On Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 6:46 AM, Srini RamaKrishnan <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>
> On a recent visit I noticed that Singapore seems to do this at a
> larger scale - where there are a lot of neighborhood outreach programs
> that bridge the ethnic gaps. There are weekly meetings, outreach
> workers and such.
>
> Maybe Chew Lin can expand?
>
>
Arguably we need the state and civil society to do all these things because
left to our own devices, we hardly smile at our neighbours? :)

Throwing a comment out there until I find more brain space to deal with
it--there is diversity of race, there is diversity of religion, there is
diversity of class. In Singapore we talk a lot about racial harmony, and
we're starting to talk about religious harmony (banning Campus Crusade for
Christ from operating at the National University--not necessarily the
smartest move. But altar wrecking is not necessarily the best plan for
building goodwill either), but we've not, till recently, been able to talk
about the poor in the community (see: income gap as a big election issue.
unfortunately the rhetoric of "they're poor cause they didn't work hard" is
still a popular one in certain circles, and it all gets messy when race and
class intersect).

CL

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