Categories
Liberty

[871] Of how dare do they say we don’t know how good we have it?

I have just enough hearing the older generation telling us – the younger generations – that we do not appreciate the meaning of independence. It’s as if these older generations know what’s the meaning of independence better than us, especially when they themselves didn’t go through the struggle of independence to start with. So, what moral authority do they have to tell us that?

Many of the older generations assume the moral authority because they’re older than us. But seriously, just because a person lives through a period which happens to be a period of national struggle doesn’t mean that person fight in that struggle. In all practical senses, many are merely spectators and free riding on others’ struggle for some ideals. In short, moral authority is earned and it doesn’t come automatically with age.

Perhaps, the reason the older generations keep telling us that we don’t appreciate the struggle Malaysia has gone through is due to our questioning nature. Perhaps, our seniors are uncomfortable that the more open-minded younger generations – the liberals – that keep testing the norms and boundaries and refusing to adhere to orthodoxy introduced and set in place by them just for the sake of adhering . If that is so, perhaps they need to be reminded that their generations too fought against for changes at one time or another. If norms and orthodoxies weren’t challenged, Malaysia would still probably be British Malaya.

If they indeed fear changes, then it wouldn’t be too harsh to say that they’re trying to preserve their legacies. Since the more liberal generations are open for changes for the better which might threaten the status quo, they disagree with our conducts. Hence, the accusation of being ungrateful.

Perhaps, they failed to realize that time changes and there are new challenges ahead. An entity will always need to reinvent itself to take on new unique challenges. If the new generations don’t challenge norms, how do you expect us to overcome new challenges? How do you expect us – both the older and the younger generations; the society – as a whole to progress? How do you expect us to move forward if we’re all stuck in orthodox norms? Do you expect us to clung to death to old models while facing infinite unique challenges that require new models?

Time does move on and changes do occur. To survive, we need to adapt and be flexible. Evolution will guarantee those that failed to adapt to regress into oblivion. Those that adapt will have fighting chances.

So, the next time anybody from the older generations tell you, the younger generations – especially the liberal ones – that you don’t know how good you have it, tell them back that, at least we are willing to change and adapt. Our minds are open to new paradigms. Our minds are free. Ask them back, are you willing to do the same? Is your mind free?

Tell those uncles of yours, those parents of yours, some older persons on TV – may they be politicians or some strangers, no matter who – that freeing the mind is harder than freeing ourselves from the old chain of colonialism.

If they don’t get that, then tell them, don’t tell us that we don’t know how good we have it. At the very least, we don’t let others do our thinking for ourselves. Tell them, our definition of freedom is much larger than mere physical independence. Forget the clichés the mainstream media tells you. Our definition of freedom is the state of free mind. With a free mind, comes liberty in the truest sense.

But of course, don’t tell them anything if you didn’t think of this critically.

Categories
Photography

[870] Of Mandarin Oriental Hotel, Kuala Lumpur

Some weeks ago on a Friday, I sat in a park by the Petronas Twin Towers, watching pretty people walked by for hours . Somehow, I think I saw more foreigners than Malaysians there.

Anyway, several recognizable structures are observable from the park. The Mandarin Hotel is one of them.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

This was caught before the haze crossed over the Malacca Straits from Indonesia to haunt all Malaysians.

Categories
Society Sports

[869] Of confronting disinformation on secularism

This article at a conservative blog is probably the one of the worst written articles I’ve ever seen. The reason for such classification is the factual inaccuracies and inconsistencies that exist in that entry. Let’s visit the article wherever there exists factual inaccuracy, inconsistency or simple disinformation. I’ll quote most of the article here so that it the conservative article is to be removed (that blog’s author has a history of deletion of proof; see here and observe that fact that the reference of that particular sentence has been removed by the author to escape burden of being selective reasoning). It’s in Malay though.

First paragraph tries to define the word secular :

Fahaman sekular adalah merujuk kepada perkataan Latin iaitu saeculum yang bererti generasi atau zaman. Dalam agama Kristian sekular bermaksud agama itu bertentangan dengan gereja. Untuk pengertian yang lebih jauh sekular merujuk kepada sesuatu yang dimiliki atau yang bersangkutan dengan dunia lahir sahaja dan tidak ada kena mengena dengan keabadian. Dalam perbincangan ini sekular bermakna kehidupan yang tidak ada kaitan dengan perkara ghaib, atau perkara agama.

It seems that the definition was taken from Wikipedia. However, mistranslation might have occurred because the article says in Christianity, the word secular means religion opposes the Church. Perhaps, that’s an honest mistaken because if it wasn’t, then it seems like a contradiction. Whatever it is, that sentence needs further clarification. Apart from that, I don’t have anything to comment on the first paragraph save one:

Dengan begitu sekularisme adalah bermakna satu fahaman yang memisahkan agama dari kehidupan ini, khususnya kehidupan bernegara. Ugama adalah masalah peribadi yang tidak mempunyai kaitan dengan negara. Manusia adalah bebas dari asuhan agama dan ketetapan dari Yang Maha Kuasa. Sekularisme menentang sebarang pengaruh agama dan manusia bebas menentukan kepercayaan dan arah haluan hidupnya sendiri.

Yup. Secularism, coupled with human rights, allows everybody to choose their own beliefs. This kind of secularism doesn’t force religion into individuals’ throat, much unlike certain conservative opinion.

Second paragraph:

Teras kepada sekularisme ialah politik yang berasaskan kepada perkauman atau pun kebangsaan, atau apa yang kita panggil nasionalisma. Manakala ekonominya pula berasaskan laissez faire dan falsafah individualisma.Ia kemudiannya merebak ke dalam masyarakat dan menjadi sebahagian dari gaya hidup mereka yang merupakan pemujaan kepada modenisma, materialisma dan pemujaan hawa nafsu.

This is pure disinformation. The first sentence states that secularism is a politics based on racialist/racist (the Malay language doesn’t seem to differentiate the term racist and racialist; I’ll pick racist from this purpose given the context of the conservative article) or nationalist sentiment while secularist economy is based on free market.

On secularism and racism, holding a secularist’s view automatically does not mean being a racist or a nationalist. Take humanist secularist for instance – this type of secularism embraces humanity as a whole regardless of beliefs or genetic makeup. Secular humanism in fact doesn’t believe in racism. As a matter of fact, humanism isn’t as divisive as racist or conservative politics. Nevertheless, I’m not saying there’s no racist secularist. What I’m saying here is that racism is independent of secularism and secularism is independent of racism. Almost like how moral is independent of religion.

On secularism and free market, consider a secular communist state. Would a secular communist state practice free market? It won’t because communism by definition rejects the notion of private property while free market accepts it. The author of that article certainly needs to read more history of economics thoughts. In short, the author of the article is not sufficiently well-read to talk about secularism and its connection with free market.

With this, the thesis of the whole article is based has been proven flawed. So this makes all other subsequent ideas based on the main idea irrelevant for debate. But I’ll visit some of the more disagreeable or notable statements.

Paragraph eight:

Bidang yang paling teruk menerima kesan sekularisasi adalah bidang pendidikan. Ini kerana pendidikan adalah merupakan saluran dan alat terpenting untuk mencorakkan haluan hidup manusia itu sendiri. Stamford Raffles adalah seorang pegawai Inggeris yang bertanggung jawab mengemukakan rancangan halus untuk mencapai matlamat tersebut. Melalui pendidikan beliau merencanakan Singapura sebagai pusat bagi kebangkitan semula peradaban asli kuno dan menyegarkan menerusi penyebaran perluasan pengaruh Inggeris dan faedah-faedah pendidikan dalam kemajuan ekonomi Barat. Beliau telah mengemukakan gagasan pusat Pengajian Asia Tenggara bagi mencapai matlamat ini. Beliau berhasrat untuk melahirkan bangsa-bangsa yang bijaksana dan terpelajar selaku orang suruhan yang jujur kepada sistem pentadbiran penjajah. Ia juga menyarankan supaya pendidikan untuk anak-anak Melayu mestilah menerusi tulisan rumi dalam usaha mengurangkan pengaruh Islam di kalangan orang-orang Melayu.

This paragraph seems to be anti-modern. Moreover, it seems to be against education brought by the British. For the record, back during the day of British Malaya, most Malays didn’t go through proper education because the Malays were suspicious of the education provided by the British. The article seems to disapprove the Malays receiving education about the modern world from the British and would be content to learn merely about the religion. Forget mathematics, language, physics, etc, eh?

Paragraph ten:

Demikianlah masyarakat Melayu mula membenci orang-orang yang hidup sederhana, yang tidak menyintai dunia, dan yang mengamalkan sikap zuhud. Segala-galanya dinilai dengan wang ringgit. Masalah negara dilihat penyelesaiannya dari sudut ekonomi, dan bukannya dengan cara yang dikehendakki oleh Islam. Kemudian pada dekad-dekad terakhir lapan puluhan lahirlah Dasar Ekonomi Baru, Amanah Saham Nasional, 30 peratus penyertaan bumiputra dalam sektor perusahaan, Loteri Kebajikan Masyarakat, dan berbagai lagi perkara yang menjurus kepada soal kebendaan semata yang kesemuanya bertentangan dengan prinsip Islam.

The article seems to hate economic progress. The progression of the article isn’t too surprising given its opposition to the Malays receiving education from the British during colonial period.

Paragraph 11:

Aspek politik adalah yang paling utama menerima kesan dari sekularisme. Perlembagaan Malaysia adalah bukti yang paling jelas dalam hal ini. Ia menafikan kekuasaan Allah, Rasulnya dan AlQuran. Politik dan agama menjadi terpisah.Sedangkan sepertimana yang kita tahu dalam Islam agama dan politik adalah satu.Tidak bercerai berai. Hijrahnya Rasul saw adalah untuk mendirikan negara Islam di Madinah. Ini bermakna Islam dan politik tidak dapat dipisahkan, di mana ia bertentangan sama sekali dengan hakikat perjalanan politik di Malaysia. Politik kita sekarang adalah acuan dari Barat, politik yang mengutamakan nafsu dan kebendaan.

Oh, the Malaysian Constitution is secular now? Didn’t that blog and its sister blogs insist that the Constitution is not secular previously? What’s going on here? Perhaps, finally, they’ve finally come to accept that fact that the Constitution is secular in nature?

On politics, well, the politics that the article espouses originates from the Arabic world. Still foreign as far as this part of the world is concerned, isn it?

The article continues that say that secularism is against Malaysian politics. That’s not true. Instead, it’s merely against religious conservative politics.

Moving on:

Apabila benda-benda menguasai manusia, maka mereka pun tenggelam dalam suasana hidup yang tidak ada berpedoman, semuanya bertuhankan nafsu. Sebab itulah hidup masyarakat kita hari ini sedang menuju ke arah kehancuran, akibat merebaknya pengaruh sekularisme itu, bahkan ianya dibelai pula oleh pemerintah kita, menjadikan orang Islam di Malaysia terlalu individualistik, hidup mementingkan diri, mengejar kemewahan dan sebagainya. Projek-projek membazir sudah menjadi semacam satu pemujaan, semuanya adalah kerana faham kebendaan telah berakar umbi ke dalam jiwa Melayu yang mengaku beragama Islam. Mampukan orang-orang Melayu sorot balik ke belakang? Soalnya terletak kepada orang Melayu sendiri. Namun pengaruh sekularisme bukanlah semudah itu untuk dibuang, apalagi ia telah tertanam ke dalam jiwa dan dijunjung pula oleh kaum pemerintah. Inilah halangan-halangan utama untuk menyebarkan akidah Islam, apalagi untuk memberikan kefahaman tentang negara Islam kerana fahaman itu amat bertentangan dengan jiwa Islam yang murni itu.

Dan jika sekiranya kita berminat untuk menegakkan Islam, kita haruslah memerangi fahaman ini yang menjadi halangan utama ke arah merealisasikan cita-cita Islam itu. Bersediakah kita?

This article is simple about “I’m the good side and secularism is the evil side”. It tries to create a false dilemma by painting the world as black and white. Perhaps, this is the reason why the conservative author has mistaken the relationship between secularism with capitalism, racism and sex.

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

p/s – after the loss to FC Copenhagen, Ajax is up against another Scandinavian club. This time, it’s from Norway, for the UEFA Cup.

Categories
Science & technology

[868] Of pity poor Pluto

The Solar system now has officially eight planets. Pluto is a planet no more. I heard it over CNN last night . BBC has a nice report on it:

Astronomers have voted to strip Pluto of its status as a planet.

About 2,500 scientists meeting in Prague have adopted historic new guidelines that see the small, distant world demoted to a secondary category.

Wikipedia as usual has a more detailed description of the event.

Now, all those religious freaks that insist they holy book(s) has(have) already said that there are nine planets in our system will need to revise their assertion.

The God of the Underworld must be angry.

Categories
Sports

[867] Of Ajax 0 – 2 Copenhagen

Hahahahaha! Own goal baby!

Aggregate 2-3.

This must be some kind of harsh justice placed upon Ajax by some kind of soccer god :

FC København defied the odds to overturn a 2-1 first leg deficit with a 2-0 win at AFC Ajax that earned them a place in the UEFA Champions League group stage.

An own goal from Belgian defender Thomas Vermaelen proved to be the decider on the night as the Dutch side somehow conspired to lose a tie which always seemed poised in their favour.

There go millions of Euros.

Despite feeling obviously disappointed, Ajax doesn’t deserve to be in the Champions League. By last season’s standard, we should have been in the UEFA Cup, which we are currently now. AZ Alkmaar should have played this match instead of Ajax. But somehow, the KNVB screwed AZ last season.

Nonetheless, loss is a loss and we all should be sporting enough to admit to defeat. All the luck for FC Copenhagen.