---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Dec 14, 2010 at 10:00 AM
Subject: Unity doesn't require uniformity
To:


*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
*December 15, 2010

*Unity doesn't require uniformity
*
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

Structure must sometimes give way to flexibility. My holiday season column
for
today is replaced by the current one. My column last week, "Oppressors must
fall
if people unite," brought comments that deserve a response.
 Although I generally attach less credence to anonymous comments, some
warrant a
response, even if the comments draw me back to topics I think I have covered

fully in past columns.

One blogger disagreed with my assertion that while complaints serve a
purpose,
"Actions make things happen." Writing in Khmer, the commentator said, in
strong
and offensive language, that "we have to talk again and again about the bad
things of Kampuchea leaders, Vietnamese dogs and servants."

Although I may have indulged in impassioned comments about the strongarm
tactics
of the Hun Sen regime, I am reminded of the dangers of intemperate words by
the
book next to my computer, "Wingnuts: How the lunatic fringe is hijacking
America," by the Daily Beast's senior political columnist, John Avlon. It's
on
the rising of "professional partisans ... unhinged activists ... hard-core
haters ... paranoid conspiracy theorists" from the political far-right and
far-left, who are submerged in a "hydra-headed hysteria" -- cut off one
accusation, another emerges in its place -- on hyper-partisan talk radio and

Wingnut websites.

Just as partisan and insulting rhetoric have not moved a political agenda
forward in the United States, neither can a shouting match advance the
prospects
of an open civil society in Cambodia. Do Cambodians really think that
shouting
sends a message to foreign governments about Cambodia that they do not
already
have?

Think of this: In the 1980s, when the rear headquarters of the nationalist
Khmer
resistance was minutely monitored in every respect by the host country, one
of
the outcomes was the sense of paranoia that grew among resistance officials.

They accused one another of betrayal and disloyalty when what we thought was

secret was not. We would forget that the world had its own sources, lodged
in
the monitors all around us.

Better to hold one's counsel and let actions speak. Think, deliberate,
decide,
then act. It is action that may influence a foreign government's policy.

Another person who responded to last week's column asked me to expand on the

issues focused on the Khmer/Vietnam border, in light of Premier Hun Sen's
objection to citizens investigating and protecting that border.

More than 30 years ago, my world politics professor reminded us that when we

look at a garden, some eyes concentrate only on certain plants and flowers
while
others look the whole garden -- specialists and generalists. My professor's
preferred approach was to look at the whole garden to see how plants or
flowers
are arranged, where rocks and stones are placed, and why.

My subsequent training in political science at the University of Michiganmade
me a generalist. So as the issue of the border encroachment is discussed, I
have
written instead about Vietnam's grand design to integrate neighboring areas
into
a Greater Vietnam led by Hanoi. As such, the border-marker dispute is an
element
of a bigger picture that concerns me more. The Vietnamization of Cambodia is

facilitated by Hun Sen, who is supported by Vietnam and legitimized by the
king
and the King Father.

A third commentator is piqued by my persistent call for Khmer democrats and
rights activists to unite around a carefully designed grand strategy to
destabilize the dictatorship and allow the installation of a more liberal
regime, rather than to align with a single political figure.

In my thinking, because Cambodians tend to personalize, and Khmer culture
still
values class, status, rank, role relationships and a superior-inferior,
master-servant, leader-follower, patron-client asymmetry, to rally around a
leader is problematic. Such a leader would likely also assume the role of
the
sun in the universe: There's only one sun!

Burmese icon Aung San Suu Kyi is right to advocate for the goal of "value
change." We need to change what we have always thought. None of us is
condemned
by karma. We are what we make ourselves to be.

Lord Buddha teaches us we don't have to wait until the next life to improve
our
lives; we can do so now. As the Buddhist proverb says, "When the student is
ready, the master appears." Are we ready?

I have referenced from time to time Dr. Gene Sharp's "From Dictatorship to
Democracy: A Conceptual Framework for Liberation." The Khmer blog, KI Media,
has
a link to the English text as well as the Khmer translation. Sharp wrote,
"Unfortunately, often most people in democratic opposition groups do not
understand the need for strategic planning or are not accustomed or trained
to
think strategically."

The idea of unity within diversity is not new. In the words of John F.
Kennedy:
"The unity of freedom has never relied on uniformity of opinion."

Let there be a market of ideas, and let carefully thought out ideas bloom.
Let
us dialogue, understand and appreciate one another, in spite of different
opinions. Each of us must learn and embrace humility as a value. Unity is a
behavior that can be learned. We know the old adage: "We must all hang
together
or assuredly we shall hang separately."

Nelson Mandela reminded us, "To be free is not merely to cast off one's
chains,
but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others."

*A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam. Write
him
at **[email protected]* <[email protected]>*.
*
http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201012150400/OPINION02/12150315

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