in defence of Chen Show Mao's speech

makapaaa

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[TD="class: msgtxt"][h=2]27 October, 2011[/h][h=3]in defence of Chen Show Mao's speech[/h]I interrupt my regular programming of not giving a shit about this blog to bring you this brief counter-argument to disapproving reactions to MP Chen Show Mao's maiden parliamentary speech.

Among the seventy-odd speeches made during the week-long session, it was Chen's speech, with its erudite Mandarin and obscure Chinese analogies, that stood out above the rest. It invited several retorts from PAP MPs, raised eyebrows among observers, and got people poring through their history books to figure out if there was more to his analogy.

It also invited several disapprovals, some from minorities, who found the choice of language and analogies offensive.

Against the backdrop of a tsunami of mainland Chinese immigrants, an entirely justified perception that the government is bending over backwards to attract mainland Chinese money and attention, and the combined effect these two trends have on minorities, I share the same such concerns, really.

But these disapproving reactions got me thinking. And I could not but conclude even more strongly that his speech was an excellent piece of political oratory.

MP Chen Show Mao's full speech, followed by
MP Teo Ho Pin's retort for comic contrast

To begin with, I read his choice of analogies and quotes differently. The point of his speech was to affirm his support for political pluralism and a tolerance of dissent and diversity, and to implore Singaporeans and the government to embrace these principles for the betterment of the country.

It seemed obvious then that sweeping appeals to classical Confucian texts, modern Chinese historical figures, and, of course, Tang Dynasty history, was a deliberate strategy of framing the argument. By appealing to the authority of classical Chinese civilisation, rather than to so-called "Western" human rights and liberal democracy, to substantiate his support for pluralism and loyal dissent, he effectively precluded the PAP from attacking him on the basis of cultural relativism.

I remember a time not too long ago when founding PM Lee Kuan Yew, self-appointed Confucian philosopher-king, stood up in Parliament and poo-pooed multi-party liberal democracy as a "highfalutin" idea. For all his possible contempt for political liberalism and pluralism in Singapore, Lee, who was an outspoken apologist for "Asian values" in the nineties (along with former Malaysian PM Mahathir Mohamad), could not possible attack Chen's speech on the basis that such political traditions or values are alien to "Asian culture".

Chen's Mandarin speech is therefore a subtle attack against an argument long propagated by the PAP -- that political pluralism, a tolerance of diversity, and freedom of dissent are foreign/Western imports inimical to Asian societies. This is an argument whose prestige has ridden on the coat-tails of Lee's prestige himself, but whose intellectual foundations are flimsier than Tin Pei Ling's street cred.

And I would believe any day that Chen, who has demonstrated an ecumenical predisposition in his intellect so far, is less of an opportunistic pseudo-Sinophile than any of the top-ranking PAP leaders. The bottom line: between an impassioned argument for humane values delivered in Mandarin, and half-wit rhetoric on "Asian values" (or on the politically-correct historical lessons of Sun Yat-sen's revolutionary legacy as applied to Singaporeans and Singaporean history, for the matter), I'd easily choose the former.

Let's not forget that his speech was technically a bilingual, not a Mandarin one. He spoke in both languages. The preceding English section drove home the same arguments, but employed completely different analogies and quotations. The words of former Foreign Minister George Yeo and Pope John Paul II were put at the service of affirming political diversity and pluralism. Surely more effective than simply translating his Tang Taizong analogy into English.

This MP is a man to watch, though he's still largely an unknown quantity. Or perhaps precisely because of that. If his party's successes continue unabated, he may be destined for a greater role in the political tapestry of Singapore. If he descends into obscurity, he won't be the first opposition politician of seemingly scholarly credentials to have sunk, along with his political fortunes, the hopes of so many Singaporeans eager for positive change.[/TD]
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[TD="class: msgtxt"][h=2]WP speeches met with robust response from PAP MPs[/h]by trulysingapore Dear Mr De Souza,
I refer to the 19 Oct 2011 Today report on your comments in parliament.
You asked Mr Giam not to throw the baby out with the bath water. It is not Mr Giam but the PAP whom you must ask not to throw the baby out with the bath water. When HDB first started, it built flats affordable to the people. Today, it builds flats pegged to market prices that enrich government coffers. In so doing, the PAP has thrown out the baby that was the HDB of yesteryears and replaced it with the current HDB Incorporated which is master at squeezing ever more money from the people.
You said our housing is the envy of many first world countries. Name those first world countries. Show us surveys of American or Canadian expatriates so we may see to what extent they prefer the small sized yet expensive apartments they are squeezed into now compared to the huge bungalows they have back home.
You said it is unfair to say that the PAP has failed in housing based on the strong foundations upon which we were built. But those foundations were built by our forefathers. The flats today are mostly built by previous leaders like Mr Lim Kim San. When will the present PAP government ever stop basking in the glory of previous generations and start asking themselves what exactly have they contributed to housing today other than sky high property prices? There is very little that the present government has to show to refute the nationwide belief that it has failed miserably in housing the people.
You may think that Mr Giam is fine tuning PAP policies. But changing from market driven HDB prices to HDB prices set in accordance to median incomes is a fundamental change in policy, not a fine tune of policy. So it is not a tacit concession but an outright rejection of flawed PAP policies.
While we may have scaled much with this government, the similar scaling that has taken place in Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea without a similar PAP styled government suggests that we could have scaled as much if not more without this government.
Dear Mr Teo Ho Pin,
I refer to the same Today report. You claimed you didn't understand the 'difference' Mr Chen Show Mao was trying to put across in parliament and that even though PAP MPs are different, they work together as a team to serve the people.
It is more or less the same thing with what Mr Chen has put across. PAP MPs and WP MPs may be different but work together as a team to serve the people. But serving the people together in a team doesn't mean doing exactly the same things or saying exactly the same things or agreeing on everything. Being on the same team doesn't mean you throw away your brain and become a robot to the team's command. Being in the same team doesn't mean you throw away your conscience and accept whatever that the team tells you as right.
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