Categories
Politics & government

[1564] Of make yourself irrelevant by not voting

Two doors.

Behind a door is an evil and behind another is yet another evil but of a different species. Which door would you choose to venture through?

In many cases especially in politics, it is about choosing the lesser of the two evils. Sometimes, we talk so much about choosing the lesser that we overlooked the third option: not choosing at all. Indeed, many voters have expressed their unwillingness to make a decision when presented with two evils. I was part of them for awhile until I began to take a step back and look at the bigger picture.

I deplore being having to choose between two evils but that is the case I will be facing for the upcoming election. There are only two candidates contesting in my constituency; one is from UMNO and another is from PAS; being having to choose between a racist and an Islamist party is a real turn-off.

Presented with limited options, I had to ask myself, do I need to vote at all?

Regardless the options, I do feel strongly about voting. I blame this on MTV, with its incessant messages extolling the virtue of voting. I bought so much into it that if I were given a chance, I would not hesitate to vote in the 2004 US Presidential Election. What made the urge greater was the options presented by the day; between Bush and Kerry, my choice was clear. Living in a liberal bastion of Ann Arbor and close to the Bible Belt made the decision easier to make.

I feel strongly about exercising my right to vote because I believe those whom consciously fail to vote practically relinquished their moral authority to discuss matters of collective importance, from state to the federal levels. Rightfully, every individual has a say in the governance of a state, especially so if those individuals are taxpayers. They have a stake in setting the direction of their state and refusal to vote should not affect that. Yet, a normative statement is not a positive statement. Positively, failure to vote means one disenfranchises oneself from the system.

An event in Iraq provides a clear example how failure to vote causes one to be irrelevant. In January 2005, Iraq had an election to appoint various representatives into its national assembly. The Sunnis mostly boycotted the process and as a result, the Kurds and the Shiites dominated the house.[1] Regardless how the boycott affected the legitimacy of the election, the house was formed to draft a brand new constitution for the war-torn country. Due to limited participation from the Sunni, the Kurds and the Shiites could have a free hand in writing a new constitution, the supreme law of Iraq.[2]

The rationale for refusal to participate in Iraq in 2005 is different from the Malaysian scenario but the effect is still the same. Those that refuse to vote make themselves irrelevant to the system. Unless, of course, if you are planning for a bloody revolution. Yet, a free election is a revolution in its own way.

All that does however only explain why it is imperative to vote. It does not tell how one breaks the false dilemma of choosing between two evils. I will touch on that soon.

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

[1] — Read Iraqi legislative election, January 2005 at Wikipedia. Accessed February 28 2008.

[2] — The Sunni Arabs’ January 2005 election boycott and the simultaneous campaign of intimidation of Sunni Arab voters by the insurgency resulted in only seventeen Sunni Arabs elected to the 275-member Assembly—a very low number compared to the proportion of Sunni Arabs in Iraq, conventionally estimated at 15 to 20 percent. By contrast, the Kurdistan Coalition List won seventy-five seats and the predominantly Shia United Iraqi Alliance won 140—an absolute majority that in theory, if not in fact, gave the Alliance the ability to write a constitution without the involvement of any other political grouping. [Iraq’s Constitutional Process II: An Opportunity Lost. Johnathan Morrow. United States Institute of Peace. December 2005]

Categories
Activism Liberty Politics & government

[1563] Of Nik Nazmi’s manifesto and putting bloggers into office

Friend Nik Nazmi is running for election and he has produced a video articulating his agenda for his constituency.

[youtube]QE0qA8H-g60[/youtube]

At the Malay College, we used to joke that he would be the first among our class to be thrown into prison, courtesy of ISA. We did not joke about him being the first among our class to run for public office.

Public domain.

Friends. Remember to blog about Nik Nazmi tomorrow as part of an initiative to put bloggers into public office!

While I am at it, allow me to touch a criticism directed at the effort made by Siber Party of Malaysia. They wrote:

While we read blogs and we do operate a blog, it is only our platform and website to inform the good citizens of Malaysia about our views and policies on matters that concern all Malaysians.

Which also means we are not going to support a blogger because he or she is a blogger. we want to know their stand, their approach, their policies, philosophies, politics on all things Malaysian and the world. [Between axes. Siber Party of Malaysia. February 25 2008]

I absolutely agree that we should not support a candidate just because the candidate is a blogger. Yet, I need to point out that the criticism misses the whole point of the initiative: the initiative at its heart is about freedom. I wrote ‘liberty’ or ‘freedom’ no less than 4 times in emails that I sent out to probably 100 bloggers and the entry which introduces the initiative.

The idea behind the effort is to put those that embrace freedom of expression into public offices. From these offices, they have opportunities to defend their and our freedom from tyranny. I honestly believe the bloggers whom I have listed believe in freedom of speech, which is essential to blogging. Elizabeth Wong has probably been doing something for liberty when I was in diaper (okay, that is an exaggeration). Jeff Ooi knows what freedom of expression is, especially when it revolves around blogging and I know enough of Nik Nazmi to know that he appreciates freedom. TAs for Badrul Hisham a.k.a. chegubad, well, he is up against the son-in-law.

The crux of the message is freedom. Indeed, supporting a candidate just because he is a blogger does not make sense. I would certain not support a religious extremist‘s candidacy for public office just because he is a blogger.

So, Siber Party of Malaysia, are you willing to reconsider your position?

Categories
Humor Politics & government

[1562] Of Pak la la la la

During the US Presidential Election in 2004, JibJab produced the most memorable song ever.

In Malaysia, we have this:

[youtube]DS3FMemnA-s[/youtube]

And thanks to the video, now I know that we will be celebrating Samy Vellu’s birthday on March 8! People! Let us give him a retirement party on that day!

Categories
Economics Politics & government

[1561] Of deficit reduction through increased spending!

BN’s manifesto says that it promises to reduce fiscal deficit:

In its election manifesto, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s coalition also pledged to create two million new jobs, encourage one million new businesses and rein in the fiscal deficit over the next five years. [Malaysia PM woos non-Malays in election manifesto. Reuters. February 25 2008]

I wonder, I wo-wo-wo-wo-wonder, how is he going to do that with his planned increase in public spending for IDR, NCER, ECER, SCORE, SDC, OMG, WTF, LOL, ROTF, ZZZ, etc, etc…

Will it be through private finance initiative? Or based on hope that the economy will improve tremendously? Or through multiplier effect brought upon by projects implemented? Or taxation? Or what?

Categories
Politics & government

[1560] Of Nader yet again

Persistence…

When Ralph Nader ran as a third-party candidate in 2000 and drew 96,837 votes in Florida, he was widely derided by Democrats, who saw him as a spoiler who siphoned crucial votes from Al Gore and tipped the election to George W. Bush. When he ran again in 2004, Democrats in many states tried to keep him off their ballots.

On Sunday, Mr. Nader officially announced that he would seek the presidency as a third-party candidate one more time — driven in part by his frustration over the efforts to thwart his last run. [Nader to Run, Citing Events of 2004 Race. New York Times. February 25 2008]

…is probably a virtue.