Dear cleareyes,
The universe is in constant change, impermanence is the only rule of the universe. While SDP has not been very successful for the past decade, it doesn't mean that it will not succeed in future. Just like SDP has been successful in the early 1990s, doesn't mean that it will continue to be successful thereafter. What goes up will come down. What comes down, may go up again. Never say never in politics.
In politics, perception is everything. Anyone who is a corrupted crook but perceived as a honest and clean person will win the game. There are just too many examples of such in past and present, and I believe we should not be lack of it in future too.
Passion is the first most important thing you need in politics, especially opposition politics. The rest could be trained or taught along the way but nobody could teach you passion though they could ignite it within you. Passion will always come together with purpose and intend. I have never ever underestimated the Power of Passion especially in opposition politics.
I have told many people, in opposition politics, you could lose on all aspects when compared side by side with PAP candidates, be it CV, education, caliber, working/political experiences etc., but there is one thing you must not lose, that is PASSION. The one and only one thing you could and should win is the PASSION.
But many people mistaken Passion as having an angry face... well, I will leave this for another day.
Goh Meng Seng
The standing of a party is measured by its usefulness/effectiveness. So we have a an opposition leader who is not in parliament but is recognised by "the world" over. We have seen a party with low scores at the polls contributing more ably to national issues. We have also seen a party with limited financial resources winning an award for its website.
Though i wont disgree with you the importance of passion, to see passion as the focal point is itself follhardy.
You can have passion all you want, but politics and social change is not about passion, but also about identification of your intent, your target and your object and how do you plan to have it reached.
Passion can drive you far, but when you run around l;ike a headless chicken, what passion would that be when you will not reach your objective and worse, pissed off would-be allies just because of passion? I dun call that passion, I consider that as sheer arrogance.
Blind arrogance and blockheaded disguisted as passion would not get anyone anywhere. We have seen that for the past 30 years where the PAP had outplayed and outrun any passion the opposition can come up with.
Its always the head that rule over the heart.
Its calls for balance but passion has to be there first. When you lack passion, you appear somewhat insincere and mercenary.
In the Singapore context, passion might be an additional factor for votes when there is lack of skills and political acumen.
A good example is Seelan Palay. You can see that the guy is driven, passionate and his conviction is clear. His understanding of political history is poor and political acumen is also poor. However he would get votes because he is sincere and passionate. He will certainlly not win the race (not because his ethnicity)but he will get higher than average votes. Remember the 30+40+30 equation.
It will be hard to get people with above avreage skills and acumen and prepared to suffer the spotlight of the ruling regime so one must do with passion, conviction, sincerity and available options. I have more regard for these sort of people than 95% of the NMPs that they have and had over the years.
Lets be encouraging and those faces on that picture is so much better than some of the photos that we see of serial politiciansand their parties who don't show any passion.
I would certainly like to Alex Au who has bucketloads of both but his overzealous partiality towards the guys who bat on the other side is quite strong medicine for our heartlands. Then again I might be wrong, the people might indeed embrace him.
This GE will be interesting and pretty much a watershed. There are guaranteed opposition seats. Knowing Singaporean trait of looking at numbers, don't be surprised that a new political party with candidates with above average qualifications being formed. Even Independents. They will likely make a statement to the effect that they rspect the PAP for its achievements but they feel that they can contribute as well.
alamak, ah seng!
the winning of SDP was due to chiam see tong and NOT traitor chee. when he took over, everything SDP won collapse. the record now with chee in charge always get the lowest votes.
in the next GE, chee might not be around to erect. he's permanent ED-ed. now with the influx of the geylang cheongster, the abc desperate disloyal wife and a 1/2past6 lawyer, SDP is permanently doomed!
SDP might face a close-shop warrant soon with so much leegal suits haven't settled amicably or properly.
please descend from your tranquil mountain once awhile and eavedrop on what peasants are talking about SDP. it has never been good and now it has gotten even worst!
Vote CSJ!
He's God sent.
Only Jesus can save Singapore...
Its always the head that rule over the heart.
I heard from a friend that Chee Soon Juan was an ex police supervisor in the past. Is it true?
If it is true then my friend told me that CSJ is a bloody sadist. He is as sick as LKY. I hear that during his time as a police officer, he uses a hammer and a thick telephone book and tortured his prisoners until they have internal injuries.
If this is true then CSJ is one sick fucker. If he came into power, he will be as sick as LKY. I hope someone can prove to me that I am wrong, if not I think I better not vote him into parliment.
Can Uncle Yap proved this is not true? If this is untrue then I will apologised to CSJ. If what I said is true then Singaporeans will have an even tougher time if we are under this sick fuck CSJ.
On the other hand you have passionate opposition candidates who can't control their passion and make insanely stupid remarks which make the PAP look like geniuses of self control.
Locke
Dear Scroobal & Phouse,
I have a short good talk with a potential candidate for SDP lately (I shall leave his name out at this moment). He felt that going through the political activism part is an important and necessary process to become "leader" of the political party or movement.
I pointed to the fact that LKY himself did not start as a politician perse. He started off as a "human rights/anti-colonial" lawyer. He only took up court case instead of going straight into banging walls with the Colonial government back then. He gained his political capital by being "legal adviser" to the leftist movement which he later crushed as "communist elements" and disbanded altogether.
Taiwan's most corrupted ex-president Chen Shui Bian did almost the same thing as LKY. He became the lawyer representing those who were being rounded up by the KMT government. He gained enough political capital to become the president without having to crash directly on the political activism front but preserve himself as an eligible candidate in the elections.
My friend didn't think much of the NCMP scheme, regarded it as "backdoor MP" into the parliament. My argument is, there are many other PAP MPs whom have not gained a single vote to get into parliament, along with all the other NMPs. Any opposition NCMPs have fought and gained the support of at least thousands if not tens of thousands to walk into parliament. Those MPs and NMPs who walked into parliament without a single vote are BackDoor MPs, not NCMPs.
SDP has to discard the narrow definitions they have for political engagement. If they are here to fight for democratic development, they must understand that they should not discard the parliamentary route altogether. My friend understood the weight that one puts on NCMP by Singaporeans but just living in self denial of such recognition. Singaporeans will look upon anyone who are NCMPs differently and chances are, if you don't screw up in parliament and in normal private life, you would be voted into parliament again.
The misconception that with a few opposition MPs in parliament is useless must be eradicated. There are many things opposition could do in parliament if they get 5 of them into it. The fire has to be started somewhere. Never mind if it is just 2 or 3 opposition MPs/NCMPs. Small sparks can become big forest fire later on.
My conclusion to him is that SDP has to preserve its strength in providing enough candidates for the next elections which will be the watershed battle for all opposition parties. With the expanded NCMP scheme, opposition parties are not merely fighting against PAP but now, in effectively competiting among themselves. Any opposition parties that cannot get at least one NCMP or MP into parliament this coming round, the party would be effectively marginalized politically.
This may be the strategy of PAP to wipe out smaller and "undesirable" opposition parties in time to come, particularly SDP through the process. I would say that if NSP is not able to get any seats, be it NCMP or MP by the next GE, it would have been politically marginalized as well.
If SDP and NSP wants to stay relevant in Singapore politics, they would have to find ways to make gain in the coming GE. There is no second way about it.
Goh Meng Seng
Dear Scroobal & Phouse,
I have a short good talk with a potential candidate for SDP lately (I shall leave his name out at this moment). He felt that going through the political activism part is an important and necessary process to become "leader" of the political party or movement.
I pointed to the fact that LKY himself did not start as a politician perse. He started off as a "human rights/anti-colonial" lawyer. He only took up court case instead of going straight into banging walls with the Colonial government back then. He gained his political capital by being "legal adviser" to the leftist movement which he later crushed as "communist elements" and disbanded altogether.
Taiwan's most corrupted ex-president Chen Shui Bian did almost the same thing as LKY. He became the lawyer representing those who were being rounded up by the KMT government. He gained enough political capital to become the president without having to crash directly on the political activism front but preserve himself as an eligible candidate in the elections.
My friend didn't think much of the NCMP scheme, regarded it as "backdoor MP" into the parliament. My argument is, there are many other PAP MPs whom have not gained a single vote to get into parliament, along with all the other NMPs. Any opposition NCMPs have fought and gained the support of at least thousands if not tens of thousands to walk into parliament. Those MPs and NMPs who walked into parliament without a single vote are BackDoor MPs, not NCMPs.
SDP has to discard the narrow definitions they have for political engagement. If they are here to fight for democratic development, they must understand that they should not discard the parliamentary route altogether. My friend understood the weight that one puts on NCMP by Singaporeans but just living in self denial of such recognition. Singaporeans will look upon anyone who are NCMPs differently and chances are, if you don't screw up in parliament and in normal private life, you would be voted into parliament again.
The misconception that with a few opposition MPs in parliament is useless must be eradicated. There are many things opposition could do in parliament if they get 5 of them into it. The fire has to be started somewhere. Never mind if it is just 2 or 3 opposition MPs/NCMPs. Small sparks can become big forest fire later on.
My conclusion to him is that SDP has to preserve its strength in providing enough candidates for the next elections which will be the watershed battle for all opposition parties. With the expanded NCMP scheme, opposition parties are not merely fighting against PAP but now, in effectively competiting among themselves. Any opposition parties that cannot get at least one NCMP or MP into parliament this coming round, the party would be effectively marginalized politically.
This may be the strategy of PAP to wipe out smaller and "undesirable" opposition parties in time to come, particularly SDP through the process. I would say that if NSP is not able to get any seats, be it NCMP or MP by the next GE, it would have been politically marginalized as well.
If SDP and NSP wants to stay relevant in Singapore politics, they would have to find ways to make gain in the coming GE. There is no second way about it.
Goh Meng Seng