Categories
Photography Sports

[934] Of bye bye Southern California

I slept late last night listening to the Michigan-Northwestern game. Michigan won though I expected the Wolverines to skin the Wildcats, it was nothing compared to what the Buckeyes did to the Golden Gophers. Michigan won 17-3. Ohio State won 44-0.

But truly, the biggest news this week doesn’t revolve around Michigan and Ohio State. USC got the honor, for the wrong reason if I might add; USC lost to Oregon 33-31. The loss changes a lot of things:

USC started the day as was one of seven unbeaten teams in the country. Now there are six.

Ohio State and Michigan won their games and will hold on to the top two spots in the Bowl Championship Series standings when they come out Sunday. That valuable spot behind the Big Ten powers, previously held by USC, is now up for grabs. All those teams with one loss are feeling a lot better about their chances to play for a national title. And Thursday’s Big East battle of unbeatens between West Virginia and Louisville just got a little bigger.

Enough of USC. I don’t love USC as much as I love…

Fair use. Yahoo! AP Photo/Al Goldis. http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/photo?slug=3ace121322d046a78db4cc28ec0fbf5e.northwestern_michigan_football_aas104&prov=ap

…interception!

Categories
Economics

[933] Of what’s next, Malaysia?

A couple months back, I was having lunch somewhere outside of Kuala Lumpur with several strangers. One of them — upon discovering that I’m an economic graduate from abroad — asked me a very macroeconomic question. He wondered which sector Malaysia should concentrate on now. I almost choked myself to death when I heard that. I was unprepared for it with a devil’s food cake so full in my mouth. Unable to form an immediate honest opinion, I played it safe and offered an answer that didn’t require too much thinking. I blurted out that Malaysia should concentrate on services. While he was swayed over by the points I offered, I was not. I know that was a lazy man’s answer and is practically, a complete bull. It’s too general to convince anybody inside economics. Zoom forward, I’m still unsure which direction Malaysia should head for. However, I think know where to start though that starting point wouldn’t be astounding at all.

I do think the person that asked me the question was concerned with Malaysia’s current emphasize on agriculture. Between the Badawi administration economic policies and Mahathir’s, current policies appear regressive. Despite appearance of current policies, I’m unwilling to criticize harshly as others had simply because I’m unable to offer solid alternatives. The best I could say right now is to diversify and see which industries are sustainable.

To be fair, the current administration realizes that something gigantic is on the move and it’s affecting Malaysia. The People’s Republic of China as well as India are attracting the very jobs that Malaysia had prospered on. These jobs had once pulled Malaysia off the extraction stage to the manufacturing stage. I’m not sure if Malaysia is moving up the value chain towards services but I’ll wager there’s a real structural change in the economy. I suspect this structural shift is one of the reasons for the current debate on Malaysian unemployment rate.

The problem is that it’s not Malaysia on its own that’s causing the structural change. Instead, it’s the PRC and India that are forcing the structural change on Malaysia. When PRC and India moving up the value chain, it’s only natural the two regional giants to compete with Malaysia. Further, competition doesn’t come from the extraction and manufacturing only. For example, India itself is coming strong on service-based industry. Characteristic of an advanced economy is that it’s dominated by service-based industry. India is not an advanced economy and it’s not even as developed as Malaysia’s. So, if you aren’t distressed yet, this is the time to panic.

In economics, there’s a theory that says a country will specialize in products that utilize the country’s abundance factor. Keeping in mind that PRC and India have approximately two billion people between them, with vast track of land and huge reserve of capital, it’s quite hard to see what Malaysia should specialize in and not face heavy competition.

And so, here comes agriculture.

Revisiting the current administration’s obsession with agriculture, I don’t think it a bad idea after all, at least in the short run. Malaysia has the comparative advantage in agriculture. Whether this is a cliché or not, Malaysia is blessed with excellent climate for agriculture. History itself has shown how kind agriculture has been to Malaysia.

Yet, there are only so many lands. On top of that, different needs are competing for the same fixed quantity of land, showing the fact that Malaysia cannot rely on agriculture forever, even if the third agricultural revolution is upon us.

Perhaps due to my limited knowledge and exposure as well as lack of creativity, in all honesty, I don’t know what is the next step for Malaysia. Except for a few areas, everyone else seems to be able to do something better than Malaysia could. Nevertheless, I know where to start. It’s education. By education, I’m not saying we should specialize in the education industry. Oh my goodness, no.

Any economy has dynamic equilibriums. This is even more so when the world is interconnected once again after so many decades of protectionism and short-sightedness. This dynamism demands adaptability.

It takes a highly educated population to allow a country to adapt perfectly and quickly to changes. With proper knowledge, they would be able to ride out structural and even cyclical changes in the economy through sheer creativity. Flexibility will allow mobility both during the best and the worst of times.

But we need not robots in place of thinking men. If we had needed robots, no need us all of so many ivory towers. Let’s build grand factories in place of schools and colleges instead if we had needed for robots instead of thinking men.

We need are thinking graduates; critical minded individuals that would be able to adapt for themselves. Individuals that are proactive. Individuals that race not with each other to be robots, but individuals that strive to be humans. Cold and warm, mad and sane, all of these emotions with heavy doses of rationalism whenever it matters.

For that, the education system must provide students the liberty to explore possibilities. For that, we need a liberal education. A system that not only allows but even encourages its members to challenge orthodoxies in science to culture to religion to everything. A system unimpeded by conservatism.

The current system is unable to give birth a society that could decide and take the right next step for our country. Our system produces robots. While some of these robots achieve consciousness later in life, time is a luxury the country can’t afford.

Besides, for too long, Malaysian economy has been dictated from the top. Though perhaps a certain degree of central planning does have its virtues, it isn’t as natural as an economy that’s run from the bottom and everywhere. A highly educated society would democratize economic planning — flattens it out as Friedman would say — hence making the economy more organic. And of course, freer.

Categories
Economics Society

[932] Of Malaysia, truly Asia

Might be a year late but I can’t get the Malaysia truly Asia song out of my mind. So, I’m immortalizing it here:

Everything I’ve wanted, all that I’ve asked of you.
Everything I’ve dreamed of, it’s all coming true.
So stay with me (with me), as we walk hand in hand.

Malaysia, truly Asia,
The mountains and the sea.
Malaysia, truly Asia,
It’s calling out, to you and me.
Malaysia, truly Asia.

Whoever that came up with that tagline, the song and the ad is a genius. Too bad, I’ve never seen it on the TV in the United States and only saw it when I came back to Malaysia.

What I think is this: the ad should be shown abroad, not in Malaysia.

What I further think is this: But things like the moral police won’t help by one bit. No song will undo the damage done by the moral police. Already, it’s hurting the economy and effort to build a more diverse and rich Malaysian society:

LANGKAWI: Retired American policeman Randal Barnhart, who was subjected to a 2am raid by religious enforcement officers, is reconsidering his plan to make Malaysia his second home.

“After that unpleasant episode two weeks ago, I do not feel like making Malaysia my second home. It is a pity because both my wife and I really love Langkawi,” he said.

I say it again. We need to disband the moral police.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

p/s — Okay. Apparently this particular entry get lots of hit and I figure people are probably looking for the actual song. So, enjoy.

[youtube]nSqI9_pmqOc[/youtube]

Categories
Liberty Politics & government Society

[931] Of “saya bukan Islam Liberal”

Jogging around the local blogosphere, I suppose me and a few other bloggers have been placed by local religious conservative bloggers within the Liberal Islam philosophical school. Though I had no qualm with it initially, I started to rethink whether that label fits me; it doesn’t.

Though these conservative Muslims have attacked the school, I had unwittingly tried to defend it despite the fact that I’m not actually in the latter group. In some cases, some conservatives attacked me on the false assumption that I’m part of Liberal Islam. My uncalculated effort to defend such philosophy hasn’t helped me in dispelling the assumption that I’m part of that loose liberal group.

In time, I’ve recognized such defense was more of a knee jerk reaction on my behalf. So, I had taken a step back and reassessed the situation. This entry will clarify some of my political stances that are relevant to the issue and explain why I don’t subscribe to Liberal Islam philosophy.

First of all, I’m a libertarian. A libertarian is a very specific branch of liberalism. It advocates that individuals should be free to do whatever they wish with their person or property, as long as they do not infringe on the same liberty of others. In short, it calls for freedom as well as respect for freedom. Libertarianism influences all aspects of my life; from economic to social beliefs. Environmentalism also influences me but that’s irrelevant to the objective of this entry.

Being a libertarian and generally a liberal, the call for free speech, etc. comes only naturally. Part of that is freedom of religion. All these are individual rights. Libertarian itself sees individual as the basic unit of a society. These rights are essential components of libertarianism. Without these rights, one’s freedom might mean less freedom for others. I’d call libertarianism as equitable freedom.

In liberalism, the state is established by its citizens to protect the citizens and their rights. The state is there to make sure those rights are not compromised by others — be it by a citizen upon another citizen or a downright infringement of sovereignty by a foreign force. Theoretically, the state is there to provide equal protect to all, hence a fair state. In a nutshell, libertarianism distributes freedom to all equally.

In one way, this grants incredible power to the state that — if it wishes to do so — it could not only not protect its citizens that established the government in the first place, the state could infringe the rights of the citizens. Hence, the question, “who will guard the guardian?”

Democracy is designed to force the state to be accountable to its citizens. It’s the guard that guards the elected guardians. Democracy unfortunately introduces tyranny of the majority. It allows the majority to infringe on the minority’s individual rights which occurs in many places, including Malaysia, France, Turkey and the United States of America. A properly written constitution might provide some safeguard against such tyranny. Alas, the constitution itself is at the mercy of the majority. This is something that still needs to be thought out soon.

Whatever needs to be thought out, apart from rationalism and empiricism, it’s the tyranny of the majority that makes me embraces secularism. Secularism helps forestall such tyranny. It’s one step towards an impartial government.

Secularism forces the state to not favor any religion at the expense of others. The state is responsible to its citizens, not to any particular group within the society. Secularism coupled with a liberal democratic system is fertile ground for a multicultural society like Malaysia.

As a secularist and a liberal, I rarely find myself talking from religious perspective. In fact, whenever I express myself in matter related to religion, it’s because the followers of religion — may it be Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, etc. — are infringing on individual rights. An example is the enforcement of moral policing which violates common people’s privacy.

Though I’m a Muslim, I take religion as something personal. Add that on top of the libertarian-ness in me, I won’t allow others to regulate my religion or belief as long as I don’t infringe on others’ rights. I don’t mind advice but decisions on my life are mine to take and I can do whatever I like, as long as such action doesn’t affect others.

I don’t see the world through religious prism. Instead, reasons appeal to me. That explains why sometimes I’m hostile towards religious conservatives — regardless of religion — which rarely provide rationality.

Proof to this is that, while I’m philosophically hostile to conservative Muslims, I’m not fond of Christian, Hindu or Jewish zealots either. That’s why I’ve issues the Republicans Party. If it hadn’t been from the religious conservatives, part of me would probably prefer the GOP to the Democrats in the US.

In the final analysis, while a liberal, I’m not part of Liberal Islam philosophy. I’m just a liberal with a strong sense of rationalism and empiricism. I’m a humanist. Suffice to say, the concept of divine rights needs to be rationalized before it becomes rationale.

The school of Liberal Islam may share some of the schools of thought that I subscribe to, but I don’t use religion to advance liberalism. I don’t use religion to justify a lot of things; I use reasons instead. That’s why I’m not a Liberal Islam. The fact that I’m a liberal and a Muslim by birth doesn’t make me a subscriber to Liberal Islam.

Categories
Politics & government Science & technology This blog

[930] Of YouTube, WordPress, Michael J. Fox and Rush Limbaugh

I’ve just realized that YouTube doesn’t quite work with WP. Inclusion of Youtube’s code turns my blog upside down.

The reason I wanted to post a clip from YouTube is Michael J. Fox ad on stem cell research.

In response to the ad, Rush Limbaugh later accused Fox of acting:

The Fox ad has triggered a backlash, with some criticizing it as exploitive. Conservative radio commentator Rush Limbaugh claimed Fox was “either off his medication or acting,” though he later apologized.

The lack of decency exhibited by Limbaugh is amazing.