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[房产] 吴明盛:组屋不应当成赚钱工具

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发表于 11-5-2011 16:31:19|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 freesoul99 于 11-5-2011 16:32 编辑

我最近看了一篇文章,很有感触,贴这给大家看看。关于大选,关于民主,我就不再多说什么了。

GE2011 BY Catherine Lim

How GE 2011 proved me – oh, so wonderfully! - wrong

For 17 years, since 1994, I had been writing commentaries on various issues in the Singapore political scene.  Whether these were  long-standing problems such as the emotional divide between the PAP leadership and the people, or specific issues such as the controversial increase in ministerial salaries, the articles invariably identified the underlying cause as the unrelenting authoritarianism of the PAP government, with all that this implies of stern, punitive measures used by the leaders, and of timid compliance shown by the led.

Even as I made a plea for a political opening up, I could not shake off the pessimism that the PAP’s obsession with  control would at best allow only a very limited version or, worse, only a semblance of it.

Now GE 2011 has changed all that.

There were four distinct issues that I had brought up in my commentaries, in all of which I had been proved wrong by GE 2011 :

1)  a climate of fear.  I had come to believe that the PAP’s systematic use of fear as a strategy to silence critics was so successful that it had become a permanent feature of the Singapore political landscape.  During election time, it  would spawn all sorts of rumours about how a powerful and vindictive government could find out who you voted for, and punish you accordingly.  But the climate of GE 2011 was far from fearful.  I saw to my amazement, in the days leading up to the election, the emergence of a large group of young Singaporeans who were articulate, confident and bold, speaking their minds freely, fearlessly, in the mainstream and social media, and showing open, unabashed support for the opposition.  Their confidence seemed infectious, spreading quickly among the people.

    Never again can I write about a population muted by fear, and its contemptible off-shoot, self censorship.

2) a politically naïve electorate. The climate of fear, as I wrote in my articles,   had created an unquestioning society that I once rather gloomily described as among the most politically naïve in the world,  since they had never been allowed exposure to the normal democratic processes of public debate, open criticism, an independent media, etc.  I even compared such an infantilized society to hothoused plants that could not survive in the jungle of the real world outside.

Apathetic, ignorant, namby-pamby Singaporeans?  No more, as shown by their surprising display of knowledge, interest and concern about social issues that had come up for debate during the GE 2011 campaigns.  They had clearly thought hard about the issues, examined the impact on their lives, and understood the power of their vote to bring about change.

3)  The underdog status of the opposition. I had shared the view, long held by the Singapore electorate, that the opposition would never pose a challenge to the PAP because of their chronic lack of quality candidates, resources, and proper organizational structure, resulting in their utter helplessness against the formidable  PAP juggernaut.  It was my belief that GE 2011 would be the opposition’s last chance to cast off the ignominious label of the underdog; otherwise they would risk being written off permanently by an exasperated, weary and resigned electorate.

But in the space of  just a few years, the various opposition groups had clearly undergone a remarkable transformation, producing candidates to match any  PAP  team in  academic and professional credentials.  In the short nine-day campaigning period, they had vastly improved their public image and standing. Indeed, so serious a threat  was the star among them, The Workers’ Party, that the PAP had to do some last-minute scrambling to come up with new campaigning strategies.

It was a startling case of underdog-to-top-dog  transformation.

4)  The inflexible mindset and style of the PAP. Clearly the chief reason that had resulted in  the realities listed  above – the fear, the apathy, the continuing weakness of the opposition -  was the outright resistance of the PAP leadership to a political opening up.  In my articles, I had invariably concluded that this resistance was in turn due to the PAP’s almost pathological dislike of the messiness of political dissent on the one hand, and their unshakeable confidence in  their own superiority, on the other.  In the four and a half decades of their rule, they had given the appearance not only of a one-party government in total control but of a government with rightful claims to perpetuity as well.

And then midway through the GE 2011 campaigning, I saw something never before seen in the PAP strongmen: a wavering of confidence, signs of real fear.  What had happened was that, while campaigning, they had received a rude shock.  Accepting the reality that for this election the ground was not really sweet, they had no idea of its sheer toxicity, and were not prepared for the extent and depth of the people’s frustration and anger on a whole range of issues.  Shocked,  the Prime Minister resorted to effusive apologies for past mistakes and humble promises to do better in the future.  The all-out strategy of placation was quickly taken up by other PAP campaigners who too promised to work harder, listen more, show more caring, etc.  One minister even spoke of the need for no less than a ‘transformation’ of the PAP style.

For me, this was the most unexpected - and gratifying - proof of how wrong I had been to suppose that the famous PAP knuckleduster approach, so beloved of the party’s founder, Lee Kuan Yew, would be used forever on Singaporeans.  GE 2011 killed it.  The rather dramatic public display of contrition, humility and goodwill, so at odds with the PAP’s usual implacability, might have been initially used as an election ruse, but through its instant spread among the PAP campaigners, its  urgency of tone and consequent high public visibility, it quickly took on the character of a serious compact with the people, from which there could be no turning back.  Indeed, it had a momentum all its own, for in his speech after the election results, the Prime Minister saw fit to reiterate the humble promise to serve the people better.  It is expected that in the coming days, his PAP colleagues would echo the same placatory message.

Only a temporary aberration of the PAP style that would assert itself once again after GE 2011 fever has died down?  Not likely.  Neither the people nor the opposition would allow that.  For by now, this promise must have sunk enough in the minds of a newly defiant electorate for them to protest as soon as they see it is not being kept.  Again, a newly emboldened opposition will want to use it opportunistically in parliamentary debates  on  PAP policies which they sense to be unpopular with the people. In this connection, it would no longer be  easy for the PAP to push through contentious decisions such as the hiking of ministerial and presidential salaries, or to make conciliatory and compromise offers that are merely concessionary, such as the Nominated Member of Parliament scheme, or  insultingly tokenistic, such as The Speakers’ Corner.  Prediction: the most feared, most infamous instrument of PAP control – the defamation suit against political opponents -  will be a thing of the past, fading away with its regular exponent, Lee Kuan Yew.  

In short, a newly energized opposition and a newly empowered electorate, two little Davids, have brought Goliath to his knees.  It is an amazing psychological victory quite independent of the outcome of GE 2011.  This election will indeed be remembered by each of these three groups, as the crossing of some defining line in their political calculations, when each will do some fine recalibrations to their strategies of dealing with each other, in order to improve on their gains or cut down on their losses, as the case may be.  GE 2011 may well be the historic reference point against which all will measure their past performance and chart their future course of action.

One very positive outcome may be that, past the rhetoric and the acrimonies, the triumphs and the bitterness of GE 2011, all three groups, whatever their individual stance, will be ultimately committed to the overriding goal of  the society’s good as a whole.  This will have the happy result of a convergence of interests and a unity of purpose, something of a rarity, but still achievable, in Singapore politics.

This, for me, will be the most significant outcome of GE 2011.  Beside it, the actual votes-count and the official taking up of positions to form a new Parliament are only the mechanics of a transformation process that has already begun in the expectations of the people.  Along its way , it will see many missteps and misunderstandings, and probably even a return of  the rancour  of  the GE 2011 campaigning.  No matter.  For the process can only move forward, since the high-sounding public commitment made by the PAP to change itself from within, for the sake of the people, has a sacrosanct quality all its own , making a breach politically costly, morally unacceptable and emotionally unsustainable.

Hence I believe that something once thought unthinkable, is happening in our midst right now - a made-in-Singapore political renaissance or revolution  of sorts, that will eventually lead to a  maturing of our society and  enable it to take its rightful place among the practising democracies in the world.

For me, GE 2011 will always be special.  For never have I been so glad that I had been proved so wrong on so many counts.

点评

写作能力太强了。受过专门训练吧。  详情 回复 发表于 11-5-2011 21:36
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发表于 11-5-2011 16:37:12|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
小狮租房
good99 发表于 11-5-2011 16:19
对. 你支票都不舍得亮出来,那就拉倒了

change,管他以后怎么change。我可以说保证房价下降10%,等两年 ...

民主选举的趋向就是演技化,娱乐化,虚伪化,金钱化。

演技不好,不会搞话题,不虚伪,不砸钱的主儿,全都完蛋。
对比这次阿裕尼,不就是这样吗?被称为君子的老杨从此88了。


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民主就是愚民加宣传  详情 回复 发表于 11-5-2011 17:13
不是因为杨是君子就完蛋,是谁去了都一样下场。那个WP梦之队太强大。  详情 回复 发表于 11-5-2011 17:05
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发表于 11-5-2011 16:48:22|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
freesoul99 发表于 11-5-2011 16:31
我最近看了一篇文章,很有感触,贴这给大家看看。关于大选,关于民主,我就不再多说什么了。

GE2011 BY Ca ...

这篇转阅率很高阿。推荐一看!
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发表于 11-5-2011 16:52:24|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
回复 freesoul99 的帖子

eventually lead to a  maturing of our society and  enable it to take its rightful place among the practising democracies in the world.

本文来自 新加坡狮城论坛 <https://www.sgchinese.net> 原文链接:http://bbs.sgchinese.net/thread-4443800-85-1.html

多么天真幼稚的想法。
民主能带来社会的成熟?
看看台湾,菲律宾。。。。。
这些受西方文化影响的人已经被鼓吹民主的人洗脑了。
民主选举那一套我早看透是怎么回事了。
需要强调的是,GCD和朝鲜的那套我也早看透了。
都不是好东西。
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发表于 11-5-2011 17:27:59|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 WAYNEWEI 于 11-5-2011 17:44 编辑

回复 山谷无回声 的帖子

我才不管什么民主独裁的。都是形式上的东西。最可笑的他们都说自己是最好的,最爱用的辩解词前者是”民主不是最完美的,但比其他制度好”,后者是“特殊国情”。

我只知道一个国家需要像邓小平,李光耀,蒋经国这样强有力有魄力有卓越眼光头脑清醒又有现代知识的领导者。

那种从草根爬上来的领导者往往很可怕,不管是民主选出来的还是靠枪杆子出来的。
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发表于 11-5-2011 17:30:25|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
回复 emmer 的帖子

看来新加坡人都很天真啊。
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发表于 11-5-2011 18:24:13|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 seanjin 于 11-5-2011 22:53 编辑
money9090 发表于 11-5-2011 15:25
回复 seanjin 的帖子

先赞扬一下童鞋的 高尚道德啊,哈哈
呵呵,那么在这么个标准啊,那玩政治的,都很无耻,君子都被玩死了。所以谁也别赖谁。。。

呵呵,政治是 狼之间的战争,不是 绅士游戏。讲究的 胜者为王, 不是什么骑士精神 (一直觉得 西方的 骑士精神 很莫名其妙。。。)

顺便说一句,道德标准不是说 对 任何事都是一个标准。。。比如说 一个大企业 用自身资源 以价格战 之类的 挤垮 小企业,你会觉得他无耻吗。。。


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发表于 11-5-2011 18:27:25|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
freesoul99 发表于 11-5-2011 16:25
回复"good99"

只是波东巴西一个选区,我想很重要的原因是票数差距太接近 ( ...

没有,输一票也是输。波东这么搞,就有点无理取闹的意思了。。。
《2%必须要重新算票罢了。
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发表于 11-5-2011 19:03:43|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
看看台湾的政坛就知道不成熟的民主会给国家,社会带来怎样的灾难。

点评

乱中有序,人人有机会,个个没把握。这就是台湾。。。。。  详情 回复 发表于 11-5-2011 19:09
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发表于 11-5-2011 21:33:02|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
呵呵,这楼已经歪的不成样子了。。。:_haixiull
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