Thursday, November 23, 2006

Even
After
All this time
The sun never says to the earth,
'You owe
Me.'
Look
What happens
With a love like that,
It lights the
Whole
Sky.

-from The Gift by Hafiz of Shiraz

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

3 years on...

The Prime Minister earlier warned that criticisms towards him and his Government are welcomed as long as they are not malicious and cynical in nature.

Well, it is hard not to be so when all of the previous grouses are left unattended and the grand promises made during the last general election unfulfilled.

It is hard to be so when the Prime Minister seemed more content to hide behind his pathetic veil of elegant silence rather than stride out confidently in rebuttal when his Government was repeatedly attacked by Tun Dr. Mahathir.

Indeed, silence does not always inspire confidence; silence, it is often said, is a sign of willing submission.

It is hard to have faith in a Prime Minister who felt the need to grandly proclaim that he is in control of his cabinet ministers or that a particular project was solely his own idea and no one else's.

Everybody knows that the best way to gain trust is to walk the talk rather than merely talk.

It is hard to rally behind a Prime Minister who conveniently uses the notion of consensual leadership to justify his often slow decision-making process or to use the cherished ideals of an ideal society such as the freedom of the press and expression as scapegoats to mask his own weaknesses and failings.

I suspect that the Prime Minister does not fully comprehend the meaning of the notion of freedom of expression which is supposedly to be one of the shining landmarks of his administration; if he does, he would not have to warn others not to test his patience by bringing up sensitive - at least in his view - issues.

The thing you need to know Prime Minister, is that you cannot pretend to be all for freedom of expression on one hand but expecting to continue to wield enormous control over what gets talked about or published.

It is either one or the other; pick one and stick to it!

Lastly, it is not enough to just be 'nice' when you are supposed to lead a country as complex as Malaysia, though 'nice' is often the lowest common denominator amongst those who have neither the charisma or the courage for the job.

And that is a dangerous and precarious position to be in - either you are the Prime Minister or not.

But hey, nobody said being the Prime Minister is an easy job right?

and the money keeps the rolling in (and out)

It is official then - the New Economic Policy (NEP) is here to stay indefinitely.

The Deputy Prime Minister, Najib Tun Razak said so in his opening speech at the UMNO General Assembly - that infamous yearly event where UMNO politicians get to amplify their sense of self-importance and feed their machoist tendencies, often through obscenely shameful displays of racism.

The irony in this whole issue is that most Malaysians have long suspected that the NEP vehicle will never be stopped; only UMNO politicians continue to delude the rakyat and themselves by giving the impression that when the right time comes, the NEP will be disbanded.

However, even if the question of the ultimate fate of the NEP was left open and unanswered, the door for any discussions pertaining to any aspect of the NEP is shut tight.

The act of questioning the validity of the NEP has long been a taboo for both the Malays and non-Malays - the non-Malays risk being labeled as opponents or threats to the integrity of the Malay race while the Malays risk being branded as traitors to their own race for doing so.

In the view of the UMNO politicians, only they - the so-called UMNOputras - have the wisdom, skills and determination to tinker, oversee and make statements about the NEP; it is perceived to be purely their exclusive domain.

It does not matter to them that the NEP which originally seeks to address the economic imbalance between the Malays and non-Malays and in the process becomes an instrument for national unity has now become one of the dangerous divisive factor among Malaysians each time it is discussed.

It does not matter to them that the NEP is seriously compromising the competitiveness of the country as a global economic player and threatening to reduce Malaysia's attractive to foreign investors in the long run - the damage of which is considered to be worthwhile in the name of protecting the integrity and status quo of the Malay race.

It does not matter to them that the long dependence of the Malays on the perks and quotas provided for by the NEP has left the Malays wanting for more, complacent and under-performing besides feeding their own bloated sense of supremacy, behaving like little sultans in their own private fiefdom.

It does not matter to them that 2 independent research studies have shown that with the right methodologies in place, the value of the Malay equity has long surpassed the targetted 30% set by the NEP proponents early in the 1970s. Even the figures released by the Government showed the Malay equity share value hovers somewhere between 36% before it was hastily withdrawn and replaced with a new lower figure.

If the Government cannot even get its own statistical data right, much less even consider the results provided by others, how will they know whether the NEP is giving the results they are hoping for? How will we know the direction the NEP will eventually take the nation in the future if we are in effect flying blind?

The Government's shitfy attitude in divulging the accurate value of the share of the Malay equity is akin to the act of the changing the goalpost in mid-game and reeks of something fishy that stinks to high heavens.

This act has also reinforces the long-held suspicions that the NEP is nothing more than a conduit for the well-connected to consolidate their wealth and gain easy money.

It is then no wonder that most UMNO politicians go all out of their way to religiously defend its apparent relevance - their very survival depends on it!

Personally, I do not mind if some poor rubber tapper in the middle of Kedah are benefitting from the NEP; but the obvious situation to us all now is that such people are not.

The NEP - which has been reincarnated under different guises over the years - has been vulgarized, its original aims have long been betrayed. It is now nothing more than a facade, a pretense to generate wealth rather than to redistribute it.

Its original noble intentions have been skewed to satisfy the whims of a select few whilst jeopradizing the future of the country on the whole.

The implementation of the NEP - being a bold social engineering program it is - needs to be continually and regularly monitored, its effectiveness evaluated to ensure that it will not take us to where don't intent to go in the first place.

Therefore, the lack of transparency on the Government's behalf and the blanket ban on any dialogue pertaining to the NEP are disappointing to say the least and irresponsibly reckless at most.

How long will the Government turn a blind eye to this matter of national importance, I do not know; but one thing for sure, the rakyat are blind no more to such transgressions.

Nonetheless, one thing is clear: the more UMNO and the Government in general tries to push for and justify the continuation of the NEP - which has degenerated into something totally different and passed its expiry date - the more hypocritical they will look and the stronger the backlash they will get from the rakyat - both from the Malays and non-Malays.

When that fateful time comes, when the tipping point is reached, the fallacy of this whole thing will be revealed and hopefully then, a new chapter in our country's history will begin.

Friday, November 10, 2006

let's be frank, shall we?

Where do you see Malaysia going in the future with the NEP in place?

Drop your comments here; I expect a commentary to follow soon.