Categories
Personal Photography

[2188] Of one of the reasons why I fell in love with Glebe

I live a good 20 minutes worth of walking away from my campus and probably 30 minutes from my school. This is a far cry from what it used to be last year, when it was more Ann Arbor-like for me. While in Darlington, I could afford to wake up just 20 minutes before classes begin and still have some time to catch with my breath. Now I need a good 2 hours to just get ready, knowing that I rather be at the university all day long rather than spend some hours at the library or anywhere relevant, go back home for lunch or a nap and return to school to finish everything off, if it is possible. Such is the pain of living near at the end of Glebe and refusing to take the bus.

But they say no pain, no gain. The chance for photography in Darlington is limited. The short distance and the relative low amount of culture and life there in general necessarily limit the supply of what makes photography exciting.

Glebe is the opposite of Darlington. The skyline of the beautiful Sydney is always there to greet my morning. Dogs with their guardians on the pavement. Birds singing in the sky. School kids rushing for schools, or just slacking off. The shops with all sort of merry people. And of course, what is Glebe without its cafes? Oh, the independent bookstores too.

Just open your eyes and frame it. Not just frame it, live it. It is inevitable to know that each street has its own character. Each seems to invite me to explore them, promising an adventure for the day, or for the week, if only I dare. Hereford Street is one which I have explored quite considerably on foot.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

I feel like I am starting to take ownership of this place. This morning, a team of four youths were soliciting for funds for Glebe right after I took this particular photo. I donated some cash and this is the only second time I have done so, so far, in 4 years.

Being a libertarian who at time harbors too much contempt for those who solicit for money, it is a big deal for me. It reflects what I care about.

Categories
Photography

[2187] Mengenai kaki cucuk laut

Semasa budaya blog mula tersebar di Malaysia, ada satu blog yang diberi nama Kaki Cucuk Langit. Malang sekali, blog tersebut sudah tiada.

Pos kali ini ditulis bagi memperingati Kaki Cucuk Langit.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

Gambar ini diambil di Moreton Bay, Queensland.

Dan ya, itu kaki saya.

Categories
Photography

[2186] Of reminiscing those sunny days

The morning did not start cheerily. It rained. Is it not funny how weather affect your mood sometimes?

To keep my spirit up, I am posting this picture from Manly up.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

Categories
Activism Society

[2185] Of it begins with a conversation

It was a day in May some five years ago that I hopped on an airplane alone from Detroit to San Francisco. I rarely go anyway alone. That is partly due to the distress I experience each time I find myself in a new neighborhood. I like the comfort of familiar surroundings. Whenever I am away from wherever I call home, I find comfort in familiar faces instead. I had to make an exception for the trip to the Golden State this time around. The agenda was one that not many of my friends in Ann Arbor shared.

A group of Malaysians consisting of students and professionals in the Bay Area had met consistently for some time then discussing all things Malaysian over lunch, dinner or supper full of Malaysian delight.
They called themselves the Malaysia Forum.

In that May, they organized a meet up to do exactly the same thing at Stanford, only with more people in a slightly more formal approach. I was curious about them. I no longer remember where I first read about the group but what I remember is how their commitment to free speech impressed me.

It is easy to believe and practice free speech too openly nowadays. The same was not true five years ago in Malaysia. There was a culture of fear then. The Mahathir administration spread the presence of the State to almost everywhere. Even under a new administration that promised to be different, the shadow of the State was intimidating. To talk about certain issues so openly was most unwise.

With that as the background, for them to discuss issues that some considered as sensitive an off limit is a courageous thing to do. There is something almost romantic about the whole enterprise. Whereas freedom saw curtailment at home, here across the Pacific in a foreign land, in defiance, they practiced freedom.

I hold fast to the idea of liberty, even then. I told myself, if they have the courage to do so, I want to study them up close. I boarded the plane.

I learned that Malaysia Forum believes that the first step towards anything is a frank conversation between individuals. Through conservations and sharing of perspectives, it is possible for a person to understand of issues relevant to Malaysia better.

Malaysia Forum functions beyond an exchange of perspectives. It is also about realizing that you are not alone. Nothing is more reassuring than the fact that you are not alone in this world. Confidence from that knowledge encourages individuals to speak freely. Without that confidence, the State could bully individuals all the way through. To me, that is the value of Malaysia Forum.
Malaysia Forum has since expanded. Initially, it was more or less a discussion group limited to the Bay Area in California.

Five years on, it is a name that is not so foreign among Malaysian community — student especially — in the United States any more. This is apparent from inquiries the group received about itself as it prepares to organize a conference in the coming week at Columbia in New York.

The expansion does go beyond the shores of the New World. Groups like these are always driven by idealism, and the most idealistic of the lot are often students, although the group itself is not student-centric. As they graduate, some return to Malaysia and spread the same ”Malaysia Forum way”. That directly helps in deepening the culture of liberty in Malaysian society.

Others find themselves in other parts of the world. London is one of few other places where the discussion group has made its presence felt by holding small discussions every now and then.

The stress on sharing is not mere rhetoric. The group broadcasts many of its activities online so that others with respectable internet connection can at least observe the discussions. The upcoming conference for instance, which will include economist Jomo K.S and politician Khairy Jamaluddin among others, will be streamed live. To outsiders unfamiliar with Malaysia Forum, the tendency to stream everything live over the internet is probably the hallmark of the group.

It is this act of sharing that enriches frank and informed conversations within Malaysia Forum.

As group expands further, perhaps to Singapore and Sydney, something exciting and wonderful will definitely occur for those who enjoy good conversations about Malaysia.

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

First published in The Malaysian Insider on April 1 2010.

Categories
Economics

[2184] Of initial reaction to the New Economic Model

With over 200 pages, it will take some time to digest the so-called New Economic Model fully. I began by reading the speech delivered by the Prime Minister earlier today and I am only beginning to read the document proper just now. Given time constraint, I doubt I will able to able to go through the points presented comprehensively. At first past though, the NEM seems to suggest something favorable to me.

It appears to suggest the retreat of the state from the marketplace. The stress on frictions in the market due to subsidies and trade restrictions, the need of liberalization and reduction of government holding in some government linked enterprises are proofs for this. The term market is prominently used throughout the document.

There is more nuance than a simple retreat however. The speech itself suggests that entities like Khazanah and EPF will be allowed to invest abroad as part of effort to not crowd out the private sector.

That is good but it does not erase the fact that these entities still exist.

Affirmative action itself is still in force although the PM suggests that it will be reformed from race-based to need-based. Somewhere in the speech, the term market-friendly affirmative action appeared. I am not quite bought by that term. I rather hear the abolition of affirmative action but I am willing to give ground that need-based is far better than race based affirmative action.

The existence of national key performance indicators itself suggests a huge bureaucracy. It has been taunted as part of government transformation but I am not at all impressed with the idea of enlarged bureaucracy. Nevertheless, I am willing to give the administration a benefit of a doubt on this front.

Never mind the administration seeks to strengthen the public sector. How that strengthening will affect the size of the bureaucracy is something I hope to find out while reading the report.