i got a feeling
that this English project's gonna be a good good one



IT'S US
Five people in the group,
-Anthony
-Dan
-Jezelyn
-Steffi
-Zul
As a group, we will be doing a project on Graciousness.
Our mission statement is
"We plan to change the mindsets of typical Singaporeans and to teach them the importance of being gracious. We want to make Singapore a better place for people to live in whereby most of the population will learn how to be gracious so that they can teach their future genrations how to be gracious and also to attract more foreigners into Singapore to help boost it's economy."



TimeLine

THINGS-TO-DO

*Watch the videos
*Comprehension articles (Theatre slobs) [group]
*Argumentative essay
*Intervention drama
*Project planning [group]
*Debate/Forum
*Formal letter [individual]
*Project blog [group]
*Video [group]
*Posters [group]
*Self and peer review [individual]

Blog

!1st reflection
- Anthony
- Dan
- Jezelyn
- Steffi
- Zul
!2nd reflection
- Anthony
- Dan
- Jezelyn
- Steffi
- Zul
!Argumentative essay Intro
- Anthony
-Dan
-Jezelyn
-Steffi
-Zul
!3rd reflection
- Anthony
- Dan
-Jezelyn
-Steffi
- Zul

Assignments
*Argumentative essay
- Anthony
-Dan
-Jezelyn
-Steffi
-Zul
*Argumentative essay re-write
- Anthony
-Dan
-Jezelyn
-Steffi
-Zul
*Formal letter
- Anthony
-Dan
-Jezelyn
-Steffi
-Zul
*Individual report
- Anthony
-Dan
-Jezelyn
-Steffi
-Zul



CREDITS
layout by leen. © leen. 2009 - ∞.
date:Sunday, August 23
time:11:44
title:Government and Graciousness.
At a dialogue marking the 40th anniversary of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS), Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew said that Singapore 뱖ill take more time to develop and mature culturally as a people?before we attain the status of a 멺racious society?



He also believes that Singapore will not achieve this in his lifetime.



While MM Lee may perhaps be right in his assessment, he failed to mention what could be another contributing factor ?perhaps the most important one ?which sets the tone for Singapore society.



This is the public words (and behaviour) of leaders in government.



In a small nation like Singapore where government leaders are seen and heard virtually everyday in the news, what our leaders do and say have an impact on how society takes its cue ?especially with a government which is all-pervasive, all-powerful and which is involved in just about every aspect of our lives.

Thus, perhaps government leaders should be more aware of the influence that they have over how society behaves.



The Man and His Tough Talk




MM Lee himself is known as a 뱓ough talker?at times. Some of his public comments still remain vividly etched in the minds of Singaporeans.



In the book, The Man and His Ideas (1997), MM Lee perhaps made his most candid (some would say alarming) comment on Singaporeans and Singapore society:

밒t뭩 like with dogs. You train it in a proper way from small. It will know that it뭩 got to leave, go outside to pee and to defecate. No, we are not that kind of society. We had to train adult dogs who even today deliberately urinate in the lifts.??Lee Kuan Yew on Singapore society, The Man & His Ideas, 1997



The analogy which MM Lee used is a most interesting one. Likening Singaporeans to 밶dult dogs? and using the example of defecation and urination, it is not only derogatory and demeaning, it is also well ungracious, to put it mildly.



In the same book, he also spoke about writer Catherine Lim, who had written an article titled 밫he PAP And The People ?A Great Affective Divide? published by The Straits Times in 1994.

밪upposing Catherine Lim was writing about me and not the prime minister꿙he would not dare, right? Because my posture, my response has been such that nobody doubts that if you take me on, I will put on knuckle-dusters and catch you in a cul de sac꾿nybody who decides to take me on needs to put on knuckle dusters. If you think you can hurt me more than I can hurt you, try. There is no other way you can govern a Chinese society.??SM Lee Kuan Yew, The Man and His Ideas, 1997



The above two quotes give one an insight into MM Lee뭩 thinking on two fronts: One, how he views (or viewed) Singaporeans and Singapore society as a whole, and two, how he reacts to being challenged politically (even if it is only a perceived challenge).



In both instances, the words he used ?which must have been selected with some thought ?are telling.

Perhaps the MM Lee quote which would summarise his entire philosophy in government and in politics would be this one:



밄etween being loved and being feared, I have always believed Machiavelli was right. If nobody is afraid of me, I뭢 meaningless.??Lee Kuan Yew, 1997, South China Morning Post.

It is also interesting to note that the above 3 quotes were made in 1997, 10 years ago. Has MM Lee mellowed since? Have his words been more measured since 1997? If the General Elections of 2006 were any indication, one would have to say no.



A gracious People뭩 Action Party?




Singaporeans will remember how MM Lee was at the forefront of the attacks on The Workers?Party (WP) candidate, James Gomes, during the elections in 2006, in the hotly contested ward of Aljunied GRC, over the issue of the missing minority forms.



In an election period of just 9 days, MM Lee trained his guns on Gomes for most of those 9 days, even after Gomes had apologized and the WP had wanted to move on and focus on the bread and butter issues which Singaporeans were concerned about.



밯hen I call a man openly, you뭨e a liar, you뭨e dishonest, and you do not dare to sue me, there뭩 something basically wrong. And I will repeat it anywhere and you can뭪 go and say, oh, I have apologised; let뭩 move on. Can you commit a dishonourable ?maybe even one which is against the law ?an illegal act and say, let뭩 move on because I뭭e apologised? You may move on but you뭨e going to move on out of politics in time.??MM Lee Kuan Yew on James Gomez, Channelnewsasia, May 2006



MM Lee further went on and accused WP secretary general Low Thia Khiang and its chairman Sylvia Lim 뱋f trying to cover up for Mr Gomez and asked its chairman Sylvia Lim to 밹ome clean?on the entire episode.?



Singaporeans were disappointed, to say the least, at the incessant attacks on Gomes by the PAP and particularly MM Lee himself and unease at such behaviour began to have a negative impact on the PAP뭩 campaign. On May 4, two days before polling day on May 6, the PAP finally said that they will deal with Gomes after the elections and that the PAP would focus on other issues from then on.



PM Lee Hsien Loong said:

밯e have taken the matter as far as we can for now. After the elections, there will be time and opportunity for a proper public resolution.?br>
 

Gomes was immediately detained by the police on 7th May, the day after Polling Day. Curiously, the police 밺ecided it would let Mr Gomez go with a warning instead as he had been cooperative and had not committed any criminal offences before.?




In the heat of the moment?



PM Lee himself was caught by his own words during the elections in 2006. At a lunchtime rally in UOB Plaza on May 3, PM Lee said:

밨ight now we have Low Thia Khiang, Chiam See Tong, Steve Chia. We can deal with them. Suppose you had 10, 15, 20 opposition members in Parliament. Instead of spending my time thinking what is the right policy for Singapore, I뭢 going to spend all my time thinking what뭩 the right way to fix them, to buy my supporters votes, how can I solve this week뭩 problem and forget about next year뭩 challenges??



Singaporeans were aghast at PM Lee뭩 use of the phrases 밼ix the opposition?and 밷uy my supporters votes? The next day, the press secretary to the PM 밹larified remarks made by Mr Lee at the lunchtime rally?




Explaining Mr Lee뭩 remark, his press secretary said Mr Lee had meant to say
that if there were many more opposition MPs in Parliament, the government and
opposition would spend all their time and energies countering each other, and
Singapore would be worse off for it.



Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong뭩 remarks labeling Singaporeans who decided to leave Singapore for greener pastures is also vividly remembered. In his National Day Rally speech in 2002, then-prime minister Goh said:

밊air-weather Singaporeans will run away whenever the country runs into stormy weather. I call them 몈uitters뭶 Look yourself in the mirror and ask, am I a 뱒tayer?or a 뱏uitter? Am I a fair-weather Singaporean or an all-weather Singaporean??




Singaporeans, particularly those who had left, did not take too kindly to the remarks. It was seen as unreasonable and unbecoming for a prime minister to ridicule fellow Singaporeans.




D??vu



In more recent times, government ministers have also made 뱔ngracious?remarks.




In April 2006, Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan, was reported to have said the following, regarding the government뭩 plans for retirement villages for the elderly:

밠y personal view is, our land is expensive. But we have nearby neighbours in Johore, Batam and Bintan. The elderly want to reach their doctors within half to one hour. So retirement villages in neighbouring countries is possible, barring the cross-border hassle. It is best to find cheap land on short leases.?




Many Singaporeans, especially the elderly, were concerned that the government was thinking of 몊ending them away to a foreign country?to 몉etire? Mr Khaw later clarified:

밢f course it뭩 up to the market to decide, and the market means the families themselves, and if the families say no, we love our parents and we can cope with them at home, then the market is zero, but let뭩 be realistic.?




In what perhaps is perceived as the most insulting remarks in recent years, Minister for Community, Youth and Sports, Vivian Balakrishnan뭩 reply to PAP MP Lily Neo뭩 request for more to be given to people on public assistance, drew gasps from Singaporeans.




Dr Lily Neo:

Sir, I want to check with the Minister again when he said on the strict criteria on the entitlement for PA recipients. May I ask him what is his definition of 뱒ubsistence living? Am I correct to say that, out of $260 per month for PA recipients, $100 goes to rental, power supply and S&C and leaving them with only $5 a day to live on? Am I correct to say that any basic meal in any hawker centre is already $2.50 to $3.00 per meal? Therefore, is it too much to ask for just three meals a day as an entitlement for the PA recipients?




Dr Vivian Balakrishnan:

밐ow much do you want? Do you want three meals in a hawker centre, food court or restaurant??




On 27 August 2007, when WP Sec Gen Low Thia Khiang questioned the government뭩 denial of a permit for his party to hold a cycling event, Minister of State for Law and Home Affairs Ho Peng Kee said:

밒f you listened very carefully Mr Low, I don뭪 know whether his hearing aid is with him because he wears one, I said there is a greater potential for law and order problems.?




Minister Ho뭩 reference to Mr Low뭩 hearing ability was regarded as below-the-belt and unworthy of parliamentary debate.




In all of the above instances, one thing stands out ?the ministers involved did not and have not apologised. If anything were forthcoming, they were mostly couched as 밹larification?and nothing more.




Hubris?



From labeling those who broke their government bonds as 밷ond breakers?and shaming them publicly, to threatening to withdraw public services from opposition wards, from denying opposition wards HDB upgrading, to alarmist remarks about 뱋ur women?becoming 뱈aids in foreign countries, foreign workers? from crude and trite replies from our civil servants (read K Bhavani), to sending in police riot squads to small public protests (read Odex), graciousness doesn뭪 seem to be a very important trait (or value) in our government.




However, having said all of the above, MM Lee could be right ?it will take a long time for Singapore to become a gracious society.


In reference to the British, MM Lee said:

밇ven the British, he said, were 뭩itting at a very high level over an empire for nearly 150 years before they developed their culture and then being invaded by football hooligans and foreigners who are now joining them and coarsening their society??




Singapore itself, through government policy, is experiencing an 밿nvasion?of foreigners. Will our own society be 밹oarsened? Time will tell.




For now, perhaps government officials should pay more heed not only to what they say in public but also how they say it. Words chosen have an impact on society, especially when they come from a government on which most Singaporeans still look to for direction.




A gracious society? For now, I뭗 settle for a gracious government ?and this, certainly, is attainable within MM Lee뭩 lifetime.

Source: TheOnlineCitizen


By: Dan