Jan 18, 2012

Malaysia - Wanting a fair share doesn’t make you a commie



I remember my heart breaking just a little bit when an Ayn Rand-loving friend declared the government shouldn’t be working on making healthcare affordable.

“People should just buy insurance,” he said.

When you earn not even RM500 on a rubber estate, can you afford health insurance? When you’re a single mother of five, earning your keep from selling food at the roadside, can you buy insurance?

My friend isn’t alone with his perceptions about the poor and how they should “help themselves.” I blame Ayn Rand and libertarianism.

I find it hard to understand the cult worship Rand and her ideas have attracted. Never mind, I take that back. Her “doctrine of selfishness” is an easy sell to the materialistic and moneyed.

Libertarianism holds liberty sacred and government non-interference as the ultimate goal. That individuals, as well as the market, should be unfettered. Survival of the fittest; none of that Socialist claptrap or welfare state-ism.

The irony and ultimate hypocrisy is Rand subsisting, in her last days, on the social security she advocated doing away with. If she had stayed true to her ideals, she should have rather died from being too poor to pay for her own medical treatment rather than burden taxpayers with her treatment bills.

I don’t advocate a welfare state and I acknowledge that communism, for all its notions about equality, just doesn’t work. Capitalism isn’t a bad thing by itself, but capitalism practised without checks and balances by the state creates a systemic inequality.

The problem with a free market is that it may be free, but it is certainly not free from bias. The richer you are, the more powerful you are, the bigger the advantage you have. All it takes is for a few big companies to join together to crush smaller companies in an industry. Monopolies are manifestations of the evils of unfettered capitalism, but sadly, those who worship money know that it is an assured way to get rich.

My comfortable middle- and upper middle-class friends sneered at the “Occupy Wall Street” movement.

“They should all just get jobs, not protest.” Ah, how money blinds you to the suffering of those who don’t have it.

They had no clue that it’s a struggle to even get a job at Wal-Mart now. That minimum wage is so paltry in the US, the working class end up juggling two or three jobs with low pay, poor working conditions and no health insurance.

People who have never known suffering or true financial struggle tend to look down on the working class.

“They should work hard. It’s just laziness that keeps them where they are.”

It’s not that easy. If every child in this world were born in the same conditions, in the same financial situations, then you can say that opportunities for wealth and self-actualisation are all equal.

Some children, some people are just luckier than others. If you were born rich, you’re likely to die rich. If you were born Caucasian, upper middle- or upper-class, moneyed and live in a neighbourhood with other people of high net worth, you will have a leg up in the financial stakes. But if you were born in Africa or Bangladesh to poor, illiterate parents in a remote area, then anyone claiming that you had the same access to opportunities are out of their minds.

The world is unfair. That’s the truth of it.

At the very least, it should be a government’s responsibility to ensure that a nation’s children have the same access to quality education. It shouldn’t be the norm as it is in Malaysia that the best education is assured to the ones with the ability to pay for it. It isn’t right that Malaysian children in private schools or “star” schools in urban areas have better educational foundations than the Orang Asli.

It’s not about making everyone rich. It’s about affording the same opportunities to everyone. A person’s economic standing or social class shouldn’t become barriers to procuring quality education or healthcare.

But in a country where it’s not about levelling the playing field but building elevators for the rich or privileged, what can you do to address inequality? All I can say is that we need to move from a mentality of “me” to “us” and find that delicate balance between acknowledging the rights of an individual to doing what’s best for a community.

It’s time to stop asking ourselves what’s in it for us and ask, instead: what’s in it for everyone?

The Malaysian Insider



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