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yaacov | 4 years ago

One of the most interesting parts of Lee Kuan Yew’s book for me was when he talked about all the critics he sued for libel. He justified it as “of course I sued them for libel, otherwise why would anyone believe me when I said they were lying?”

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jb1991|4 years ago

I once saw a book written by a 90s politician in Singapore that, in part, tried to explain why there is no free press in Singapore. The reason was that since all press are corrupt, the government cannot allow them. I found that amazing in its arrogance.

seanmcdirmid|4 years ago

This probably has a lot to do with Singapore's fragile existence after founding...after being kicked out of a union with Malaysia due to racial reasons, and with communist insurgencies in vogue in the 1960s/70s. I'm not defending them, just that their history is a reason why Singapore is Singapore.

tmule|4 years ago

Libel laws exist in Europe too, including UK. Their existence, per se, isn’t problematic.

xxpor|4 years ago

From an American perspective they certainly are, but I realize we're the odd ones out here with extremely strong 1st amendment protections.

digianarchist|4 years ago

This is how the PAP keeps the opposition suppressed in Singapore.

refurb|4 years ago

Indeed. The one that stuck out to me is when a constituency votes PAP out, PAP turns off the money. HDBs aren't "selected" for upgrades. Public works projects are delayed, etc. And LKY fully admitted this - "If you don't vote for PAP, why should you benefit from our spending?".