WHAT IS IT ALL ABOUT?

Posted by Unknown On Wednesday, March 17, 2010 24 comments

Life isn't about keeping score. It's not about how many friends you have. Or how many people call you. Or how accepted or unaccepted you are. Not about if you have plans this weekend. Or if you're alone. It isn't about who you're dating, who you use to date, how many people you've dated, or if you haven't been with anyone at all. It isn't about who you have kissed. It's not about sex. It isn't about who your family is or how much money they have. Or what kind of car you drive. Or where you're sent to school.



It's not about how beautiful or ugly you are. Or what clothes you wear, what shoes you have on, or what kind of music you listen to. It's not about if your hair is blonde, red, black, brown, or green. Or if your skin is too light or too dark.

It's not about what grades you get, how smart you are, how smart everyone else thinks you are, or how smart standardized tests say you are. Or if this teacher likes you, or if this guy/girl likes you. Or what clubs you're in, or how good you are at "your" sport. It's not about representing your whole being on a piece of paper and seeing who will "accept the written you".

life Pictures, Images and Photos

But life is about who you love and who you hurt. It's about who you make happy or unhappy purposefully. It's about keeping or betraying trust. It's about friendship, used as sanctity, or as a weapon. It's about what you say and mean, maybe hurtful, maybe heartening. About starting rumors and contributing to petty gossip. It's about what judgments you pass and why. And who your judgments are spread to.

life Pictures, Images and Photos

It's about who you've ignored with full control and intention. It's about jealousy, fear, pain, ignorance, and revenge. It's about carrying inner hate and love, letting it grow and spreading it.

But most of all, it's about using your life to touch or poison other people's hearts in such a way that could never occurred alone. Only you choose the way these hearts are affected and those choices are what life is all about.

-author unknown-


HAS THE TIME COME FOR CIVIL SOCIETY TO GROW?

Posted by Unknown On Tuesday, March 16, 2010 16 comments

The political landscape of our country is somewhat like a paradox - while we proclaim to be democratic in government, there are signs of an invisible authoritarian hand hovering over the nation. Under such circumstances, I believe that the time has come for civil society to play a more important role in our country.


Civil society can be defined as that realm of activities and institutions that lie outside the direct control of the government. It has an important role particularly around issues such as governance, corruption and as a check and balance for the government and opposition.

Malaysia’s civil society, as broadly defined here, is most diverse. It includes not only social and educational organizations, but also NGOs concerned with the erosion of individual liberties, broader political movements.

Modern society is facing new challenges where abuse of power is no longer a new phenomenon. Throughout history, man has seen how elected officials under the auspices of free and fair elections, use the legislature, courts, and other state apparatus to increase executive power and influence to their advantage. Conflicts within different branches of the government have also besieged effective governance and democratic principles.

Unfortunately, many political parties in our country are in crisis. A weak democratic culture and the competition for the benefits associated with the state have contributed to their failure to effectively articulate coherent positions and respond to popular interests. Parties are charged, often correctly, with corruption, lack of transparency, weak internal party democracy, questionable practices and the reluctance to promote new leaders.

All this and more justify the call for the development of a civil society. Civil society is the voice of the people. Its effective participation in the decision-making is not only imperative for progress and development in a society, but it also contributes to strengthening of pluralistic and democratic political systems. Further, they are increasingly challenged by the complex social and political transformations emerging due to structural changes.

I believe the time has come for us to develop a civil society and this requires persistent efforts for developing a culture of awareness, participation, transparency, accountability and tolerance. Only through pursuit of these principles can creative interplay between parliaments and civil society strengthen democracy and promote development.

Any country needs checks and balances to make sure no individual and no institution can become so powerful that it can make the lives of all other people miserable. Parliament, executive power and justice system must be separated and can keep each other into constitutional limits.

If we look around us today, we can see that not every country which has pro forma institutions of this kind, really has a functioning democracy. A country may have a building called the parliament which may consist of nothing but the docile followers of the all-powerful leader, while the justice system can be just one branch of the repression machine.

Even countries which have started a transformation towards democracy, have yet to succeed and for various reasons can fall back into an authoritarian pattern of power distribution. It is important to bear in mind that just a large building in the capital with big sounding names for ministries don't make up a democratic system.

Whenever the transition stops and the people's opportunity to influence the overall policy is slowly taken away from them, the checks and balances which usually work in democracies are simply not yet in place. We can see how some MSM can get intimidated, opposition parties are under attack and courageous officials 'promoted' some distant place.

In the light of such situations the civil society is an important safety net. It allows people to express themselves directly and independently with no ties to any political party. It also gives them the opportunity to increase awareness of what is happening in our country.

Even when democratic change does progress, it often happens that none or few of the established parties may dare to pick up some topic of vital interest.Even if they do, they may face denials from the status quo and be under attack in various forms such as what we see in our country.

Civil society can fill this gap. For instance, associations can e.g. protest against the proposed GST when other MPs failed to argue against it. Or they can bring to light new topics such as certain health or environmental issues which other MPs or leaders have failed to pick up.

Another point to consider is that civil society can advocate the rights of minorities which are too small to have political significance. A very good example would be the concerns of the orang asli or the Native Communal Rights issues of Sarawakians. Through civil society, public discussion can bring to light certain important issues from the viewpoint of citizens. In this way, civil society adds dynamism and perspective to the issue at hand.

The importance of civil society is not only functional but also constitutive. If free association is either forbidden or simply non-existent, one cannot have any participation into public decisions between elections and outside political parties. For instance, if the parliament decides to impose GST and civil society did nothing to prevent that from happening, it means the rest of us will be GST-ed for life, especially if the MPs etc failed to prevent it from being implemented.

An autonomous civil society is based on ideas - not on prestige, power or money. Remember - associations have no power to make, change or abolish laws or to shape the state's policy. They do not have the financial resources of powerful economic groups. Who then will be in civil society if there are no vested interests? It will be people who really believe in the importance of certain ideals, or topics. Even if not all can agree on all these topics and even if many associations might actually never reach their goals, members of a civil society in voicing out their concerns, can add the idealistic, moral voices to the public arena. That is why I believe the time has come for us to develop and participate in a civil society.

My apologies for this late post. I had to read up lots on this post which I started writing a few days ago. I do not wish to offend anyone with my ideas which I put forward here only with the hope for a better society. Please leave a comment to share your views. Thanks and have a lovely evening.


WHAT SORT OF LOVER ARE YOU?

Posted by Unknown On 27 comments

What sort of lover are you? Dormant or Active? Boring or romantic? As for me, I am a lover of words - a lexophile indeed! Here's a lovely list of quotes that will surely bring a smile or two to your face. The next post should be up around 7p.m. Do leave a comment to share your thoughts or views. Thanks. Enjoy the rest of the afternoon.



1. A bicycle can't stand alone; it is two tired.

2. A will is a dead giveaway.

3. Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.

4. A backward poet writes inverse.

5. In a democracy it's your vote that counts; in feudalism, it's your Count that votes.

6. When a chicken crosses the road it's poultry in motion.

7. If you don't pay your exorcist you can get repossessed.

8. With her marriage she got a new name and a dress.

9. Show me a piano falling down a mine shaft and I'll show you A-flat miner.

10. When a clock is hungry it goes back four seconds.

11. The guy who fell onto an upholstery machine was fully recovered.

12. A grenade fell onto a kitchen floor in France resulted in Linoleum Blownapart.

13. You are stuck with your debt if you can't budge it.

14. Local Area Network in Australia : The LAN down under.

15. He broke into song because he couldn't find the key.

16. A calendar's days are numbered.

17. A lot of money is tainted: 'Taint yours, and 'taint mine.

18. A boiled egg is hard to beat.

19. He had a photographic memory which was never developed.

20. A plateau is a high form of flattery.

21. When a short fortuneteller escapes from prison look for a small medium at large.

22. Those who get too big for their britches will be exposed in the end.

23. When you've seen one shopping center you've seen a mall.

24. If you jump off a Paris bridge, you are in Seine .

25. When she saw her first strands of gray hair, she thought she'd dye.

26. Bakers trade bread recipes on a knead to know basis.

27. Santa's helpers are subordinate clauses.

28. Acupuncture: a jab well done.

29. Marathon runners with bad shoes suffer the agony of de feet.

30. The roundest knight at King Arthur's round table was Sir Cumference. He acquired his size from too much pi.

31. I thought I saw an eye doctor on an Alaskan island, but it turned out to be an optical Aleutian .

32. She was only a whisky maker, but he loved her still.

33. A rubber band pistol was confiscated from algebra class because it was a weapon of math disruption.

34. The butcher backed into the meat grinder and got a little behind in his work.

35. No matter how much you push the envelope, it'll still be stationery.

36. A dog gave birth to puppies near the road and was cited for littering.

37. Two silk worms had a race. They ended up in a tie.

38. A hole has been found in the nudist camp wall. The police are looking into it.

39. Atheism is a non-prophet organization.

40. Two hats were hanging on a hat rack in the hallway.. One hat said to the other,
'You stay here, I'll go on a head.'


41. I wondered why the baseball kept getting bigger. Then it hit me.

42. A sign on the lawn at a drug rehab center said: 'Keep off the Grass.'

43. A small boy swallowed some coins and was taken to a hospital.
When his grandmother telephoned to ask how he was, a nurse said, 'No change yet.'

44. The soldier who survived mustard gas and pepper spray is now a seasoned veteran.

45.. When cannibals ate a missionary, they got a taste of religion.

46. Don't join dangerous cults: Always practice safe sects.


A TALE OF TWO OUTCOMES

Posted by Unknown On 18 comments

The current political landscape (read the latest by Malaysiakini HERE about how, according to LKS, the China Press editor has been told to resign or the daily would face a three-month suspension) kind of reminds me of A Tale of Two Cities - a novel written by Charles Dickens (1859) that is set in London and Paris before and during the French Revolution. It is the most printed original English book, and among the most famous works of fiction because over 200 million copies of the book have been sold.



According to Wikipedia, the tale depicts the plight of the French peasantry under the demoralization of the French aristocracy in the years leading up to the revolution, the corresponding brutality demonstrated by the revolutionaries toward the former aristocrats in the early years of the revolution, and a number of unflattering social parallels with life in London during the same time period. It follows the lives of several protagonists through these events, most notably Charles Darnay, a French once-aristocrat who falls victim to the indiscriminate wrath of the revolution despite his virtuous nature, and Sydney Carton, a dissipated British barrister who endeavours to redeem his ill-spent life out of love for Darnay's wife, Lucie Manette.

And why does the current situation remind me of that book? It is the theme of social injustice.

Wikipedia states:

Charles Dickens was a champion of the maltreated poor because of his terrible experience when he was forced to work in a factory as a child. His sympathies, however, lie only up to a point with the revolutionaries; he condemns the mob madness which soon sets in. When madmen and -women massacre eleven hundred detainees in one night and hustle back to sharpen their weapons on the grindstone, they display "eyes which any unbrutalised beholder would have given twenty years of life, to petrify with a well-directed gun".

The reader is shown the poor are brutalised in France and England alike. As crime proliferates, the executioner in England is "stringing up long rows of miscellaneous criminals; now hanging housebreaker ... now burning people in the hand" or hanging a broke man for stealing sixpence. In France, a boy is sentenced to have his hands removed and be burned alive, only because he did not kneel down in the rain before a parade of monks passing some fifty metres away. At the lavish residence of Monseigneur, we find "brazen ecclesiastics of the worst world worldly, with sensual eyes, loose tongues, and looser lives ... Military officers destitute of military knowledge ... [and] Doctors who made great fortunes ... for imaginary disorders".

The Marquis recalls with pleasure the days when his family had the right of life and death over their slaves, "when many such dogs were taken out to be hanged". He won't even allow a widow to put up a board bearing her dead husband’s name, to discern his resting place from all the others. He orders Madame Defarge's sick brother-in-law to heave a cart all day and allay frogs at night to exacerbate the young man's illness and hasten his death.

In England, even banks endorse unbalanced sentences: a man may be condemned to death for nicking a horse or opening a letter. Conditions in the prisons are dreadful. "Most kinds of debauchery and villainy were practised, and ... dire diseases were bred", sometimes killing the judge before the accused.

So riled is Dickens at the brutality of English law that he depicts some of its punishments with sarcasm: "the whipping-post, another dear old institution, very humanising and softening to behold in action". He faults the law for not seeking reform: "Whatever is right" is the dictum of the Old Bailey. The gruesome portrayal of quartering highlights its atrocity. CLICK HERE for more.

I wonder why in some cases, action is taken against certain quarters with lightning speed while in other infamous cases, NOTHING HAPPENS no matter what is written/published/spoken.

I surmise the story being written is "A TALE OF ONE LAND, TWO MEASURES" or "A TALE OF TWO OUTCOMES".

In response to one comment from Anon @ 10.35am, I wrote "Things are not normal when made to sound normal in an abnormal state :-)." It is almost as though that sentence was prophetic as then, I did not know what was ahead along this journey...Looks like there is global warming of a different sort as a storm could be brewing in a tea-cup while others are in closeted safety with Amazons guarding their doors and windows!

Anyway, while some are seething in fury and madness, here's Peter, Paul and Mary singing WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE? CLICK HERE for the youtube video clip. Alternatively, you could CLICK HERE for the Joan Baez version.

Where have all the _______ gone? I could fill in that blank with lots of values missing today. Where did it all go? How could it just vanish into the air just like that?

Sighs.

Most saddening today and I am, for once, speechless for now.

Do leave a comment if you wish to share your thoughts. Thanks and have a nice day even though...., in spite of ....cos no matter what, we have to persevere and to keep the good fight in our hearts and fill it with hope. God bless all of us, God bless Malaysia!


NOW WE CAN BEGIN : WHAT'S NEXT?

Posted by Unknown On 16 comments

Crystal Catherine Eastman (June 25, 1881 – July 8, 1928) was a lawyer, anti-militarist, feminist, socialist, and journalist. She is best remembered as a leader in the fight for women's right to vote, as a co-editor of the radical arts and politics magazine The Liberator, and as a co-founder of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. I was pleasantly surprised when I came across her speech written in 1920 shortly after the vote was won for the Federal Suffrage amendment. It is an amazing speech and it is so difficult for me to believe that it was written 90 years ago!!! What a progressive and deep thinker and activist she was then. Do read the speech and please leave a comment to share your views or thoughts. Thanks! May all the women in this country, and all the men too step forward to vote in the next GE. May you have a blessed day today and always!



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NOW WE CAN BEGIN : WHAT'S NEXT?

Most women will agree that August 23, the day when the Tennessee legislature finally enacted the Federal suffrage amendment, is a day to begin with, not a day to end with. Men are saying perhaps "Thank God, this everlasting woman's fight is over!" But women, if I know them, are saying, "Now at last we can begin." In fighting for the right to vote most women have tried to be either non-committal or thoroughly respectable on every other subject. Now they can say what they are really after; and what they are after, in common with all the rest of the struggling world, is freedom.

Freedom is a large word.

Many feminists are socialists, many are communists, not a few are active leaders in these movements. But the true feminist, no matter how far to the left she may be in the revolutionary movement, sees the woman's battle as distinct in its objects and different in its methods from the workers' battle for industrial freedom. She knows, of course, that the vast majority of women as well as men are without property, and are of necessity bread and butter slaves under a system of society which allows the very sources of life to be privately owned by a few, and she counts herself a loyal soldier in the working-class army that is marching to overthrow that system. But as a feminist she also knows that the whole of woman's slavery is not summed up in the profit system, nor her complete emancipation assured by the downfall of capitalism.

Woman's freedom, in the feminist sense, can be fought for and conceivably won before the gates open into industrial democracy. On the other hand, woman's freedom, in the feminist sense, is not inherent in the communist ideal. All feminists are familiar with the revolutionary leader who "can't see" the woman's movement. "What's the matter with the women? My wife's all right," he says. And his wife, one usually finds, is raising his children in a Bronx flat or a dreary suburb, to which he returns occasionally for food and sleep when all possible excitement and stimulus have been wrung from the fight. If we should graduate into communism tomorrow this man's attitude to his wife would not be changed. The proletarian dictatorship may or may not free women. We must begin now to enlighten the future dictators.

What, then, is "the matter with women"? What is the problem of women's freedom? It seems to me to be this: how to arrange the world so that women can be human beings, with a chance to exercise their infinitely varied gifts in infinitely varied ways, instead of being destined by the accident of their sex to one field of activity -housework and child-raising. And second, if and when they choose housework and child-raising, to have that occupation recognized by the world as work, requiring a definite economic reward and not merely entitling the performer to be dependent on some man.

This is not the whole of feminism, of course, but it is enough to begin with. "Oh, don't begin with economics," my friends often protest, "Woman does not live by bread alone. What she needs first of all is a free soul." And I can agree that women will never be great until they achieve a certain emotional freedom, a strong healthy egotism, and some un-personal sources of joy -- that in this inner sense we cannot make woman free by changing her economic status. What we can do, however, is to create conditions of outward freedom in which a free woman's soul can be born and grow. It is these outward conditions with which an organized feminist movement must concern itself.

Freedom of choice in occupation and individual economic independence for women: How shall we approach this next feminist objective? First, by breaking down all remaining barriers, actual as well as legal, which make it difficult for women to enter or succeed in the various professions, to go into and get on in business, to learn trades and practice them, to join trades unions. Chief among these remaining barriers is inequality in pay. Here the ground is already broken. This is the easiest part of our program.

Second, we must institute a revolution in the early training and education of both boys and girls. It must be womanly as well as manly to earn your own living, to stand on your own feet. And it must be manly as well as womanly to know how to cook and sew and clean and take care of yourself in the ordinary exigencies of life. I need not add that the second part of this revolution will be more passionately resisted than the first. Men will not give up their privilege of helplessness without a struggle. The average man has a carefully cultivated ignorance about household matters -- from what to do with the crumbs to the grocer's telephone number -- a sort of cheerful inefficiency which protects him better than the reputation for having a violent temper. It was his mother's fault in the beginning, but even as a boy he was quick to see how a general reputation for being "no good around the house" would serve him throughout life, and half-consciously he began to cultivate that helplessness until today it is the despair of feminist wives.

A growing number of men admire the woman who has a job, and, especially since the cost of living doubled, rather like the idea of their own wives contributing to the family income by outside work. And of course for generations there have been whole towns full of wives who are forced by the bitterest necessity to spend the same hours at the factory that their husbands spend. But these bread-winning wives have not yet developed homemaking husbands. When the two come home from the factory the man sits down while his wife gets supper, and he does so with exactly the same sense of fore-ordained right as if he were "supporting her." Higher up in the economic scale the same thing is true. The business or professional woman who is married, perhaps engages a cook, but the responsibility is not shifted, it is still hers. She "hires and fires," she orders meals, she does the buying, she meets and resolves all domestic crises, she takes charge of moving, furnishing, settling. She may be, like her husband, a busy executive at her office all day, but unlike him, she is also an executive in a small way every night and morning at home. Her noon hour is spent in planning, and too often her Sundays and holidays are spent in "catching up."

Two business women can "make a home" together without either one being over-burdened or over-bored. It is because they both know how and both feel responsible. But it is a rare man who can marry one of them and continue the homemaking partnership. Yet if there are no children, there is nothing essentially different in the combination. Two self-supporting adults decide to make a home together: if both are women it is a pleasant partnership, more fun than work; if one is a man, it is almost never a partnership -- the woman simply adds running the home to her regular outside job. Unless she is very strong, it is too much for her, she gets tired and bitter over it, and finally perhaps gives up her outside work and condemns herself to the tiresome half-job of housekeeping for two.

Cooperative schemes and electrical devices will simplify the business of homemaking, but they will not get rid of it entirely. As far as we can see ahead people will always want homes, and a happy home cannot be had without a certain amount of rather monotonous work and responsibility. How can we change the nature of man so that he will honorably share that work and responsibility and thus make the homemaking enterprise a song instead of a burden? Most assuredly not by laws or revolutionary decrees. Perhaps we must cultivate or simulate a little of that highly prized helplessness ourselves. But fundamentally it is a problem of education, of early training -- we must bring up feminist sons.

Sons? Daughters? They are born of women -- how can women be free to choose their occupation, at all times cherishing their economic independence, unless they stop having children? This is a further question for feminism. If the feminist program goes to pieces on the arrival of the first baby, it is false and useless. For ninety-nine out of every hundred women want children, and seventy-five out of every hundred want to take care of their own children, or at any rate so closely superintend their care as to make any other full-time occupation impossible for at least ten or fifteen years. Is there any such thing then as freedom of choice in occupation for women? And is not the family the inevitable economic unit and woman's individual economic independence, at least during that period, out of the question?

The feminist must have an answer to these questions, and she has. The immediate feminist program must include voluntary motherhood. Freedom of any kind for women is hardly worth considering unless it is assumed that they will know how to control the size of their families. "Birth control" is just as elementary an essential in our propaganda as "equal pay." Women are to have children when they want them, that's the first thing. That ensures some freedom of occupational choice; those who do not wish to be mothers will not have an undesired occupation thrust upon them by accident, and those who do wish to be mothers may choose in a general way how many years of their lives they will devote to the occupation of childraising.

But is there any way of insuring a woman's economic independence while child-raising is her chosen occupation? Or must she sink into that dependent state from which, as we all know, it is so hard to rise again? That brings us to the fourth feature of our program -- motherhood endowment. It seems that the only way we can keep mothers free, at least in a capitalist society, is by the establishment of a principle that the occupation of raising children is peculiarly and directly a service to society, and that the mother upon whom the necessity and privilege of performing this service naturally falls is entitled to an adequate economic reward from the political government. It is idle to talk of real economic independence for women unless this principle is accepted. But with a generous endowment of motherhood provided by legislation, with all laws against voluntary motherhood and education in its methods repealed, with the feminist ideal of education accepted in home and school, and with all special barriers removed in every field of human activity, there is no reason why woman should not become almost a human thing.

It will be time enough then to consider whether she has a soul.

- written by Crystal Eastman, 1920

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Please leave a comment to share your views or thoughts. Thanks! Regardless of your gender, remember to step forward to vote in the next GE. May you have a blessed day today and always!



CHERISH AND HONOR FREEDOM OF SPEECH

Posted by Unknown On Monday, March 15, 2010 28 comments

This morning, I came across an article in Malaysiakini called Agong: Lies, distortion in new media so I thought I'd repost an updated version of this essay on freedom of speech which I wrote in 2008. I sincerely hope that Malaysians will still enjoy freedom of speech and that we will speak, write and even think with decorum and with respect one for another. At the same time, I hope the authorities concerned will be fair in zeroing in on culprits fairly without showing favor for any party for there have been many cases where one particular MSM made many questionable remarks but yet nothing happened to them. In other cases, for one article alone, a few MSM were given show-cause letters. Above all, may the Almighty impress upon all quarters concerned, a deep sense of honor, justice, integrity, accountability and transparency from hearts that are in touch with their conscience that the rakyat may continue to look up to them as public institutions of good repute. Do leave a comment to share your thoughts or views. Thanks. Have a lovely day!


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FREEDOM OF SPEECH

Freedom is one of the most precious possessions that we can have. For centuries, men have fought and died for freedom and this is still continuing today. As we all know, there are many in the world who have sacrificed comfort in life and freedom as a result of expressing what is in their hearts.

Freedom of speech refers to the right of the individual to express his views about matters of interest to him/her whilst freedom of the press would refer to the freedom of written word in printed form and that BOTH refer to the freedom of THOUGHT and are the outward expressions of our THOUGHTS.

George Orwell in Nineteen Eighty-Four depicts a society where freedom of speech is denied and he argues there as to whether thought is possible without any external stimuli. (For more, CLICK HERE) The long and short of it is that distortion of facts, limiting areas of thought and expression, not only stagnates but destroys the human mind, creativity, potential and retards the development of relationship between man with himself and man with others!!!

Freedom of speech is not the freedom to hurt or harm others. Yet, some in our society who do the latter most insidiously, using others to hurt others be it in the political arena or in society. Personally, I strongly advocate that freedom should stem from a full, creative life which is satisfying for ourselves and can lead to the betterment and growth of society.

The ability to think and to speak are the two abilities that distinguish us from lower life forms. Thus, to me, the denial of these two basic freedoms is a DENIAL OF MAN’S HUMANITY!!! As long as conditions are repressive, thought processes cannot function normally.

A society that muzzles the press and the freedom of opinion may be equated with one that forbids THINKING and in doing so, will pave the way for it to stagnate. There is more to life than physical comfort and the possession of luxury items or non-essential comforts of life. Throughout the ages, man has fought and died for freedom. Like what I mentioned before, freedom of speech is fundamental to the functioning of democracy.

I opine that such types of freedom enable men to make life creative, progressive and meaningful. Stop. Think. Are we at that stage in Malaysia? Think hard.

We must remind ourselves that unfettered freedom is a chimera and can be a danger to the established order and the economic well-being of the country.

Freedom of the press (and the new media) must be used to bring to the fore the views of the public (and not that of the individual), whether they are critical of, or in support of the government; and it can even be a bulwark against government excesses.

Intelligent opinions and constructive criticisms should not be smothered, for such suppression can create a groundswell that is inimical to the government. The MSM and new media must always remember that views that are inimical to the state, if given free scope, can spell disaster e.g. sowing the seeds of discord. All must write responsibly and if they did not, they must apologize or be brought to task. The authorities concerned must always act fairly and consistently to continue to have credibility in the eyes of the rakyat.

History shows that in countries where restrictions were placed on such freedoms, the dictatorial regimes fell. This happened in India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Pakistan etc. where the rulers insulated themselves against political criticism and this led to their death or downfall.

The people in East Berlin courted arrest in order to preserve those forms of freedom discussed here. Deep thinkers who have freshness of thought and expression, incisive writing, fearlessness, a drive to seek justice etc. would find it absolutely suffocating to be limited by any restrictions. More important than bread or economic well-being is the freedom by which man wants to live.

Click HERE to see the 2009 Worldwide Press Freedom Ranking Index for Malaysia.

I dream of a Malaysia where we have an enlightened government that allows freedom in communication, criticism (with decorum), change and growth and that the government will always remember that by restricting such freedoms to avoid criticism to preserve a static condition, they are actually sowing the seeds for ultimate destruction!!!

To live without freedom is to live in fetters. One’s personality should not be lost in an attempt by certain characters to force one to be subservient to a system or a person. Yet, freedom, when not misused, is a boon.

With freedom, comes responsibility - responsibility in reporting, blogging, speaking and expressing our thoughts. So, the betterment of society depends on the right exercise of freedom which should not be taken away from us in any guise, rhetoric or policy.

It is my hope that the government, together with the rest of society will nourish our freedom of speech that should be exercised wisely while honoring democratic principles and respect for one another. We cannot expect to agree on everything but let us choose to agree on core values and morals including a hatred for corruption and a love for honesty, integrity, moral values, justice, fairness etc. Let us cherish and honor freedom of speech which must not be misused or abused in any way. Let us use it to spread hope, goodwill and bring to light things which must be made known in order that we can have a better society.

Thanks for reading. Do leave a comment if you wish to share your thoughts and views. Thanks. Have a lovely evening.


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