FIRST REQUISITE TO FINDING SOLUTIONS
Most of the stubborn problems that still exist in society today are persistent mainly because of a lack of courage. Often, there is fear of rocking the boat, fear of aggravation, fear of the unfamiliar, fear of the obvious, fear of oversimplification, fear of political incorrectness, fear of novelty, fear of ridicule and fear of not leaving well-enough alone.
It is always safer to do nothing; carry on business as usual or make token small modifications to existing policies. That way, there is no chance of failing more miserably than the present failure.
When we open any newspaper today, we see many enthusiastic letters from ordinary people with bright ideas to solve many societal problems. Sometimes, people talk about them for a while. If you are lucky, sometimes, people rubbished them and pronounced them impractical and not viable. But, more often than not, these letters are ignored. So, after a while, these altruistic people get a little disillusioned and stopped writing.
Modern societies depend on experts to provide solutions to many of life's problems. Unfortunately, by the very definition of expertise, experts can only provide classical or proven answers and the very fact that problems still persist prove that experts can no longer be relied upon to save us anymore.
So, the solutions in this blog create an opportunity to really have a no-holds-barred knocking-around of strange and revolutionary ideas. I believe it is somewhere in these types of ideas that solutions can be found for seemingly unsolvable problems.
I would recommend that the first step in this new direction is to be brave and be generous enough to perhaps entertain in our minds the novel, the weird and the unthinkable. But, we must submit these to a consistent and systematic way of analysis and evaluation to make this whole exercise worth doing.
Wednesday, 28 August 2013
Monday, 26 August 2013
WHAT IS MAI-KIASI ABOUT?
"Kiasi" is a Hokkien phrase which alludes to an attitude of extreme caution or a deep fear of risk-taking. It is my contention that it is because of kiasi that a lot of problems in society are allowed to fester and eventually become intractable.
"Mai" is a Hokkien word meaning "do not have" or "reject".
So, put together, "mai-kiasi" literally means "have no fear".
"Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgement that something else is more important than fear."
"Kiasi" is a Hokkien phrase which alludes to an attitude of extreme caution or a deep fear of risk-taking. It is my contention that it is because of kiasi that a lot of problems in society are allowed to fester and eventually become intractable.
"Mai" is a Hokkien word meaning "do not have" or "reject".
So, put together, "mai-kiasi" literally means "have no fear".
"Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgement that something else is more important than fear."
- Ambrose Redmoon
It is in the very spirit of Mr Redmoon's "judgement that something else is more important", that I have created this blog with the intention of encouraging everyone to find his courage to speak up and help solve the problems we face as a society.
Hence, the tagline: Managing Adversity Insightfully - Knocking Ideas Around Singaporean Issues, which incidentally is what MAI-KIASI as an acronym spells for! It is the task of this blog to record and publicize my solutions to many of our national problems.
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