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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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050294
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0502640.000
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1994-05-26
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<text id=94TT0520>
<title>
May 02, 1994: The Whipping Boy
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
May 02, 1994 Last Testament of Richard Nixon
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ESSAY, Page 80
THE WHIPPING BOY
</hdr>
<body>
<p>BY JAMES WALSH
</p>
<p> Should anyone much care whether an American boy living overseas
gets six vicious thwacks on his backside? So much has been argued,
rejoined and rehashed about the case of Michael Fay, an 18-year-old
convicted of vandalism and sentenced to a caning in Singapore,
that an otherwise sorry little episode has shaded into a certified
International Incident, complete with intercessions by the U.S.
head of state. An affair that sometimes sounds--on editorial
pages--equivalent to the abduction of Helen of Troy has outraged
American libertarians even as it has animated a general debate
about morality East and West and the proper functioning of U.S.
law and order. The Trojan War this is not: the wooden horse
is in America's citadel.
</p>
<p> Which, to all appearances, is what Singapore wanted. The question
of whether anyone should care about Michael Fay is idle: though
Singapore officials profess shock at the attention his case
has drawn, they know Americans care deeply about the many sides
of this issue. Does a teenager convicted of spraying cars with
easily removable paint deserve half a dozen powerful strokes
on the buttocks with a sopping-wet bamboo staff? At what point
does swift, sure punishment become torture? By what moral authority
can America, with its high rates of lawlessness and license,
preach to a safe society about human rights? Isn't the shipshape
and affluent little city-state molded by Lee Kuan Yew a model
of civic virtues?
</p>
<p> Not quite the game of Twenty Questions, but close enough. The
caning sentence has fascinated many Americans who had never
heard of Singapore and perhaps could not tell Southeast Asia
from Sweden on a map. It has concentrated minds wondrously on
an already lively domestic debate over what constitutes a due
balance between individual and majority rights. Too bad Michael
Fay has become a fulcrum for this discussion. Not only does
he seem destined to be pummeled and immobilized by an instrument
of ordeal, but the use of Singapore as a standard for judging
any other society, let alone the cacophonous U.S., is fairly
worthless.
</p>
<p> To begin with, Singapore is an offshore republic that tightly
limits immigration. Imagine crime-ridden Los Angeles, to which
Singapore is sometimes contrasted, with hardly any inflow of
the hard-luck, often desperate fortune seekers who flock to
big cities. Imagine in the same way Jakarta or Shanghai. Beyond
that, Singapore began its life as a British colony designed
to serve as a shipping, administrative and financial center.
Today it is a highly skilled society without the urban sprawl
and rural poverty that afflict larger nations. An analogue might
be Manhattan incorporated as a republic between the Battery
and 96th Street, with its own flag, armed forces and immigration
controls.
</p>
<p> Even without its government's disciplinary measures, Singapore
more than plausibly would be much the same as it is now. An
academic commonplace today is that the major factor determining
social peace and prosperity is culture--a sense of common
identity, tradition and values. The house that Lee built is
76% ethnic Chinese, a people with one of the most self-disciplined
cultures in the world. Prizing family, learning and hard work,
overseas Chinese have prospered wherever they have settled.
Heavily Chinese Hong Kong is, granted, a somewhat messier place
than Singapore. But without social engineering or the flogging
of vandals, Hong Kong is still very safe and quite rich. Its
crime rate: 1,522 reported offenses for every 100,000 people
in 1992. Singapore's was 1,507.
</p>
<p> And America's? Don't ask. Unlike Singapore, though, the U.S.
today is a nation in search of a common culture, trying to be
a universal society that assimilates the traditions of people
from all over the world. Efforts to safeguard minority as well
as individual rights have produced, as Lee charges, a gridlock
in the justice system. America is not the pandemonium portrayed
in the shock-addicted mass media. But its troubles stem more
from the decay of family life than from any government failures.
Few societies can afford to look on complacently. As travel
eases and cultures intermix, the American experience is becoming
the world's.
</p>
<p> Singaporeans have every right to be proud of their achievements.
Does that justify Michael Fay's sentence? A letter writer to
the New York Times advised that "six of the best," as he suffered
at an English public (that is, private) school, might cure all
that ails American youth. Comparing Fay's sentence to a headmaster's
paddling is fatuous--but then, as John Updike once noted,
old boys of Eton and Harrow can often "mistake a sports car
for a woman or a birch rod for a mother's kiss." The pain from
flaying with wet rattan, as it is done in Singapore, can knock
a prisoner out cold.
</p>
<p> The circumstances of this affair--evidently no Singaporean
has ever been punished under the Vandalism Act for defacing
private property--suggest that Singapore has used Fay as an
unwilling point man in a growing quarrel between East and West
about human rights. Several large Asian countries, China among
them, argue that the U.S. has no business criticizing their
own, equally legitimate values. But Japan stresses majority
rights too. So does Hong Kong. Neither is watering its economic
miracle with the blood from a bamboo cane.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>