best serves its own purposes and future.

Potong Pasir and Hougang residents deserve to be treated differently because they have made their choice to sacrifice a better living for the sake of having Opposition rule -- because of this choice, they are different from the rest of Singapore.

When a government takes into consideration the welfare of a nation it must take into consideration the welfare of all its peoples, regardless of their beliefs, as long as these beliefs do not jeopardize other people.  The government's duty of care extends to everyone and does not have the right to discriminate against their moral and political choices.  For a parallel example, let's just take their stand to its logical conclusion.  If governments all around the world were to say tomorrow: "We will not upgrade the houses of Muslim-Malays", we would instinctively reject that as a repulsive and unjust policy, because all Muslim-Malays are entitled to their beliefs, their moral creeds and choices, and they are all part of our "One nation, one people, one Singapore".  So the government must serve them too, if they have any respect whatsoever for their dignity and autonomy as human beings.  Similarly here; Potong Pasir and Hougang residents have made a conscious and informed choice which has to do with their belief system.  Their reasons may be varied -- perhaps they want more political vibrancy.  Perhaps they feel more comfortable with a friendly face in power.  Perhaps they genuinely think the Opposition candidates are more sincere and qualified.  Regardless of their reasons, they are exercising their civic rights and liberties as citizens of a democracy to prioritize these reasons over other considerations.  The government cannot discriminate against them because of this.  Regardless of their choices, they are our citizens! And the government needs to take care of all our citizens.  They need to protect all of us from terrorism, be concerned about how much can all of us afford healthcare, be willing to provide jobs for all of us.  That's because we are one country.  Such a discriminatory policy is only going to divide us along territorial lines, and insinuate that some people are more deserving citizens/all animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others.

We know something is gravely wrong with democracy when people are penalized for having any power whatsoever in it.  The whole point of having choices is that your choice matters, and can bring about your best welfare.  Democracy becomes poisoned when people are punished for participating, punished for daring to think of themselves as members of a functioning democracy.

We need some new answers from the PAP, but first we need some new questions from ourselves, to ourselves, about what it means to be a citizen, and what it means to be a human being.  Do you instinctively, in your mind and heart, without the trappings of their party rhetoric and official stands and legal codes, feel that what they are doing is ethical? Respectful to the human being? Fair, just, with the interests of the people foremost? We need moral outrage.  We need to care because no one else will.  The international media will write cursory reports on it and tsk-tsk behind our backs, but they are powerless to institute fundamental change.  Look at how The Economist gets sued for damages each time they so much as mention a whiff of nepotism.  If Singaporeans in Bukit Timah, or Marine Parade, don't care about what happens to Singaporeans in Potong Pasir or Hougang, then I have serious doubts on how much they truly deserve and appreciate their citizenship.  Yes, we may point fingers at the PAP, but I think we first need to care.  Are we too jaded to bother? Is it just an insider, intellectual ha-ha poor-people joke? If so, then that's a sad possibility to contemplate.

I wrote this article in the run-up to the elections.  If you'd read the last paragraph, I suspect you might detect my frustration with how the people around me were responding, or rather, seemed not to be responding to the issue of upgrading.  It seemed that mainstream media skirted carefully around the issue, and if letters were sent to the forums I didn't see any of them published.  Were we all afraid to stand up and say: hey, wait, this is just wrong? Please take this chance now to lobby for what should be a basic entitlement of the members of those two constituencies.  This is the least we can do to send a loud, clear signal to the PAP: Singaporeans think, feel and act a little more deeply than just for money. 

GE 2011 will simply have to be run another way.


Posted at 11:55 am by gaylegoh
Spoken (150)  




Tuesday, June 06, 2006
And Just Before I Leave For School...

...I notice this morning's copy of the newspaper.  Chee Soon Juan and his fellow party members served with summons for speaking in public without a licence, and Chee Siok Chin's application faces dismissal because she did not pay her $5000 deposit ahead of the deadline.  Now too late to pay.  Tragic.  I go to the hawker centre and talk to the auntie selling hor fun and the next door chicken rice uncle, considered speaking in public without a licence or not? As for Chee Siok Chin, I predicted her appeal would never survive in court.  Guess it won't even get to see the light of day in court after all.  But why not simply withdraw and re-submit it, this time paying ahead of the deadline? Are there more legal loopholes I'm missing?

Nothing like a little Opposition suffering to brighten my morning.

Posted at 12:34 pm by gaylegoh
Spoken (27)  




Monday, June 05, 2006
To All Interested


Bethesda Pasir Ris Mission Church
Pasir Ris Drive 2; opposite Loyang Point
Come if you're interested to know more, or for a time of worship :)

Posted at 10:13 am by gaylegoh
Spoken (29)  




Sunday, June 04, 2006
Las Vegas Sands on Singaporean Shores

The plans are underway, the contract has been tendered out, the little models of mini-resorts have been smugly placed on public display.  I can only look on with wonder and trepidation as we await the unveiling of the integrated resorts -- and, that which concerns me, the accompanying casinos.

The biggest proponents of the coming casinos have mainly lauded the economic benefits which would otherwise be diverted to our neighbours.  I shan't deny the fact that the casinos will bring us economic gain in terms of tax revenue, employment, etc., but what severely concerns me are the social costs involved which no one seems interested in any longer.  For instance, I read with no small measure of indignation an article from the Straits Times released yesterday, 1/06/06, some excerpts of which I am posting here (you will need to be a member to read the full article online):

"IF ANYONE is looking for evidence that the right decision was made on the Marina Bay casino resort, they need look no further than remarks by Las Vegas Sands COO Bill Weidner. In a Bloomberg wire service story yesterday, Mr Weidner was reported saying that casino revenues from its winning proposed property may exceed US$1 billion (S$1.6 billion) a year.

...Indeed, Singapore has invested so much thought, planning, and public consultation into its decision to allow casinos here that it has managed to guide bidders for the Marina Bay project - and eventually those for the Sentosa site - to not only target gaming punters but an entire range of leisure seekers.

...Finally, the decision to pick the Sands, which has no local partner, shows that Singapore has a clear understanding of its real economic interest. It's a focus on the big picture, not a matter of narrow concerns. Together with the prudent level of transparency that has accompanied the process, this is further evidence of Singapore's free and open economy. The best idea wins. Period."

This flamboyantly one-sided article leaves key concerns so obviously out of the picture that it boggles my mind to think how it could have been written in good conscience.  We need to look no further to affirm our decision than at the Chief Operation Officer of a foreign company concerned only with how much profit they can milk out of this $3.2 billion venture? We have invested "so much thought, planning, and public consultation" that we decided to target tourists, not just gamblers? Strange, I thought the "public consultation" showed us that Singaporeans were narrowly divided on the issue of even having the resort in the first place, rather than being concerned about who we should mass-market the resorts to.  And one cannot help but wonder what the writer means by "the prudent level of transparency" he claims accompanied the process.  The writer makes the qualifier of it having been 'prudent', which really sounds like a euphemism for the fact that the process has not been totally transparent.  From what I recall, we had the announcement that the government was thinking of building a casino, we had a period of debate -- lots of forum letters, a TV programme or two, opinion polls which showed us, according to Today, split Singaporeans 52% in favour and 48% against -- and then they announced, to no one's real surprise, that the plan would go ahead.  And we heard little since then.  It was as though once they said they'd do it, everybody just spontaneously shut their mouths and got on with life.  I think the issue deserves more attention than that.  Even as we prepare for what has become inevitable, we should continue the consultation and transparency in the interests of debating how to deal with the social costs which are going to crop up.

Loansharking, prostitution, money laundering, bankruptcy -- the issue has much more depth than a $1.6 billion annual paycheck, assuming we accept the estimate to be valid (though we must take it with a pinch of salt considering its source: someone who has a vested interest in making the casino sound lucrative).  We also need to consider where that money is going to come from.  Each dollar that is accrued to our GDP is a dollar that came out of someone's pocket; a dollar that paid for nothing but a quick thrill, empty air and the taste of defeat.  Let's also not kid ourselves in saying that only foreigners will frequent the casinos.  Many Singaporeans gamble hard and heavy.  According to the statistics thoughtfully provided by the MCYS, 40% of the population gambles once a week, and 2.1% -- one in fifty -- are at risk of becoming 'pathological gamblers', or gamblers who are obsessively, compulsively addicted to gambling and whose addiction often results in 'destructive behavior, like substance abuse, divorce, family violence, even suicide...illegal acts, like criminal breach of trust, theft or petty crime'.  The recovery rate for gamblers, once addicted, is a dismal 8%.  Already, when the impact of gambling has been so harsh on our population, we are going to introduce a new avenue for it -- casino gambling.  Let's look at the two main measures which have discussed thus far in controlling the harm done to Singaporeans.

1) Means Testing

"We don't want the man going there after work or the housewife going there when she's free in the afternoon. So there must be controls on who can gain access to the casino.  And if you are not of a certain economic class, you should not even think of going there. You should confine yourself to 4D, Toto or horse racing."
-- Then-Trade and Industry Minister George Yeo

I found that quote when I was searching for information on such policies.  It was amusing, because I stumbled across this letter which said that the comments made by Wong Kan Seng and George Yeo regarding means-testing for the casinos were edging us towards a 'wealth-conscious and class-based' society.  The only government reply we saw to that was here, in which the Perm. Sec of Home Affairs hastened to assure us that Wong Kan Seng had not used those words -- yes, yes, but George Yeo did, and that's the point. 

So already we have our first problem; it will be class-divisive.  But all rich-poor sensitivities aside, the danger with letting the rich through and not the poor is that one is implicitly making either one of two assumptions: (i) the rich make wiser choices, and (ii) the rich have more money to lose, hence this will be less of a problem.  Both assumptions are faulty ones. 

The rich get addicted too, as the prosecution of several high-level executives for siphoning company funds to pay gambling debts has shown, memorably in the case of Chia Teck Leng of Asia Pacific Breweries who in 1999 accumulated gambling debts of more than $1 million and resorted to fraud to obtain credit facilities.  The very same example shows that it is not true that those with more money stand to lose less -- it can be argued that they stand to lose more, at least quantitavely, and that gambling addiction can ruin their lives just as completely.  In fact, according to Thomas A. Garrett, Senior Econmist in the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, the median annual income level of casino gamblers in the USA is USD 50 000, which is USD 9000 above the national average of USD 41 000.  More attention needs to be paid to containing the harm done to those from the higher income levels as well.

Perhaps the casinos may want to implement checks on 'problem gamblers' by being granted access to client information as well (privacy what privacy, can eat or not?).  The process followed might largely imitate standard operating procedure for banks doing credit checks when deciding whether or not to approve loans.  These records should be closely scrutinized and the alert raised at the first sign of any discrepancy, whereupon the gambler should be disallowed from playing further.  Of course, he will no doubt then resort to Singapore Pools, loansharks or crime to fuel his addiction but...well, casino is casino what :) who's to stop us now? Though I'm against the idea, gahmen has made its decision.

2) Entry Fee

I am rather suspicious of this one.  Again, let's put aside the arguments that such a measure is discriminatory against Singaporeans, low-income ones in particular, and just examine its effectiveness or lack thereof.  $100 per visit, or $2000 a year, is supposed to deter Singaporeans from gambling.  I will grant that it will make people think twice about it.  But my concern arises when that initial 'investment' has been made, and doubtless many will make it.  It costs about the same or more for a roundtrip to Genting, or to go on a cruise with a casino, or to fly to Macau, etc., and that hasn't stopped people from flocking to those avenues.  So what happens after that investment has been made? It then takes on the semblance of a backfoot, a loss to recoup, before the betting has even started.  That means higher initial bets and a greater reluctance to quit when on a losing streak because of the niggling voice in the back of your head that says, you already lost $100, you must now win at least $100 before leaving! And we all know how the odds are stacked against that.  The alternative of a $2000 membership fee means that those who pay it will probably frequent it even more so as to get the most bang for their buck, so to speak, and also means that stakes will be higher as they're in it for the long haul, and have already committed a large sum of money on the assumption that they will be coming back more often.

These are just two of the potential problems I've noticed that I've highlighted here.   We have yet to hear more on how we can counter the other problems such as crimes and vices which are ancillary to casinos.  The important thing, I think, is to ensure that we don't lose focus of these problems in our planning and preparation for the building of the casino.  It shouldn't be a case of sitting back and saying the government will take care of it, just because the newspapers tell us there's nothing to worry about.  Casinos will somewhat change the face of Singapore, and we had better ready our mirrors so as to be reflexive about and reactive to the oncoming changes.

Posted at 08:34 pm by gaylegoh
Spoken (64)  




Wednesday, May 31, 2006
A 'lighter touch' for new media, says Lee Boon Yang

"We accept the new media; that it's going to be a free-for-all. You can expect a more lively vibrant new media environment particularly during election period. Going forward, we will have to make efforts to engage these people, efforts to accomodate alternative platforms to air their views and we will look at how this can be catered to from now till next GE. It's too early now to say specifically what we will do. We need to study the plans, what's do-able in light of technological changes.

Some level of responsibility will enhance the quality of debate. At the end of the day, what do we want? We want informed debate, we want people to be more aware. That's very much part of a participatory democracy. If you're not informed, you can't take part, if misinformed or worse ill-informed, you are not making a valid contribution in the context of cyberspace and with the rapid development of the new media, having a sense of responsibility and interest to participate from a well informed, objective perspective is a good development."

-- Minister for Information, Communications and the Arts Lee Boon Yang: 31/05/06

It seems that MICA's evaluation of the impact on blogging on GE 2006 has led them to the right conclusions.  The sweeping developments which have revolutionized the balance of power in our political landscape cannot be stemmed.  Online discourse cannot be effectively clamped down upon due to technological avenues such as overseas and anonymous proxies.  To implement anything less than an absolute information blackout would be to incur the wrath of local Singaporeans, many of whom have gained political awareness through the Internet in GE 2006, as well as the disapproval of the international community which already views our ruling party as an anachronistic government in the arena of democracy.  More than anything, this shows that the PAP is finally coming to terms with the fact that Singaporeans cannot be bullied, browbeaten, bribed and threatened into voting with their feet and voting with their fear.  This is a victory that tips the scales of power a little more into the hands of us -- the citizens of Singapore.

I haven't openly agreed with the PAP in quite some time, but in this I must congratulate them on having taken the first steps in embracing the fact that our nation is changing and maturing.  Tactically, I'd say this is the right way to move in order to win back those they've alienated with their hardline tactics.  To continue to edge out opposition parties with their upper hand in a manner that's patently unfair and painfully obvious will only give opposition members the benefit of a martyr complex that will win sympathy to their camp. 

But time will tell if the PAP is only taking this step because it cannot effectively rule out the freedom of expression on the Internet without great social, economic and political cost, or if it genuinely recognizes the value in a maturing society that's starting to open its doors and step out onto the streets, to reach out to one another, and to congregate to discuss how to build their future instead of waiting for their country to be built for them.  One way of judging the genuine level of their commitment is to see if it takes other steps to allow for a more open society in other areas.  To stop threatening its own taxpaying citizens with the prospect of the elderly and the disabled having to overcome many flights of stairs to get to their own homes if they don't vote for the PAP would be an excellent start.  Another way to judge if they are truly becoming more open and inclusive would be to see how it treats those who dare to speak up in ways not confined to the computer screen - will amplification devices be allowed at Speaker's Corner? Will more permits be granted to those who wish to speak up and gather in protest? Will we stop 'embarrassing' the US ambassador by asking him if he wants to press charges when a straggling "crowd" of people gathered outside the US Embassy to demonstrate against the war on Iraq? Lastly, one must bear in mind that they have not reached a decisive conclusion on their treatment of the blogosphere and the online community.  There are still overtones in their words which potentially suggest that some measures will be taken to rein in bloggers if they go too far.  It is entirely possible that they will allow moderate posters to continue, figureheads for the "alternative voice", yet prosecute and punish those who are more extreme in their views and hence considered to be propagating "rumours and lies" in their books.  If censorship will occur at all, we will need a clearer stand from them on how it will be carried out before throwing any wild celebration parties.  After all, it is not the first time we have heard talk of a so-called open, consultative society while the signals tell us otherwise.

These are things the PAP must consider if it wants to prove itself genuine in its intention to entrust more responsibility to our citizens and hence invest more accompanying, underlying and implicit trust in Singaporeans.  But the men in white are not the only ones we should be watching.  We should also turn our eyes to Singaporeans themselves.  Will they take their cue, and capitalize on this opportunity which for the first time in a long while looks optimistic for the future of political participation? The media for instance -- will journalists start to be bolder in pressing for their alternative op-eds and news angles to be published, and will this also see an easing of censorship on the part of the news editors? A kind of tacit adventure of dialogue appears to be presently unfolding.  The PAP has made their overture, and it is time to determine our response.  I for one am keeping my eyes peeled, for just as MICA answers one question, it raises a host of others, and the answers are important in determining the impact of this latest announcement and what it really means for our country.

Addendum: Just as I finished writing the above post, which was based on this CNA article, I was alerted to a different report of the announcment published by the Straits Times and available here on Mr. Wang's blog.  This article focusses more on defending the restrictions which will continue to be in place, rather than the fact that Lee expressed that no action will be taken against those who have posted contents online, according to the CNA write-up.  It's these restrictions specifically which concern me.  It suggests that podcasting for the Opposition will likely continue to be banned, and access to certain materials will still be restricted, as I speculated about earlier on.  The ST article makes me temper my congratulations with an even greater measure of conservative suspicion.  What do you guys think this means? Is this a significant advancement, or just a smokescreen for the continued restriction of online avenues for alternative opinions?


Posted at 10:35 pm by gaylegoh
Spoken (71)  




Monday, May 29, 2006
Layout

I changed the layout for this site to black text on a white background, a default theme provided by blogdrive, but it keeps vacillating between the old layout and the new one.  It's really irritating - any blogdrive members who know what's going on? I want to keep the new layout permanent; it's more readable.

Posted at 12:05 am by gaylegoh
Spoken (18)  




Sunday, May 28, 2006
Reading Through Our Constitution

The codified constitution of nations is vital in defining and enshrining the value systems of societies all over the world. It sets in stone the extent of a government's powers over its people.  It creates rules we are all bound to, codifies standards we are held accountable to - but most importantly, perhaps, it is a mirror of the nation; by examining a constitution, one is often able to discern the country's beliefs, traditions and culture of governance.  The constitution of the United States is the oldest of all modern nations' constitutions, and a classic example of this.  The 1st Amendment, for instance, is taught to children early into their elementary school education (their equivalent of our primary school).  It is a simple and powerful declaration of what Americans will fight to the death to fiercely defend:

Amendment I - Freedom of Religion, Press and Expression.  Ratified 15/12/1791.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

In Singapore, the prominence of our constitution and the extent of our awareness of it is severely diminished in contrast.  This is due partly to the fact that a constitution is never an all-powerful affair.  Here in Singapore, it can be amended with the support of two-thirds of an obviously one party dominated Parliament.  The PAP has had no qualms in exercising this capacity.  But perhaps it is the very fact that they have this power and have used it so many times that allows our constitution to be such a telltale mirror of our culture of governance.  It reflects the power of the government over the people, and reveals the Singaporean tradition.  I have found it deserving of a closer look.

To begin with, I quote Sylvia Lim:

"Amendments to the Constitution should be carefully scrutinised and in some countries such as Switzerland, the Constitution can only be amended by a referendum where the people have to vote. Compare that with the situation here. Since 1984 when I first encountered the Constitution in university, this document has grown about three-fold in thickness due to numerous amendments. One advantage arising out of this is that if one looks at the history of some of the amendments under The Government and The Legislature, one has a good idea of when our Presidential and General Elections were held!"

Lim is likely referring to incidents such as the one in 1991 when the constitution was amended for the creation of Group Representation Constituencies (GRCs) with a racial quota.  At first this was a three-man requirement, but it steadily expanded from then on.  An already beleaguered Opposition now finds itself even more hard-pressed to assemble a credible crew of talent with which to contest the wards.  Whether this is a genuine attempt to ensure minority representation in Parliament that conveniently makes life more difficult for the Opposition, or an engineered measure to further marginalize their presence, I'll leave to you to decide.  It is already telling that such a grey area has resulted from this modification of our constitution, but that's not the focus of my article today.

Instead, I'm going to talk about what I looked for and found in our constitution, that paralleled the American 1st Amendment.  I had a feeling that article would provide us with an insightful reflection of our culture, just as its American counterpart does for the USA.  Sure enough:

Article 14: Freedom of Speech, Assembly and Association.

(1) Subject to clauses (2) and (3)
(a) every citizen of Singapore has the right to freedom of speech and expression;
(b) all citizens of Singapore have the right to assemble peaceably and without arms; and
(c) all citizens of Singapore have the right to form associations.
(2) Parliament may by law impose
(a) on the rights conferred by clause (1)(a), such restrictions as it considers necessary or expedient in the interest of the security of Singapore or any part thereof, friendly relations with other countries, public order or morality and restrictions designed to protect the privileges of Parliament or to provide against contempt of court, defamation or incitement to any offence;
(b) on the right conferred by clause (1)(b), such restrictions as it considers necessary or expedient in the interest of the security of Singapore or any part thereof or public order; and
(c) on the right conferred by clause (1)(c), such restrictions as it considers necessary or expedient in the interest of the security of Singapore or any part thereof, public order or morality.
(3) Restrictions on the right to form associations conferred by clause (1)(c) may also be imposed by any law relating to labor or education.

As you can see, I've italicized the portion of the article that discusses our freedom, and it's obviously overwhelmed by the caveats which frame that portion; the fine print, so to speak, that actually restricts this freedom.  Contrast this to the short, simple statement of the 1st Amendment that can afford to be so concise because it is so inviolable.  Our constitution offers us the hope of such a freedom, then proceeds to overwhelm it with conditions, limits, reminders, requirements, all of which revolve around some vague definition of what constitutes an endangerment of 'the security of Singapore...public order or morality'.  Oh yes, and no one can freely come together to discuss and take action over their jobs or their schools.  In the interests of this all-encompassing 'public order or morality', no one can truly exercise their right to peaceful speech and assembly.  In the interests of 'public order or morality', holding up placards labelled "HDB", "EDB" and "NKF" is obviously dangerous, incendiary and morally abhorrent, hence the application for a permit to do so must be rejected, and if you go ahead anyway, you're in trouble.  This is exactly what Singapore is like.  It offers us some hope for freedom, then dashes it with all sorts of caveats.  Just think:

Imaginary Article 104857:Open and Consultative Society

(1) Subject to clauses 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9, all citizens have the duty and the right to tell their government how they feel in the interests of building a better Singapore.
(2) You can't conduct online election advertising or publish a political website unless you register with the MDA and fill up lots of forms and have your name in our record books.
(3) You can't speak with a microphone or a loudhailer at Speaker's Corner.
(4) You can't speak at Speaker's Corner without registering first and asking for approval of your speech topic.
(5) There is a police station down the road from Speaker's Corner.
(6) We sued Chee Soon Juan, outspoken political figure.
(7) We detained Gomez, political figure who runs a website dedicated to Singaporean politics.
(8) We kicked out Ryan Goh for instigating the pilots to grumble about how bad their job is and how much their life sucks.
(9) We can and do put government figures in the media.

The list could go on for far longer than that, but I'm sure you get the gist.  They tell us one thing but seem to show us so many other things that prevent us from claiming that first hope of freedom, that first glimpse of a constitutional right.

The constitution, at the end of the day, is not responsible for our political culture, or lack thereof.  It is merely a reflection of how we have grudged ourselves some little freedom, only to have the spirit of that freedom lost and mired in qualifiers that are loose enough to be interpreted in a variety of ways - a large enough variety that we shrink in space, back into our corners, for fear of being a victim of loose interpretation.  The prospect of upsetting 'public order and morality' because our bogeyman.  I suppose an apt analogy would be of a parent who tells his teenage daughter: "You can date.  But you must wear long skirts, long-sleeved and high-necked blouses, you can only date someone of your own race and your own religion, you must not kiss, you must be in a public place at all times, you must be back at six, and if you do anything that qualifies as indecent you will not be allowed to date at all." I wonder if we'll ever be ready to say:

"You're an adult now.  You can date.  End of story - have fun!"

Granted - this won't come overnight.  Many are prone to being suspicious of free speech in Singapore.  It's often vigorously painted as a Pandora's Box which, once opened, can't be closed, and will wreak havoc in our carefully stable society.  Well then, I suggest taking a first step to test the waters: abolish the permit system.  In its place, have laws to punish those who assemble and upset 'public order or morality' (and while we're at it, we should definitely redefine what that is so no one can interpret it to mean 'if you don't agree with me, hush up').  Have a reactive law, one that punishes after the crime has been committed, rather than a loosely-worded and ill-defined preventive one.  That way people breathe more easily when stepping up to voice their opinions, but are still held responsible for what they say because they may be reported for slander or hate speech.  It's certainly more progressive than the status quo.  Too dangerous - won't work? But I've seen something that makes me think it will. 

Where?

The racist bloggers.  That's one issue that always riles me when the international media brings it up.  They only ever say "bloggers jailed under colonial-age anti-sedition law", conveniently neglecting to mention that they were jailed for posting in hate and bigotry.  But who was responsible, really responsible, for bringing Nicholas Lim and Benjamin Koh to court? A citizen; a member of the public who made that 999 call.  Not the government who first spotted and reacted, but one of us.  I had also been referred to Gan Huai Shi's blog before the whole issue exploded, and I briefly read through the barrage of comments left on his entries.  Not a single one I recall shared or espoused his views.  He was called 'childish', 'immature', 'attention-seeking'.  His views were shouted down and overwhelmed by the vast flood of people who rejected his words.  Who says Singaporeans can't decide? Who says any idiot who spouts his head off and incites violence in the name of ignorant hatred can wreak havoc in our midst? The matter of the racist bloggers having been brought to public attention, outcry and subsequent punishment left me convinced that we heard their foolery but we didn't embrace it.  Without even realizing it, we had faced our bogeyman.  Someone had disturbed public order and morality, and no one rioted or died because of it.  Not because it was prevented in time, because it wasn't - but because it happened, and we responded to it; we denounced it.

So why not have reactive laws that keep us accountable, instead of preventive ones that keep us afraid?

Posted at 02:27 pm by gaylegoh
Spoken (43)  




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