Menurut pendapatmu seberapa imbangnya dg ignorance(s) para
eksekutif-yudikatif vs anggota legislatif? Bagaimana pendapat Novri
Susan mengenai hal ini? Sepertinya Susan telah, menurut Jawa, "nggebyah
uyah" thd para legislators.

Note
nggebyah uyah lk air laut semuanya asin

--- In [email protected], "sunny" <ambon@...> wrote:
>
>
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/opinion/the-dprs-shameful-politics-of-ign\
orance/435465
>
> The DPR's Shameful Politics of Ignorance
> Novri Susan | April 15, 2011
>
> Indonesians may already have lost the words to describe the values and
principles of lawmakers' behavior in the House of Representatives.
During the democratization era, political elites have become wilder and
shown open contempt for the system. Watching porn videos at a
legislative meeting is but the latest example.
>
> What our elites easily forget is that their power comes from people
through general election and taxes. And they show their insensitivity to
that public with the unpopular proposal to build a new legislative
building with a price tag of Rp 1.13 trillion ($131 million).
>
> The stated reason for a new House tower is the need for a more
comfortable working space and facilities. However, the public cannot
accept that reason, considering the economic conditions that are now
pushing up food and oil prices for the common consumer. And long list of
issues would seem to merit more consideration than new facilities for
lawmakers - for example, fixing national infrastructure, education and
health services for poor people. Moreover, renovating the existing DPR
building would be a perfectly acceptable solution.
>
> Here Malaysia offers an interesting comparison. The parliament in
Kuala Lumpur listened to public appeals to cancel a new legislative
building that would have been built at an expense of 800 million ringgit
($265 million). Earlier, lawmakers decided just to renovate the old
building. By its political culture, Malaysian civil society is softer
than Indonesia's in voicing public aspirations. Even so, the voice was
heard in this case. Across the strait in Indonesia, though, despite a
vigorous civil society that isn't shy about making known its concerns,
the political elites in the House ignore it.
>
> Obviously, the country's elites are afflicted by the politics of
ignorance. This impedes the proper functioning of democratic systems,
tripping up legislative, monitoring and budgeting activities. A vivid
example of this ignorance can be seen in the failure of the National
Legislation Program in 2010, in which only 10 new laws were passed out
of a target of 70. According to some reports, Indonesia has only been
able to pass a maximum of 20 laws annually since the birth of the
democracy era.
>
> Compare that number to Singapore, where from 1990-98 the parliament
was able to push through 360 new pieces of legislation - an average of
45 new laws per year, according to its Legislative Council Secretariat.
This gap in performance between the two countries offers tangible
evidence of the politics of ignorance running rampant in the DPR. Beside
the poor performance of the legislative program, the House is still
unable to fulfill its role of monitoring the executive branch of the
government, as witnessed by the failure of the Bank Century
investigation, and the slow progress being made in eradicating
corruption.
>
> Colombia University political scientist Jeffrey Friedman, through his
article about "the epistemology and politics of ignorance" stated that
the ignorance disease among politicians actually occurs as a rational
mechanism to achieve self-interested goals, such as the accumulation of
money from state budgets. Friedman calls this mechanism "deliberately
dissembling," and it occurs when politicians carry on clandestine
discussions on how to utilize state resources for personal gain. The
deliberately dissembling phenomenon can be clearly seen at work in the
House's resolute intention to proceed with the unpopular tower
construction.
>
> Basically, deliberately dissembling works best in an oligarchy. It
speaks ill of our country that it has been so easy for legislators to
ignore public appeals to drop the building project - even to the point
of seeming absurdly, deliberately obtuse on the matter.
>
> Another ridiculous political phenomenon rising up recently is House
Speaker Marzuki Alie's supposed ignorance of President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono's call to put a tight leash on budget expenditures following
the recent spikes in the price of oil. Marzuki's ignorance, along with
that of his fellow Democratic legislators, of the president's call to
reduce spending could lead to the Indonesian people's trust eroding in
the government as a whole.
>
> Moreover, many people are still questioning the overall benefit of a
democratic government on their quality of life. At a lower-income,
grassroots level, there is a persistent belief that life has gotten
tougher since the reformasi movement came into being in 1998. When
elected officials who survive on taxes fail to be responsive, the stage
is set for larger discontent to spread.
>
> As a consequence, Indonesian democracy is being threatened and broken
down by the politics of ignorance among the House's elites. After 10
years of democratization, huge swaths of the public still have yet to
see a notable increase in their prosperity. While politicians work in
their own self-interest, accumulating wealth by siphoning funds from
state budgets, more than 30 million people languish in extreme poverty.
>
> The country needs stronger leadership that can root out and exile the
politics of ignorance. Yudhoyono needs to take a firmer stand in order
to force the House to answer to the public's criticism in a substantial,
respectful manner. At the very least, he should be working to postpone
the project until his own party colleague, House Speaker Marzuki, can
offer up a compelling reason why it should proceed. Otherwise, the
public will have no choice but to assume the president is in full
support of the new office tower.
>
> Novri Susan is a doctoral candidate at the Global Studies School at
Doshisha University in Kyoto, Japan.
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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