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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>
-
-