Showing posts with label GOOD READ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GOOD READ. Show all posts

June 26, 2008

Random Thots

i was rummaging thru my RSS feeds as usual.. i stumbled upon nadnut's brog post.

I find her statement especially endearing.. which is another mantra of mine in blogging

Not long after, blogging became an ‘in’ thing, and everyone and anyone started blogging. It was a major change that affected everyone, as advertisers realized that blogging was a cheap and viable medium to consider, which in turn led to the most basic economic rule: with demand comes supply, though in this case, it was a very bad supply of blogs. Everyone started jumping onto the bandwagon or in this case, the money tree which deteriorated the qualities of blogs just because everyone was posting entries without any substance.

To me, I find that one should be themselves and not blog just for the sake of earning money. Any income from blogging should be seen as a reward and not a justified salary.


we should all be bloggin for only ourselves and not jump on the bandwagon of those celebrities-brog wannabes...

+1 for humanity

June 16, 2008

100 Most... ...



Leaders & Revolutionaries, Heroes & Pioneers,Scientists & Thinkers,Artists & Entertainers & Builders & Titans.



All the above are the annual list of the world's most influential people as ranked by TIME.

The Numero Uno is Vladimir Putin

May 30, 2008

A Geisha in New York




A Japanese geisha has been teaching New York about the ancient art of her profession.

Komomo, which means Little Peach, danced, sang and signed copies of her book titled "A Geisha's Journey" for curious onlookers in an art gallery and book store.

The book consists of a series of essays and photographs taken by Naoyuki Ogino, who started documenting Komomo's transition into a geisha when she was fifteen years old.

May 27, 2008

6 Reasons you can’t convert a fool

1. They don’t want to change
They probably imagine that they are smarter than you are and that there is nothing more for them to learn. Many have an aversion to “book learning” meaning anything that you have to read to learn, because reading is impractical and has no relation to “real life”. Reading is for weaklings and people who have no practical use.

Morons tend to form clots and reinforce each other’s foolishness.


2. They don’t know a whole lot
You can’t use illustrations because they won’t get them. They will hear exactly what you say, they may even understand your words, but your string of words will not resolve into a meaningful grasp of what you are trying to convey. Actually, you may just get bogged down in the labor of making things simple enough for them to understand. It’s like trying to translate Finnegan’s Wake, word-for-word, into kiddie-form.

3. They don’t have the capacity
Apart from, not wanting to, they simply lack the equipment to get smarter. A complex idea will boil down to the color of the guy who stated it, or his political affiliation, or what their buddy Frank said about him. Everything is reduced to where they can think they understand it. This is what they have to do to survive/maintain sanity. If the facts are too big, make them small.

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4. You can’t hide your contempt
If you have discussed something with a true idiot, one with no grasp of the facts, but who is convinced that he is smarter than you are, then you know what I mean. You can hide displeasure, you can stifle anger, but the pure, outright loathing that pretentious simpletons tend to summon up, that has a way of showing itself.

5. They will likely try to fight you
You usually don’t get to be an adult fool without somebody questioning your intelligence at some point. Morons tend to be very touchy about being called on their stupidity, any situation in which you say, or even imply, that they are wrong will likely turn combative. The idiot will dip down into his bag of learned-by-rote urban legend bullshit, and when the last one fails, he will be left only with his lack of intelligence and his fists. The satisfaction of beating you down will make up for the disappointment of not being able to outsmart you.

6. Their friends are as dumb as they are
Morons tend to form clots and reinforce each other’s foolishness. Fool’s cannot stomach dissent, they cannot bear the sight of people who don’t agree wholeheartedly with what they say. They have no shortage of people to tell them why your ideas are wrong, and how full of shit you are.

May 26, 2008

OZ 3G iPhone To Be Fastest In The World

Australia will have the fastest Apple 3G iPhone in the world a senior executive of Telstra has told ChannelNews. "We know what is coming we have seen the new device and it will be available on our network as soon as it is launched in the USA. By Xmas this phone will be capable of 42mbs which will make it faster than a lot of broadband offerings and the fastest iPhone on any network in the world " they said.

FULL REPORT AVAILABLE HERE

April 9, 2008

我不生不气

DEDICATED TO ALL WHO ARE ANGRY & LOST IN THIS POINT IN TIME.


他人气我我不气,我本无心他来气。
倘若生气中他计,气出病来无人替。
请来医生把病治,反说气病治非易。
茶不思来饭无味,通宵达旦不入睡。
倘你伸腿离我去,撇我一人活受罪。
奉劝老伴想开点,千万不要再生气。
气是杀人刀,装进没法掏。
气是杀人贼,装进撵不出。
如果把气装肚里,就是喝了敌敌畏。
气字危害真可惧,诚恐因病把命弃。
如今尝够气中气,我不气不气就不气。
现在是敬权敬钱不敬老,
心胸开怀莫烦恼,哈哈大笑学个傻吊。


人生就象一场戏,今世有缘才相聚。
  相处一处不容易,人人应该去珍惜。
  世上万物般般有,哪能件件如我意。
  为了小事发脾气,回想起来又何必。
  他人气我我不气,气出病来无人替。
  生气分泌有害物,促人衰老又生疾。
  看病花钱又受罪,还说气病治非易。
  小人量小不让人,常常气人气自己。
  君子量大同天地,好事坏事包在里。
  他人骂我我装聋,高声上天低入地。
  我若错了真该骂,诚心改正受教育。
  要是根本没那事,全当他是骂自己。
  左亲右邻团结好,家庭和睦乐无比。
  夫妻互助又亲爱,朝夕相伴笑嘻嘻。
  政通人和享天伦,晚年幸福甜如蜜。
  邻里亲友不要比,儿孙锁事随他去。
  淡泊名利促健康,文明礼貌争第一。
  三国有个周公瑾,因气丧命中人计。
  清朝有个闫敬铭,领悟危害不生气。
  弥勒就是布袋僧,袒胸大肚能忍气。
  笑口常开无忧虑,一切疾病皆消去。
  不气不气真不气,不气歌儿记心里。
  只要你能做得到,活到百岁不足奇。

世上到处都是气,无气万物无生机。
  人活凭的就是气,无气活着啥意义。
  浑身正气身体壮,邪气缠身伤身体。
  你不生气气找你,气是自己争来的。
  人生一生都是气,若是气人己先气。
  惹人生气为不义,人要生气为中计。
  生气百害无一利,气坏别人伤自己。
  气出病来自己医,花钱受罪人讽讥。
  气量狭小没出息,只让别人窃窃喜。
  生气常常伤理智,办坏事情悔莫及。
  争气损尽己力气,看你争气不争气。
  世人都应晓利弊,欢欢喜喜消消气。
  大度能忍天下气,不气别人不生气。
  你尊我敬多谦虚,但愿大家都和气。

April 8, 2008

Random Inklings

I was doing my usual morning intarwebs rounds. I found the below article.
Guess somehow it relates to our society and me. Do take a breather today to tink if it is u in the story.

And Uncle Fong, KNS ur that sg story.......

As I've mentioned a handful of times, during a recent squirrel rescue attempt in my attic, a friend put his foot through my bedroom ceiling. It was not me that technically broke the attic, but the blame is still largely mine.

So now, when my daughters spill something at dinner or break a cup, they have been instructed to instantly say, "Daddy broke the attic." It's a simple statement that kind of puts spilled juice in the right context. "No big deal," they say, "Juice is just juice, my dad knew I might spill and break things even though I am trying my hardest."

They enjoy the freedom of being able to say that and it made me think, do I ever do the same thing with God? That is, when I fail, do I ever instantly lean on the truth and grace of the cross? Why can't I in a moment of failure, call upon a much greater promise than just "daddy broke the attic" and say, "Christ died for me?"

Not that my sin or failure is not a big deal, but it has already been paid for. The cost has already been paid. And saying "Christ died for me" when I break something might help me remember that I too am a child at a very big table. I too have a father who loves me and cares for me. And I too have been provided an out from the sin I commit.

Christ died for me.

March 26, 2008

New Versions of Veritas Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions for Windows

21Mar2008 - This week Symantec announced new versions of its storage management and high availability solutions that support Windows Server 2008. Steve Wilkins, Sr. Manager, Product Marketing, talks about what this announcement means to Symantec.

Q. What is Symantec announcing?

We announced new versions of Veritas Storage Foundation and Storage Foundation High Availability for Windows that enable our customers to manage multi-vendor storage without disruption to users or applications. We enable organizations to reduce costs, lower risk, and have the same confidence and manageability deploying applications on the Windows Server platform as they would have deploying on more robust enterprise-class platforms.

Q. Why is Symantec supporting Windows?

Support for the new Windows Server 2008 reflects the fact that Microsoft is pushing up into the data center and that mission critical applications are increasingly being run on the Windows Server platform – the most obvious being Exchange.

Q. What's unique about the new products?

Storage Foundation for Windows allows data center admins to manage the islands of storage across a variety of vendors, given the heterogeneity of most data centers. We are trying to provide a standard set of tools so admins aren't restricted to working only on familiar products.

Storage Foundation High Availability for Windows integrates Veritas Cluster Server, protecting the application as well as the data across local, metropolitan, and wide-area distances, be it for a cross-country or globally-based organization. In the event of a fault, the application is moved to another available server, physical or virtual. As far as the user is concerned, the application just keeps running.

Storage Foundation for Windows also provides support for the high-end stuff in the data center – such as EMC SRDF/Star which is used for multi-site replication and disaster recovery.

Q. What else is new in this release?

Besides support for Windows Server 2008, version 5.1 also extends support to the Vista client, Exchange 2007 Service Pack 1, SharePoint Portal Server 2007, Blackberry Enterprise Server, as well as compatibility with new storage arrays from third-party vendors.

Among the new feature enhancements, SmartMove dramatically reduces the time it takes to bring the new array online by copying only the relevant data blocks, and not the white space; 3-pass and 7-pass volume shred provides confidence that sensitive data is securely deleted before retiring or repurposing a disk array; and enhanced Fire Drill makes it even easier to test disaster recovery plans without taking down applications.

*************************************************************************
“For a point release, this has some nice additions - better Microsoft support, more high availability and disaster recovery options, additional array support and greater efficiency and ease of use.”
— Enterprise Strategy Group Analyst Bob Laliberte
*************************************************************************

Q. How are we doing on ease of use?

One of the issues for our customers, as Windows Server moves up into the data center, is that administrators are encountering far more complexity than they have in the past. Our job is to mask that complexity as much as possible and remove the opportunity for manual errors. The Configuration Checker does automatic checks against our compatibility lists, the new wizards help set up campus clusters, DR configurations, and Enterprise Vault, and Storage Foundation Manager provides single-pane-of-glass visibility and reporting.

With all these new features and capabilities, storage administrators could be seeing a whole lot more of their friends and families!

October 26, 2007

Tom Plate & Jeffrey Cole interview LKY - Tuesday, October 9, 2007

By Tom Plate
Pacific Perspectives Columnist

This is an incisive interview. One worth spending 15minutes to read.
It marks the true measure of the man Lee Kuan Yew.
At 82 and still plugged into what's happening in his world - very much your world.

This is the complete transcript of MM(as the founder of modern singapore is now known) LKY's interview with syndicated columnist Tom Plate of the UCLA Media Center and new-media expert Jeffrey Cole of the USC Annenberg School Center for the Digital Future.

This took place on Sept. 27, 2007 in the minister's private office at Istana, Singapore.

**********************************************************************************

Singapore's first prime minister talks about China, the United States, and international politics as well as the future of media in Asian countries like Singapore and around the world

Q: How are you?
Lee: Ageing rather fitfully as we all do, but when you're past 80, it's a pretty steep climb.
Q: The thing is you have not retired?
Lee: I think if you retire, the idea of just reading books and playing golf ... you just disintegrate.
Q: There's such a high correlation between people who retire and play golf and die, right? If you don't play golf and don't retire ... follow the logic!

Lee: You have to have something more than that. You have got to wake up every morning feeling there's something worth doing and you're not just lying back and coasting along. Once you coast along, it's finished.

Q: It's great to be in Singapore right now because it's so bustling!
Lee: It's partly just sheer luck. I would say 60 percent hard work, 40 percent luck. Sixty percent because we put ourselves into this position, went through some very hard times starting with the Asian crisis, SARS and so on -- but we have got onto the right track. We could see China growing, India coming on. We're just at the junction of the two and placed ourselves to take the tailwind of both of them -- but keeping all our other bases intact, our connections: U.S., Europe, Japan.

Q: You even have good relations with Taiwan?
Lee: That's crucial. That's part of the old -- our past.
Q: But that's not all that easy to do?
Lee: It's still tough, but it doesn't matter. The mainland knows these were the terms on which we established relations with them.

Q: One of the first questions I asked you roughly 10 years ago when I started the column on Asia and America was what would be the one thing you would say to the American people about the United States' role in Asia. You thought for a few minutes and then you said: "Tell the American people that America must get the relationship with China right, because if that relationship is gotten right, it benefits everybody in Asia. And if it's not gotten right, it's going to create problems." Have we more or less got the relationship right?

Lee: I think it's not bad. Congress is in a fractious mood looking for excuses for what's gone wrong, believing China's exchange rate offers unfair advantage. Yes, the Chinese should up the value of their yuan -- maybe 10 percent, 15 percent -- but it's not going to help you. It's not going to solve the problem. It might create problems for them if they do it so suddenly. But if they do it gradually, I think it shouldn't be a problem.

Q: They probably will do it?
Lee: They'll do it gradually. They're scared of unemployment. They're scared of what happened to Japan when the factories relocated. They need their low-end jobs, making shoes, garments, whatever. If these factories move, you have got unemployment -- that's a real problem for them. They're scared of it as they're moving up-market. It's a new game for them and they're nervous. Their legitimacy depends upon solving the economic problems and not having riots in the cities even as their old state-owned enterprises retrench.

Q: What would you say to Americans who say if China rises, America has to fall?
Lee: No, I do not see a win-lose, zero sum game here. It was the U.S. that brought China into the World Trade Organization (WTO). It was George W. H. Bush that opened the door, invited China to start selling to America. That was carried on by President Clinton. Clinton finally, with his then Treasury Secretary Rubin, got the Chinese into WTO.

You have got two choices with China. Keep them out -- but the U.S. must have done its calculations, because if you keep them out, then you have them as a spoiler. They're going to do reverse engineering, steal your patents and where is the profit in that? You slow them down, there's no doubt about that. You slow down their transformation but at the same time, you are not benefiting from that transformation. If you go back and remember the 1980s and early 90s, you needed that market to grow but you never factored in the speed at which they would grow. That's scary. That's happened and I think they know that it's a difficult transformation for them. It's not easy. They have got enormous problems -- internal problems, disparity within the cities, between the cities and the countryside, and now with cell phones and satellite TV, they have to change track, instead of just going helter-skelter for gold ... now they're talking about achieving ! a harmonious society.

Q: Do we on the whole know pretty much what the real picture inside China is?
Lee: I think your China-watchers are well briefed, they know.
Q: There shouldn't be any big surprises? We pretty much know where the tensions are?
Lee: [Nods affirmatively]
Q: You mentioned Bob Rubin and Clinton. The genius of their approach was they convinced the Chinese that it was in their interest to join WTO. They weren't doing anybody any favors, was it going to be good for China?

Lee: No, I think they had [Chinese Premier] Zhu Rongji to deal with and that made the difference. Zhu Rongji was the man who pushed the Chinese side. He was backed by [President] Jiang Zemin. He did the sums and decided that if China was going to catch up with the world, they had to open up and this will force a continual opening-up, joining WTO and having to abide by the rules -- and now they're in.

Q: You see them still going there -- going in that same opening-up direction?
Lee: Their problem now is convincing the world that they're serious about a "peaceful rise." These are thinking people. You're not dealing with ideologues.

I don't know if you've been seeing this or heard of this series that [the Chinese] produced called The Rise of the Great Nations . It's now on the History Channel. I got our station here to dub it in English and show it. It was quite I would say a bold decision to tell the Chinese people this is the way the European nations, the Russians and Japanese became great. Absolutely no ideology and they had a team of historians, their own historians. To get the program going, they went to each country, interviewed the leaders and historians of those countries.

You should watch the one on Britain, because I think that gives you an idea of how far they have gone in telling their people this is what made Britain great. I was quite surprised. The theme was [doing away with] the Divine Right of Kings, a Britain that was challenged by the barons who brought the king down to Runnymede and then they had the Magna Charta, and suddenly your "Divine Right" is based on Parliament and [the barons] are in Parliament. That gave the space for the barons to grow and the middle class eventually emerged. When the King got too uppity, Charles the First got beheaded.

Now this series was produced in a communist state, you know. In other words, if you want to be a great nation, so, if the leader goes against the people's interests, you may have to behead him! They also said that because there was growing confidence between the people and the leaders, the country grew.

It is in fact a lesson to support their gradual opening up and their idea of how they can do it without conflict -- the "peaceful rise." They have worked out this scheme, this theory, this doctrine to assure America and the world that they're going to play by the rules.

Q: You think they'll be able to do that fast enough to accommodate the middle class who want clean air and so much else?

Lee: I cannot say what they will do. I go there once in a year, I spend one week. I get reports, I read it but I'm not a China-watcher. I have got many other things to watch, I'm a Singapore-watcher! My guess is they're going to move pragmatically one step at a time and the first thing they are trying to do right at this moment is to get the succession to the next Standing Committee right. [The chairman will] have his team and the next five years will be his policy.

I think the policy will be let's grow, let's have more equality in the country and keep the country as one. Let's have no trouble abroad, let's make quite sure that Taiwan doesn't do stupid things which will force the mainland to act. Let's have a successful Olympics and then we are into a new age, one step at a time.

The first problem is blue skies for the Olympics, and the way to do that is the way they did it in 1999 when I went there for the 50th anniversary and I found blue skies. I asked our ambassador about this: He said they stopped all factories for the last two weeks. I think they're going to do that, maybe the last four weeks before and the cars will be cut down by half, odd and even numbers and so on. But to go and clean up properly will take umpteen years, retrofit coal mines and so on. That's a very costly and slow business.

They are engaging us in Singapore, and we're going to do an EcoCity with them, choosing the site now. They have agreed. They've offered us several sites and we're choosing one where there can be sustainable growth. What we've done in Singapore, we recycle water, you keep your air clean, you do this, you do that, higher costs, more social discipline, more engineering, sewers, recycling water, et cetera and so on. It's a slow process but they want to learn how it can be done. That's important.

Q: If we could move to the other superpower, the United States. I know you're reluctant to give out advice, unlike American journalists who always try to tell you what to do, but for America, since you've been a friend of America and you've seen it over decades, what are two, three things, that you worry about in America?

Lee: I think in the next 10 years you have got to extricate yourself from these problems in the Middle East. It may take you five years to get it stabilized and then after that, you gradually have more time and energy to think about the other big problems in the world. This is sucking up too much of your resources. To solve this, you have got to tackle the two-state problem in Israel because as long as that's festering away, you're giving your enemies in the Muslim world an endless provocation from which they can get new recruits for crazy adventures to try and knock you down, to blow themselves up and blow the world up. How you're going to do that, I don't know.

Q: Did you follow the Israeli lobby debate in the U.S.? Two professors -- from Harvard and the University of Chicago -- did this paper about the alleged extreme influence of the Israeli lobby in American foreign policy. Even if the paper overstated or used some unwise language in making its case, is there something to this?

Lee: You have got to settle this issue with the Jewish lobby. If you have this as a festering sore, you get Muslims entangled in hate campaigns. I'm not saying if you solve this, everything will be sweet and harmonious -- but if you solve this you will remove a cancer in the [international] system. Then you can better tackle the other problems. You are alone in this [Middle East policy] because the Europeans are not with you. Nobody helps you, but everybody doesn't want to openly oppose you.

Q: What about inside America itself? Do you see any indices that worry you, whether it's education?
Lee: For the next 10, 15, 20 years what you have will keep you going as the most enterprising, innovative economy with leading-edge technology, both in the civilian and military field. You have got that already.

You will lose that gradually over 30, 40, 50 years unless you are able to keep on attracting talent and that's the final contest, because what you have done, the Chinese and other nations are going to adopt parts of it to fit their circumstances and they are also going around looking for talented people and wanting to build up their innovative enterprising economies. And finally this is now an age where you will not have military contests between great nations because you will destroy each other, but you will have economic and technological contests between the great powers.

I see that as the main arena of competition by 2040, 2050 and it'll be the U.S.; China for sure; Japan, keeping up with the U.S. and trying to retain its separate position from China, closer to the U.S. and hoping to maintain a special position; India, somewhat behind China, trying to catch up. I don't know about Brazil.

Q: Charles de Gaulle had a great comment about Brazil. His advisers said to President de Gaulle that he had to go to Latin America -- Brazil. He said why? They said Brazil has great potential. De Gaulle said, "Ah, yes Brazil has great potential ... and always will."

Lee: I put my money on China, India and Western Europe. If Western Europe can get past the welfare approach to society and get their unions modernized, I think they have got the technological basis and the talent to rise again, not as a military power because I don't think they got the stomach for that, but as an economic power which they can do. I think they'll give the world a run for their money.

Can they do it? I don't know. Their history is so deep, you never know. Under pressure, as they feel they're being left behind by history, they may decide to do it. I mean, you look at [French President] Sarkozy, he may or may not succeed, but he's convinced himself and he's convincing quite a group of the French elite. The CEOs of the big multinationals in France don't need convincing. They know it. It's the broad think-tanks, the media, the intellectuals who still feel that they have a superior system. They loath having to give that [welfare approach] up, but they may, you know, because that's the only way to catch up.

Russia may become a player if they are able to find a way to convert the oil and gas into a more enterprising economy. I don't know if they can get out of their corruption and the mismanagement of the resources, but they have got talented people.

But long-term for America, if you ask me, say, project another 100 years, 150 years into the 22nd century, say, 2150, whether you stay on top depends upon the kind of society you will be because if the present trends continue, you'll have a Hispanic element in your society that's about 30, 40 percent. So, the question is do you make the Hispanics Anglo-Saxons in culture or do they make you more Latin American in culture."

Q: That is exactly the right question.
Lee: I mean, if they came in drips and drabs and you scatter them across America, then you will change their culture, but if they come in large numbers, like Miami, and they stay together, or in California, then their culture will continue and they may well affect the Anglo-Saxon culture around them. That's the real test.

But on the [China] side, you can be quite sure that their numbers are so great -- the Chinese Hans -- they can take any number of new migrants, they will be absorbed. So, long-term, I think the Chinese have figured this out. Then, if they just stay with "peaceful rise" and they just contest for first position economically and technologically, they cannot lose. If they are not Number One, they will be Number Two. If they are not Number Two, they are Number Three. They have figured that out.

Q: Singapore is one of the world's most wired countries, far ahead of the pack. How do you imagine over time that this will change Singapore? What will be your sense of what happens in an educated country with high standards, when anyone can get anything on the Web, videos and blogs so that the role of a centralized media become less and less dominant?

Lee: Well, it is already on its way because the print media here is not growing the same way, they are stagnating. It's not declining as fast as, say, it is in America or Britain ... And this is happening here.

The young, they read things on the Internet. I mean, I am part of the older generation. Yes, I read some stuff on the Internet, but at the end of the day, I say, well, let's see what the proper analysis is. So, I look up, I look at the editorial pages and the op-ed pages. I am not sure that the young will do that anymore, but the way the print media can stay in the contest is not to be the first with the news because that's not possible, but to be the first with the background and the analysis and the ones with the high credibility will stay in business.

You must have credibility because you get so much on the Internet. Whom do you believe? Finally, you've got to say, who is saying this? And you don't know. But if you say, this is The New York Times, this is the Washington Post or the L.A. Times, then you say, well, that is the standard.

I mean, that goes for every country, I think, but we have a different problem here because we are bilingual. English is our first language, well, for the younger generation. The older generation, Chinese was their first language, but the ones below 30 now, below 35, the majority, English is their first language and Chinese or Malay and whatever will be their second language. But with the rise of China, we are already seeing more and more going to China doing business and more Chinese coming here doing business. So, they are going to start reading the Chinese blogs, the Chinese news. It's already happening. So, the trend will be from print to screen.

Q: China has not given up hope in terms of trying to control the content on the Internet. But my sense since the last time I talked with you and with some of your brightest people, is that you have a sense of inevitably, that this new technology is going to overwhelm efforts to control it, is that right?

Lee: Right, it is not possible. Look, you are going to have a PDA that is also running video and you can have your servers blocked. But if you've got a 3G phone, you use another server, and so then you are through.

No, it's not only going to happen, it's already happening. Otherwise, how do you get all these pictures of the monks in Myanmar or Yangon or Mandalay coming out? It's all on cell-phones. Now, there are areas which are blocked out now. They are blacked out, sure, but they are still coming out because you've got a 3G phone and I am quite sure Reuters or whatever news agency must have given their correspondents and stringers, saying, here, use this. You take it and you use this and you get it through. Otherwise, how can you get it through because the government is already blocking out [communication]. Many of the areas are now non-functioning, you can't use the cell-phone. But images are still coming through. I just saw something this morning. So?

Q: Right. So, that the role of the centralized media is less important. Even if you can control the centralized media, that's less and less valuable than before.

Lee: I don't know if you've caught up with this story. It's a bit of scandal going on. [Former Deputy Prime Minister] Anwar Ibrahim leaked a video, an old video, way back in 1980, of an Indian lawyer talking to a top judge about how he can arrange to get him promoted to be the "Number One" or whatever. I think it was an eight-minute video and Anwar has now put it on the Internet and it's on YouTube! So the Malaysian bar -- which have already been dismayed at the degradation of their judiciary and the corruption and judge-buying and case-buying -- they have demanded a royal commission to inquire into the facts.

So, the government, under pressure now, has appointed a committee of judges and one eminent person, to check on the authenticity of this tape. So that's bought them some time, but in the meantime, 2,000 lawyers, following what the Pakistani lawyers did, have marched on to the prime minister's office to deliver a petition to investigate this matter. Now, this would not have happened without the Internet and without YouTube. I mean it is so simple, you see.

Q: That's a changing world.
Lee: But at the same time, there is the problem of credibility. So, you have a website called Malaysiakini. That means "Malaysia Now" and it's got some very good articles in it and some of them are signed regularly by the same person. So when we get that, we read it and then we say, okay, circulate it. But you get a lot of rubbish, too, and you have got to filter it. It's a waste of time.

Q: Well, your earlier point about the credibility of serious newspapers and serious magazines is more important now than ever.

Lee: You've got to go by them. You know, it's like the ratings agencies which put a lot of financial institutions down.
Q: This is the future of professional journalism, if there is any?
Lee: No, you'll always have it. But if we don't use this [new technology], then we are just one hand tied behind us: Should we allow our opponents to have that advantage? This is a highly competitive world. But the flood of information leads to overload. Therefore, you've got to have somebody filter it for you.

Q: Can I go back to your comment about Myanmar and the video that's getting out from the hand-helds, where, unlike Tiananmen in 1989, you cannot just pull the plug on all visuals. With regard to Myanmar -- and I realize anyone's guess is as good as anyone else's -- but did you see that it's plausible to ask China, as it did at the Six-Party Talks, in some way to work skillfully and work behind the scenes to assume a role in moving Myanmar forward out of the Middle Ages and maybe into the real world?

Lee: I'm not sure the Chinese have got that power. And in Myanmar, these are rather dumb generals when it comes to the economy.

Q: They are!
Lee: How they can so mismanage the economy and reach this stage when the country has so many natural resources?
Q: It's a gift!
Lee: It's stupid. So I'm not sure. The Chinese, they've tried, and, in fact, we have tried to talk them out of isolation. I tried through a general called Khin Nyunt. He's the most intelligent of the lot. I sold him the idea, or at least he bought the idea, that the way for them to go forward was to get out of uniform and do it like Suharto, form a party -- Golkar -- and then take over as a civilian party. But halfway through, Suharto fell. So, it ended up as the wrong advice, they back-tracked. Then they chucked Kyin Nyunt out.

Q: Timing is everything!
Lee: Meanwhile, I had advised several of our hoteliers to set up hotels there. They have sunk in millions of dollars there and now, their hotels are empty. But, you know, you've got really economically dumb people in charge. Why they believe they can keep their country cut off from the world like this indefinitely, I cannot understand. And you know, you need medicines -- they smuggle in from Thailand. It doesn't make sense.

We will see how it is, but whatever it is, I do not believe that they can survive indefinitely. Look, the day they decided to close down the government in Yangon and go into this Pyinmana, or whatever the place is called where there's nothing and they are putting up expensive buildings for themselves and a golf course -- and the top general had a lavish wedding for his daughter which was then out on YouTube -- the daughter was like a Christmas tree! Flaunting these excesses must push a hungry and impoverished people to revolt. But what will happen, I don't know because the army has got to be part of the solution. If the army is dissolved, the country has got nothing to govern itself because they have dismantled all administrative instruments.

Q: You have a candidate in the coming American presidential election that you prefer? You'd like to endorse whom? I have my candidate, but you've got to get American citizenship!

Lee: Who's your candidate?
Q: You! You've helped run this pretty well country for so many years.
Lee: You need to have an American who is not only good on television but he must have the networking that can raise him the funds and the grassroots support.

Q: I notice you said "him".
Lee: Well, her, him/her. No, [Hillary Clinton is] leading, she's leading. Will she be good for America?
Q: I don't know.
Lee: Sorry?
Q: What do you think? I'm too close to her.
Lee: What do you mean you're too close to her?
Q: I'm right there. I'm American, I'm right in the middle of it. I don't like any of them. She may be good enough, though she's not the best that we've got.

Lee: She's good enough?
Q: She's probably good enough.
Lee: Well, we have to live with whoever wins.
Q: I read somewhere recently that you actually have a bit of a worry about your country's survivability over the long run? Are you serious?

Lee: Singapore is not a 4,000-year culture. This is an immigrant community that started in 1819. It's a migrant community that left its moorings and therefore, knowing it's sailing to unchartered seas, guided by the stars, I say let's follow the stars and they said okay, let's try. And we've succeeded and here we are, but has it really taken root? No. It's just worked for the time being. If it doesn't work, again, we say let's try something else. This is not entrenched. This is not a 4,000-year society.

Q: You really have a sense of the country's endangerment.
Lee: Yes, of course.
Q: It's amazing, you come in here and you walk around here in one of the great cities in the world. Yet you are worried about survival.

Lee: Where are we? Are we in the Caribbean? Are we next to America like the Bahamas? Are we in the Mediterranean, like Malta, next to Italy? Are we like Hong Kong, next to China and therefore, will become part of China? We are in Southeast Asia, in the midst of a turbulent, volatile, unsettled region. Singapore is a superstructure built on what? On 700 square kilometers and a lot of smart ideas that have worked so far -- but the whole thing could come undone very quickly.

For this to work, you require a world where there are some rules of international law and there is a balance of forces of power that will enforce that international law and the U.S . is foremost in that. Without that balance of power and international law, the Vietnamese will still be in Cambodia and the Indonesians will still be in East Timor, right? Why are they out? Because there were certain norms that had to be observed. You can't just cross boundaries. This little island with four and a half million people, of whom 1.3 are foreigners working here, has got to maintain an army, navy and an air force. Can we withstand a concerted attempt to besiege us and blockade us? We can repel an attack, yes. Given the armed forces in the region and our capability, we can repel and we can damage them. Three weeks, food runs out, we are besieged, blockaded.

Q: Who will come after you? Who would come after you?
Lee: There are assets here to be captured, right?
Q: Some unnamed bad regime?
Lee: When [Malaysia] kicked us out [in 1965], the expectation was that we would fail and we will go back on their terms, not on the terms we agreed with them under the British. Our problems are not just between states, this is a problem between races and religions and civilizations. We are a standing indictment of all the things that they can be doing differently. They have got all the resources. If they would just educate the Chinese and Indians, use them and treat them as their citizens, they can equal us and even do better than us and we would be happy to rejoin them.

Q: Do you think it's healthy for the citizens of Singapore to feel that pressure, that tension that it all could change quickly? Do you think that makes them run this country more effectively, be better citizens by not getting complacent?

Lee: My generation, the ones above 50, who have lived through the first part, they know. The ones under 30 ,who've just grown up in stability and growth year by year, I think they think that I'm selling them a line just to make them work harder but they are wrong. The problem is they don't believe. They think I'm wrong. That's a problem that all countries face. You look at the Japanese, I remember their parents. After their defeat, they had great leaders not just in politics but in business at every level. They travel, they work, and they sold their goods like mad to rebuild Japan. Now you look at them ... You look at the younger generation, will they work like some of the fathers did? I don't think so, but in a corner will they do it again? I think yes because it's a deeply-imbedded culture. They will fight. That's the difference between an ancient culture and a new one. Theirs is embedded, ours is not. At the same time that anc! ient culture is preventing them from making rational decisions about migration, immigration and meeting the problems of ageing.

Q: Singapore's armed forces are in pretty good shape, right? So when are you all planning to invade neighboring Indonesia?

Lee [laughing]: All we want is a quiet peaceful world. We have made something of our lives and we'll be quite happy to carry on like this and help them get along and do better. We started this LKY School of Public Policy, giving them scholarships to prove to them it's done by good governance. It's not by robbing you.

Q: I (Plate) graduated from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton. And so I'm a big fan of public policy schools. I think you all are doing a great job at the Singapore policy school. I think you chose a wonderful dean [former U.N. Ambassador Kishore Mahbubani]. I was recently there to offer a humble seminar. The quality of the students knocked me out.

Lee: I think that's an investment worth making because [students from the region] will go back and they will tell their media chaps and their leaders and say, look this country works because it's working like this: first, it's honest; second, it's rational; third, it makes decisions and follows through on those decisions. The decisions are made after very careful consideration of all options and consequences.

Q: I agree with you and if you look at the course list, it's a very impressive course list. Now, you were educated in England and many of your top people were educated in America or England, so Western education for a long time has been the cutting edge, has been the leader, the place you wanted to go to. Is it your sense that American higher education is still terrific?

Lee: It will stay like that for as long as you keep on getting talented people into your country and staying on, but will you do that? I think yes for 10, 20 years, but 30, 40, 50 years, I'm not sure because other countries will become more attractive or as attractive. It is the extra inputs you get.

Let me explain how I see it. If Singapore depended on its own domestic talent, we wouldn't have made it, but we were the center for education in this region from British days and many came to be educated and many stayed behind. Our top layer was drawn from a larger base and in my first Cabinet of 10, there were only two of us who were born and bred in Singapore. The others came from Malaysia, China, Ceylon, from India and elsewhere. It's a talent pool that was drawn from a bigger region, and that's the secret of your success. You drew in first your talent from Europe because you offered them opportunities. In the last few decades, you've been drawing your talent from all over the world, including Asia. If you can continue to do that, you will continue to succeed.

Not only must you attract them, you must get them to stay.
Q: How are you doing on that?
Lee: We give a lot of scholarships to Chinese and Indians. If one quarter stay on here in Singapore, we're winners, especially with the Chinese. They come in here, they get an English education, they get our credentials and they're off to America because they know that the grass is greener there. The Indians, strangely enough, more of them stay here in Singapore because they want to go home to visit their families, America is too far away. We are net gainers for how long? I think in the case of China, maybe another 20, 30 years and then the attraction is gone. We can't offer them that difference in opportunities and standards. India, maybe longer -- 50, 60 years before their infrastructure catches up. Anyway, this is not my worry anymore!

Q: On India, there's been a lot of hype in America, in foreign affairs publications and so on, about India becoming the next superpower. I was in New Delhi about three months ago -- it seems to me India's got a long way to go.

Lee: They are a different mix, never mind their political structures. They are not one people. You can make a speech in Delhi; [Prime Minister] Manmohan Singh can speak in Hindi and 30, 40 percent of the country can understand him. He makes a speech in English and maybe 30 percent of the elite understand him.

In China, when a leader speaks, 90 percent will understand him. They all speak one language, they are one people. In India, they have got 32 official languages and in fact, 300-plus different languages. You look at Europe, 25 languages, 27 countries, how do you? The European Parliament? Had we not moved into one language here in Singapore, we would not have been able to govern this country.

Q: Minister Mentor, thank you very much.