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Tuesday, 31 July 2018

Migrants work harder

re: "Playing the ‘racist’ card" (PostBag, July 30)


Dear editor,
Peter Atkinson's defence of Barry Wallace and the like-minded against the charge that their attitudes are racist is doubtless sincere, as are the attitudes themselves. However, sincerity of belief guarantees neither truth nor decency. The Jim Crowe segregationists of 1950s America were doubtless also sincere in their beliefs about African Americans, which nonetheless remained racist and false. The same is true of Barry's claim that "if you look at the people who come to Australia, most only come to get money from the government, and many don't work and form conclaves. Also, they don't mix into Australian society."

To avoid the charge of racist prejudice prompting such accusations, they would have to be backed up by facts. The relevant facts are the statistics comparing Australian born citizens with immigrants and their children, which show Barry and his sincerely like-minded mates to be wrong. First, immigrants to Australia have higher education levels than the Australian born, with 9.2% having postgraduate degree compared to only 4.8 for the Aussie born. More tellingly, the children of migrants have consistently higher educational expectations than those of home born Australians: 60% of the children of migrants complete at least year 12, compared with only 53% of the children of parents born in Australia. Almost 50% of the children of migrants complete at least a bachelor degree, compared a low 36% for those with both parents born in Australia. These are not the statistics for a group who “only come to get money from the government.”

Naturally, this high motivation to build a better life for themselves and their children is reflected in substantial contributions to the Australian economy and to Australian society more generally. Australia and its non-immigrant population would be much worse off culturally and economically without the boons that migrants and their children bring with them.

Although racist prejudices certainly continue to exist in Australia, with 27% of Australian citizens (Yes, citizens) having experienced personal abuse or discrimination "because of their ethnicity," 86.8% of Australians report that they think it "a good thing for a society to be made up of people from different cultures."

The readily available facts, such as those cited above from The Place of Migrants in Contemporary Australia (Executive Summary), published by the Department of Immigration and Border Control, 2014, flatly contradict the sincerely believed falsehoods of Mr. Atkinson and those he would defend. To recklessly assume the truth of such false beliefs without bothering to check them is to indulge a prejudice which should properly be called racist.

Happily, at least for now in Australia, the racists continue to be losers.

 Felix Qui

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The above letter to the editor is the text as submitted by Felix Qui to the Bangkok Post.

The text as edited was published in PostBag on July 31, 2018, under the title "Migrants work harder" at https://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/postbag/1512962/identity-crisis
  

Wednesday, 25 July 2018

In a real bind

re: "Stifled speech stunts plans for future" (Opinion, July 24)


Dear editor,

The obediently passed 20-year strait jacket for Thais persistently voting against the bad old ways of Thainess sounds as wondrous in the unelected and self-amnestied PM's telling as the myth of Suvarnabhumi, whose reality turned out to have more than a few cobras infesting its swamp.

 Felix Qui

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The above letter to the editor is the text as submitted by Felix Qui to the Bangkok Post.

The text as edited was published in PostBag on July 25, 2018, under the title "In a real bind" at https://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/postbag/1509630/in-a-real-bind
  

Wednesday, 18 July 2018

Keeping the faith

re: "The faith of atheists" (PostBag, July 16)


Dear editor,

In speaking up for theists, Eric Bahrt did not get it quite right with his assertions about atheists. Atheists certainly have faith: they have faith that humans are capable of much good, although they also acknowledge the fact that when whipped up by religious fervour, humans are also capable of great evil, as in holy wars, pogroms, inquisitions, xenophobic genocide, and the like horrors that dot human history.

But the faith of atheists on what is real is radically different to that of theists. The faith of atheists is based solidly on evidence and reason: there is a vast and growing body of solid evidence that evolution is real; there is also an ever expanding body of solid evidence that helps us better understand the past, present and future of the universe we live in. In contrast, the faith of theists is, as Luther insisted, necessarily the epitome of blindness, having not a single shred of evidence or of reason to support the idea that any of the myriad gods and goddesses that delight us in uplifting stories, except when those stories are truly depressing, has the virtue of actually existing.

Atheists also have the humility, when confronted with the mysteries of the universe, to honestly say, "We don't know," unlike the facilely fake answer that "God did it."

 Felix Qui

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The above letter to the editor is the text as submitted by Felix Qui to the Bangkok Post.

The text as edited was published in PostBag on July 18, 2018, under the title "Keeping the faith" at https://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/postbag/1505502/give-boys-thai-id
  

Tuesday, 3 July 2018

What do Thais think?

Re: "Majority believe election, new govt will improve economy: poll" (BP, 2018, July 1)


Dear editor,
Polls like those regularly reported from NIDA and Suan Dusit are interesting because they might indeed represent what Thais think, which is often not what is in fact the case. Still, it's useful to know what the public thinks, albeit only on officially permitted topics.

The truly important issues to Thai society, according to common assertion, are strictly off limits to informed opinion, being protected by censorship that enforces ignorance not only of the topics themselves but of what Thai people truly think about those topics of national importance. None may know what is thought lest what?

 Felix Qui

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The above letter to the editor is the text as submitted by Felix Qui to the Bangkok Post.

The text as edited was published in PostBag on July 3, 2018, under the title "What do Thais think?" at https://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/postbag/1496570/barges-bursting