Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- 1 Introduction – Malaysia's Future Is Redeemed
- Before Pakatan Harapan
- Before 9 May 2018
- With Mahathir at the Helm
- 31 One Thing Is Certain—There Will Be More Amendments to the Constitution
- 32 The More Things Change, the More Things May Actually Change
- 33 Did Merdeka Liberate or Create Malaya?
- 34 Interview with Nurul Izzah Anwar: Rebuilding a Nation Long Divided
- 35 The Diminishing of Humans Through Identity Politics
- 36 The Art of Dismantling Cultural Pluralism
- 37 No Need to Let Bigots Dictate Policy
- 38 What the Penang Floods Say About Malaysian Politics (and It's Not Just About Climate Change)
- 39 This is the Moment of Truth for Malaysia's Race-based Politics
- 40 We are Equal Only Through Our Vote
- 41 Why the Opposition Has a Shot at Toppling the Barisan Nasional with Mahathir at the Helm
- 42 Spiralling Back towards Reformasi
- 43 Individual Freedom Is a Matter of National Survival
- 44 Why Meet the Twenty-first Century with Twentieth Century Mindsets?
- 45 A Final Quarrel between a Repentant Grandfather and Oldfashioned Self-absorbed Parents
- 46 Outraged Enough to Go Vote or Cynical Enough to Stay Home?
- Beyond 9 May 2018
- About the Author
37 - No Need to Let Bigots Dictate Policy
from With Mahathir at the Helm
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 February 2019
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- 1 Introduction – Malaysia's Future Is Redeemed
- Before Pakatan Harapan
- Before 9 May 2018
- With Mahathir at the Helm
- 31 One Thing Is Certain—There Will Be More Amendments to the Constitution
- 32 The More Things Change, the More Things May Actually Change
- 33 Did Merdeka Liberate or Create Malaya?
- 34 Interview with Nurul Izzah Anwar: Rebuilding a Nation Long Divided
- 35 The Diminishing of Humans Through Identity Politics
- 36 The Art of Dismantling Cultural Pluralism
- 37 No Need to Let Bigots Dictate Policy
- 38 What the Penang Floods Say About Malaysian Politics (and It's Not Just About Climate Change)
- 39 This is the Moment of Truth for Malaysia's Race-based Politics
- 40 We are Equal Only Through Our Vote
- 41 Why the Opposition Has a Shot at Toppling the Barisan Nasional with Mahathir at the Helm
- 42 Spiralling Back towards Reformasi
- 43 Individual Freedom Is a Matter of National Survival
- 44 Why Meet the Twenty-first Century with Twentieth Century Mindsets?
- 45 A Final Quarrel between a Repentant Grandfather and Oldfashioned Self-absorbed Parents
- 46 Outraged Enough to Go Vote or Cynical Enough to Stay Home?
- Beyond 9 May 2018
- About the Author
Summary
A nation starts building itself long before the nation-state is established. There were Germans before Germany was established and there were Italians before Italy was founded. There were definitely Malayans with a sense of being Malayans before Malaya was founded in 1957.
Where the emergence of a nation is concerned, the state tends to construct clear communal and ethnic categories with which it is able to manage and manipulate the identity building in the country. These become like Lego pieces that stick together in exact fashion but with the borders hardened. At the social everyday level, however, society builds cohesion the way one bakes a cake – the ingredients have to mix and they have to be loose, both in essence and in definition.
There is tension between these two sets of dynamics and the two have to battle for dominance. In the case of Malaysia where race and religion decide much of how its citizens describe themselves and institutionally relate to each other, there is what may be seen as a state capture of society.
Allow me to air some thoughts about some keywords first before I get down to talking about how we can limit the knee-jerk racial discrimination that infects the country.
Some Keywords
Let's start with ‘discrimination’. To ‘discriminate’ is a strange word. It means having the ability to notice subtle differences (which seems a positive thing), but it also means to think disapprovingly of and to act unfavourably towards things and people considered different (which is not a positive thing).
Discrimination therefore is not only about noticing a difference but also about noticing a difference deemed negative. It is hard work and it is continuous work. It is also collective work and being collective work, it easily becomes political work.
But what difference? It can't be any difference. In almost all cases, it is about difference from whatever it is one considers to be defining of oneself. We harbour no discrimination against a bird because it has wings; we harbour no prejudice against a shark because it can swim in deep waters and grow new teeth endlessly; we do not dislike a frog because it can croak. These are about elements and characteristics that we do not take on as characteristics of my selfhood.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- CatharsisA Second Chance for Democracy in Malaysia, pp. 141 - 144Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2018