Daphne Maia http://www.daphnemaia.net bite-sized commentaries posterous.com Wed, 12 May 2010 21:52:00 -0700 Our children are color blind - Shouldn't we keep them that way? [On Racism] - http://www.daphnemaia.net/our-children-are-color-blind-shouldnt-we-keep http://www.daphnemaia.net/our-children-are-color-blind-shouldnt-we-keep

I was reading this very interesting article earlier this morning, on how children learn to become racist, and I shared it across my various social media pages. A friend, @LuoYanjie, then shared the link to this video, and I think it does drive home a very good point - that children are unaware of the concept of 'race', until their parents teach them all the usual social stereotypes of the different races.

Living in a "multicultural" society promoting racial harmony and equality, and still, we teach our children such untruths?

Shame on you, racist parents!

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Tue, 12 Jan 2010 18:23:00 -0800 Of race and entitlements in Singapore http://www.daphnemaia.net/of-race-and-entitlements-in-singapore http://www.daphnemaia.net/of-race-and-entitlements-in-singapore

Some of you would have heard of Singapore's new "double barrel" policy of race declaration for children of mixed parentage.

On the surface, this sounds great - it tells the child exactly who he/she is, who his/her parents are, and his/her bloodline.

Then this morning, I read this news article on Channel News Asia, which says that the race which "parents choose to place first will be considered the main one." (source)

"Main race?" I asked myself.

I read on about the debate in parliament, on why there is even a need to declare a 'main' or dominant race:

Paulin Tay Straughan, Nominated MP, said: "I am trying to understand why you need to have a declaration of a dominant race. Perhaps Minister can help us appreciate the implications of registration in real terms."

Associate Professor Ho Peng Kee, Senior Minister of State for Home Affairs, said: "We have got ethnic-linked policies, for example HDB's ethnic integration policy, and these are key policies. So we do need to know which classification to put the child under."

Hri Kumar, MP, Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC, said: "In light of the many different permutations, and now the greater flexibility of choices given to parents, is the selection of race on the identity card going to become an artificial exercise - you pick a race of convenience?"

Clearly, everyone is going to pick Chinese as the dominant race due to the fact that Chinese is the government's "preferred" race in Singapore. So yes, it really is an artificial exercise that only looks good on paper.

I don't think this exercise is helping the situation of racial / ethnic discrimination that still exists in Singapore at all, despite our claims of racial harmony and of our multi-ethnic society that lives in harmony.

I know what you're thinking - that some ethnic-linked policies "protect" the minority races. But I'm for the school of thought that everyone should have equal opportunities, no matter what colour their skin is. If we remove this racial classification, there would be no special entitlement in the first place, or any need at all to protect people from any particular ethnic group. 

In my ideal world, race doesn't matter, and there is no racial divide

But I suppose we are light years away from that.

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