Coup degrace in Parliament

Backbenchers Club chairperson Shahrir Abdul Samad and I studied \’Government\’ as a subject during our Sixth Form days. It was an optional course for all Arts students for the Higher School Certificate of the Cambridge University in 1968. That was the favourite and best course of my entire schooling and education. \’Governance\’ was the core …

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The shame of it all

New Straits Times group editor-in-chief Kalimullah Hassan wrote an excellent treatise in his Sunday column (Oct 16, 2005) on the God-given dignity of human beings, as not reflected in the August house of power that we call the Malaysian Parliament. Malu is a four-letter Malay word. Tak malu is a seven-letter Malay curse! \’Shame\’ is an old English word …

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The schooling of undergraduates

During my doctoral days, I read two very important and then quite popular books in the US. One was entitled, The Schooling of America and the other, The Closing of the American Mind . Today, almost 20 years later, it appears that most of our so-called educated and learned elders of our society appear to have not read these …

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National unity must move beyond parties and dinners

Christian Malaysians form about 11 percent of the nation\’s population of about 25 million people. If only citizens are considered, this figure totals about two million people. With an average non-Muslim family size of about five, that makes for about 400,000 Christian household heads and consequently about 800,000 or more voters. With the majority of …

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Why did I join the vigil?

Three nights ago, I received an urgent SMS – Father Jojo requested Christians to gather in front of the High Court for a vigil on the issue of the \”denial of rights\” involving the wife of the army commando M Moorthy who had died recently. This was the first time I had been invited to …

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The constitution is our judicial cornerstone

I totally agree with Suhakam chairman Abu Talib Othman – who as attorney-general had helped craft the Article 121 (1A) provision – that the primary legal authority of the nation is and must always remain the constitution. The case for such a \’constitutionalism\’ was exceptionally well argued by constitutional lawyer Dr Cyrus Das in a two-page interview …

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