Archive for the ‘teaching_material’ Category

Neighbours looking out for neighbours

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

National Museum 2010. Image © Yvonne Koh

 

When I am an old woman I shall wear purple
With a red hat which doesn’t go, and doesn’t suit me.
And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves
And satin sandals, and say we’ve no money for butter.
I shall sit down on the pavement when I’m tired
And gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells
And run my stick along the public railings
And make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain
And pick flowers in other people’s gardens
And learn to spit.

You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat
And eat three pounds of sausages at a go
Or only bread and pickle for a week
And hoard pens and pencils and beermats and things in boxes.

But now we must have clothes that keep us dry
And pay our rent and not swear in the street
And set a good example for the children.
We must have friends to dinner and read the papers.

But maybe I ought to practice a little now?
So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised
When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple.

– Jenny Joseph

HI ALL, this is some background to our project, which ties in with efforts to care for the so-called “weaker” members of our society. We are focusing on the elderly who may be poor, isolated or vulnerable, and getting them to share their stories with us. Some of the folks we deal with will be homebound elderly who have some health problems.

(Figures are taken from this speech.)

We have one of the fastest ageing populations in the world. Today, there are about 300,000 persons aged 65 years and above. In 20 years’ time, we will see a three-fold increase to about 900,00 — ie today, one in 12 Singaporeans are 65 years and above. By 2030, this will be 1 in 5.

That is why we are preparing for an ageing society and that’s why it is important and urgent to do so.

In 2000, the number of elderly aged 65 and above living alone was about 15,000. This increased to 22,000 in 2005. Living alone is the highest risk factor for social isolation. Preliminary results from an MCYS-commissioned study indicate that 26% of seniors who live alone have symptoms of depression compared to only 9% who live with their spouse or family. Further, 16% of seniors with weak social networks outside the household also show such symptoms as compared to only 8% who have strong social networks outside of the household.

Based on the survey findings, an estimated 35,000 older persons aged 60 and above live alone in 2009. Even if we do not consider the increase in singles and smaller families, this number is expected to rise further, to 61,000 in 2020 and 83,000 in 2030.

Our community can act to prevent social isolation of the elderly, and this is where our project comes in useful.

As younger volunteers, we can extend our empathy and expertise. Not all of us can commit to regular befriending, but we can help record the stories, nursery rhymes, memories and journeys of our older generations.

Short and Sweet: Interviewing & writing guidelines

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Lombok 2010. Image © Yvonne Koh

 

HI FOLKS working on the Silver Connect elderly project, our book will focus on “I remember” as part of an oral history project, noting down the experiences of the elderly and passing it down to the next generation.

(For those websurfers who are curious about what we’re doing, drop me a note and I’ll tell you more!)

a) We will write on “I remember”: journeys, first loves, the most memorable meal I had, the most mischievous thing I’ve ever done — you have leeway to choose what to write on based on your time with your interviewees.
b) We will also add in AV recordings and photography sessions for our old folk once we build rapport and trust.
c) There’s a 500-word limit for our short stories, one for each of the elderly we interview.

Our aim is to have volunteers who are patient and empathetic and willing to spend time with the elderly, build bonds, and continue to visit. You will make many new friends, from our volunteer writers to the befrienders to the old folks.

Don’t worry about writing and interviewing expertise, we’ll provide support every step of the way.

Step-by-step guide
1. Depending on the number of volunteers and your availability, you will be paired to between two and 10 old folks.
2. You will spend time with the old folks and the befrienders, building rapport and asking questions.

- For NAC tie-up:
a) Ask old folks about how they entertained themselves, and if they have memorabilia of performing spaces.
b) See if old folks are willing to perform rhymes and old songs etc with Rediffusion, or on stage for next year’s Arts Festival.

- For our book project
a) Tell our elderly that we wish to record their stories for the younger generation. Build rapport and just chat about “I remember”. You can carry a point-and-shoot camera and record details.
b) Writing workshop: date TBA.
c) Write a 500-word short story on your elderly friends. You have the freedom to write about anything under “I remember”. I will e-mail samples of short stories, and provide support along the way.

Timeline:

By end September
- Gather volunteers, gather volunteers’ information on dialects spoken, time commitment etc.
- Sept 30: Have briefing by Phyllis on Tampines’ Silver Connect scheme, how “isolated” elderly folk are at risk and why we’re reaching out to them.
- Sept 30: Short background and debrief on the project by Yvonne, with hand-outs on interviewing and writing guidelines. Also touch on what information to ask for to help in our NAC tie-up.

October to March
- “Pairing” of volunteers with befrienders and elderly.
- Visits to old folks by volunteer writer, with befriender or otherwise. Own time, own target. To coordinate with befriender.
- To help NAC with their December deadline.

March to May
- Writing workshops and support.
- Handing in of 600-word stories on your elderly friend’s story.
- Editing and writing

Problems:
- Dialects/other languages: Volunteer writers will work closely with our befrienders, who already can communicate with the old folks. When rapport is built, I hope that the elderly will have one more befriender: You! I hope that there will be enough friendship that you will continue to visit the person you interview :)

*

These are some writing tips I gathered from journalism courses/online material such as the Poynter Institute. I hope you find these useful! Please don’t hesitate to e-mail me if you find yourself getting stuck, I want to make sure you’ve writing support every step of the way.

I’ve condensed some of my experiences and added some pieces of information from this piece.

- Obey Mark Twain: You may need more time, not less, to write something good and short.
- Ask for action, not emotion.
- Scatter “gold coins” in your writing. “Gold coins” are interesting nuggets of information.
- Good things come in threes.
- Big picture must have small details.
- Write deliberately, calibrate each word. Cut the weaker elements: adverbs, passive constructions, strings of prepositional phrases, puffy Latinate words.
- Obey Strunk & White: “Omit needless words.”
- Obey Donald Murray: “Brevity comes from selection, not compression.”
- Obey Chip Scanlan: “Focus, focus, focus.”
- The more powerful the message, the shorter the sentence: “Jesus wept.”

*

From this Stanford University’s list of some books on writing:

Elements of Style. Fourth edition. William Strunk Jr. & E.B. White. Pearson Allyn & Bacon; 4th edition. 2000)
The “little book” that provides more good advice per page than any other.

Grammar, Rhetoric and Composition. Richard D. Mallery. Barnes & Noble. 1967.
A long-time standard.

When Words Collide: A Media Writer’s Guide to Grammar and Style. Lauren Kessler & Duncan McDonald. Wadsworth Publishing Co. 1992.
A good reference guide, particularly oriented to journalists.

On Writing Well. Sixth Edition. William Zinsser. Harper Collins. 1998.
Excellent book on writing prose.

Revising Prose. Third Edition. Richard A. Lanham. Macmillan Agency. 1991.
Although this is pitched at an undergraduate level, it has sound practical advice on self-editing.

*

From this piece, which is what I think we want to do with our project.

Brady Dennis was a night cops reporter in the Tampa bureau of Poynter’s St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times when he started writing “300 Words,” a series of short stories about ordinary people, in 2004. This year, he won the Ernie Pyle Award for human interest writing for his series. The “300 Words” stories have been running, alongside pictures by Times photographer Chris Zuppa, on the front page of the paper’s local-news section, about once a month. To find their stories, Zuppa and Dennis think of a moment they want to capture, then find the subject who best defines that moment. Dennis is now a general-assignment reporter in the Times’ Tampa bureau. I interviewed him, via e-mail, to find out what he’s learned about storytelling in small doses.

MICHAEL WEINSTEIN: How did you come up with the idea of writing 300-word stories?

BRADY DENNIS: I first dreamed up “300 Words” while working as a night cops reporter in Tampa. For starters, I wanted a project that offered a break from the usual murder and mayhem that I typically covered (and enjoyed covering). But more importantly, I wanted to take a chance and offer something in the metro section that readers weren’t used to seeing, something different that would make them slow down and take a breath and view the people they passed each day a little differently. I knew I wanted the pieces to be short — they never jump from 1B — and to highlight people that otherwise never would make the newspaper. Luckily, I [worked with] a photographer who shared this vision and a brave editor willing to try new approaches and fend off the skeptics.

A big inspiration for the series, by the way, were the “People” columns that Charles Kuralt had written for the Charlotte News back in the early 1950s [see www.charleskuraltspeople.com].

What was the easiest thing about doing them?

The easiest thing was my complete confidence in the people we would find. I believe that each person not only has a story to tell, but that each person has a story that matters. I’ve always felt humbled in the presence of everyday, “ordinary” people who are willing to share their lives with us. Give me them any day over politicians and celebrities.

What was hardest?

The hardest thing, I suppose, was finding a theme in each piece that was universal — love, loss, death, change, new beginnings. Something everyone could relate to on a human level. I didn’t think it was enough to say, “Look, here’s an interesting person.” I wanted to capture that person in a moment when readers could say, “I understand. I’ve been there.”

What did you learn about writing short stories with a beginning, middle and end?

I learned it doesn’t take 3,000 words to put together a beginning, middle and end. A good story is a good story, no matter the length. And sometimes the shorter ones turn out [to be] more powerful than the windy ones.

That said, there’s a risk of sounding like I’m advocating super-short stories with no traditional nut graph. Not so. I believe no matter how long or short the story, people should know why it is important and worth their time. It’s not enough just to paint a pretty picture. We must strive to tell them something about the world that matters, to be journalists and not simply storytellers. Hopefully, in a non-traditional way, “300 Words” does that.

Has it made you a better reporter? Better writer?

Absolutely. “300 Words” made me a better reporter by forcing me to rely almost primarily on observation. Notice that most pieces contain almost no quotes. I didn’t interview people as much as I simply shut my mouth and watched and listened. We don’t do that enough.

It also made me a more economical writer. With only 300 words to spare, each one had to matter. I’ve tried to apply that rule to the other stories I do, even the long ones. The idea is to cut away the fat and leave only the muscle. As my editor, Neville Green, repeated again and again: “Less is more.” It’s true for most stories we write.

How did your editor help you?
Neville Green helped in so many ways. He wrote most of the headlines. He helped me trim many unnecessary sentences, greatly improving the stories with each change. And sometimes, he simply put that universal theme I was searching for in perspective. “Isn’t this story about…” he would start, and he’d always be dead-on.

Anything else I should ask?

One thing I would offer is my opinion that, now, more than ever, we should be willing to take risks and make reading the paper an unpredictable and interesting exercise. “300 Words” was an effort at that. But there are a million other possibilities, and journalists are pretty bright folks. All it takes is the willingness to risk something new.

I ♥ Zaobao

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

NO PLASTIC surgeons here…

期待下一代生育 先给孩子快乐的家庭
妇科医生徐菁赤的生育之道

林弘谕 (2010-08-22)

徐菁赤医生的专项是高危妊娠。

徐医生双亲是退休华文教师,自小受传统价值观熏陶,对生养也有负担,认为这是人妻应尽的责任。

对新加坡人生育这一科“不及格”,徐医生说:“孩子必须在快乐的家庭里成长,充分感受父母与长辈的爱,往后他们结婚生育的概率就高一些,因为他们也期待另一种快乐的延伸。”

新加坡医疗集团妇科中心医务总监徐菁赤医生(38岁),入行超过12年,对妇科情有独钟。她说,妇科跟儿科不同,前者是迎接生命的喜悦,后者很多时候看到的是孩子的病痛与眼泪,普通科也常见老人和病痛者,多是不开心的事。

另外,内科医生只在诊所看病,外科医生就是“chop”——动手术,跟病人很难建立长期关系。妇科则是取两者之间的优点,在诊所看病外,也帮忙接生或动一些手术,医生和病人能建立更好的关系,尤其是看到新生命的降临,给产房里带来无限欢乐。

健康妇女也可能属高危妊娠

徐医生的专项为高危妊娠科(high-risk pregnancy),这个成立不久的妇科中心,也专为高龄产妇服务。

过去近12年,她都在竹脚妇幼医院当妇科医生,最近被新加坡医疗集团挖角,特别设立妇科中心,由她主导。她说:“公司特别为我在诊所里设立一个手术室,随时能给有需要的病人进行小手术,对病人和医生来说,这是最理想的工作环境。”上星期一,新加坡医疗集团开设第二家妇科中心,也由徐菁赤医生担任医务总监。

高龄产妇除了是高危妊娠群外,那些健康、第一次生产的妇女,也可能属于高危妊娠。徐医生指出,一些产妇因怀孕导致高血压,造成多个器官衰竭,包括肝脏、肾脏、脑部等,最后致命,不可忽视。

她看过一名高龄产妇,因子宫颈无力(Incompetent cervix)生出早产婴儿。这种病症因子宫颈“无痛性扩张”无法锁紧,使得羊膜脱出导致破水而流产。徐医生说:“通常,初期怀孕至9个月,子宫颈内口应保持紧实,只有在临盆阵痛时,才会松弛开张,这个病人怀第一胎时,不晓得自己有子宫颈无力的问题,胎儿在26个星期早产,患上大脑性麻痹(Cerebral Palsy)。她第二次怀孕时来看我,我们发现她有这个问题,为她进行子宫颈缝合术,最后成功生出健康宝宝,她最近也生了第三个健康婴儿。”

高龄产妇较安全的做法

年过35的高龄产妇,胎儿患上唐氏综合症的概率偏高。过去,在接受妇科检查时,会进行抽羊水检测,但是每300个检测中,1个面对流产的危险。“也就是说,高龄产妇可能因做抽羊水检测,意外失去一个正常的胎儿。”另一方面,年龄低于35岁的产妇或年轻产妇,较少做这项检测,因此造成这个年龄层的产妇,生出较多的唐氏综合征婴孩。每100个这类病儿中,80个的母亲生产时,年龄都低于35岁。

她说:“现在,我们为各年龄层怀孕第一期的产妇做体检时,进行超声波扫描,同时检查她们颈项皮肤的厚度,鼻骨和血液检测,确定胎儿患上唐氏综合征的概率有多少,这是较安全的做法。”

高龄产妇怀孕期间,高血压和糖尿病是两个常见的问题。通常,在怀孕约7个月后,产妇才出现糖尿病现象,就得配合饮食调理。怀孕后期,如果糖尿病控制失当,胎儿可能面对死亡的危险。“孕妇应定时进餐,每次小量,确保血糖不会忽然升高,以稳定病况。”

糖尿病患者如果想怀孕,必须先停止口服药物,才开始计划怀孕,否则生出心脏有孔等疾病的婴儿概率很高。那些糖尿病患者意外怀孕,医生会进行详细的扫描,看胎儿是否不正常,再作打算。

徐医生说,一些高龄产妇因年龄关系,可能已有其他疾病问题,例如肾脏功能不良,一旦怀孕后,肾脏病可能变糟,最后增加患者高血压的概率。

孪生胎儿属高危妊娠

徐医生指出,一个人对高龄产妇常有的错误印象。“一些病人跟我说,自己年龄已经很大,担心自然分娩时没力气把孩子挤推出来,因此选择剖腹生产。其实,只要是健康的产妇,即使高龄,我都建议她们自然分娩。我知道病人中,年龄最大的是43岁,仍能生出健康孩子。”她的病人来自美国、瑞典、越南、蒙古、中国、新加坡等,包括不孕者。

另一个怀孕误解,认为一次过生两个的孪生胎儿最好。她指出这是属于高危妊娠群,生出早产儿的概率偏高。一些孪生是从两个卵子而来,有些从卵子一分为二,共同从一个胎盘吸取养分,后者每两个星期得给妇科医生复诊,确保胎儿发育正常。

胎盘的问题

徐医生特别指出,生产时,附着在子宫壁上的胎盘会随着婴儿出世而排出体外。“但是,一些病人的胎盘却生长在子宫壁内与外,当生产时,一部分胎盘会排出,另外一部分滞留在子宫里,生产时会造成大量出血。有些的胎盘则从子宫外延伸生长到其他器官,如膀胱等,好像癌细胞一样扩散。当出现这种情况,医生会让剩余胎盘保留在产妇体内,希望经过一段时间,胎盘被身体吸收而变小。但是,如果出现体内出血,医生就会动手术切除病人的子宫,这也可能对其他器官造成损伤。”

临床经验丰富的徐医生说,剖腹生产者如果再怀孕的话,出现胎盘在子宫外生长的概率较高,尤其是在剖腹愈合的疤痕上,这常被人忽略。医生必须通过超声波扫描,确定胎盘是否正常。她举一个病例,这个病人剖腹生产两个孩子,怀第三胎时,出现胎盘在子宫外靠近剖腹疤痕的地方,甚至也生长到膀胱部位,最后出现大量出血,她为病人切除子宫,保住生命。

问她西医对胎盘的药用价值有什么看法?

她笑说,西医不鼓励人们吃胎盘,它纯粹是蛋白质。很多年前,医院收集众多产妇的胎盘后,转卖给厂商制造化妆品,但后来担心感染爱之病病毒和B型肝炎等疾病,停止这类交易。
不是回家就翻查孩子课业的妈妈

坐在眼前的徐菁赤医生,漂亮,充满女性的柔美,说话轻声细语。但她自认是个好动的人,小学毕业,就取得跆拳道黑带。

她打趣说:“原本是要用这个吓唬一下丈夫,没料到他也是跆拳道黑带高手,我们的志趣相投。”母亲要她学弹钢琴,她学跆拳道;要她学芭蕾舞,她转去学游泳。

她的双亲是退休华文教师,自小受到华人传统思想与价值观的熏陶,重视家庭,对生养孩子也有负担,认为这是为人妻所应尽的责任。

当年,父母受到“两个就好”的生育政策影响,徐医生原本也想生两个,基于喜欢孩子,后来又多生一个。三个儿子分别是10岁、8岁、5岁,丈夫是律师。“三个很多了,不能再生,否则就无法给他们quality time(有素质的时间)。”如果孩子有课外安排的访游活动,她也会请假跟随,陪孩子一起游玩。

采访隔天,记者有问题致电给她,她正好拿半天假,要跟孩子去野餐。她说,她都尽量从密集的工作表中抽出时间,与孩子培养亲子关系。

一般上,她的工作是早上为病人动手术,之后在诊所看病,尽量在下午五六点下班,跟孩子相聚,这也是她转到私人医疗界服务的原因之一。

全家到齐后才能动筷

徐医生毕业自南洋女中,在华中初级学院认识现在的丈夫。丈夫喜欢看电影,每个周末都带孩子看戏。对于孩子的教养,她秉承华人的传统用餐礼仪,一定要全家到齐后才能动筷,而且孩子必须长幼有序地叫长辈吃饭,这方面的教养她很坚持,对女佣也须以礼相待。“反倒是读书,我没给孩子太多压力。我不是那种一回家就翻查孩子课业的母亲,而是告诉他们,应该在我们下班前先完成功课,那么我们回家后就能享受天伦。”

问医生进入医学院,是否得拥有一张每科特优的漂亮成绩单?

她说:“成绩固然重要,但是面试成果也是被录取的考量因素。新加坡学生非常聪明,晓得如何‘击败体制’,在学业上考取特优成绩。一些顶尖的初级学院,甚至教导学生在申请进入大学医学院的面试时,如何应对,如何解答问题,如何得分。”

虽然,现在医学院的入学保持各科特优的高标准,但是实习医生的工作流程已改善很多。“我记得第一天当实习医生时,从早上8点忙足24小时,为了方便工作,我还特别挑一双舒适的鞋子来穿,工作忙进忙出,跑上跑下,最后发现一双脚湿嗒嗒的,原来是破皮流血,我贴上药布,继续工作。我不感觉疼痛,一直到下班后,回到家里,两只脚像废了一样!”

让另一种快乐延伸

最近,李光耀资政说:生儿育女这一科,新加坡人“不及格”!徐菁赤医生说,新加坡人花太多时间在工作的追求上,即使其他国家,也面对同样问题。

她说:“当你对工作表现满意后,再想到结婚,甚至生育,到时你已力不从心了。我身边有很多优秀的同事和朋友,都无法找到适合的对象。

“我认为孩子必须在一个快乐的家庭里成长,充分感受父母与长辈的爱,那么往后结婚、生育的概率就高一些,因为他们也期待另一种快乐的延伸。”

出路

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Southern Ridges hike. Image © Yvonne Koh

 

我缺乏耐性 没甚麽事能让我满意
我常得罪人 这好像是天生的本领

– 王菲 《出路》

我不喜欢政治 因为觉得充满阴险…关心社会 可社会沦陷 当然也有好的一面


I’VE
pretty bad vibes about this person whom I think will easily 借刀杀人 and has ego problems. I’m OK, You’re OK, but I don’t have to get too close to you.

Interesting background on intuition, though. I like the Berkeley series, which has gems such as these.

And I really love this interview:

One final question, looking back at this journey that you’ve been on. For students watching or reading this interview, is there one particular lesson that they might draw from this intellectual journey that you’ve taken?

A lesson I draw is one that my father always taught me, which is about the importance of late bloomers. My father had students in junior year in high school who were C students, and thirty years later they were the Mayor of Manchester, New Hampshire, and they were college professors, and they were physicians and lawyers. We all mature at different rates. One of the things a liberal education does is to make you ready for the moment. Make the ground ready for the moment when the seed is prepared to drop. I think students too often think, if they’re not a success in college, they’re a failure forever, or if they’re not a success in a professional school. We all grow at different rates. The late bloomers are legion, starting with Winston Churchill and you can go through lists and lists and lists — Harry Truman. I hope students understand and they’re preparing themselves, even if they’re not quite sure now where they’re going.

外婆的语言

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

 

洪艺菁

  我喜欢看香港电视连续剧和电影,尤其是粤语原版的。工作很忙,以前总告诉自己,等老了才看还来得及。但随着普通话越来越普及,等到我年老,粤语影视业会否随着观众群的缩小而逐渐凋零?

  广州市政协建议,将广州电视台主要频道,由广东话改为华语播出,以适应亚运会及广州拟打造国际都市形象的需要。这建议引起民众的极大回响,广州掀起一场广东话(粤语)保卫战。数百名广州民众上个月25日在闹市公开集会,以行动力挺粤语,主要是“80后”及“90后”的年轻人。

  一些民众也在社交网站“面簿”(Facebook)上号召支持者,香港抗议者甚至扬言要号召10万人,今天上街“捍卫广东话、中国传统”。

  中国政府推广普通话政策可追溯到1956年,广州市政府部门、教育机构开始逐步使用普通话作为主要语言,粤语的使用则被不同程度地削弱。这次的建议却引起人民如此强烈反应,可归纳成四大原因。

  一、广州市政协早前针对建议进行调查,反对者达79.5%,同意者仅占20.5%,但当局却一意孤行,引起民众反感,质问当局“为什么不尊重结果”?

  二、市政协声称这么做是为了迎接亚洲运动会,但批评者指这原因不符合逻辑,因为亚洲多数国家的运动员都不懂得普通话。

  三、有人指出,粤语华语之争“其实是岭南文化与北方文化的冲突”,直呼“母语告急,岭南文化垂危!”

  四、广州台全改播普通话的建议从心灵深处刺伤了说粤语人的心。在香港,人民更为自己熟悉的语言“感到委屈”。香港《苹果日报》前记者蔡淑芳表示:“在英国统治的年代,广东话在香港普遍被视为二等语言,现在香港回归祖国,作为母语的广东话,仍然遭到抨击,令人遗憾。”一些人把今次行动视为捍卫粤语的最后堡垒。

  另一方面,有些人却批评这些反对者行动过于偏激,认为广州应有开放用华语的包容胸襟,“让外来人融入广州,首先是语言融合”。

也有人从学术角度切入,指出所谓的“广东话”并不只是“粤语”,还包括潮州话和客家话,因此岭南文化不会随着粤语的减少使用而被削弱。但是,捍卫派却指出,政府“现在拿粤语开刀,接下来就轮到其他方言了。”

  香港民众今天将在湾仔举行“保护粤语大行动”,远在新加坡的我,唯能寄予遥远的祝福。

  身为新加坡人,我实在没立场说什么捍卫的话。毕竟,新加坡华人早就放弃了我们的方言。事实也证明,新加坡的华文华语政策,让不同籍贯的华人更好地沟通,也加强年轻一代的竞争力。可是,我们和我们的下一代因此失去了什么?也许,只有多年后蓦然回首,我们才会有所觉悟,或感到遗憾。

  我无法列出一百个应该捍卫方言的理由。我想支持和祝福广州和香港的挺粤民众,完全只是出自同理心。和他们一样,粤语陪伴我成长,我也很不舍得看到粤语的舞台越来越小。

  我对广东话有特别深厚的感情,虽然它不是我的母语,却是我外婆的语言。

  我小时候由外婆照顾,虽然外婆会讲华语,但有时还是会掺杂几句粤语。当我不开心或睡不着,外婆都会唱粤语童谣《月光光》、《团团转》给我听。

我们最大的嗜好就是祖孙俩并坐在舒服的大床上,一起看粤语古装片录像带,看大侠如何排除万难、伸张正义、扶弱济贫。“邪不能胜正”的思想,就这么根深蒂固地烙印在我小小的脑海里。

  讲广东话也是我出国留学时,与马来西亚同学拉近距离的最佳方法。在纽西兰游学半年,那里的新加坡人不多,马来西亚学生却不少,而且很活跃。由于我能够说粤语,很快就融入他们的圈子里,结交许多好友。新马文化相近,有这些同学相伴,初次独自出国的我一解乡愁。

  初当记者,跑意外新闻时,需要访问年长者时,粤语也特别能派上用场。访问年长者,若以方言发问,对方一般比较愿意打开心房,接受访问。

  近几年,外婆有些老年痴呆了,有时会想象自己回到年轻的时光。她有时会语无伦次,答非所问,但用广东话和她交谈时,她一般比较有反应,因此我们很庆幸,还有这道与她沟通的桥梁。

 最近同事访问一少年,少年透露由于他祖父母都讲方言,因此他和祖父母交谈时,总觉得“有些怪异”。我听了同事的分享,心里抽痛了一下。

  然而,对于崇尚“事事向前看”的新加坡来说,这些也许根本没什么大不了,因为说得冷酷一些,这群讲方言的老人和他们熟悉的方言一样,都因为再也没有经济价值,无法为新加坡“打造国际都市形象”或“缔造经济增长”而被忽略、遗忘。

   (作者是《我报》采访主任)

Medals don’t matter, doing right does

Sunday, August 1st, 2010
Don’t be afraid to speak up and take action if you are in a position to do so

By Lee Wei Ling

I WAS
searching for some old books containing many of my favourite Chinese poems. My books and my room at my parents’ house have seen extensive changes since I moved to live with my brother Lee Hsien Loong’s family from 2002 to 2005. My room at Hsien Loong’s house was too small to move more than a tenth of the books I needed. So the rest, I left in my room in Oxley Road.

In 2003, after my mother suffered a bleed into her brain, my room at my parents’ house was extensively renovated so a nurse could rest there. The nurse needed more creature comforts than I did. So a bed was placed in the room and a water heater was installed in the bathroom so she could have a warm shower.

And my books, packed in boxes, were moved into the basement. It took me two days a few weekends ago to find the books I wanted and even then, I couldn’t find several. But by chance, I did find the nine medals I had been awarded for topping my cohort in medical school as well as individual prizes in subjects where I was first in class. One medal that I recall was made of pure gold was missing. I had handed it to my mother to be locked up as I have a talent for losing things.

I was surprised that I felt no sense of triumph or joy when I found the medals. In my immature youth, I had worked very hard to earn them. Indeed, 35 years ago when I was in medical school, I would study the following year’s subjects even while on vacations, reading several textbooks before the new term began.

Hence, I knew not only the scientific facts that the authorities agreed about, but I was also aware of what was still controversial. When term started and I attended the lectures, I didn’t have to take notes except when I wanted to prevent myself from falling asleep.

I remember that while I was still a medical student, I accompanied my parents on a trip to Osaka. A Mr S. Oya, an elderly gentleman who owned Teijin, a manufacturer of synthetic fibre, invited us to his house for dinner. His first wife had died and he had married a woman much younger than he was — a vivacious Japanese lady not at all sedate as one would expect a Japanese wife to be. When my parents introduced me to her, she prophesied “one day you will be a famous professor”. I did not demur since that indeed was my ambition.

Decades have passed since then, and my priorities in life have changed. Medals and titles now mean little to me. What matters is that I must do right, and I should do so even if I offend people who have power over me.

I have acquired the title of “Professor”, but that gives me no joy. In fact, I prefer to be addressed as “Dr”. The title “professor” has been sprinkled around liberally among the medical fraternity here, and there are some professors with whom I certainly do not wish to be grouped.

My younger brother, Lee Hsien Yang, once asked me: “Why do you step on powerful and sensitive toes?”

I replied: “But if I don’t, who will do so to put things right?”

Hsien Yang is no coward. When in the army, to which he was bonded for eight years for accepting the President’s Scholarship as well as the Singapore Armed Forces Scholarship, he earned badges for scuba diving as well as parachuting. He needed to get only one of the two badges, as all senior officers had to prove to their men that they were not cowards.

Hsien Yang got both. Like me, he likes physical challenges. But as a businessman, he knows that antagonising powerful people does not make good business sense. But I am not a businesswoman; I am a doctor serving patients in the public sector. Since 2008, I have also been a regular columnist in The Straits Times and The Sunday Times. I am much less important than my two brothers or my sisters-in-law. But writing columns gives me a chance to discuss social trends and to point out government policies that I think are wrong.

That does not mean my bosses cannot take action against me if they so wish. But it is better to do what is morally correct than to be so afraid that one does not dare say “boo” to our superiors. Pay rise, bonus, promotion or demotion are much less important than doing what is right. Besides, if I do not try to right a wrong that I am aware of, my conscience will bother me.

I don’t think my temperament has changed since I was a child, but my purpose in life certainly has — and I hope it has changed for the better. I try not to hesitate to speak up when my superiors or even the Government do something that I think is not in the best interest of Singapore. The criticism is made with the sincere wish to improve our system and to benefit Singaporeans.

I do all this not because I wish to score points or gain glory. I do so because I owe Singapore a debt for the opportunities it has given me. In return, people in my position should always do what they think is the best for Singapore.

The writer is director of the National Neuroscience Institute. Send your comments to suntimes@sph.com.sg

Fat, lazy species + gambling

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

SIN city! Image © here

 

MAYBE I’ll go on a solitary sampling tour of all the ice-cream brands in the neighbourhood mamak shop. I think Magnum is overpriced and not yummy. I’d rather pay for Haagen Dasz (sp?) green tea ice cream actually, but sometimes it’s fun to just eat trash.

Didn’t sleep enough, as usual, and am self-medicating with sugar! Hey it’s the weekend and I can do exactly as I please, which is to lie around, eat junk food, and snipe. Maybe embark on some hysterical moral panic act. Try to see how I can put my grubby paws on other people’s money. Maybe — argggggg even read something in Bahasa. Sigh. Work! Work! I don’t want to work. We should just sit around on the beach under the coconut tree and eat coconuts and grow fat.

*

YES, I’m feeling snipey today, so let’s jump onto one of my favourite hobby horses, GAMBLING. I’ve some statistics here.

Firstly, from One Hope Centre, which helps gambling addicts and helps them on the path to recovery. (I’m ambivalent about it being a church group, but so far it’s the best non-profit I know of other than Credit Counselling that helps gambling addicts.)

The info below has been collected by an anonymous volunteer:

One Hope Centre support groups are large, numbering anywhere between 30 to 60 participants. Among One Hope clients, 35% are aged 35-44, 35% are aged 45-54, 90% are married, 90% are Chinese (YES, all the stereotypes are TRUE), and 35% are Buddhist. According to Reverend Tan, gamblers think they can control their emotions, and also believe they can control and recoup their losses. Problem gamblers can’t forgive themselves for their losses, and they become detached from society. Each compulsive gambler, according to the group, can also adversely affect the lives of somewhere between 10 and 20 relatives, friends, and business associates around him.

Many people here claim to use gambling for stress relief, leisure or (gasp) “family time”. As an example, Reverend Tan cited an MCYS 2008 survey which revealed that 50% of the respondents viewed gambling as a leisure activity, while another four in 10 undergrad students gamble. In addition, a similar SMU survey found that three youths out of 100 gamble, while the National Council on Problem Gambling reported that calls to their hotline have doubled since Resort World Sentosa opened its doors. When another casino theme-parm opened in April 2010, gamblers started using the excuse of “whole family entertainment” to pay a visit, throwing family members at the theme park and going into the casino themselves. “We are living in a world of gambling,” said the reverend, “and no one is immune from becoming a gambling addict when given the right opportunity.” He quoted Michael Franzsee, noting that “more lives are destroyed by gambling than by drugs and alcohol combined”.

(Note: This can also take the form of STOCK MARKET GAMBLING, or “land banking” or whatever, all you idiots who “invest” without really knowing WTF you’re doing.)

In Singapore, there’s the case of Simon Lee, a problem gambler who killed his family (a wife and two children) in March 2005. In another case, a Singapore businessman lost $6 million and was reduced to driving a taxi for a living. The reverend also pointed out that gamblers often get into heavy debt and borrow from illegal loansharks, who come knocking for payment. When gamblers can’t pay, they often want to kill themselves, thinking that they can then relieve the family of these problems. When callers phone One Hope, they are already at their wit’s end, and One Hope becomes their last hope.

While IMH maintains that gambling is a “problem of the brain” (WAKE UP, doctors!!), Reverend Tan claims it is a “heart problem” — greed. He says that strong family support is the key to recovery for problem gamblers. One Hope views its programme as a “family package treatment”, inviting family members to participate in the gambler’s recovery and restore the broken relationships. Otherwise, given the opportunity, a gambler can easily fall back into addiction.

Credit Counselling Singapore assists consumers in recovering from serious debt problems by providing general credit management information, credit counselling and debt management. While One Hope helps clients with emotional issues and illegal loansharks,
CCS deals strictly with debt management and legal loansharks.
CCS’s typical client is 39 years old, earns $2,700 a month, has about seven creditors, and owes $71,000 in debt. About 66% of clients are married, with 49% holding an A-level cert or above and 46% staying in a five-room flat or larger.
CCS charges $30 for a counselling session and $100 for its Debt Management Programme. These charges, it says, are levied so that the client will not take its services for granted and will be more committed to the programme.

Volunteers from
CCS started counselling debtors in 2005. Clients fall into four categories: a “hard luck” client suffers from an unexpected crisis, such as retrenchment or medical bills. The second category is the “spender”, where a client who earns $3,000 a month can actually spend over $5,000, using the $2,000 from credit lines. Men in this category typically make a few big purchases, such as a house or a car, while women typically make several small purchases that accumulate into big debts. For example, they might argue that it’s cheaper to “buy two, get one free”, which actually leads to more spending (YES: WAKE UP when you read those fancy credit card brochures for cosmetics + other “cute” items!) A third category is “muddle-headed” client, who borrows from the banks to lend the money to friends and family. For example, many people lost jobs last year and borrowed money to start their own companies. As the crisis worsened, many new ventures failed, leaving clients unable to repay their loans. Finally, the fourth category is the “punter” clients, who plays the stock markets or gambles on lotteries, soccer games or horse racing.

For someone to repay $71,000 in debt, the
CCS counsellor said that it would take 26 — yes, 26!!! — years of the client not buying anything to eat or drink. Troubled debtors rarely approach
CCS directly — more often than not, it’s a concerned family member who seeks resolution to the family debt.

With Marina Bay Sands Resorts Casino, the Casino will definitely want to recoup the $7.5 billion (I think) they sank into building this “theme park”. Let’s see where the money actually comes from.

Partnership

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

D SAID he tried not to be too harsh on himself as he’s not found a partner when we were talking of his parents; I thought of LKY and his love for his wife and how tough it must be when someone you love is dying.

I told my diving partners when we were on the ferry that one of the things I look for when I’m looking long term is whether this person will be there and dependable when the shit hits the fan, such as when if one or both of us should fall seriously ill, if a child runs into trouble, when there are different pulls on our time and needs. A good marriage is about compromise and support and working together towards joint goals.

Came across Gottman when I was reading Malcolm Gladwell. He can predict whether a couple will divorce after watching and listening to them for just five minutes.

From John M. Gottman, The Seven Principles For Making Marriage Work (ISBN: 0609805797):

What can make a marriage work is surprisingly simple. Happily married couples aren’t smarter, richer, or more psychologically astute than others. But in their day-to-day lives, they have hit upon a dynamic that keeps their negative thoughts and feelings about each other (which all couples have) from overwhelming their positive ones. They have what I call an emotionally intelligent marriage.

Recently, emotional intelligence has become widely recognised as an important predictor of a child’s success later in life. The more in touch with emotions and the better able a child is to understand and get along with others, the sunnier that child’s future, whatever his or her academic IQ. The same is true for relationships between spouses. The more emotionally intelligent a couple — the better able they are to understand, honour, and respect each other and their marriage — the more likely that they will indeed live happily ever after. Just as parents can teach their children emotional intelligence, this is also a skill that a couple can be taught. As simple as it sounds, it can keep husband and wife on the positive side of the divorce odds.

Perhaps family lawyers who handle divorce cases should also have a list of counsellors or psychologists who can also do marital counselling? If I do by some chance end up in law, this is something I’d look into — counselling for couples seeking divorce.

In the meantime there’s NUS stuff to go through and courses to sign up for. Pretty excited about it all, actually — I might end up in teaching rather than law after all.

[中国早点-京城偶寄]发展的路上,一个都不能少

Monday, July 19th, 2010

● 韩咏红

  你大概记得张艺谋的电影《一个都不能少》?故事是说某山区小学高老师赶着回乡看望病重的母亲,临时找来13岁的孩子魏敏芝当一个月代课老师。高老师交代魏敏芝看住孩子,不能让他们辍学,“一个都不能少”。果然,班上有10岁的同学因家贫欠债被迫辍学进城当童工,小老师魏敏芝谨记高老师的嘱托,与全班同学凑钱要把他找回来。小老师在城市里开展了茫茫寻人之路。

  12年前的电影,因为情节与演员气质都质朴感人,由于简单的故事主线触到了中国乡村贫困的现实与人类的善良本质,所以让人念念不忘。在艰难处境中,大伙儿要同舟共济,不让任何人落单,这是小朋友的行为所体现的道理。

  2010年的中国社会与政治环境,让人特别容易联想到这部电影。

  这些年来,中国经济之突飞猛进早已经不是新闻。从数据上看,在1990年以前,中国国内生产总值(GDP)还没达到4000亿美元;这个数字在1995年就超过了7000亿美元,2000年再突破万亿美元;到了2009年底,官方数字显示GDP总量达到了4.92万亿美元。20年来,经济总量绝对是以几何倍数增长。

  但是在同一时候,与翻红的经济构成刺眼反比的是中国贫富差距加剧扩大,区域发展不均衡凸显,以及劳动报酬占GDP比重连降22年,下降幅度将近20%,行业间收入差距达到 16倍。冷冰冰的数据反映的事实是:经济越发展,财富分配越不均衡,穷人分得的蛋糕比例越小。

  有时候,外界会看到中央政府试图扭转不公平现象扩大的趋势。例如今年以来,中央先后召开第五次西藏工作座谈会与第一次新疆工作座谈会,强调要加大力度推进这两个西部落后地区的“跨越式”发展。经过多年的经济建设,如今弹药充足的中国政府开出的支票数额大得惊人:新疆工作座谈会宣示在2011年到2015年,对新疆的社会固定资产投资将达到2万亿人民币(4080亿新元)。

  今年,中央的目光不限于少数民族地区,7月上旬召开的第一次西部大开发工作会议,最高领导人提出目标,包括了很多个“大台阶”:今后10年让西部地区综合经济实力上一个大台阶;人民生活水平和质量上一个大台阶,基本公共服务能力与东部地区差距明显缩小;生态环境保护上一个大台阶。同时,国家发改委公布今年新开工的23个西部重点,总规模达6822亿元人民币。这个数额,较前十年西部大开发年均投资总额增长3 倍有余。

  政府将关爱的眼神投向西部,宏观的背景是为了如期实现2020年全面建设小康社会的目标;更大的驱动力是西部少数民族地区严重的社会暴乱与落后地区频发的群体性事件。再此之外,领导精英估计也看到,反正钱多了,与其购买大量美国国债承受美元贬值的风险,不如将财富分给国内落后地区的同胞。

  近期这类开发落后地区的新闻,或在西部采访时,我总想起《一个都不能少》。30年前中国决心放弃计划经济探索市场经济道路,提法是“让一部分人富起来”,慢慢地,现实中不只是一部分人“先富起来”,而是只有一部分人富起来,甚至是不合理或违法地暴富,并且这个结果还被视为理所当然。

 “一个都不能少”是很简单的信念,即不要失去任何人,不让任何人落单,其含义却是深刻的。曾经,在GDP挂帅与集体主义的名义下,国家领导与全社会接受、容忍与允许无数的弱势群体落后。事实证明,遭到边缘化的弱者不可能永远默不作声,尤其社会越发展信息越发达,弱势者的反扑强烈冲击歌舞升平的美好景象。

  今天,反过来照顾弱势群体,缓解贫富差距是必要的。只不过,如果贫富差距,地区发展不协调的格局已经固化,在西部投资的几千亿万亿元,最终创造的财富也可能是由大型国企与公有部门占大比例,民间占小部分,而不公正的现象依然持续。

  要在加大投资的同时转贫富两极分化,需要冲破现有利益格局,否则落后地区也可能经济越增长社会越不稳定。

  最终,时间将检验出为政者政策设计的能力,诚意与勇气——政策的执行过程将更接近“一个都不能少”的公平原则,还是继续假设GDP增长能够解决一切。

We Are What We Choose

Monday, July 19th, 2010

These remarks are from Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos commencement speech to Princeton’s Class of 2010, delivered on May 30, 2010.

As a kid, I spent my summers with my grandparents on their ranch in Texas. I helped fix windmills, vaccinate cattle, and do other chores. We also watched soap operas every afternoon, especially “Days of our Lives.” My grandparents belonged to a Caravan Club, a group of Airstream trailer owners who travel together around the U.S. and Canada. And every few summers, we’d join the caravan. We’d hitch up the Airstream trailer to my grandfather’s car, and off we’d go, in a line with 300 other Airstream adventurers. I loved and worshipped my grandparents and I really looked forward to these trips. On one particular trip, I was about 10 years old. I was rolling around in the big bench seat in the back of the car. My grandfather was driving. And my grandmother had the passenger seat. She smoked throughout these trips, and I hated the smell.

At that age, I’d take any excuse to make estimates and do minor arithmetic. I’d calculate our gas mileage — figure out useless statistics on things like grocery spending. I’d been hearing an ad campaign about smoking. I can’t remember the details, but basically the ad said, every puff of a cigarette takes some number of minutes off of your life: I think it might have been two minutes per puff. At any rate, I decided to do the math for my grandmother. I estimated the number of cigarettes per days, estimated the number of puffs per cigarette and so on. When I was satisfied that I’d come up with a reasonable number, I poked my head into the front of the car, tapped my grandmother on the shoulder, and proudly proclaimed, “At two minutes per puff, you’ve taken nine years off your life!”

I have a vivid memory of what happened, and it was not what I expected. I expected to be applauded for my cleverness and arithmetic skills. “Jeff, you’re so smart. You had to have made some tricky estimates, figure out the number of minutes in a year and do some division.” That’s not what happened. Instead, my grandmother burst into tears. I sat in the backseat and did not know what to do. While my grandmother sat crying, my grandfather, who had been driving in silence, pulled over onto the shoulder of the highway. He got out of the car and came around and opened my door and waited for me to follow. Was I in trouble? My grandfather was a highly intelligent, quiet man. He had never said a harsh word to me, and maybe this was to be the first time? Or maybe he would ask that I get back in the car and apologize to my grandmother. I had no experience in this realm with my grandparents and no way to gauge what the consequences might be. We stopped beside the trailer. My grandfather looked at me, and after a bit of silence, he gently and calmly said, “Jeff, one day you’ll understand that it’s harder to be kind than clever.”

What I want to talk to you about today is the difference between gifts and choices. Cleverness is a gift, kindness is a choice. Gifts are easy — they’re given after all. Choices can be hard. You can seduce yourself with your gifts if you’re not careful, and if you do, it’ll probably be to the detriment of your choices.

This is a group with many gifts. I’m sure one of your gifts is the gift of a smart and capable brain. I’m confident that’s the case because admission is competitive and if there weren’t some signs that you’re clever, the dean of admission wouldn’t have let you in.

Your smarts will come in handy because you will travel in a land of marvels. We humans — plodding as we are — will astonish ourselves. We’ll invent ways to generate clean energy and a lot of it. Atom by atom, we’ll assemble tiny machines that will enter cell walls and make repairs. This month comes the extraordinary but also inevitable news that we’ve synthesized life. In the coming years, we’ll not only synthesize it, but we’ll engineer it to specifications. I believe you’ll even see us understand the human brain. Jules Verne, Mark Twain, Galileo, Newton — all the curious from the ages would have wanted to be alive most of all right now. As a civilization, we will have so many gifts, just as you as individuals have so many individual gifts as you sit before me.

How will you use these gifts? And will you take pride in your gifts or pride in your choices?

I got the idea to start Amazon 16 years ago. I came across the fact that Web usage was growing at 2,300 percent per year. I’d never seen or heard of anything that grew that fast, and the idea of building an online bookstore with millions of titles — something that simply couldn’t exist in the physical world — was very exciting to me. I had just turned 30 years old, and I’d been married for a year. I told my wife MacKenzie that I wanted to quit my job and go do this crazy thing that probably wouldn’t work since most startups don’t, and I wasn’t sure what would happen after that. MacKenzie (also a Princeton grad and sitting here in the second row) told me I should go for it. As a young boy, I’d been a garage inventor. I’d invented an automatic gate closer out of cement-filled tires, a solar cooker that didn’t work very well out of an umbrella and tinfoil, baking-pan alarms to entrap my siblings. I’d always wanted to be an inventor, and she wanted me to follow my passion.

I was working at a financial firm in New York City with a bunch of very smart people, and I had a brilliant boss that I much admired. I went to my boss and told him I wanted to start a company selling books on the Internet. He took me on a long walk in Central Park, listened carefully to me, and finally said, “That sounds like a really good idea, but it would be an even better idea for someone who didn’t already have a good job.” That logic made some sense to me, and he convinced me to think about it for 48 hours before making a final decision. Seen in that light, it really was a difficult choice, but ultimately, I decided I had to give it a shot. I didn’t think I’d regret trying and failing. And I suspected I would always be haunted by a decision to not try at all. After much consideration, I took the less safe path to follow my passion, and I’m proud of that choice.

Tomorrow, in a very real sense, your life — the life you author from scratch on your own — begins.

How will you use your gifts? What choices will you make?

Will inertia be your guide, or will you follow your passions?

Will you follow dogma, or will you be original?

Will you choose a life of ease, or a life of service and adventure?

Will you wilt under criticism, or will you follow your convictions?

Will you bluff it out when you’re wrong, or will you apologize?

Will you guard your heart against rejection, or will you act when you fall in love?

Will you play it safe, or will you be a little bit swashbuckling?

When it’s tough, will you give up, or will you be relentless?

Will you be a cynic, or will you be a builder?

Will you be clever at the expense of others, or will you be kind?

I will hazard a prediction. When you are 80 years old, and in a quiet moment of reflection narrating for only yourself the most personal version of your life story, the telling that will be most compact and meaningful will be the series of choices you have made. In the end, we are our choices. Build yourself a great story. Thank you and good luck!

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/we-are-what-we-choose-2010-6#ixzz0u4ePcZIo

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Was cycling and saw this cute white bus from Bedok Transport that said it’s running off oil from Ikea’s kitchens for World Environment Day.

http://www.bedoktransport.com/

Cute. I’ll keep this company in mind if I ever need to charter buses.

Represent…

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

LSE:

A: Should convicted poachers receive capital punishment? Discuss.
B: No, because if there is to be capital punishment at all, we have bigger fish to fry than poachers.
A: Like rapists and murderers?
B: That. Was totally what I considered typing. Those two groups, in that order. Haha.
A: You can add violence to women and children as crimes heinous enough to warrant capital punishment…

Princeton:

C: Just found out that I have inadvertently smuggled illegal goods into China - poppy seed bagels that I got from a Costco in Taiwan. It turns out poppy seeds are illegal in China, which is why the Beijing-based company Mrs. Shanen’s bagels doesn’t do poppy seed flavored ones!

Indo-China

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

READING Perfect Hostage: A Life Of Aung San Suu Kyi now, it’s by Justin Wintle. ISBN: 978-0-091-79651-8. Library call number: 959.105092.

Much of what goes on in Burma passes unnoticed in the international press. It is a difficult country to report, just as, because of its size and varied terrain, it is a difficult country to police in the way the regime would like…Only through the perseverance and dedication of a small number of expatriate media agencies and ill-funded relief organisations staffed by refugees outside Burma, and the courage of their own informers inside the country, putting their liberty and sometimes their lives at risk for the sake of truth and exposure, is something like a steady narrative maintained.

Without a regular flow of dependable, non-partisan information about it, any country can go to the dogs unseen. A regime that is oppressive can get away with almost anything, provided it too maintains its own kind of vigilance. But with Burma other factors kick in. The long and vividly captured conflict in Indochina — Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, on the other side of Thailand — satiated interest in South-East Asia for a generation; and, since Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait in 1991, world media attention has concentrated on the Middle East, especially following 9/11. For all the talk of “globalisation”, international news-gathering was as selective in 2005 as it was in 1985 or 1965. Just as it took ten years and more for the outside world to appreciate the enormity of what went on in China during the Cultural Revolution, so we are only now beginning to understand the enormity of what has gone on in Burma. Perhaps if the ruling junta had actual plans to develop nuclear weapons, we would be more alert. But the irony is that, when it comes to weapons of mass destruction, Burma’s generals and lieutenant-colonels are doing (and have been doing) far more damage on the streets of our cities than Saddam could ever have done. Burma is second to Afghanistan as a producer and exporter of heroin — a trade the US government asserts has mainly fallen into the hands of those who, in any decent society, should be combating it: the country’s rulers. Similarly, to the dismay of Burma’s neighbours, the military appear to condone the production and distribution of tens of millions of amphetamines each year.

Why bother to make a dirty bomb when a syringe is all it takes? Yet short of an internal implosion or direct intervention, and all the moral qualms that direct intervention evokes, it is hard to see things changing fast. The USA has, since 1997, applied economic sanctions — as, belatedly, the EU has begun to. But quite apart from the doubtful efficacy of such initiatives — they hurt the oppressed at least as much as those who oppress them, the argument goes — the Burmese junta has greatly benefited from changes that have occurred in neighbouring China. There, following Deng Xiaoping’s economic reforms of the 1980s, a new breed of aggressive entrepreneur has emerged, in the main no more concerned with human rights than their stubbornly communist predecessors, but willing to do business with any pariah state that does not threaten China’s security.

*

SPEECH BY GEORGE YEO ON CHINA’S RE-EMERGENCE ON THE GLOBAL STAGE, 13 JULY 2010

In the last two days, we have discussed much about China’s internal developments and its external relations. I thought for my presentation today, we take a step back and set China in perspective. There are many people in the world who fear the rise of China; who wonder whether in this re-emergence of China on the global stage, they will see a China that is aggressive, imperialistic, dominant and domineering. In official speeches, fine words are used but in the inner councils and in the darker rooms, real concerns are expressed and sometimes the fears are acted upon. That is in the nature of human society.

Churchill once said that to see far into the future, we must look far back into the past. To try and discern China’s re-emergence in this century, it is important to see China in its earlier incarnations. For us in Southeast Asia, China is deep in the historical memory. Just last week, we had from Oman, a small dhow, a replica of an ancient dhow which sank 500 miles from Singapore during the Tang Dynasty, carrying 65,000 pieces of Chinese pottery from many kilns in China, principally Changsha but also from other places as well. And on the pieces of the pottery were Buddhist motifs and Islamic motifs, because that was also the age of Nalanda and the age of the Abbasids. Even then, it was a huge trade and it brought great prosperity to the region. During the Sung Dynasty, China was probably a large part of the global economy and the kingdoms in Southeast Asia and Southern India competed and fought each other over the China trade. And in one of those wars, a fleet from south India, the Cholas, defeated Srivijaya.

So when I say re-emergence, there is a particular meaning. Unusual for any other country, China has been able, over a wide geographical expanse, to reconstitute itself again and again. To my European friends, I tell them that it is like the Roman Empire after it was destroyed and broken up, reconstituting itself four, five times more till today. Of course, it never happened in Europe. And till today the nations of Europe have deep tribal loyalties. We see it during the World Cup, and it is expressed in their languages, in their food, in their wines and in their passions. China is unusual in that over 90% of its population consists of Han Chinese and there is a sense that they belong to a common race. The Americans, because of the exceptional nature of their conception, believe that it is good for everybody in the world to become American. It is good for you to be American, to have American values, then you would be better off and the world will be a better place. So there is a natural missionary spirit among Americans, and indeed which is expressed from time to time in American foreign policy. For the Han Chinese, it is different. The Han Chinese are a little like the Jews. If you are not born one, there is no need for you to become one. I mean yes, learn the language, understand the habits, enjoy the food, observe the niceties; but if one day a non-Chinese were to say, look I will become Chinese, everyone will feel a little awkward because if you are not born one, how can you be one? It is like those who convert to Judaism and proclaim themselves Jewish. In formal terms, they may be accepted but in deep emotional terms, that is a different story. And because of this, the Chinese attitude towards empire, which is really a western term, is very different from the empires created by Europe in the age of imperialism. For China it was the world inside which was decisive. If it coheres, if the waterways and irrigation canals are in good repair, if the grain can flow freely, the internal market explodes and becomes very prosperous, for which it requires central authority and a central bureaucracy. But when that breaks down, all hell breaks loose and it can go on for decades or centuries, and millions of people die when that happens.

For this reason, those who govern China are always preoccupied with its internal development. Very often, its foreign policy is really to secure an environment of stability so that it can concentrate on its internal development. All too often in its history, if foreign threats are not addressed, if foreign relations are not managed, then that becomes a domestic problem. And when domestic issues are not resolved, the country goes into difficulty. I do not think China is naturally aggressive for this reason. But of course, if you are Korean or Mongolian or Central Asian or Vietnamese, well, you will say from time to time we were invaded by China, maybe even incorporated into their empire, and I think that is a fair perspective. But if you look at it from the internal perspective of China - securing the border regions, its supply lines – it’s really defensive. And nothing perhaps expresses it more than the rebuilding of the Great Wall of China from [the time of Emperor] Qin Shi Huang (秦始皇)- even from before that during the Zhan Guo (战国)or Warring States period - again and again in its history, in order to protect the internal environment so that the country can be well-governed.

So when we look at China into the future, China will of course seek to influence developments in the border regions, and in this case the border regions include all of Southeast Asia. But its dominant objective is internal, not aggression for the sake of lebensraum, of migrating its people and turning others into subject populations. It is important to understand this psyche because that has created a political culture which makes it acceptable for China to be governed as one polity. And because of the fears that local officials will be captured by local populations, so from the time of the Ming Dynasty they had a rule that you cannot be a high official, cannot be a gao guan (高官), within four hundred miles of the place of your birth. And the system has been recreated in the PRC - you cannot be a high official near where you were born because you cannot escape all the loyalties of family and mutual obligations. So today if you look at China, the provincial leaders, particularly the Party Secretary and the Governor, are almost always not from their own province. And each province is about the size of a major European country. Again I tell my European friends, it is as if by practice, by regulation, the Chancellor of Germany cannot be German, the French President cannot be French, and the British Prime Minister cannot be British. But in China, it is considered acceptable because this has been the system from a long time ago.

Does it mean, going into the future, that China will be able to progress on a straight line and without major hiccups, without major difficulty, become the greatest power on Earth, even though it may be self-contained, and determining the terms of interaction with the outside world. It will not be so simple because the challenges within China today are enormous, always going back to how to govern the country so that there is peace, so that there is development, so that their regions are in balance and there are the systems, records, the waterways, the roads, to redistribute.

The biggest issue in China today is urbanisation - urbanisation on a scale and at a speed never seen before in Chinese history. This is something new. It has always been a rural society in the past, and governing the country was really about making sure that the countryside was productive. Today China is 40% urban. During Mao, it was 20% urban. One day it will be like Taiwan, like Korea, it will be 80% - 90% urban. And this will create a whole new situation requiring a whole new set of skills. The Chinese Communist Party achieved power when Mao Zedong broke from the Bolsheviks by capturing power from the countryside, not from the urban proletariat. All the skills and instincts and techniques of the Communist Party are based on control of the countryside, of the peasantry. But now the cities are growing rapidly, creating a new situation: small families, very often one-child, the anonymity of city environments, everybody on handphones, instant messaging, on the Internet - and China has already has more internet users than any other country on earth - and growing social mobility. This is a challenge, not only for the Communist Party; this is a challenge for Confucianism itself. Because Confucianism, which is what has held Chinese society together from the time of the Han dynasty, requires a certain accepted set of hierarchical social relationships which is all dissolving now in the modern world into networks. So somehow, and we face that problem in Singapore too because we are three-quarters Chinese here, we need a new … what I call “Urban Confucianism”. And that will be a new challenge for Chinese society because upon that, the Communist Party will have to re-invent itself based upon these profound social changes. If China succeeds in doing this, I have no doubt it will once again be the biggest economy on earth and the greatest country on earth. But it is not going to be easy because it is a new situation. No one in the world really has a solution for it; everybody is grappling, we are grappling.

You notice in Asia, all the traditional political parties have come into trouble. We had the LDP in Japan, the KMT in Taiwan. In Korea it is never quite settled. In Thailand, the tension between Bangkok and the countryside. In Malaysia, UMNO which was rural-based, now becoming urban-based, becoming urbanised. In Indonesia, Golkar. In India, we had the Congress party. And all are now confronting urban populations which are not happy. It is almost as if the more you develop, the bigger urban populations become, the more disaffected they are with traditional government. And it is partly for this reason that in recent years, China has became quite fascinated with the Singapore experiment.

Compared to China, Singapore is like a bonsai; it is too small to be of general relevance but it has some genetic similarities. So from time to time, researchers and social scientists in China, they study Singapore and say: “Oh well, if it can work here, maybe it can work there.” We found in our interaction with China over the years that their interest in the Singapore experiment is episodic. From time to time when it confronts issues and it scours the world for solutions, it looks at what Singapore does. Sometimes it likes what it sees, sometimes it does not like what it sees. And then it draws and abstracts the relevant lessons. This of course puts Singapore in a rather interesting position vis-a-vis China.

The point I am making is that when people say China is going to dominate the world, they worry that China is not only going to become very strong economically, but that it will seek to subjugate others and force them to behave like Chinese. I do not think that will happen because that goes against the grain of Chinese history. Chinese statecraft over the years, mostly defensive in its fundamental objectives, has always been to treat foreigners as foreigners; making a clear distinction between what is within and what is outside; between nei (内)and wai(外). And very elaborate methods to handle what is outside so that it is not a threat to what is inside. We see this again and again expressed in modern terms in present policies. So when it comes to WTO trade liberalisation, trade yes, this yes, that yes, but when it impinges upon core structures - the commanding heights of the state economy, cultural issues, I do not think China, whoever governs China, will ever allow the world outside to determine how the country is governed within. You take say, the recent quarrel with Google over how it should operate in China. The Chinese did not want it to become a big problem but Google on its own wanted to politicise it. Of course once you politicise it, then China has no choice but to stick to its fundamental principles. Google has since stepped down, and decided, let’s handle this in a pragmatic way, and China is prepared to handle it in a pragmatic way. That insofar as it does not impinge upon its core interests, they can be flexible. But if it does, well that is a separate matter.

So too for China’s financial institutions. In the 19th century within a short period after the Opium War, China lost control of its financial system. I remember one senior LDP politician telling me some years ago that the Japanese knew that the moment ships landed on Asia’s mainland, they would be inspected not by Asians but by Europeans. Japan knew that unless it quickly re-created itself, it too would suffer the fate of China. But unfortunately Japan thought the solution was to become a competing imperialism and that led to grief. For this reason, while China will benefit from the international financial system, while it will allow its own financial industry to be opened up, when it comes to core structures, it will never allow itself to lose its sense of autonomy - media, finance, cultural policy, strategic state industries.

In some way, this may go back to the nature of the Chinese language itself, its ideographic character. As a child, it’s easier to read Chinese characters than alphabetic words because the Chinese characters are pictures. So little children of two - three years old can recognise Chinese words but they cannot read alphabetic words As an adult, alphabetic words are more convenient. So it is a language which really makes it difficult for you to fully access as an adult. But if you are born into it, then it becomes a part of you naturally. Some scholars have described the Chinese character system as a digital system because it is not phonetic, so it does not alter over time - the same characters can be read today as they were a thousand years ago, two thousand years ago. Whereas if you look at alphabetic systems, that cannot be done.
If we look into the 21st century and ask ourselves, let us say China succeeds and it becomes strong and powerful and its influence radiates into a much wider region - what will the world be like? I think the world will not become a Pax Sinica because the world is too big for that. And China is too internally preoccupied, to really have aspirations towards creating a Pax Sinica. I mean, China is not interested in making the Myanmar people democratic, or in making Muslims Confucianist. China is quite prepared to accept the world in all its diversity, so long as “you” do not threaten “me” (China). But there has to be a certain structural stability, for that it is in the nature of political power. And it will be a multi-polar world. In our part of the world, in Asia, to simplify it, and it is of course an over-simplification, I think there will be three major poles. There will be China, there will be India, and there will be the US. It is this triangle and how they relate to one another, which really will decide the big issues of war and peace in this century. Sino-US relations have already been discussed, I believe MM talked about it last night, the US Ambassador (Jon Huntsman) was here, so I think there is no need for me to go over ground which is already familiar to you, and which some of you know more about than I do.

But I will like to talk a little about India because India in terms of size and in terms of the age of its civilisation is comparable to China. And the two countries, really the two civilisations, because of the high Himalayas and the great deserts of Central Asia, except for the border skirmish in 1962, [have] never fought each other. Yes, there were monks, there were traders - they communicated through Southeast Asia, both influencing the countries of Southeast Asia, but they never fought. There is a certain deep recognition of each other as an ancient people, and a certain respect. The Chinese have always seen India as a source of Buddhism, of Kung Fu, of knowledge about astronomy and mathematics. The Indians on their side of the Himalayas, have always known that beyond there was a great emperor who ruled a vast realm with a rich market. Culturally they are not close. In fact culturally, they are very different. But there is a certain mutual respect and now they have got to settle their borders, they have got to work through some of their difficulties. As it was during the 19th century, China is already India’s biggest trading partner and that trade is growing rapidly.

Few years ago, the mountain pass of Nathu La between the Siliguri corridor of India and Tibet, has been re-opened. When I was in Tibet last August, a local official whom I met, told me that the Gaoyuan Tielu (高原铁路)(the high railroad) from Xining to Lhasa, would be extended to Shigatse. He said that we are actually very close to the Nathu La pass and if the Indian government would agree, we could just link up to the Indian railroad, and Calcutta will only be a few hundred kilometres away. And then all of us will have much easier access to the sea. When I tell it to the Indians, they looked at me, they are a little worried. While most Chinese today are not aware there was a war in 1962, most Indians remember it. It is deeply etched in their memory, a scar not completely healed. But I believe one day these problems will be resolved because there is no natural antipathy between them. The benefits of trade and exchange are overwhelming, and the borders will be open. There will be more connections, and each can benefit the other hugely.

For this reason, I and others have been deeply involved in this project to revive the ancient University of Nalanda, which in its heyday was the greatest university on earth. Hundreds of years, attracting at its peak, 10,000 students from Japan, Korea, China, Tibet, Central Asia, all of Southeast Asia, and which received for many years, the great Tang dynasty monks, Xuan Zang (玄奘), Yi Jing (義淨)and others. And till today, the best records of that period was the account by Xuan Zang, the Da Tang Xi Yu Ji (大唐西域记), the Great Tang Western Region History. That is still the best record of India during that period of history more than a thousand years ago. So we are hoping that by reviving this university and making it an international university, it can bring together Asians from all over, so that each will know that their forefathers had once upon a time, helped one another, live together in peace, with trade, with monks crossing borders. And if we can help recreate some of that in this century, the likelihood that we will be able to preserve that larger peace will be improved.

There are people who feel that maybe they can also use India to counterbalance China. To me, that is much too simplistic. Yes, India is the world’s biggest democracy and that is often trotted out as an explanation why India and America are natural partners. For certain issues, yes, America and India are natural partners. For other issues like climate change, India and China are natural partners. I believe each will, in the end, calculate upon its own interests. India is too old, too wise, too spiritual, too worldly, to be anything but itself. Democracy is one layer, but there are many layers, going down many kilometres.

I think it was in the Upanishads, in the Hindu pantheon, they have 33 crore gods - 330 million gods and goddesses. It is a bit mind boggling, isn’t it? But of course, the Indians also believe in one spiritual essence. Over the centuries, there is no aspect of the human condition which the Indians have not experienced, or thought about, or tried to explain. Its complex social structures, the persistence of caste and you need only to look at the classified ads for marriages in the Sunday newspapers to know how alive and well caste is, to know that India will always be India. India is not going to be made use of by anybody, except in its own self interest. For this reason, there will be three poles. And each will be deep, profound unto itself.

I do not believe America is in decline, the way many people write about. America is the new world. It created a new political culture, social structure, based upon free individuals joining it. It is a little like the internet protocol, TCP/IP. If you accept TCP/IP, you can join America. So you can be Chinese, you can be Jewish, you can be Indian, you can be Arab; you take your pledge, adhere to their laws, you are part of it. And because it is open-ended, it seeks to extend its reach to the world. But if you look at it from another perspective; the globalisation that we see today, is an American globalisation. The TCP/IP which is at the heart of American political culture is really the connections now which is hyperlinking Chinese, and Indians, and Europeans, and Latinos together in the world, enabling us to operate a common trading system, a common financial system.

China cannot provide that globalisation software because China will always be internally preoccupied and to the extent that it is interested in the world outside, it is so that its internal management can be improved, and always in self-defence. China is not interested to create a Pax Sinica, or to have its own version of the TCP/IP. Yes it has Confucius Institutes; it wants you to learn Chinese and so on, but like the Jews, if you are not born one, thank you very much. Whereas, with America, it is different. What will link China and India together? Not Chinese software, not Hindu software; it will be American software through American universities, through the English language, through Anglo-Saxon rules of trade, of financial standards. This is an interesting multipolar world we are entering; a China which is re-emerging powerfully, an India which is also growing but which will be a pole unto itself and an America which is not only a reality, but also a necessity. Thank you.

Q&A

Moderator MP Josephine Teo: Minister, I would like to ask you about our ASEAN neighbours. In your interactions with them, what do you sense as their attitude towards China? And what is it that consumes the minds of the leaders in ASEAN when they think of the re-emergent China?

Minister George Yeo: Even when China was down, was economically inconsequential, all the countries of Southeast Asia bar none had a certain deep respect for China because they remember the China of the Qing Dynasty, they remember the voyages of Zheng He (郑和). And all over Southeast Asia there are Chinese communities which by their performance and their abilities, are a reminder to them of what China can become again. For this reason the re-emergence of China is not completely unexpected among the countries in Southeast Asia and as the realities impinge among themselves, in trade numbers, in visits and so on the responses which have historical antecedence all come back. They do not want to be dominated by China but they want China’s friendship. They are careful about impinging on China’s core interests but at the same time, instinctively they want diversification. I give you an example which is Myanmar. Myanmar, because of the western embargo has had to depend a lot on China. China has a lot of influence in Myanmar. But Myanmar does not want to be part of the Chinese realm. It prefers to remain in ASEAN even though it knows in ASEAN it gets criticised every time we meet. But it is prepared to bear with all that because it gives them some room to play. India, which is also a neighbouring country to Myanmar, doesn’t want China to have exclusive influence so it keeps its border also open. And I was quite surprised recently to read a report that recently between Myanmar and India, they decided to build a road from Arunachal Pradesh into Myanmar. We know Arunachal Pradesh is claimed by China but I think that the Myanmar government had decided that it would act in its own self interest and open up the border region because it would help its own development. So I would say that you find countries of Southeast Asia respectful of China, wanting China’s friendship and at that same time wanting diversification and wanting to have friends in all directions.

Question: Good afternoon, sir. My name is Chan Zhixing and I’m a third year law student from the Singapore Management University (SMU). You mentioned about elements of nei (内-internal) and wai (外-external). My question is: What are some of the guiding principles which determine what is nei and what is wai from a Chinese perspective? Do we know what is considered important to them, what is their core interest, but what is the guiding principle for them in deciding whether something is internal or external? Thank you.

Minister: You know, it’s hard to reduce this into rules. I think those of us who are raised as Chinese instinctively feel it, and learn that as a core principle as a young child in how you deal with people who are not like you. And the way to treat those who are not like you is to be extra nice to them. You always treat strangers better than your own people because you are afraid of strangers. So the best food, the best items are reserved for strangers [Laughter]. Among yourselves you get the second best, but when a foreigner comes, always win him over by generosity because you are afraid of him. How do you define that? Is it genetic? It is not genetic because Han people are genetically very diverse. Is it a fixed set of cultural norms? But the norms in dong bei (东北-the Northeast) are very different from the norms in gan su (甘肃), very different from norms in the South. And strangely even the Chinese outside China often make this clear distinction between nei and wai. If you talk to Indonesian Chinese, the Malaysian Chinese, they make that distinction very clearly. And even those who are assimilated in the Philippines and Thailand, very often these distinctions persist. But I am hard put. I think it would require scholars to do research into this to say look, these are the hundred rules by which you distinguish inside from outside.

Moderator: Well, even our grandparents think of us as nei sun (内孙paternal grandson) or wai sun (外孙-maternal grandson). When we visit China as wai bin (外宾-foreign visitor) we have to pay higher entrance fees. So sometimes if we can get away with it it’s ok to pretend to be nei bin (内宾-domestic visitor) [Laughter]. But Minister, I have another question that I will like to pose to you. You said very briefly earlier that there are episodic levels of interest in Singapore from the Chinese and sometimes they like what they see in Singapore, sometimes they don’t like what they see - that got me very interested. In your interactions, what have you uncovered as likeable aspects and not-so-likeable aspects, as far as the Chinese are concerned?

Minister: You mean, what they like of us and what they don’t like of us?

Moderator: That’s right.

Minister: Well, I think because Singapore is so small and has a different history, so there are limits to what the Singapore model can hold to the Chinese. But at the same time, the leaders in the mainland know that there are deep historical and cultural connections between Singapore and China going back to the Qing dynasty. I had a discussion about Wan Qing Yuan (晚晴园 )the other day which was the house which Sun Zhong Shan lived in when he was in Singapore. He was there eight times, he lived in the house six times with his mistress and I think three or four of the uprisings in China were organised in Singapore and the money was collected in Singapore. In fact the Tong Meng Hui (同盟会)after it was established in Dong Jing (东京-Tokyo), six months later it was established in Singapore and that became the precursor to the Guo Ming Dang(国民党). And the Guo Ming Dang flag, which is the flag of Taiwan today, was chosen from four different specimens and the contest was held in Singapore. When they chose the model, the owner of the bungalow Teo Eng Hock, who is our Defence Minister’s great grand uncle, his wife sewed together the flag and that flag today is in the KMT Museum in Taipei. Then during the anti-Japanese struggle in China, Singapore was a major base for the raising of funds, to help. Volunteers went throughout Southeast Asia but Singapore was the Zong Bu (总部-headquarters). A lot of the discussions were held in the Yi He Xuan(怡和轩 - Ee Hoe Hean Club) which was the business club still existing today, refurbished recently. The Japanese Imperial Army, when they drew up their plans in Taiwan to invade Singapore, they had already drawn up a list of thousands of Chinese community leaders in Singapore who would have to be neutralised. So it was not an accident that after Nanjing, the place where the greatest slaughter took place was in Singapore. And then after that, the great twists and turns in China all had their reflections here in Singapore. I think a scholar who wants to write the history of the left wing movement in Singapore attributed, I think it was in today’s newspapers, the decline of the Barisan Socialist to its aping of Cultural Revolution policies in China which was so out of line to reality in Singapore that they were defeated. Under Mao, the contacts were minimal, but after Mao, when China was opening up, when Deng Xiaoping was trying to find a new way forward for China, Singapore became an inspiration to China because of all the connections there. If Singapore could succeed, why can’t China succeed? Because China has more people, cleverer people, a prouder tradition. So when the special economic zones were established, the Chinese Foreign Minister appointed Dr Goh Keng Swee as Adviser to the State Councillor Gu Mu. So since then, whether it was for special economic zones, industrial estates Suzhou, Tianjin and so on, from time to time, China’s focus - go to Singapore to see whether it could extract lessons, and then it moves on if it feels that it has learnt already. But I notice in recent years, a great interest in the management of urban politics, because the PAP, the People’s Action Party, is probably the most successful urban political party in Asia, and the Chinese want to know what is the secret. And there are, every year, many Chinese delegations visiting our constituencies, visiting the Members of Parliament while they are holding their meet-the-people sessions, their political clinics. Well, if we can play a helpful role to China, we should. It costs us nothing, and a strong China, wealthy China, is good for Singapore. We hope also that it is not just China learning from our mistakes and failures; I think we should also have the good sense and wisdom, the humility, to learn from China’s experiences and failures, and in the process, also include ourselves and keeping the relevance at our own model.

Moderator: On that note Minister, I have a question about the role of Singapore. Is it a farfetched idea to think of Singapore as a bridge between China and the world? If there is one thing we can do to strengthen ourselves…?

Minister: No, Singapore cannot be a bridge. A bridge suggests a certain exclusive channel of communication. We are in a networked-world, there are numerous, almost infinite number of bypasses. What Singapore can do…

Moderator: So a bridge rather than the bridge.

Minister: It can be a node. If we are creative, if we are far-seeing, we can enlarge this node and increase its connectivity to other nodes. But if we become self-satisfied or inward-looking, then we will shrink and then become less relevant to others. But it is becoming a networked-world, and everybody has bypasses. No one is indispensable.

Moderator: And the one thing we can do to strengthen ourselves as that node?

Minister: It is a little paradoxical, that the more we want to strengthen our links with China, and we should, the more we must strengthen our links to other parts of the world. Because if you look at it as a node in the brain with many synaptic connections, the more connected we are to India, to Southeast Asia, to Europe, to Japan, to Africa, the more valuable are our links to China, to the Chinese people. The key to Singapore’s good relations with China is in our ability to grow synaptic connections to other parts of the world, in particular the parts of the world which in an earlier age of globalisation created Singapore. It was the age of the British Empire which brought Indians, which brought Jews through Baghdad and Calcutta into Singapore, which brought Indonesians and Malaysians, and Thais and Vietnamese, which brought Australians and Japanese. All those links which created us in the 19th century, which we revive, because these are now the links which will give us all our life nutrients in this century to grow and to prosper.

Moderator: Well ladies and gentlemen, although we invited Minister George Yeo to speak to us on China, but you can see from the breadth of his knowledge and his interest in history, and also his keen observation of everything that’s going around in the world, you do not get just China, you will get synapses, you will get TCP/IP, you will get everything else that is related to this in the most interesting, stimulating and engaging way. May I just ask all of us to just show our appreciation to Mr George Yeo for sharing with us so generously. Thank you so much!

The Bookseller Of Kabul

Monday, July 12th, 2010

READING this book now. ISBN 1-84408-047-1, Library call number 958.10460922

Sultan was convinced that under the Taliban the country grew increasingly poor, dismal and insular. The authorities resisted all modernisation; they had no wish to either understand or adopt ideas of progress or economic development. They shunned scientific debate, whether conducted in the West or in the Muslim world. Their manifesto was above all a few pathetic arguments about how people should dress or cover themselves, how men should respect the hour of prayer, and women be separated from the rest of society. They were not conversant with the history of Islam or of Afghanistan, and had no interest in either.

Sultan Khan sat in the car squashed between the illiterate Taliban soldiers, cursing his country for being ruled by either warriors or mullahs. He was a believer, but a moderate Muslim. He prayed to Allah every morning, but usually ignored the following four calls to prayer unless the religious police pulled him in to the nearest mosque with other men they had snatched up from the streets. He reluctantly respected the fast during Ramadan and did not eat between sunup and sundown, at least not when anyone was looking. He was faithful to his two wives, brought up his children with a firm hand and taught them to be good God-fearing Muslims…

The Department for the Promotion of Virtue and Extermination of Sin, better known as the Ministry of Morality, was behind his arrest. During the interrogation in the prison Sultan Khan stroked his beard. He wore it according to Taliban requirements, the length of a clenched fist. He straightened his *shalwar kameez*; it too conformed to Taliban standards — tunic below the knees, trousers below the ankle. He answered proudly: “You can burn my books, you can embitter my life, you can even kill me, but you cannot wipe out Afghanistan’s history.”

I think morality should stand behind ministry. Not ministry before morality. :)

I mean I want to see

Monday, July 12th, 2010

“The unreal is more powerful than the real. Because nothing is as perfect as you can imagine it. Because its only intangible ideas, concepts, beliefs, fantasies that last. Stone crumbles. Wood rots. People, well, they die. But things as fragile as a thought, a dream, a legend, they can go on and on. If you can change the way people think. The way they see themselves. The way they see the world. You can change the way people live their lives. That’s the only lasting thing you can create.”

– Chuck Palahniuk

From this blog. This man sounds like such a lovely man. In Vienna.

He reminds me of why teachers in Asia are my favourite people. I love the Princeton programme…I met some of his friends on my trip through Laos, and they remind me of X. Educators *are* my favourite people. The people I met are friendly, easy-going, empathetic, and intelligent and hungry and funny.

I hope you find your harbour. I hope you find your sanctuary. I hope you find your heart’s home. God bless, god speed, and bon voyage. If you want to stay where you are and sleep all day, I think that’s perfectly fine too. :) That’s how dreams are made, you know.

That reminds me, I have to go read The White Tiger. Mmm…reading. You adult readers can go and watch football and surf for porn and watch TV if you want. Just remember to stay clean, go slow, and relax. :)

I think Singapore’s the best place for that, actually.

Leaders

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

“To lead people, walk beside them…
As for the best leaders, the people do not notice their existence.
The next best, the people honor and praise.
The next, the people fear; and the next, the people hate…
When the best leader’s work is done the people say,
‘We did it ourselves!’ ”

- Lao-tsu

A generous heart, kind speech and a life of service and compassion are the things which renew humanity.

- Source unknown.

THE best leaders I’ve seen in education get their hands dirty and lead by example. Look at Mrs Chua, for instance, who picks up litter as she walks around the school and is loved by all her staff and students. Learning from her example, I now “de-rubbish” the park when I go cycling — you don’t have to sign up for a beach clean-up (though it’s fun to do things in groups! I’m asking the Brownies to join me in a beach clean-up exercise come September); all it takes is a little effort from each of us.

风水轮流转

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

AL-JAZEERA on Empire. Good stuff.

Featuring:
Tony Benn — Former Labour minister in the British government
Sir Christopher Meyer — Former British ambassador to the US
Yasmin Alibhai-Brown — Journalist and author

Swoon…Shakespeare

Friday, May 28th, 2010

 

Two households, both alike in dignity,
In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,
From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,
Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.
From forth the fatal loins of these two foes
A pair of star-cross’d lovers take their life;
Whole misadventured piteous overthrows
Do with their death bury their parents’ strife.
The fearful passage of their death-mark’d love,
And the continuance of their parents’ rage,
Which, but their children’s end, nought could remove,
Is now the two hours’ traffic of our stage;
The which if you with patient ears attend,
What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend.

I THINK I’ll take my complete volume along for the June trip. It’s between this, and Crime And Punishment, and a heavy tome comparing Hitler And Stalin. (I should really get hold of a guide book to at least learn a bit of Lao, and look up addresses of decent tour agencies.) I’ve not read Shakespeare for such a long time…just The Tempest when the Bridge Project came to Singapore.

Was just reading Romeo and Juliet again and falling in love with the language all over again. A misspent youth means that I know bits and pieces by heart — hmm, the poem memorisation project has gone off the rails, I really should pick it up again in a less ambitious form (eg 30 lines a week).

Also watched Shrek 3, which was a decent bit of entertainment…Call me naive, but I’m most upset by Benicio del Toro selling ice cream in ads…No! Benicio! I loved you in films like Traffic. Haven’t watched many good movies recently; I think I’ll check out The Thomas Crown Affair.

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Sorry if I’ve been a bit hermity, guys. Eg K, thanks for the invitation to the LOTR marathon, but it was the weekend Goh Keng Swee died and I was needing to recharge back in my cave…also invitations out for concerts and all; I’ve been pretty rude in responding very slowly to SMSes and calls.

I still think there should be some basic rules when it comes to cellphone use though. My South African friend tells me it’s considered rude in SA to call people after 8.30pm…When I am King, this will be the policy. We can’t be “on call” all the time, that’s just bad for the nerves. Vienna was lovely for the shops shut on Sundays, and people know how to block off time for family, church, strolling in the park, whatever, without constantly checking the Internet, being online, doing conference calls, pecking away at their cellphone or media device.

Sigh, I may be turning into a crotchety old Tory-like “back in the good old days” person, but what’s up with the upbringing of some kids nowadays? I was waiting for the train and had this family shove in front of me with their kids, with the mother telling the kids: “You know what to do when the doors open, right?” (ie telling them to rush in and grab seats). If I were a parent, I’d *slap* any child of mine who pushed in front of others and grabbed seats. I’ve been taught that others come first, that we should *give up* our seats to those who need them. We should try to smile instead of scowl as moods are infectious and there’s no point being a grouch. It’s basic consideration.

Manners are kindnesses…You must always be kind. Opening doors for people is routine. Pour tea for others before starting on your drink. Make sure everybody has their food in front of them before you eat. Be generous with compliments and praise. Be on time. Remember to think of others first. Don’t talk a lot about yourself. You’re not that interesting. It’s others who matter.

Is that really so hard to remember?

Your “schoolmarm” says:

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

LOOK UP to people like Ruth Simmons instead of some chihuahua-toting pink-frocked fame whore.

“I was intent on doing something productive and on being everything my parents taught me to be. Their values were clear: do good work; don’t ever get too big for your breeches; always be an authentic person; don’t worry too much about being famous and rich because that doesn’t amount to too much.”

–Ruth Simmons, from her essay “My Mother’s Daughter: Lessons I Learned in Civility and Authenticity,” Texas Council for the Humanities Journal, Spring-Summer 1998.

“No one Ruth Simmons knew had gone to college, and certainly no one yet in her family had been college educated. But Ruth set her sights on higher education. Her high school teachers sent her money during her early years in college to help pay for the cost of her education at Dillard University in New Orleans. When she had nothing to wear to … See morecollege, a teacher took her in her closet and gave her clothes to wear to school. Simmons wrote: “These were people that wanted me to succeed in the worst possible way: they knew the odds out there, and wanted me to overcome them.” ”

This is why I love teachers, and why educators are my usually my favourite people. We won’t be where we were without our parents, firstly, and great teachers who believe in us.

Goodbye, Dr Goh

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

Zaobao picture taken on the day after he died

 

GOOD pieces by Janadas Devan + Tommy Koh in today’s Sunday Times. (I’ve boycotted the site for the longest time due to their stupid policy of making subscribers pay for the online version…it’s a shame they don’t showcase their best writers and put cr– blogs on the main site instead.)

From Janadas:

Dr Goh Keng Swee has been described as the founder of the Singapore Armed Forces, the architect of Singapore’s economy, the master builder of independent Singapore. He was also, as I have said on many occasions in this space, a remarkably gifted writer — indeed, the most distinguished writer of English prose this country has had.

…To begin with, he was possessed by the desire to write — to communicate, to explain policy, to clarify, to argue, to convince. As Dr Goh himself noted, not without some pride, he and his Old Guard colleagues “may be the few remaining members of a vanishing breed of political leaders: We write our own speeches. We have our ideas as to how societies should be structured and how governments should be managed. We prefer to express these ideas our way.”

As a result, as Dr Goh went on to observe in the preface to his first collection of essays, The Economics Of Modernisation, he and his Old Guard colleagues ended up addressing “their citizens on matters of public policy more often than is usual in most countries”.

And in Dr Goh’s case, at least, speaking about public policy really meant speaking about public policy. He was never condescending to his audience, no matter how humble they were; he never acted or behaved as though public policy, no matter how complex, could not be understood by the public.

I will, if I may, cite a personal memory here as evidence: The first time I heard Dr Goh deliver a speech was at the NTUC’s historic Modernisation Seminar in 1969, which my father, Devan Nair, organised and chaired. Only 14 years old then, I had been dragged to the seminar because I was a nuisance at home, and was dreading listening to Dr Goh speak.

To my utter surprise, I not only understood what he said, but also found it most interesting. And if I, a 14-year-old, could understand him, so could the unionists.

There were no scholars in the NTUC in those days. The best-educated unionists then would have come from the teachers’ union, and possibly the journalists’ union, but even then, few among the teachers or journalists would have been university graduates. And yet, Dr Goh spoke to the unionists as equals, without a hint of condescension, and explained to them in great detail the economics of cooperatives, with his English being translated simultaneously into Mandarin, Malay and Tamil.

“I suggest that the financial base could be built upon a life insurance cooperative,” he urged, arguing against the proposal to start with a bank, as the NTUC had been advised to do by some European trade unions. “The insurance cooperative should not, at any rate in the initial stages, move into other fields of insurance such as fire, marine, motor and general insurance,” he continued. “There is no advantage that a cooperative enterprise enjoys in these fields over private enterprise. It is otherwise in respect of life insurance.”

And so on — very serious but plain talk. And thus was NTUC Income born — not as a result of scholar-officials shuffling papers in a hermetically sealed committee room, but as a result of scholar-officials shuffling papers in a hermetically sealed committee room, but as a result of a world-class economist speaking directly to the representatives of port workers, postmen, petroleum workers, road sweepers, seamen, bus drivers, bank clerks and factory hands. Speaking directly to them, moreover, of complex issues in so accessible a fashion that even a 14-year-old could understand; and speaking of these weighty matters without in any way misrepresenting their complexity or talking down to his audience.

Even now, more than 40 years later, I doubt if any academic — or journalist or civil servant, for that matter — would be able to produce a more exact, thorough and accessible account of the principles of cooperatives as Dr Goh produced that day for unionists. I was too young to realise it then, but it appears clear to me in retrospect that what Dr Goh did that day was profoundly democratic.

And here I think is a hint of how his linguistic gifts contributed to his statesmanship. He was a graceful, even stylish writer, to be sure. His ear — in part because he listened to a good deal of music, especially Baroque — was unerring. His diction and his tone had a classical purity. I don’t think he ever wrote a sentence that didn’t *sound* good. But all this was incidental.

What made Dr Goh so important a writer was the same thing that made him so important a statesman: a deep ethical sense. His writing — the way he worked at it to arrive at the precise formulation, the way he always used the simple word in favour of the difficult, the way he strove for clarity — all this was a technique in sincerity, in honesty. He wanted to explain; he desperately wanted to communicate; he felt writing was a way of speaking clearly, honestly and sincerely to his fellow men.

As I look back 40 years to that speech in 1969, I am struck by how unlikely it all was. In how many countries would a finance minister, as Dr Goh was then, even attempt to seriously engage unionists on the principles of cooperatives? How many world-class economists, as Dr Goh was also, would go out of their way to eschew technical language as he did? How many people in his position — at least a foot smarter than anybody else in almost every room he found himself in — would take this much care to talk to perfectly ordinary people about complex issues?

“The vicissitudes of fortune which we experienced in our quest for a decent living in a none too hospitable environment bears resemblance to the biblical journeys of the children of Israel in their search for the promised land,” he wrote once. “And like Moses, we had to explain, exhort, encourage, inform, educate, advise — and to denounce false prophets.”

The prophet is dead. May his soul rest in peace. We have only his prophecies left. They still bear reading.

janadas@sph.com.sg

(OK break, I got to go shower to go out, continue typing when I get back home.)

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Read this. Can’t understand Chinese? Well that’s what Babelfish is for, isn’t it? And the Internet…and your neighbourhood CC that runs classes…and the Confucius Institute…and dictionaries. :)

Rereading Black Swan

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

ALWAYS a hard decision…to buy or to just check out from the library whenever?

The writer Umberto Eco belongs to that small class of scholars who are encyclopedic, insightful, and nondull. He is the the owner of a large personal library (containing thirty thousand books), and separates visitors into two categories: those who react with “Wow! Signore professore dottore Eco, what a library you have! How many of these books have you read?” and the others — a very small minority — who get the point that a private library is not an ego-boosting appendage but a research tool. Read books are far less valuable than unread ones. The library should contain as much of what you do not know as your financial means, mortgage rates, and the currently tight real-estate market allow you to put there. You will accumulate more knowledge and more books as you grow older, and the growing number of unread books on the shelves will look at you menacingly. Let us call this collection of unread books an antilibrary.

I love this so much I’ve to repost it…

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Spring 2010
Solitude and Leadership

If you want others to follow, learn to be alone with your thoughts

By William Deresiewicz

The lecture below was delivered to the plebe class at the United States Military Academy at West Point in October of last year.

My title must seem like a contradiction. What can solitude have to do with leadership? Solitude means being alone, and leadership necessitates the presence of others—the people you’re leading. When we think about leadership in American history we are likely to think of Washington, at the head of an army, or Lincoln, at the head of a nation, or King, at the head of a movement—people with multitudes behind them, looking to them for direction. And when we think of solitude, we are apt to think of Thoreau, a man alone in the woods, keeping a journal and communing with nature in silence.

Leadership is what you are here to learn—the qualities of character and mind that will make you fit to command a platoon, and beyond that, perhaps, a company, a battalion, or, if you leave the military, a corporation, a foundation, a department of government. Solitude is what you have the least of here, especially as plebes. You don’t even have privacy, the opportunity simply to be physically alone, never mind solitude, the ability to be alone with your thoughts. And yet I submit to you that solitude is one of the most important necessities of true leadership. This lecture will be an attempt to explain why.

We need to begin by talking about what leadership really means. I just spent 10 years teaching at another institution that, like West Point, liked to talk a lot about leadership, Yale University. A school that some of you might have gone to had you not come here, that some of your friends might be going to. And if not Yale, then Harvard, Stanford, MIT, and so forth. These institutions, like West Point, also see their role as the training of leaders, constantly encourage their students, like West Point, to regard themselves as leaders among their peers and future leaders of society. Indeed, when we look around at the American elite, the people in charge of government, business, academia, and all our other major institutions—senators, judges, CEOs, college presidents, and so forth—we find that they come overwhelmingly either from the Ivy League and its peer institutions or from the service academies, especially West Point.

So I began to wonder, as I taught at Yale, what leadership really consists of. My students, like you, were energetic, accomplished, smart, and often ferociously ambitious, but was that enough to make them leaders? Most of them, as much as I liked and even admired them, certainly didn’t seem to me like leaders. Does being a leader, I wondered, just mean being accomplished, being successful? Does getting straight As make you a leader? I didn’t think so. Great heart surgeons or great novelists or great shortstops may be terrific at what they do, but that doesn’t mean they’re leaders. Leadership and aptitude, leadership and achievement, leadership and even ex­cellence have to be different things, otherwise the concept of leadership has no meaning. And it seemed to me that that had to be especially true of the kind of excellence I saw in the students around me.

See, things have changed since I went to college in the ’80s. Everything has gotten much more intense. You have to do much more now to get into a top school like Yale or West Point, and you have to start a lot earlier. We didn’t begin thinking about college until we were juniors, and maybe we each did a couple of extracurriculars. But I know what it’s like for you guys now. It’s an endless series of hoops that you have to jump through, starting from way back, maybe as early as junior high school. Classes, standardized tests, extracurriculars in school, extracurriculars outside of school. Test prep courses, admissions coaches, private tutors. I sat on the Yale College admissions committee a couple of years ago. The first thing the admissions officer would do when presenting a case to the rest of the committee was read what they call the “brag” in admissions lingo, the list of the student’s extracurriculars. Well, it turned out that a student who had six or seven extracurriculars was already in trouble. Because the students who got in—in addition to perfect grades and top scores—usually had 10 or 12.

So what I saw around me were great kids who had been trained to be world-class hoop jumpers. Any goal you set them, they could achieve. Any test you gave them, they could pass with flying colors. They were, as one of them put it herself, “excellent sheep.” I had no doubt that they would continue to jump through hoops and ace tests and go on to Harvard Business School, or Michigan Law School, or Johns Hopkins Medical School, or Goldman Sachs, or McKinsey consulting, or whatever. And this approach would indeed take them far in life. They would come back for their 25th reunion as a partner at White & Case, or an attending physician at Mass General, or an assistant secretary in the Department of State.

That is exactly what places like Yale mean when they talk about training leaders. Educating people who make a big name for themselves in the world, people with impressive titles, people the university can brag about. People who make it to the top. People who can climb the greasy pole of whatever hierarchy they decide to attach themselves to.

But I think there’s something desperately wrong, and even dangerous, about that idea. To explain why, I want to spend a few minutes talking about a novel that many of you may have read, Heart of Darkness. If you haven’t read it, you’ve probably seen Apocalypse Now, which is based on it. Marlow in the novel becomes Captain Willard, played by Martin Sheen. Kurtz in the novel becomes Colonel Kurtz, played by Marlon Brando. But the novel isn’t about Vietnam; it’s about colonialism in the Belgian Congo three generations before Vietnam. Marlow, not a military officer but a merchant marine, a civilian ship’s captain, is sent by the company that’s running the country under charter from the Belgian crown to sail deep upriver, up the Congo River, to retrieve a manager who’s ensconced himself in the jungle and gone rogue, just like Colonel Kurtz does in the movie.

Now everyone knows that the novel is about imperialism and colonialism and race relations and the darkness that lies in the human heart, but it became clear to me at a certain point, as I taught the novel, that it is also about bureaucracy—what I called, a minute ago, hierarchy. The Company, after all, is just that: a company, with rules and procedures and ranks and people in power and people scrambling for power, just like any other bureaucracy. Just like a big law firm or a governmental department or, for that matter, a university. Just like—and here’s why I’m telling you all this—just like the bureaucracy you are about to join. The word bureaucracy tends to have negative connotations, but I say this in no way as a criticism, merely a description, that the U.S. Army is a bureaucracy and one of the largest and most famously bureaucratic bureaucracies in the world. After all, it was the Army that gave us, among other things, the indispensable bureaucratic acronym “snafu”: “situation normal: all fucked up”—or “all fouled up” in the cleaned-up version. That comes from the U.S. Army in World War II.

You need to know that when you get your commission, you’ll be joining a bureaucracy, and however long you stay in the Army, you’ll be operating within a bureaucracy. As different as the armed forces are in so many ways from every other institution in society, in that respect they are the same. And so you need to know how bureaucracies operate, what kind of behavior—what kind of character—they reward, and what kind they punish.

So, back to the novel. Marlow proceeds upriver by stages, just like Captain Willard does in the movie. First he gets to the Outer Station. Kurtz is at the Inner Station. In between is the Central Station, where Marlow spends the most time, and where we get our best look at bureaucracy in action and the kind of people who succeed in it. This is Marlow’s description of the manager of the Central Station, the big boss:

He was commonplace in complexion, in features, in manners, and in voice. He was of middle size and of ordinary build. His eyes, of the usual blue, were perhaps remarkably cold. . . . Otherwise there was only an indefinable, faint expression of his lips, something stealthy—a smile—not a smile—I remember it, but I can’t explain. . . . He was a common trader, from his youth up employed in these parts—nothing more. He was obeyed, yet he inspired neither love nor fear, nor even respect. He inspired uneasiness. That was it! Uneasiness. Not a definite mistrust—just uneasiness—nothing more. You have no idea how effective such a . . . a . . . faculty can be. He had no genius for organizing, for initiative, or for order even. . . . He had no learning, and no intelligence. His position had come to him—why? . . . He originated nothing, he could keep the routine going—that’s all. But he was great. He was great by this little thing that it was impossible to tell what could control such a man. He never gave that secret away. Perhaps there was nothing within him. Such a suspicion made one pause.

Note the adjectives: commonplace, ordinary, usual, common. There is nothing distinguished about this person. About the 10th time I read that passage, I realized it was a perfect description of the kind of person who tends to prosper in the bureaucratic environment. And the only reason I did is because it suddenly struck me that it was a perfect description of the head of the bureaucracy that I was part of, the chairman of my academic department—who had that exact same smile, like a shark, and that exact same ability to make you uneasy, like you were doing something wrong, only she wasn’t ever going to tell you what. Like the manager—and I’m sorry to say this, but like so many people you will meet as you negotiate the bureaucracy of the Army or for that matter of whatever institution you end up giving your talents to after the Army, whether it’s Microsoft or the World Bank or whatever—the head of my department had no genius for organizing or initiative or even order, no particular learning or intelligence, no distinguishing characteristics at all. Just the ability to keep the routine going, and beyond that, as Marlow says, her position had come to her—why?

That’s really the great mystery about bureaucracies. Why is it so often that the best people are stuck in the middle and the people who are running things—the leaders—are the mediocrities? Because excellence isn’t usually what gets you up the greasy pole. What gets you up is a talent for maneuvering. Kissing up to the people above you, kicking down to the people below you. Pleasing your teachers, pleasing your superiors, picking a powerful mentor and riding his coattails until it’s time to stab him in the back. Jumping through hoops. Getting along by going along. Being whatever other people want you to be, so that it finally comes to seem that, like the manager of the Central Station, you have nothing inside you at all. Not taking stupid risks like trying to change how things are done or question why they’re done. Just keeping the routine going.

I tell you this to forewarn you, because I promise you that you will meet these people and you will find yourself in environments where what is rewarded above all is conformity. I tell you so you can decide to be a different kind of leader. And I tell you for one other reason. As I thought about these things and put all these pieces together—the kind of students I had, the kind of leadership they were being trained for, the kind of leaders I saw in my own institution—I realized that this is a national problem. We have a crisis of leadership in this country, in every institution. Not just in government. Look at what happened to American corporations in recent decades, as all the old dinosaurs like General Motors or TWA or U.S. Steel fell apart. Look at what happened to Wall Street in just the last couple of years.

Finally—and I know I’m on sensitive ground here—look at what happened during the first four years of the Iraq War. We were stuck. It wasn’t the fault of the enlisted ranks or the noncoms or the junior officers. It was the fault of the senior leadership, whether military or civilian or both. We weren’t just not winning, we weren’t even changing direction.

We have a crisis of leadership in America because our overwhelming power and wealth, earned under earlier generations of leaders, made us complacent, and for too long we have been training leaders who only know how to keep the routine going. Who can answer questions, but don’t know how to ask them. Who can fulfill goals, but don’t know how to set them. Who think about how to get things done, but not whether they’re worth doing in the first place. What we have now are the greatest technocrats the world has ever seen, people who have been trained to be incredibly good at one specific thing, but who have no interest in anything beyond their area of exper­tise. What we don’t have are leaders.

What we don’t have, in other words, are thinkers. People who can think for themselves. People who can formulate a new direction: for the country, for a corporation or a college, for the Army—a new way of doing things, a new way of looking at things. People, in other words, with vision.

Now some people would say, great. Tell this to the kids at Yale, but why bother telling it to the ones at West Point? Most people, when they think of this institution, assume that it’s the last place anyone would want to talk about thinking creatively or cultivating independence of mind. It’s the Army, after all. It’s no accident that the word regiment is the root of the word regimentation. Surely you who have come here must be the ultimate conformists. Must be people who have bought in to the way things are and have no interest in changing it. Are not the kind of young people who think about the world, who ponder the big issues, who question authority. If you were, you would have gone to Amherst or Pomona. You’re at West Point to be told what to do and how to think.

But you know that’s not true. I know it, too; otherwise I would never have been invited to talk to you, and I’m even more convinced of it now that I’ve spent a few days on campus. To quote Colonel Scott Krawczyk, your course director, in a lecture he gave last year to English 102:

From the very earliest days of this country, the model for our officers, which was built on the model of the citizenry and reflective of democratic ideals, was to be different. They were to be possessed of a democratic spirit marked by independent judgment, the freedom to measure action and to express disagreement, and the crucial responsibility never to tolerate tyranny.

All the more so now. Anyone who’s been paying attention for the last few years understands that the changing nature of warfare means that officers, including junior officers, are required more than ever to be able to think independently, creatively, flexibly. To deploy a whole range of skills in a fluid and complex situation. Lieutenant colonels who are essentially functioning as provincial governors in Iraq, or captains who find themselves in charge of a remote town somewhere in Afghanistan. People who know how to do more than follow orders and execute routines.

Look at the most successful, most acclaimed, and perhaps the finest soldier of his generation, General David Petraeus. He’s one of those rare people who rises through a bureaucracy for the right reasons. He is a thinker. He is an intellectual. In fact, Prospect magazine named him Public Intellectual of the Year in 2008—that’s in the world. He has a Ph.D. from Princeton, but what makes him a thinker is not that he has a Ph.D. or that he went to Princeton or even that he taught at West Point. I can assure you from personal experience that there are a lot of highly educated people who don’t know how to think at all.

No, what makes him a thinker—and a leader—is precisely that he is able to think things through for himself. And because he can, he has the confidence, the courage, to argue for his ideas even when they aren’t popular. Even when they don’t please his superiors. Courage: there is physical courage, which you all possess in abundance, and then there is another kind of courage, moral courage, the courage to stand up for what you believe.

It wasn’t always easy for him. His path to where he is now was not a straight one. When he was running Mosul in 2003 as commander of the 101st Airborne and developing the strategy he would later formulate in the Counterinsurgency Field Manual and then ultimately apply throughout Iraq, he pissed a lot of people off. He was way ahead of the leadership in Baghdad and Washington, and bureaucracies don’t like that sort of thing. Here he was, just another two-star, and he was saying, implicitly but loudly, that the leadership was wrong about the way it was running the war. Indeed, he was not rewarded at first. He was put in charge of training the Iraqi army, which was considered a blow to his career, a dead-end job. But he stuck to his guns, and ultimately he was vindicated. Ironically, one of the central elements of his counterinsurgency strategy is precisely the idea that officers need to think flexibly, creatively, and independently.

That’s the first half of the lecture: the idea that true leadership means being able to think for yourself and act on your convictions. But how do you learn to do that? How do you learn to think? Let’s start with how you don’t learn to think. A study by a team of researchers at Stanford came out a couple of months ago. The investigators wanted to figure out how today’s college students were able to multitask so much more effectively than adults. How do they manage to do it, the researchers asked? The answer, they discovered—and this is by no means what they expected—is that they don’t. The enhanced cognitive abilities the investigators expected to find, the mental faculties that enable people to multitask effectively, were simply not there. In other words, people do not multitask effectively. And here’s the really surprising finding: the more people multitask, the worse they are, not just at other mental abilities, but at multitasking itself.

One thing that made the study different from others is that the researchers didn’t test people’s cognitive functions while they were multitasking. They separated the subject group into high multitaskers and low multitaskers and used a different set of tests to measure the kinds of cognitive abilities involved in multitasking. They found that in every case the high multitaskers scored worse. They were worse at distinguishing between relevant and irrelevant information and ignoring the latter. In other words, they were more distractible. They were worse at what you might call “mental filing”: keeping information in the right conceptual boxes and being able to retrieve it quickly. In other words, their minds were more disorganized. And they were even worse at the very thing that defines multitasking itself: switching between tasks.

Multitasking, in short, is not only not thinking, it impairs your ability to think. Thinking means concentrating on one thing long enough to develop an idea about it. Not learning other people’s ideas, or memorizing a body of information, however much those may sometimes be useful. Developing your own ideas. In short, thinking for yourself. You simply cannot do that in bursts of 20 seconds at a time, constantly interrupted by Facebook messages or Twitter tweets, or fiddling with your iPod, or watching something on YouTube.

I find for myself that my first thought is never my best thought. My first thought is always someone else’s; it’s always what I’ve already heard about the subject, always the conventional wisdom. It’s only by concentrating, sticking to the question, being patient, letting all the parts of my mind come into play, that I arrive at an original idea. By giving my brain a chance to make associations, draw connections, take me by surprise. And often even that idea doesn’t turn out to be very good. I need time to think about it, too, to make mistakes and recognize them, to make false starts and correct them, to outlast my impulses, to defeat my desire to declare the job done and move on to the next thing.

I used to have students who bragged to me about how fast they wrote their papers. I would tell them that the great German novelist Thomas Mann said that a writer is someone for whom writing is more difficult than it is for other people. The best writers write much more slowly than everyone else, and the better they are, the slower they write. James Joyce wrote Ulysses, the greatest novel of the 20th century, at the rate of about a hundred words a day—half the length of the selection I read you earlier from Heart of Darkness—for seven years. T. S. Eliot, one of the greatest poets our country has ever produced, wrote about 150 pages of poetry over the course of his entire 25-year career. That’s half a page a month. So it is with any other form of thought. You do your best thinking by slowing down and concentrating.

Now that’s the third time I’ve used that word, concentrating. Concentrating, focusing. You can just as easily consider this lecture to be about concentration as about solitude. Think about what the word means. It means gathering yourself together into a single point rather than letting yourself be dispersed everywhere into a cloud of electronic and social input. It seems to me that Facebook and Twitter and YouTube—and just so you don’t think this is a generational thing, TV and radio and magazines and even newspapers, too—are all ultimately just an elaborate excuse to run away from yourself. To avoid the difficult and troubling questions that being human throws in your way. Am I doing the right thing with my life? Do I believe the things I was taught as a child? What do the words I live by—words like duty, honor, and country—really mean? Am I happy?

You and the members of the other service academies are in a unique position among college students, especially today. Not only do you know that you’re going to have a job when you graduate, you even know who your employer is going to be. But what happens after you fulfill your commitment to the Army? Unless you know who you are, how will you figure out what you want to do with the rest of your life? Unless you’re able to listen to yourself, to that quiet voice inside that tells you what you really care about, what you really believe in—indeed, how those things might be evolving under the pressure of your experiences. Students everywhere else agonize over these questions, and while you may not be doing so now, you are only postponing them for a few years.

Maybe some of you are agonizing over them now. Not everyone who starts here decides to finish here. It’s no wonder and no cause for shame. You are being put through the most demanding training anyone can ask of people your age, and you are committing yourself to work of awesome responsibility and mortal danger. The very rigor and regimentation to which you are quite properly subject here naturally has a tendency to make you lose touch with the passion that brought you here in the first place. I saw exactly the same kind of thing at Yale. It’s not that my students were robots. Quite the reverse. They were in­tensely idealistic, but the overwhelming weight of their practical responsibilities, all of those hoops they had to jump through, often made them lose sight of what those ideals were. Why they were doing it all in the first place.

So it’s perfectly natural to have doubts, or questions, or even just difficulties. The question is, what do you do with them? Do you suppress them, do you distract yourself from them, do you pretend they don’t exist? Or do you confront them directly, honestly, courageously? If you decide to do so, you will find that the answers to these dilemmas are not to be found on Twitter or Comedy Central or even in The New York Times. They can only be found within—without distractions, without peer pressure, in solitude.

But let me be clear that solitude doesn’t always have to mean introspection. Let’s go back to Heart of Darkness. It’s the solitude of concentration that saves Marlow amidst the madness of the Central Station. When he gets there he finds out that the steamboat he’s supposed to sail upriver has a giant hole in it, and no one is going to help him fix it. “I let him run on,” he says, “this papier-mâché Mephistopheles”—he’s talking not about the manager but his assistant, who’s even worse, since he’s still trying to kiss his way up the hierarchy, and who’s been raving away at him. You can think of him as the Internet, the ever-present social buzz, chattering away at you 24/7:

I let him run on, this papier-mâché Mephistopheles and it seemed to me that if I tried I could poke my forefinger through him, and would find nothing inside but a little loose dirt. . . .

It was a great comfort to turn from that chap to . . . the battered, twisted, ruined, tin-pot steamboat. . . . I had expended enough hard work on her to make me love her. No influential friend would have served me better. She had given me a chance to come out a bit—to find out what I could do. No, I don’t like work. I had rather laze about and think of all the fine things that can be done. I don’t like work—no man does—but I like what is in the work,—the chance to find yourself. Your own reality—for yourself, not for others—what no other man can ever know.

“The chance to find yourself.” Now that phrase, “finding yourself,” has acquired a bad reputation. It suggests an aimless liberal-arts college graduate—an English major, no doubt, someone who went to a place like Amherst or Pomona—who’s too spoiled to get a job and spends his time staring off into space. But here’s Marlow, a mariner, a ship’s captain. A more practical, hardheaded person you could not find. And I should say that Marlow’s creator, Conrad, spent 19 years as a merchant marine, eight of them as a ship’s captain, before he became a writer, so this wasn’t just some artist’s idea of a sailor. Marlow believes in the need to find yourself just as much as anyone does, and the way to do it, he says, is work, solitary work. Concentration. Climbing on that steamboat and spending a few uninterrupted hours hammering it into shape. Or building a house, or cooking a meal, or even writing a college paper, if you really put yourself into it.

“Your own reality—for yourself, not for others.” Thinking for yourself means finding yourself, finding your own reality. Here’s the other problem with Facebook and Twitter and even The New York Times. When you expose yourself to those things, especially in the constant way that people do now—older people as well as younger people—you are continuously bombarding yourself with a stream of other people’s thoughts. You are marinating yourself in the conventional wisdom. In other people’s reality: for others, not for yourself. You are creating a cacophony in which it is impossible to hear your own voice, whether it’s yourself you’re thinking about or anything else. That’s what Emerson meant when he said that “he who should inspire and lead his race must be defended from travelling with the souls of other men, from living, breathing, reading, and writing in the daily, time-worn yoke of their opinions.” Notice that he uses the word lead. Leadership means finding a new direction, not simply putting yourself at the front of the herd that’s heading toward the cliff.

So why is reading books any better than reading tweets or wall posts? Well, sometimes it isn’t. Sometimes, you need to put down your book, if only to think about what you’re reading, what you think about what you’re reading. But a book has two advantages over a tweet. First, the person who wrote it thought about it a lot more carefully. The book is the result of his solitude, his attempt to think for himself.

Second, most books are old. This is not a disadvantage: this is precisely what makes them valuable. They stand against the conventional wisdom of today simply because they’re not from today. Even if they merely reflect the conventional wisdom of their own day, they say something different from what you hear all the time. But the great books, the ones you find on a syllabus, the ones people have continued to read, don’t reflect the conventional wisdom of their day. They say things that have the permanent power to disrupt our habits of thought. They were revolutionary in their own time, and they are still revolutionary today. And when I say “revolutionary,” I am deliberately evoking the American Revolution, because it was a result of precisely this kind of independent thinking. Without solitude—the solitude of Adams and Jefferson and Hamilton and Madison and Thomas Paine—there would be no America.

So solitude can mean introspection, it can mean the concentration of focused work, and it can mean sustained reading. All of these help you to know yourself better. But there’s one more thing I’m going to include as a form of solitude, and it will seem counterintuitive: friendship. Of course friendship is the opposite of solitude; it means being with other people. But I’m talking about one kind of friendship in particular, the deep friendship of intimate conversation. Long, uninterrupted talk with one other person. Not Skyping with three people and texting with two others at the same time while you hang out in a friend’s room listening to music and studying. That’s what Emerson meant when he said that “the soul environs itself with friends, that it may enter into a grander self-acquaintance or solitude.”

Introspection means talking to yourself, and one of the best ways of talking to yourself is by talking to another person. One other person you can trust, one other person to whom you can unfold your soul. One other person you feel safe enough with to allow you to acknowledge things—to acknowledge things to yourself—that you otherwise can’t. Doubts you aren’t supposed to have, questions you aren’t supposed to ask. Feelings or opinions that would get you laughed at by the group or reprimanded by the authorities.

This is what we call thinking out loud, discovering what you believe in the course of articulating it. But it takes just as much time and just as much patience as solitude in the strict sense. And our new electronic world has disrupted it just as violently. Instead of having one or two true friends that we can sit and talk to for three hours at a time, we have 968 “friends” that we never actually talk to; instead we just bounce one-line messages off them a hundred times a day. This is not friendship, this is distraction.

I know that none of this is easy for you. Even if you threw away your cell phones and unplugged your computers, the rigors of your training here keep you too busy to make solitude, in any of these forms, anything less than very difficult to find. But the highest reason you need to try is precisely because of what the job you are training for will demand of you.

You’ve probably heard about the hazing scandal at the U.S. naval base in Bahrain that was all over the news recently. Terrible, abusive stuff that involved an entire unit and was orchestrated, allegedly, by the head of the unit, a senior noncommissioned officer. What are you going to do if you’re confronted with a situation like that going on in your unit? Will you have the courage to do what’s right? Will you even know what the right thing is? It’s easy to read a code of conduct, not so easy to put it into practice, especially if you risk losing the loyalty of the people serving under you, or the trust of your peer officers, or the approval of your superiors. What if you’re not the commanding officer, but you see your superiors condoning something you think is wrong?

How will you find the strength and wisdom to challenge an unwise order or question a wrongheaded policy? What will you do the first time you have to write a letter to the mother of a slain soldier? How will you find words of comfort that are more than just empty formulas?

These are truly formidable dilemmas, more so than most other people will ever have to face in their lives, let alone when they’re 23. The time to start preparing yourself for them is now. And the way to do it is by thinking through these issues for yourself—morality, mortality, honor—so you will have the strength to deal with them when they arise. Waiting until you have to confront them in practice would be like waiting for your first firefight to learn how to shoot your weapon. Once the situation is upon you, it’s too late. You have to be prepared in advance. You need to know, already, who you are and what you believe: not what the Army believes, not what your peers believe (that may be exactly the problem), but what you believe.

How can you know that unless you’ve taken counsel with yourself in solitude? I started by noting that solitude and leadership would seem to be contradictory things. But it seems to me that solitude is the very essence of leadership. The position of the leader is ultimately an intensely solitary, even intensely lonely one. However many people you may consult, you are the one who has to make the hard decisions. And at such moments, all you really have is yourself.

William Deresiewicz is an essayist and critic. His article “The Disadvantages of an Elite Education” appeared in the Summer 2008 issue of THE AMERICAN SCHOLAR.