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Liberty Society

[1092] Of liberalism, multicultural societies and multiculturalism

One of the characteristics of liberalism is tolerance. While that might be true of liberalism taken as a whole, as usual, I am interested in classical liberalism and will refer such liberalism as simply liberalism. This tolerance originates from the non-aggression axiom. While I understand the relationship between tolerance and the non-aggression axiom, I had a hard time trying to justify multiculturalism in the name of liberalism. It turns out that it is hard to justify because it is unjustifiable.

I had the impression that multiculturalism is the apex of tolerance where different people from very different backgrounds come and live together in harmony, respecting each others’ rights. This impression, that both are related to tolerance, has brought me to assume that liberalism actively supports multiculturalism by virtue that both share the characteristic of tolerance. That opinion further strengthened my opinion on the relationship between liberalism and multicultural societies; that a liberal society is a multicultural society and multicultural society is synonymous to multiculturalism.

After a couple of headaches, enlightenment rained upon me. I somehow began to realize the difference between the descriptive multicultural and the prescriptive multiculturalism. The former merely describes a state of a society without espousing what state should the society be. The latter actively advocates for a state of multicultural through policies collectively called multiculturalism. With that realization, I have come to the conclusion that liberalism is neutral of multicultural society and unsupportive of multiculturalism.

It must be noted that a multicultural society is the natural course of a liberal society. Be aware that this is not similar to stating that the only cause a multicultural society is liberalism.

Liberalism by its very nature is tolerant and a liberal society is a tolerant society. This tolerance exhibited by liberal societies attracts people from all over, especially from illiberal societies. While liberalism produces multicultural societies, multicultural societies are not the goal of liberalism. To make the idea clearer, multicultural society is a side effect of liberalism; liberalism indirectly causes the creation of multicultural societies. The relationship between liberalism and multicultural societies stops there and goes no farther.

To actively encourage the formation of a multicultural society is taking it one step farther; that is multiculturalism and not liberalism.

A pillar of liberalism is spontaneous order. The policies of multiculturalism contradict the spirit of spontaneous order. A liberal must not force to turn a society into a multicultural one. By force, I mean, the state, which has the monopoly of policing power, actively promoting multicultural society as an end. It is worth reiterating that a liberal society would sooner or later become multicultural unconsciously. Forcing the process to go faster is counterproductive. Just as we cannot force others to be free, we cannot force society to become multicultural.

While multicultural society is, depending on point of view — I certainly do see it as such — a positive unintended effect of liberalism, liberals themselves, or rather, liberal states, should be neutral on issues relating to multicultural societies. Such neutrality is essential because whether a society is multicultural or monocultural, it is not related to liberty. In an already liberal society when negative rights are secured, do we expect the state of multicultural to affect liberty in any way?

I would answer no.

I do believe that I was not the only that that had tried to say multiculturalism is part of liberalism. A lot of multiculturalists do call themselves as liberals and it is easy to understand how such confusion could occur.

As stated earlier, a creation of a multicultural society is a side effect — a symptom — of liberalism. Advanced liberal societies more often than not are multicultural societies. Those that misunderstood the relationship between liberalism and multiculturalism will try to emulate these advanced liberal societies to the letters, instead of to the spirit. The strong relationship between liberalism and multicultural societies blurs the causality and causes many liberals — I would call these liberals as neophytes — to accept multicultural societies as central to liberalism.

Again, multicultural society is a symptom of liberalism; a multicultural society is simply a sign of a maturing liberal society. Multicultural society is not central to liberalism while multiculturalism is out of the equation.

For us to emulate advanced liberal societies, we need to secure the roots of liberalism, not the symptoms of liberalism. For once the roots are secured, the symptoms will come in good time.

Categories
Economics Liberty Politics & government

[1077] Of Malaysia-US FTA is under threat

With respect to the current negotiation on Malaysia-US FTA, chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Democrat Tom Lantos made the most unhelpful comment:

The recently-announced oil and gas deal between Iran and Malaysia is equally abhorrent. That is why today I am sending a letter to our trade representative, Susan Schwab, requesting that all negotiations between the United States and Malaysia on a free trade agreement be suspended until Malaysia renounces this proposed deal.

According to Bernama, “abhorrent” deal refers to this:

Abdullah was reacting to a statement made by US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Tom Lantos who demanded that US President George W. Bush suspend all FTA negotiations with Malaysia, in protest over the US$16 billion (RM57.6 billion) deal signed last month between Malaysia’s SKS Group and the state-owned National Iranian Oil Company.

All this is on top the fact that negotiation is tough:

A proposed Malaysia-U.S. free trade pact may falter if negotiators fail to make firm progress in bridging differences at a fifth round of talks next week, a U.S. official warned on Wednesday.

Negotiators will meet again for a week starting Monday in Malaysia’s Sabah state on Borneo island, where they will seek a compromise over opening up of Malaysia’s services and government contracts – two key hurdles to a deal – said Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Karan Bhatia.

Labor and environmental issues are also holding up talks, he said.

Further at Forbes by Associated Press :

Malaysia has warned it will drop free trade talks with the United States if it is asked to scrap a multi-billion-dollar gas deal with Iran, a news report said Friday.

[…]

In an angry reaction, Trade Minister Rafidah Aziz told Washington to stay out of Malaysia’s affairs and warned the government will not bow to any threats, the Malay-language Utusan Malaysia reported

While I am very keen of the Malaysia-US FTA, I have to agree with Rafidah Aziz. No one shall dictate Malaysian relationship with Iran. Besides, that oil and gas cooperation is not a government-to-government dealing.

Malaysia must have the liberty to forge relationship with anybody. It is our liberty and in my priority list, liberty sits higher than an FTA.

Despite that, I urge both the Malaysian and the American negotiators to ignore Lantos and realize a closer relationship between the two countries. It is only through trade could we guarantee our prosperity. In Kant’s words, “the spirit of trade cannot coexist with war.

Further, what better way for Malaysia to get back at Lantos other than having a successful fair FTA?

Categories
Liberty

[1058] Of liberalism and democracy

It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried.

— Winston Churchill, November 30, 1874 — January 24, 1965

Many have elevated democracy from a mere tool to such sacredness that the absence of democracy practically guarantees worldwide scorn. Despite the popularity of democracy as a form of government, there is nothing inherently good about democracy. Democracy is a tool and like any tool, it could be used for betterment or otherwise. Keeping that in mind, democracy guarantees only one outcome: right or wrong, the majority wins.

There are many things that cannot be decided through majority vote. I vividly remember during one of my multivariate calculus classes, my instructor challenged us to a mathematical problem. After giving us reasonble time to solve it, he surveyed the class in a way a democracy would. The majority, including me, produced the wrong answer. Upon tallying the result, the instructor announced that “mathematics is not democratic.”

Indeed.

Perhaps, I am guilty of overusing the words “means” and “ends” to the point of banality. Nevertheless, democracy has never been the end and will never be the end. Many advocates of democracy confuse the ends and means of a society. A tool — democracy — can never be the end and there can be no question about that, especially to liberals.

While democracy has been associated with liberalism in modern times, it had not always been the case. Early liberals were suspicious of democracy; Voltaire for instance preferred monarchy instead of democracy. There were many reasons for distrusting democracy. One is the possible disrespect of individual liberty by the majority; tyranny of the majority, so to speak.

A murder is still a crime regardless whatever the masses say. Transgression of liberty is still wrong, regardless what the majority thinks.

In liberalism, participation in a society does not signal a surrender of individual rights to the society. Participation in a democracy does not translate as the participator surrendering or delegating his liberty to the majority.

The day democracy violates individual liberties is the day democracy stops being an asset and becomes a liability. By that, I am not repudiating democracy. Democracy does have its benefits. And in no way I am expressing support for authoritarian rule. Liberalism does not start from the top, be it human or a supreme being; it starts from the bottom, the people that form any state.

I am simply implying that democracy cannot be used to justify transgression of individual liberty. Therefore, a superior democracy, with all things equal, is liberal democracy. Simple majoritarianism just will not do.

Categories
Activism Liberty

[1055] Of Tak Nak NST

Oh heck. What the hell.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

With the talk about free speech and all, what are you going to do about it, realistically?

Paste a banner on your blog and then do nothing?

I propose a boycott on NST. Read ’em but don’t buy ’em. Hit them where it hurts the most.

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

p/s — There might be a misunderstanding caused by this entry. I have nothing against defamation law. NST has every right to seek right of redress from Jeff Ooi and Rocky’s Bru, if Jeff Ooi and Rocky’s Bru are indeed guilty of defamation. By that, I am not implying that Jeff Ooi and Rocky’s Bru have committed fraud or defamation. I am just saying that the post has little relevant to the case, originally.

This post is one of those entries that try to ride on a wave but not actually part of the wave. I am targeting NST not because of the current lawsuit. Rather, it is because of NST’s biased reporting. I do however sympathize with the two bloggers.

Notwithstanding the right, I do not feel the redress NST is seeking is not sufficiently justified. I doubt that the two bloggers have made malicious false statements against NST. If there are strong proofs of otherwise, I would be glad to rescind my sympathy towards the two bloggers and even support prosecution. But I still will not buy NST.

Please differentiate the such right from such justification. I disagree with the justification, not the right. For this reason, I do not plan to endorse “Blogger United” or paste their banner here on my blog. The “movement” seems to deny the right to redress while dismissing NST’s allegation.

John and SiPM might have described what my position on the case.

Categories
Books, essays and others Conflict & disaster Economics Liberty

[1054] Of Immanuel Kant, free trade and peace

By virtue of their mutual interest does nature unite people against violence and war… the spirit of trade cannot coexist with war, and sooner or later this spirit dominates every people. For among all those powers… that belong to a nation, financial power may be the most reliable in forcing nations to pursue the noble cause of peace… and wherever in the world war threatens to break out, they will try to head it off through mediation, just as if they were permanently leagued for this purpose

— Immanuel Kant, Perpetual Peace, 1795.