| Yawning
Bread. April
2006
Democracy, liberalism and values
|
|
|
|
Earlier this week, I received an email which I think cries out for a public answer, rather than a private response. So it is. The reader wrote:
* * * * *
|
||
|
In response to the first question,
Actually, I seldom talk about "more democracy". Partly, it is because the word "democracy" has been so abused that it is no longer clear what people mean by it, but partly too, I wonder if political participation requires a certain minimum of being informed, rational and liberal. If large swathes of a population are neither informed, rational nor liberal, what would "democracy" represent? Mob rule? Instead, although I think I don't quite say it in so many words, I am more concerned about liberalism, because this is one of the necessary conditions for democracy. A society can be prosperous and dynamic with liberalism alone, without democracy. Hong Kong under the British was one such example. By liberalism, I mean the way we structure state and society in order to accommodate as many variations in opinion, culture and preferences as possible, no doubt within limits of security and civil peace. I am driven by the idea that as much liberty as possible should repose with the individual. The community and the state should take as little away from him as is absolutely necessary to function. I argue repeatedly that Singapore is too statist and too communitarian, politically, socially and in some ways, economically too. We too often prioritise the demands of the state and community over the autonomy of individuals. The state gets to control the mass media, at the expense of the individual's freedom of speech. Majoritarian ideas stifle artistic expression, unusual career choices and innovation generally, not to mention imposing "mother tongue" demands on tens of thousands of school children that is at variance with their home language. For a generation, many bright students have been denied university education on account of this conformist requirement. Needless to say, majoritarian ideas about morality trump the gay and lesbian persons' freedom to live his life as he wishes and his access to equal treatment in law, employment and social recognition. Even with respect to the economy, liberalism, which is most consistent with laissez-faire markets, falls short in Singapore. Here, the state is extensively involved in the economy. For example, too much of our economy is bound up with government-linked businesses, with the result that the government mindset -- paper qualifications being supreme, scholars being highly valued and fast-tracked -- permeates through much of economic life. The elitist attitudes and unquestioning culture that this mindset brings tends to be inimical to competition and innovation.
|
|
|
|
Another example would be in the way our
public transport system is basically a government-blessed duopoly. Entry
barriers are set so high that potential new entrants to the bus industry
are deterred.
Liberalism is founded on ideals of human rights, separation of powers, the free market and a general notion of limited government. All governments have expansionist tendencies, wanting to control more and more areas of a country's social and economic life. In so doing, they steadily reduce the choices, intellectual, social and economic, that are available to citizens. Censorship reduces intellectual space. State intervention in the economy beyond areas which are natural monopolies reduces livelihood and consumer options. Demands of social conformity strangle creativity and personal actualisation. Liberalism has to be actively defended against encroachment by the state and illiberal social movements through adherence to a Bill of Rights, by a free press, an independent judiciary, and even, as is developing in Europe, the institution of ombudsmen, whose job is to scrutinise administrative actions by the government for fairness and respect for people's rights. In addition, there should be robust civic institutions independent of the government, to speak up on various issues. For example, we might ask, where are the citizen's watchdogs over public transport, housing, education, healthcare or judicial behaviour? Where are the independent labour unions? Why must law and government policy be so suspicious and restrictive of independent organisations? Not least, the multiplicity of voices should also be represented at the political level, so that it's harder to pass bad law in the first place.
|
|
|
|
This is what I mean by checks and balances.
I feel that in Singapore, the instinct of the executive to widen its scope
of control is not sufficiently balanced by due regard for defending the
liberty of the individual.
I have always believed that liberalism and civic institutions come first before democracy. Democracy without the freedom to express views, and organise to promote beliefs, without justice and the rule of law, is meaningless. As for corruption, why are we only bringing up examples of Thailand and Indonesia? Democracy is not a cause of corruption, which some people imply when they posit the choice between Singapore's (authoritarian) status quo and "more democracy", e.g. Philippines. Consider New Zealand, Finland, Ireland, Israel. These are small countries, but they are liberal democracies with vibrant civic organisations and alternating parties in government. Yet there is very little corruption. Why can't we be like them? One should argue that it is independent civic organisations that can act as watchdogs against corruption in government. A free media that is not deterred from investigative journalism, a sure-footed judiciary that examines government legislation and decisions with a sceptical eye, and independent ombudsmen in various areas that review administrative actions, all help to keep corruption in check. Even if a government turns dirty, independent bodies are there to hold them to account. We are at greater risk for not having these checks and balances. I don't mean to knock the integrity of the present People's Action Party (PAP) leaders, but I point out again and again how we don't have a second line of defence. When the first line -– the PAP's integrity -– fails, we have nothing left to stop a complete rout. * * * * *
|
|
|
|
In response to the second question:
I do not consider liberalism as a "Western value" that stands opposed to "Asian values". Like most political observers, I see the effort to sell "Asian values" as a ploy to mask authoritarianism. The tension is between liberalism on one hand and statism/ communitarianism on the other. Very often communitarianism relies on the state for its coercive power, at the same time, it has little objection to an interventionist state, thus the relationship between the two can be symbiotic. Communitarianism is not without its good points. The general principle is for the individual to submit to the norms of the community, in return for the community's care and protection afforded to him. This can be quite highly recommended in societies that are rooted (immobile), culturally homogenous, not particularly fast-moving technologically, perhaps agrarian. With little mobility, the individual has little choice but be part of the community; it is better then that the community accepts and extends its support to him. With cultural homogeneity, and relative technological stability, the individual's ideas and his options do not deviate too far from the mean anyway, so he doesn't have to give up much in order to conform. One of the possible good things about communitarianism is a tendency to impose a burden of care on those who are better off. Philanthropy and mutual obligation helps to bridge economic divides. The problem is that, for Singapore, the conditions for communitarianism are not there. Ours is a society of mobility and diversity. That diversity is heightened by a constant import of cultural and intellectual ideas, and rapid technological change, continuously opening previously unimagined economic horizons. Life options are numerous. People want to try new things and go off in different directions. Limiting their choices, holding them back, simply makes them unhappy. And then they leave, to our country's loss. Worse, what communitarianism we have is not really a natural result of identity and community spirit, but is kept alive as a tool for statist authoritarianism and its attempt to monopolise "truth". The very attempt to re-label it as "Asian values" betrays the fact of its political capture. Both liberalism and communitarianism have good track records as ways for organising society. But different societies call for different solutions. * * * * * Let me now come to values. I acknowledge that the government may, at times, be merely trying to approximate a community's values when they formulate policies. But sometimes, they themselves admit that their own personal values colour their decisions. In an interview with the Straits Times, Minister of State Ho Peng Kee admitted as much. See Is homophobia essential to our 'national interests'? Our cabinet ministers are drawn from a very unrepresentative segment of our population, mostly because they are selected by induction. None of them are self-made politicians. There is a tendency for the incumbents to induct others of the same mould and outlook. To see what I mean, just look at the new candidates that the PAP has introduced to the public for the coming general election. There are 17 men among them. All of the men are married. There is no bachelor, not even a divorcee among them. Why not? Bachelors and divorcees are not at all uncommon in Singapore, even among professionals and corporate leaders. It won't surprise anyone of us if ministers tend to echo each other's values in cabinet discussions, creating the illusion that in the community at large there is a similar unanimity. Even allowing that they may bend over backwards to try to reflect a community's views when they make their decisions, I still have three caveats: Firstly, how they read public opinion can easily be coloured by their own personal views. Where are the objective surveys, for example, of public opinion? In the few cases where there are, how are the questions phrased? In the absence of impartial data, it is entirely human to believe that one's opinion has more support among others than may prove to be the case. Secondly, policies can be formulated narrowly or widely. A certain value may be common, but it doesn't mean that other values must be proscribed; they can also be allowed and given fair space to co-exist. Now if you say that Value A demands that Value B be proscribed and the former is more popular, then you are back to a philosophical question of whether we wish to be a liberal or a conformist society. Without overriding threat to society itself, a liberal society cannot allow one value to banish another value, so no matter how popular Value A is, it cannot be used to justify the suppression of Value B. Yet in many areas, our government does this, censorship and bans being their chief tools. Have they no choice but to be illiberal? Thirdly and most important of all, I have elsewhere argued that it is false to argue to that government policy merely reflects public opinion, when the government, through censorship and bans, go out of its way to shape public opinion. Example: So Singaporeans are in the main homophobic, and therefore the government must maintain homophobic policies, they say. But how can Singaporeans be anything other than homophobic if gay-positive news and opinion are censored out, if government ministers themselves keep on making homophobic remarks, and the education ministry has programs to drum into people that homosexuality is sick, immoral and illegal? * * * * * As the reader who wrote to me says, there may be no perfect answers. And I certainly don't claim to have any. But what I am concerned about is how, through their domination of the media, the Singapore government has got too many people thinking that only they know the best answers. But for goodness sake, where in history is there
an example where a government has all the best answers? If Singaporeans
believe that we are some kind of ahistorical exception, we must be the
world's greatest fools. © Yawning Bread
|
||
|
Footnotes None Addenda None
|
|