Sunday, December 31, 2006

The environment: why people will care, sooner or later

photo: European Environment Agency (click on photo for site)

Humans have changed a lot of things. Of these, there are some things that should be changed, like poverty, like monarchy. But the relentless pursuit of development has had its ramifications on the environment. Considering that the environment is the pillar of our very existence, blessing us with clean air, water, sufficient food, and good land to farm and build, that's probably something we don't want to change.

Shock and awe

It is a proven biological and social concept that the more gradual a change, the better humans and wildlife alike are able to adapt to the change and the felt impact of the change is therefore reduced. We see this all the time - in the wild, most animals have been able to survive the gradual transition from the ice age to today, while the dinos were all wiped out with a sudden temperature drop due to a giant meteorite; and in more civilised society, we've been able to cope with a gradual tripling of oil prices, but thai stocks plummeted after the sudden, unexpected (and bird-brained) institution of capital control measures.

For the past couple of hundred of years, ever since the industrial revolution kickstarted our pollutive and eco-unfriendly ways, our world's climate and environment has been changing - but gradually. Now, there's a kind of delayed-feedback mechanism here, hence the gradual change: if you slash and burn a football-sized area of forest today, you're not going to get a football-sized patch of barren land tomorrow, or even a month later.

The trouble is that the damage we did, and are still doing, to the environment has increased exponentially - so, logically, the wounds the environment's going to show will also increase exponentially. That goes to say, this change we're talking about isn't going to be gradual any longer.

To exacebate the situation - notice that we're haven't been getting the proportionate amount and scale of feedback from our inputs to the environmental system. For example, carbon dioxide levels since the industrial revolution have gone way off the scale (almost 3 times the natural fluctuation of the past million years). One, that isn't any gradual change; Two, remember delayed-feedback? We may not feel the full impact of this now, but it's sure to come back to haunt us.

So that's pretty much a time-bomb on our hands. And we're already seeing a sneak preview of it exploding:For one, the five hottest years on record have occured within the last 7-8 years, we've seen deadly heatwaves in europe; The 2005 Atlantic hurricane season is the most active in recorded history (with memorable monsters like Katrina) and also the most devastating (causing at least 2,280 deaths and US$100 billioin in damages).

Since it's neither insignificant nor gradual, is highly visible and dramatic, and (best of all) hits people where it hurts most - in terms of dollars and cents and human lives, it's going to have a whopping felt impact. That's just a sneak preview, the tip of the iceberg - and Bush is already having problems dealing with it. When the shock and awe really starts, the environmental movement will not only infiltrate every level of politics, but also cause the masses to join today's few sore-throat, lost-hope environmentalists in creating an unprecendented amount of ground support. That's when we'll really have to sit up and do something about it.


Capitalist self-regulation

Elementary economics tells us that any economic system self-regulates to balance supply and demand - if supply goes down, price goes up, therefore demand tends to go down. As our fossil fuels and other natural resources gradually get depleted, supply will tend to go down (the production of several OPEC countries are already falling below their quota due to drying-up oil fields - and let's not talk about overstated oil fields yet). Hence the price of natural resources will go up, and in fact, the oil price has tripled and stabilised at almost that level - and it seems unlikely to head south in future.

This means two things: Firstly, businesses and governments alike will reduce their consumption of pollutive fossil fuels natural resources, so pollution would tend to go down. One visible example of this is the aircraft industry, in which "fuel efficiency" is the buzzword - aircraft manufactors are going to great lengths to reduce fuel consumption, for example by using expensive composites - such that the airbus A380 has nearly the same fuel consumption as the old Boeing 747.

Secondly, green technology would appear much cheaper in comparison, hence higher adoption of green technology, and increased funding for green R & D is likely. And this, for sure, is a good thing, since green technology not only reduces consumption of natural resources but attempts to be environmentally-friendly in every way, hence promoting environmentalism even more, and reduces the damage we do to the environment

Also, it is becoming increasingly obvious that many things we take for granted - like the environment's capacity to absorb pollution, water resources, fertile soil... are finite, but self-replenishing resources, since pollution and other damage to the environment are having more and more visible ramifications - e.g. in the form of desertification and/or land degradation when unsustainable farming methods are used. Hence some form of governmental regulation will - eventually - surface to ensure that we do not the damage we do the environment and the self-replenishing resources (i prefer not to use the term "renewable") do not exceed its ability to recover from our damage and replenish those resources and hence is sustainable, and will not deplete these resources or irreversibly damage the environment. And this is what we have seen in international fishing quotas, and sulphur dioxide emission treaties (sulphur dioxide emissions has actually decreased).

Economic agendas may be a distraction from the environmental one, especially in countries like China, but only a temporary one. The environment is one irreplaceable pillar of any economy - whether in terms of providing water, electricity, or fertile land for farming. If the environment collapses, so will the economy. When this happens, or hopefully, before this happens, people will care about the environment, and take steps in that direction


But will it be too late?

When we talk about damage to the environment, there is a point of no return: Do enough damage to the environment fast enough, and it will be irreversably wrecked, with no capability to repair itself. The principle is similar to that on wildlife: wildlife can adapt to changes in the ecosystem, but if the change is big enough and fast enough, that species just goes extent.

So the question is whether we have crossed that point of no return. Only time will tell. Judging from the scale of the damage to the environment, and the fact that we only started this havoc business during the industrial revolution (only slightly over 200 years ago), one thing's for sure - that point of no return isn't very far away, if we haven't crossed it yet. But to be pessimistic is to be defeatist. The human race has every reason to be optismistic and take steps to ensure that we do not cross that point, beyond which, the capacity of Earth to support life, and our very own existence, is to be questioned.

It starts with you and me. Now or never.


Recommended reading / viewing: The inconvenient truth (movie or book) (Al Gore's educational campaign on global warming)

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

My flickr: now up

Finally done my flickr... see it here. Do pop by to take a look. Any feedback is very much appreciated! Thanks.

To all the RI peeps: Enjoy what's left of your holidays (if you're not chiong-ing chinese homework...)

Saturday, December 23, 2006

Merry christmas

Aiyah quite some time never blog liao... very busy recently with RIPB, science club ESP, OBS etc. stuff. budden i'm a little bit of a workaholic...

Came back from thailand a few days ago, had quite a fun trip. Some friends brought my family on a road trip to west and north thailand, then we go back to bangkok for shopping. my mum quite addicted to shopping in bangkok, but the things are really cheap... we came back with 4 boxes, luggage exactly just nice, 1 more kg then overweight. The food also very good, somemore got $2 ramen shop (hachiban ramen)... i love jap food. I fly budget (tiger airways) then comeback that time raining, no aerobridge so got to chiong to terminal from plane, like joker like that. but $9 ticket (plus around $50 taxes and surcharge) cannot complain lah...

Haiz, 4 years go thailand 6 times liao (bangkok 4 times - yes my mum addicted to shopping, then phuket 2 times) Next year dowan to go thailand anymore. Go australia better. Go japan or europe even better but very ex, though it's damn nice. I've been to hamburg, germany before, and it's so lovely.

Have a blessed christmas everyone! And go listen to some christmas carols from the mrbrown show... but admidst all the celebration and shopping, let's not forget what we are celebrating: the birth of Jesus, who came to earth as a sacrifice for our sins, and whose death paid for our sins and brought us forgiveness and eternal life. Let us not let this true meaning of christmas be lost in a shopping spree and a windfall of presents.

Friday, December 08, 2006

Tongue in cheek



Btw, i'll be away in thailand from 9-19 dec... going bangkok, chiangmai, some province in west thailand and some hilltop national park in north-west thailand (yes it's the 3rd year running i'm going to bangkok... my mum's addicted to shopping in MBK, and i just love the SGD$2 ramen at ichiban ramen). My parents' thai friends will be bringing us around. Apparently they say the nightime temp at that hilltop park is 5deg! As cold as beijing ?! We'll see...

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Beijing exchange programme

Beijing was fun. I'll leave the political-economical analytical ramblings on China tourism and economic development and capitalism vs communism blah blah blah till another post... so here is just the fun side of it :-)


The city

With capitalism taking hold, displacing communism, and its rapid economic development, Beijing was seriously better than I expected. Well, while toilets at the great wall still stink, much of Beijing is clean and, shockingly, green - on the roadsides, and in the many parks (a reflection as the city's historic status as the emperor's home). Ok, correction, most trees in warm temperate climate are deciduous, and it's late autumn/winter now, but you get the point. Crime is at at a record low. The streetscape is starting to look a bit like japan.

There's still plently of congestion everywhere - in the airport, in their MRT, on the roads (you're probably better off walking during peak hours, save for the wintery weather), but heavy and continued investment in infrastructure (e.g. tiered road interchanges, up-and-coming MRT lines, more and new buses) has indeed helped to solve the problem.

The weather

Much better than singapore, to say the least. But seriously, I prefer cold weather :-) Dun sweat at all... This time, weather at beijing was around 6 to -2, and there was very light snow on sat morning.


The sights & the shopping

Ok we went to the usual tourist attractions... great wall, tiananmen, forbidden city, bla bla bla... but what really struck me was the richness of history and culture in beijing.

Oh and I did quite a bit of shopping :-) Most are dirt cheap, if u know how to bargain. But many of the shops will jack up the price if they see u r a foreigner, so while shopping with china pple, i shut up and got them to bargain for me - well, I look local enough, but i'll give the game away once i open my mouth. And another big sore point is their service... mostly damn lousy... and they'll try to cheat you by giving you fake notes (luckily i didn't kena this) as well as try not to give you your change (more than one shop "forgot" to give me until i asked).

Ok, in fact, too much shopping. My luggage quite badly overweight (luckily they didn't care as it was group check-in) and i had to sit on top to close it. Heng ah can close...


The school & the students

Again, in many ways a pleasant surprise. 人大附中 School facilities are good (in some aspects better than RI.. especially the canteen food). The students are damn enthu and really demonstrate class and school spirit (nationalism?) - unlike here. Ok I said i'll leave the analysis of capitalism and collective action till another post... so I'll resist... And they are really warm and welcoming. I had 2 buddies (xiaoyao and xiaodi), since the one that came to singapore (xiaoyao) and I attended class with couldn't host me for homestay. Both r really nice, and so is xiaoyao's class (junior 2/13) - had a really nice time talking to them, interacting with them, and they gave me a whole lot of things. Big thanks to them for making this trip such a pleasant one

But china's education system still has room for improvement. It focuses too much on memorisation and rote learning, and too little on independent critical and creative thinking. My buddy's mum ranted a lot on this... but seriously, you can't have much discussion with class sizes of 50. Anyhow, despite this, their students are really smart, and their willingness to work hard will serve them well.

Btw.... the pic to the left is of special significance to jianxiong. Ok jianxiong i'm not spilling the beans here.


The food

Quite good. Especially those signature specialities like beijing duck, zhajiang noodle etc. It's mostly spicier, salitier, oilier, and fatter than singapore - pretty scrumptions, but not for the health-conscious. If you're on a weight-loss progamme, beijing's probably not fo you. Food's much cheaper than singapore too.


Accomodation

Above expectations. We stayed in the school's hostel, and it's definitely much better than RI boarding (from what I heard). Pretty clean, with all the necessary facilities, and good heating and hot water. They even have an "activity room" with table tennis tables, dvd player etc. etc.


Final notes

Quite a fun trip :-) And certainly an eye-opening one. Thanks to all those who have made this trip possible, and I also thank the lord for keeping me safe


P.S. more photos available on jianxiong's photo album . Some photos mine, some his. Specific people welcome to request specific photos (hinthint)

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Class allocations

Hi everyone. before i sort out the photos and post on my beijing trip, just a quick update on sec 3 2007 class allocations.

I'm in 3C 2007. These are the pple in 3C 2007 excluding scholars and new students (yah i went to school today to see): Disclaimer: accuracy not guaranteed.

2A 2006 Beck Jong Hyun (trip sci lit)
2B 2006 Nair Manish (trip sci geog) (geog RA)
2B 2006 Tanuj James Geoge (trip sci lit)
2B 2006 Zhao Yang (trip sci geog other(?))
2C 2006 Kristian Lee (trip sci lit) (lit RA)
2C 2006 Daniel Tan (trip sci geog) (geog RA)
2D 2006 Ashish Kumar (trip sci lit) (lit, geog(?) RA)
2D 2006 Huang Renyong (trip sci lit) (chem, bio RA)
2D 2006 Samuel Tay (trip sci lit MEP(?)) (lit, chem RA)
2D 2006 Wang Yuxin (trip sci lit other) (chem RA)
2H 2006 Aaron Tang (trip sci geog) (physics/chem/bio RA (?))
2H 2006 Toh Ying Jie (trip sci lit) (lit, chem RA)
2K 2006 Ren Yan (trip sci geog) (geog/chem/bio RA)
2L 2006 Conan Chui (trip sci lit) (lit RA)
2M 2006 Me (trip sci geog) (geog,chem RA)
2M 2006 Peh Shingbo (trip sci geog) (geog RA)
2P 2006 Kenneth Goh (trip sci geog other) (chem,bio RA)
2P 2006 Huang Wenjie (trip sci geog jap) (geog, bio RA)
2P 2006 Daniel Lim (trip sci geog) (physics(?), chem RA)
2Q 2006 Joshua Tung (trip sci lit) (lit RA)
2Q 2006 Choon How (trip sci lit) (lit RA)


As u can see there's no shortage of 3.94 and 4.0s... And besides, it's pretty easy for the PRC scholars to get 4.0 (chinese and maths no question, same goes for 3 sciences (except maybe bio), they can't do geog or hist and definitely not lit so instead they do CHINESE lit, then english is a problem, so for sec3, they take "English 2/ English B" i.e. easier CTs...).

So that's a receipe for competition... Survival of the fittest it will be!


ERRATA: I missed out the following pple: Wong yong sheng, Yan Bing Yi, Jonathan Lian, Gabriel Tan. And there will be 7 new students (6 PRC / 1 Indian) to make up a total class size of 32

Monday, November 20, 2006

Leaving on a jetplane

Will be flying off to beijing for exchange programme tomorrow, attached to 人大附中. Will only be back on dec 1.

The weather there is pretty cold (but not that cold), my little desktop widget tells me that it will be average around 0-10 over the next few days. I'm not too used to those temps, and i've never been to a cold countries during winter... but there's always a first time. Hope I don't freeze

Then must also remember to take care of belongings (esp. cam, passport, $$$)... kena warn liao there plenty of pickpockets, then the travel insurance only got partial coverage for personal belongings.

Looking forward to it :-) Will be pretty fun and eye-opening. And also it will be pretty interesting to see first-hand more abt culture and practices in China, and the state of Beijing's economic and urban development, and how certain policies have affected people. I thank the lord for this opportunity.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

What are you praying for?

from ChristNotes

What are you praying for? Are you asking God to give you more stuff--a bigger house, a new car, a bigger salary? What you pray for indicates what is important to you.

It is a great lesson to examine what the people in the Bible prayed for.

King David, in Psalm 27:4, prayed, One thing I ask of the LORD, this is what I seek: that I may dwell in the house of the LORD all the days of my life, to gaze upon the beauty of the LORD and to seek him in his temple. He asked God for just one thing: that he would dwell in God's presence. David clearly knew that in God's presence he would receive everything he needed (see Matthew 6:33).

Paul also didn't pray for worldly things. Instead, in Philippians 1:9, Paul prayed that the church would walk in love: And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more. Paul knew the importance of love, and so he made it a point to pray that the church would grow more and more in love.

Furthermore, he prayed that believers would be strengthened spiritually: I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through His Spirit in your inner being (Ephesians 3:16).

In short, your prayers can tell what you consider to be important. If you are only praying for worldly stuff, then you are neglecting what is of lasting value: knowing God, dwelling in His presence, walking in His love, and being strong spiritually.

Therefore, decide to adjust what you're praying for. Learn to listen to your prayers, because they locate your level of spiritual maturity.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Worth a thousand words

Photography is one of my passions and very much a part of my life. Each photo captures precious moments, giving golden sunsets, or fragile pink blooms, or the hustle and bustle of a megapolis, or the cheerful bubbling grin on a baby's face a kind of timeless immortality. Each shot tells its own story, carrying with it unbelieveable emotion and memories of times long past. And it is also very much a refined and yet democratised form of art, with realism impossible to create by any other means.

My journey as a photographer

My first camera was a cheap kodak film cam, which i got as a present in P2. That was really the start of my journey in photography. I still remember walking on the beach in bintan snapping away with that cam... Then in P5, my parents got me a sony P-72 (still working today). Being digital, that provided instant gratification and allowed me to go trigger-happy without giving a fart about film cost and the quantity i have on hand.

Later i joined RI photo club; that has given me the opportunity and exposure to greatly improve my photography skills, and go beyond "point and shoot" equipment, techniques, and pictures. It has opened up whole new realms of photography like photojournalism / event-coverage in which you just can't miss or screw up any shot, and aesthetic photography like the pros.


My kit now

At the moment I'm using a Nikon D70s + 18-70 kit lens + tokina circular polarizing filter + manfrotto ballhead tripod and of course all the accessories like a bag, dry box, batts etc. Next on the to-buy list is a SB-600 flashgun and a 70-300 lens. Haha... as for the usual big debate when it comes to DSLRs (canon vs nikon, in which canon and nikon are the only contenders), i think nikon better lah. To be fair, for dSLRS both are very good, but nikon better. Canon is comparatively cheaper and autofocus is damn fast but it's bit plastic. Having tried both, i more happy with nikon image quality (no we're not talking about the canon top range chao expensive lenses), battery life, durability, handling etc.

Haha... but to each his own, to all the canon users out there: your preference, your choice, your money. I think nikon better, that's just my opinion. The important thing is that we are all united in appreciation and pursuit of photography and its artistic value and the priceless memories it captures. A picture is worth a thousand words.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Recounting 2006

One year pass so fast... Has been quite an enjoyable year, really busy, sometimes stressed out, but fun lah :-).

You'll probably already know my marks. Quite satisfied in general lah. Delighted that my maths improved quite a bit, much less careless this year. But the sian thing is... CHINESE. jia lat lah, especially that CT paper... pull my GPA down... And then i miss top for eng & msp both by 1 mark! biang eh...

Next year i'll be taking trip sci geog, geog & chem RA. Confirm want to drop malay lah, copy ppt very sian, then memorise
memorise memorise... memorise one chinese enough lah, dunwant to memorise malay liao. Then so busy need to drop something.

2M: been nice knowing everyone! Breaking down all the animosity on the surface, and the class spirit (or lack thereof), i can see that we have really grown closer together lah. Let us be remembered as a fun-loving class! 2M for marks!

I thank the lord for carrying me through this year, providing me his grace, and being my tower of strength when i sometimes feel just so overwhelmed and start to consider giving up. I realise what i can achieve on my own is so little, but with his strength and his grace, the insurmountable can be achieved.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Poverty and the dearth of solutions

Our mums were probably right when they told us not to waste food "cos children in Nigeria are starving". Yes they are. 6 million toddlers starve to death each year. And it's not only Nigeria. Indeed, the gross excesses of the developed world seem disgusting - even morbid - when juxtaposed against the 800 million who go to bed hungry each day (no, they don't drink glucose solution aka a particular opposition leader). While the rich splurge on cosmetic surgery to beautify their faces, 4 million 3rd-world babies die each year due to poor or nonexistent medical facilities. And just as we don't consider $2 to be a large sum of money, 1.1 billion people live on less than US$1 a day.

The cavernous divide is staggering - Even within the developed world itself: Anton Rupert, arguably South Africa's most prominent businessman, owes a business empire and is listed among the Forbes 500 wealthiest list. Now think about the better-known face of Africa - barly clothed, skin-and-bone stick figures, with no guarantee when their next meal will be.


An abundance of causes, a dearth of solutions

It is to these stick figure occupants of dystopia that the prospect of communism seems most promising, and Bolshevik "peace, bread, and land for everyone" seems most utopian. At the very least, they yearn for some improvements to their social environment, and the provision of affordable, accessible, and quality healthcare and educational facilities. But the question is: where's the money going to come from? There are no easy answers.

Humanitarian aid is, to governments and the poor alike, seems the best solution - after all, starving people often don't look further than their next meal. But it is merely a quick fix at best - it allievates the symptom but not its root cause. And above all, it doesn't teach the poor - and their governments - to stand on their own feet, but merely become reliant and dependant on aid. But the shrinking 1st world population can't always support a burgeoning 3rd world population, and when donor fatigue sets in, or when times are less rosy, this lifeline may just be cut off.

At worst, corruption makes humanitarian aid throwing money into a bottomless pit. The cash inflows might not even reach the poor. When distributed through government channels, all it may do is fatten the wallets of some - Just take a look at Nigeria's late dictator, Sani Abacha, who lived in splendour off US$4 billion in siphoned aid dollars. The alternative of going through NGOs somehow doesn't seem appealing to governments - logically so, since it means that no funds can be diverted to swiss bank accounts.

Economic development would be a utopian solution - jobs would lift millions out of poverty. But it is a seemingly impossible one. Foreign direct investment, the usual force kickstarting economic growth until the economic engines of countries can run on their own (this requires both capital and skilled labour, among other things) , is decidedly low given the astronomical risks - a whole spectrum ranging from political instability to corruption to dismal infrastructure. Even if they do, MNCs do wreck havoc absent a government immune to bribery - they frequently exploit their workers, and indirectly harm farmers by polluting the enviroment (the textbook example being Shell in Nigeria). They allow catastrophies like the Bhopal disaster to occur - life is cheap there, isn't it?


How to make poverty history

The quintessence of the problem is probably political. The possibility of any economic development will only come with the required political framework. Especially with a giant competitor - China - for the same market segment, there is no room for corruption or complacency in the developing world. Talent, and the political will to implement whatever ideas talent brings, are the keys in lifting countries out of poverty - but only when used in unison. The sad part of the whole issue, though, is that such talented, altruistic, and determined leaders are a rarity.

With the foundation stone of economic development laid, several things need to be done. One, their resources need to be used in a rational and sustainable manner as cash cows to jumpstart the economy - be it labour, oil, timber or natural wildlife and beauty (like Chile or Botswana). Two, labour-intensive industries must be promoted via the provision of infrastructure and a efficient and effective bureaucracy and possibly government incentives. Three, to avoid further exacerbating poverty, their swelling population must somehow be controlled. Extra babies can only mean that there is less to go around. Four, once some foreign exchange has been generated, better education can and must be provided to the masses - unless countries want to keep mining metal or sewing clothes and remaining poor forever, this is the only way to add value (in terms of skill) to labour and climb up to the next rung of industry (i.e. skill-intensive).

Perhaps an accusatory finger must be pointed at the developed world as well, for their protectionist policies, unfair trade laws, and protection. We have artificially cheap US cotton swamping African nations breaking the already fragile rice bowl of these African farmers. The failure of Doha is similarly worrying, since it means that the 3rd-world's exports will continue to face sometimes insurmountable trade barriers, thus hindering their economic development - what's the use of producing so many goods when you can't get them out of your borders?

But to ask the the leader of any developed country, already facing economic stagnentation, to put millions of his farmers out of a job (and it's hard to create jobs for so many of them in the often saturated other sectors of stagnant economies) , and throw his popularity and votes out of the window, is probably asking for the moon. Even though promoting the development of the 3rd world can only benefit developed countries in the long term by serving as a growth engine and providing investment opportunities, elections, and the loss of jobs, and therefore seem more pressing. Again, selfish desire and shortsightedness jeopardises long-term common good.

That need not be the case. So do the vagaries of problems the 3rd world face. The obstacles to eradicating poverty need not be insurmountable. Political will and good ol' common sense and a dose of altruism are the keys. And they are in our hands. Are we brave enough to use them?

2nd para incorporating research from RI "RJC today" submission

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Survival of the fittest - effective but cruel

This post is in response to the Wee Shu Min (da RJC girl) saga. In reply to Derek Wee's concerns (published in ST forum) on older workers being less employable, the latter ridiculed the former, calling him a "wretched, undermotivated, overassuming leech", saying that "if you're not good enough, life will kick you in the balls", "if people would prefer hiring other people over you, it's because they're better".

Yes, miss wee has a point but her bloody tone and insensitiveness doesn't help to put her point across. Of course derek wee should try every measure to make himself more employable, but i find her lack of compassion is also troubling - and given that she's the daughter of an MP, her comments are bound to make people talk and will probably have significant ramifications on her dad's career, whether fair or unfair, justified or not. Yes, she's an RJC humanities scholar, and he's probably learnt - but failed to apply - ethics (kantian, golden rule etc.) in philosophy class. Giftedness without empathy makes you a mindless, heartless, souless robot; talent without morals can only be a detriment to society - what if that talent is applied in the wrong manner? Just look at people like Osama: he's talented, no doubt, but this talent has been applied in perverse ways. I certainly hope that this episode is not an accurate reflection of her character and she is not devoid of a heart. If not, i fear for her - what goes around comes around.

The idea of survival of the fittest is a very efficient and effective one in terms of producing results, the trouble with it is that it's a very cruel system, lacking in empathy and pretty heck care whether each individual sinks or swims (i.e. you die, just too bad).The basis of capitalism is also survival of the fittest - and therefore it is sometimes cruel (think of polarisation), but society has implemented various safety nets to help those who fall behind in this race (e.g. social security, social welfare, unions, legislation on retrenchment benefits etc), as well as tried to ensure that everyone is given (as far as possible) equal opportunity. Of course the reverse of capitalism (i.e. communism) won't work at all because of man's selfish nature that undermines its premise of equal effort, therefore deserving of equal reward. At the end of the day, a balance is needed.

Related mrbrown podcast: The elite way to say sorry

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Slacking

This post-CT period got a lot of time, finally got to do a lot of things i wanted to do for long long time but cannot do cos no time... Like play com, go shopping spree whole day, go chinatown jalan-jalan, go changi boardwalk, read wiki... But too bad haze so terrigible cannot go round take many photos...

The trouble is that i seem to be rather much a workaholic... feel pretty weird playing games, like "aiyah spend 2 hours not achieving anything", dunno why find it hard to relax leh... go holiday also like that, last time i went phuket in june i bueh tahan bring laptop to do work cos there's almost NOTHING to do in phuket (ok got lah but we spend so much time lazing around... u get the point)

This holidays will also be pretty hectic for me lah... 13-15 nov got prefect retreat, 21/22 Nov -2/3 Dec got exchange programme to china, 9-16 dec going on holiday to phuket / rachaburi (sp?) / chingmai (with some nice thai friends bringing us around), then christmas week got prefect training camp and maybe going back to my parent's hometown in ipoh as well (they were born there)... then got the weather studies project (VERY TIGHT TIMELINE), then maybe also have organising committee for obs... But the sad thing is that i miss the opportunity to go for 1 debate competition (VJC) cos i'll be overseas... NOOOO! Aiyah there will be other competitions lah, but i want and need the competition experience as well as a showcase opportunity.

I trust in the lord to bless me and carry me through!

Friday, October 20, 2006

Released: atomic bomb video

This is for those who requested the atom bomb video ky, joeltan, ernest, and i did for general science.

In the eye of the storm

Yay CT's over... can slack and vegetate in front of com and play com and slack and read and play piano and go out and slack.

I opened up and fixed my old PC (with some help - 1 ram bay was dead, the video card screwed etc. etc. - DUN USE WINDOWS), so now can play all the games (which don't work on Mac). But damn unreliable and damn slow, so i koped some RAM from an old unwanted faulty laptop and jam it inside. Still very unreliable and slow compared to my mac though...

But it't only the eye of the storm - this happy-go-lucky lull won't really last long. My holidays are quite packed, will be overseas for quite some time (in and out in and out for almost 1 month straight)... got to do some work and reading and photography and exercise (haha)... and of course, CT will come back and haunt us in 6 days

I hope i did ok for CTs :-). Yes CTs are not the quintessence of academic studies or GPA in RI, but they still count a lot. Frankly there's plenty to worry about (english word limit, chinese everything, geog nat veg part (a) which will make part (b) wrong if i get it wrong... and of course the killer maths paper)... but i just leave it up to god and pray everything'll be ok lah.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Give thanks



There are many, many things we have to thank god for - not least because we have sinned, fallen short of his glory and am undeserving of grace. But God so loved the world that he died for me and you, given us his grace, love, restored our relationship with him, and given us the gift of eternal life. And for that, I thank him.

I must also thank the lord for all that I have, all that I am. He could have put me into some improvished African family only to starve to death, but no, he has put me in a loving family, in a relatively peaceful and prosperous part of the world, and given me a multitude of gifts - physical, intellectual, and so on.

I am also grateful for how he is always there for me, how he picks me up when I fall and helps me when I am in need. I can feel him in my heart and talk to him. He gives me strength, gives me hope, and always makes a way when there seems to be no way, lighting up the path like how he led the Israelites in the desert with a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night.

The mind-blowing thing about it all is that I deserve none of this - but by his love and grace and mercy, he has forgiven my sin and assumed the punishment on my behalf. Thank you lord.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Uniquely Singapore: on the right track



From sunny Haiwaiian beaches (yes, even bikini babes) to shop-till-you-drop Bangkok to artsy Paris and its Eiffel Tower, great tourist destinations all have a unique brand, something they are famous for, and perhaps a stereotype firmly etched in the minds of billions worldwide. For Singapore to join this league of great tourist destinations, it must follow suit.

Mention "Singapore" to almost anyone overseas (apart from our neighbours), and you'll probably get "fine city" or "very clean and green" for a reply (and maybe occasionally "oh? that authoritarian place where they caned michael fay?" or "which part of China is it in?" as well). That doesn't sound like a very exciting tourist destination, does it? Well, that's the sad truth - in the recent past, at least. Average tourist stays in Singapore tend to be around 3 days or less (that's really short in comparison to other cities). Singapore used to be just clinically efficient and really boring to tourists with nothing much special (how's some "NO SMOKING: FINE $1000" signs for landmarks?) - after all, you can't expect rows after rows and malls after malls of the same shops ubiquitous in every bustling metropolis (not Bangkok's cheap bargains and fake goods) to be a tourist magnet, can you? For sure we had other things like Sentosa and Chinatown, but if Orchard Road is Singapore only "must-go" attraction, we're in pretty big trouble.

It's no secret that tourism is a lucrative business (tourism (including sex tourism) contributes to some 20% of thailand's GDP, directly and indirectly). And just as the other pillars of our economy and prosperity (value-added industries, commerce etc.) are threatened by other countries who might, in the future, be able to do it better and cheaper, the government finally realised what we're missing out on.

Singapore is a diverse melting pot of cultures East and West, complete with a whole contrasting spectrum from bustling malls to sunny beaches to lush green parks, and embellished with mouth-watering food. Emphasizing this diversity, while retaining the "clean and green" and "everything runs like clockwork" brands would probably be the best way to go. The "Uniquely Singapore" marketing campaign is indeed on the right track.

More needs to be done, of course, to make Singapore a much more interesting, fun, and vibrant place for tourists (and locals alike). We probably don't want to replicate Thailand's or Amsterdam's red-light districts, even though prostition and sex tourism is a guaranteed tourist magnet, because of the vagaries of problems it brings, but there are means other than "red lights" to bring vibrant colour to Singapore. Unquestionably, just as Paris has its Eiffel Tower, and Sydney its opera house, there needs to be ONE distinctive, recognised, and remembered Singapore landmark. In this respect, the recent Marina bay developments (Integrated resort, Singapore flyer, Bayfront avenue, Esplanade etc.) as well as their counterparts in Sentosa (Integrated resort II, revamping of Sentosa attractions etc) are much needed. Besides, I'm pretty convinced that the slew of govt measures ($100 entrance fee etc.) and social stigma are sufficient to deter almost all but the richest Singaporeans from both casual and hardcore gambling at the casino, thus minimising harm while maxising gains - it's no secret how profitable casinos are (that's why gambling odds are never in the player's favour) and how lucrative taxing them can be.

Of course not everything's about the big picture. The devil's in the details - every tourist must interact with cities on a personal level. That goes to say, how frontline service staff and on-the-street Singaporeans deal with these tourists do matter. There must be some warm personal touch to service excellence on the part of frontline service staff, and on-the-street Singaporeans must give the tourist a generally pleasant expericence (e.g. by being helpful when asked for directions, not swarming into the MRT without letting alighting passengers get out first) to leave a good impression on the tourists - like legendary Thai hospitality ("the land of a thousand smiles"). It's not only about 4 million smiles and coordinated flower blooms whenever delegates come to town.

Not that I'm saying the MICE (meetings, incentives, conferences/conventions, and exhibitions) market is unimportant - it's highly lucrative, especially since business travellers aren't on the same shoestring budget as tourists are. Singapore needs to capitalise on its famed clockwork efficiency and business-friendly environment, adequate and state-of-the-art facilites, as well as value-added services (like some of the things they did during IMF/WB - I don't mean ensuring roads are newly repaved all the time but rather things like ensuring big shots are taken care of from the moment they step out of the plane and nice "singapore goodie bags" and "singapore tourist guides" for all business tourists) to gain that edge.

Singapore is just beginning its metamorphosis from a boring city to a vibrant one, from a run-of-the-mill city to a unique and distinctive one. The uniquely Singapore train is on the right track. Next stop, "Uniquely Singapore, a great tourist destination".

Link: STB Visit Singapore website

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

The heat is on: CTs


Left: everyone's worst nightmare

Only 1 more day to CT now... sian lah. stress lah... especially that stupid chinese and msp... My chinese must get 80 for CT (including that 公函/私函 test) to get 4.0 (because of a screwed up semester 1, and a so-so ca)... die lah, how to get? Especially when there are so many 词/详读课文/成语/惯用语/谚语 to learn, and i almost never read chinese books (now starting to regret chucking all the 小读者songlaoshi gives out and the 我报my mum gives me one side without reading at all)... I hope they moderate up 10marks. And then i want academy for science (most likely chem) and geog so must do very well for both... Then english... walau, i dunno my CA how lah, cos of a so-so drama challenge (the class assessment portion). The maths even more sian, always lose marks cos careless - i noe the content but everytime calculate salah or forget this forget that, then all the questions related one and no follow through marks so part (a) wrong only lah then u gg. I want to do the daniel chew 6-prizes leh... WALAU NO MORE TIME TO MUG (but i suppose everyone also lah, or worse, i noe some pple can't be bothered)

Actually my emotions to ct quite conflicting lah... want more time to study (only had 1 week after all the assignments and projects were cleared) so want it to be later, but at the same time want to get it done with quickly, a little bit tired of school and mugging liao.

There's also the question of why I place such expectations on myself. But honestly, I have no answer to that, other for the fact that I'm a perfectionist (desire for and happiness deriving from personal achievement and challenge + desire to be "proded" and gain respect/attention/etc this way). Might have inherited it, or developed it somehow (haha nature vs nurture debate), or both. But whatever the case, my brain seems to be wired this way, and I can't get away with myself for slacking/slipshod work/underachievement, hence the stress. Got good and got bad lah, but i choose to live this way and am happy like this.

Well, I guess i'll just trust in the lord to carry me through lah. As the song goes, "god will make a way, when there seems to be no way", and as jeremiah 29:11 "for the lord plans to prosper you and not harm you, plans to give you a hope and a future". He has done so, and i thank him for his amazing grace, which all of us sinful humans don't deserve. And i trust in him to continue to do so, for his love and grace is unfailing.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Kim Jong Il: Armed and dangerous and possibly suicidal


The eccentric Kim Jong Il (or "The Sun of the 21st Century" / "the great leader", as he prefers to call himself) gatecrashed (unwelcomedly, of course) his way into the nuclear club with his long-threatened nuke test today. It is estimated that NK has enough material to make several crude n-bombs... hardly commensurate to its level of economical and general technological development.

The irony of his self-awarded title "the great leader" immediately becomes apparent - and grossly so, when you juxtapose Kim's nuclear ambitions against the poverty and suffering of his starving proletariat - whose welfare he can't be bothered with at all. The morbid irony of the situation (and I say morbid because many North Koreans die each year from starvation brought about by Kim's isolationist and self-marginalising actions) is when you consider North Korea's government's communist fundementals (in spite of their self-declaration DPRK - since when can their word be trusted?) - this is a hardly equal distribution (and in fact a waste) of wealth, not that North Korea's motto of a "prosperous and great country" (강성대국) has much truth in it (let's exclude them counterfeit greenbacks).

Kim's actions are probably suicidal, or at best, masochistic. His long game (not that commiting suicide and bringing 23million poor people down with you is a trivial game) of brinkmanship (from isolationism to NPT to taepodong to nukes) has never served to make him much allies, or friends, or trade partners, except china, who is friendly to NK, but grudgingly so. At best, most countries dole out humananitarian aid to the oppressed and starving under Kim's authoritarian government - but this risks Kim diverting these funds to his nuclear effort.

This brinkmanship is ultimately unsustainable in the long run. His nuclear pursuit doesn't come cheap - from paying pakistani scientists for help and exported technology to refining the uranium/plutonium, there is no doubt nukes cost a bomb. This a drain on NK's stagnant medival economy - and like a tree slowly rotting away, or a upside-down pyramid, there is no doubt Kim's regime will one day collapse. There is a limit to how much starvation the people can take before revolting or dying en masse if Kim's iron hand makes any revolt impossible. Of these, the former is the more optismistic - but however optismistic, it will take far too long and cost far too much, in terms of actual lives and wasted generations.

Kim's brinkmanship has so far been calculated to drive wedges between other countries, especially between China (communist) & South Korea (any instability north of the DMZ will affect it very adversely) and Japan & US (both of which really hate N Korea). But this might be the last straw that tips the balance - it's now up to these countries to take harder measures against Kim and bring him back to the territory of sanity. Soft measures have proven not to work. It's time to take the hard ones.

A peaceful agreement or disarmament pact with NK, while at the same time joint-development of NK's economy would be the utopian solution. But i can say with much certainty that it is a mere strand of hope that won't materialise. NK is indeed a tricky mess for the world to clear up. Doing nothing is not an option. Sanctions and even more isolation will just make kim more rebellious and defiant. A localised strike on Kim's nuclear factories will is a receipe for disaster: remember nuclear fallout? Full-scale military action, on the other hand, is pretty undesirable. Not that it will take much for kim to capitulate, but that the risk of a nuclear reaction (pun intended - remember mutually assured destruction? ) and the destabilisation of the Korean peninsula, including possible harm to S Korea's economy, is way too high. The cost is also high - in terms of both lives and money. But if this proves really necessary, the temptation to impose democracy with a magic wand ("ta-da" and it's done) with insufficient follow through must be resisted. Just look at Iraq and what a terrible screw-up it's been. People who have been living in a dictatorship all their lives can't just adapt to democratic reform instantly.

Kim Jong Il is a heartless lunatic, corrupted by the absolute power he inherited. It is the duty of the other nuclear states to remove him and his nuclear ambition and the threat he poses. Let the oppresed north korean proletariat escape the clutches of this tyrant, and have an existence of greater value and dignity than mere props for Kim's insanity. Let the malnourished north korean babies grow up on more than force-fed propaganda and scraps, with hope of a future. The cost of failure is the continued suffering of NK's 23 million people - people with the capacity to feel pain, not merely a statistic, i must stress.


Further reading:

Of blocks and boards





Of blocks: Last thursday marked a pretty momentous occasion for most of us - we moved into the new Raja block. Gone was the old classroom block, it's privacy, the lovely admin block garden, and of course all the memories... good and bad... inside it. But it is time for change - the old block (since the early 1990s) shows visible signs of ageing... from broken door windows (2K, 2J) to vandalised tables. Spanking new raja block is quite nice lah - especially the cosy project rooms (too bad the locks were installed the wrong way and we can't use them...see photo of mark and jonlim guitar-ing away in the room (that was before they found out about the locks and told us not to use)) But the downside is the long flights of stairs and the distance from the astroturf and the daily traffic jams. But i shouldn't be complaining... just think of some of the teachers who have to struggle up to 7th floor with their bulk (built in or otherwise) if the lift breaks down.. FIRE DRILL... HAHA. But seriously, from an architectural standpoint, the block's design is both aesthetic and functional, though i would have preferred more finished surfaces (i.e. tiled not concrete floors etc.)

Of boards: Just found out today that i got in to ripb. First a big thankyou to everyone who helped me during my campaign. Next 2 years in ripb will be pretty fun but challenging and perhaps stressful i guess. But first thing mrs lim asked me was "so no more 3.94 ah? Need to reorganise my time lah... will be dropping malay and possibly squash in favour of ripb/debate/science/photography. Hope to maintain GPA. But i suppose the board will be a really good and valueable experience for me :-) And i thank the lord for giving me this opportunity

cheers.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Haze

As I type this, the PSI is 140, the stench of something burning hangs in the air, and mediacorp even put a little PSI indicator on the top left of my TV... visibility this afternoon was less than 1km, I couldn't even see the start of Changi runway 02L from PIE...

Blame it on the wind blowing in from Sumatra, and blame it on the slash-and-burn subsistence farmers in Sumatra who practically live hand-to-mouth. But u can't change the weather, and these farmers don't know the consequences of this traditional practice passed down for generations. In the first place, they wouldn't be there if they had better jobs. But many a time these "better jobs" entail moving into crowded, unsanitary and unpleasant squatters - and their lives will be no better.

I tell you who to blame... Bambang and his squad of inept, corrupt officials, and all their predecessors (i'm not saying all are corrupt and inept, but that there are sufficient corrupt and inept ones to pull down the whole system). While gleaming skyscrapers greet any visitor to Jakarta, look harder and you'll find poverty and misery - from the garbage-scavenging slum-dweller to menial labourer. While the economy has grown 5.6% in 2005, this has benefitted only the upper strata of society and perhaps a much squeezed middle class. Contrast Indonesia's many millionaires with the 27.1% of its population living below the population living below the poverty line, and you'll soon see a textbook example of extreme polarization. Inflation skyrocketed during the Asian Financial Crisis, and has recently dropped to a still-astonishing 17.1% in 2005 - and as we all know, inflation affects the poor consumer the worst, and not the multi-millionaires whose cash is happily stowed away in foreign currencies. Add to that corruption, which hinders economic development in favour of self-gain, diverting funds meant for the poor and the poor's welfare (eg education in rural areas) to the pockets of greedy officials - as they say, a large potion of foreign direct aid during the 2006 Boxing Day tsunami "disappeared".

So you have a pack of poor subsistence farmers, given poor educational opportunities, and poor job options, that simply have no other way to survive but slash and burn... Little political will exists to make them aware of the severe ramifications of slash and burn, and to implement and enforce legislation against slash and burn farming while at the same time providing these farmers a way out (lamentably, it is not the interest of any populist politican to invoke change against their traditional way of life...such is the self-annhilatory nature of democracy)... and this forms a potent molotov cocktail; haze becomes a fait accompli. All it then takes is the right weather conditions (a dry spell and winds blowing NE - e.g. La Nina, occuring every few years) to detonate this molotov cocktail, spelling PSI-140s for Singapore and Malaysia, and hopefully a wake up call for Bambang to stop NATO-ing about his "vision for change" and get down and dirty

Hello

So... i finally decided to start a blog... well, i need somewhere to rant and organise my thoughts, right?

But be warned, this will probably will be filled with chucks of whining and complaining and bitching (uniquely Singaporean HAHA)... about everything and anything, from crazy dictators helming medival economies to self-annihilatory economic systems, to more down to earth topics like school and Singapore.

Well, just a little about myself for those who dunno me... I'm a christian (now with Mt Carmel.. though i stay in Changi), currently sec 2 in RI. i have pretty much a reputation for being a perfectionist... and i love: science, geog (esp urban planning), debate & PPE, photography, and architecture. I use mac! it's much better than windows... haha


Ok that's all...
nigel