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Notis: Laman MR2, Univ. Australia, Net Influence By Editor 30/1/2001 5:07 am Tue |
Ada dua pengumuman:
Untuk memenuhi ruang notis ini, mungkin elok jika kami sajikan sesuatu untuk
dibaca. Ia merupakan satu rencana oleh MGG Pillai dalam laman
malaysia.cnet.com pada tahun lepas. HOW TO INFLUENCE FRIENDS AND CONVINCE PEOPLE THROUGH THE INTERNET
M.G.G. Pillai The importance of marketing throws the debate off scent in most
countries. And no where is this more evident, and more contentious, in
the region and beyond than in politics. The opposition, hemmed in by
official rules and policies more often than not, find the Internet a boon
and godsend; the government, while usually taking the lead in making that
available, have allowed it to seize the advantage. In Indonesia, Burma,
Malaysia, Vietnam, government peccadillos are mercilessly portrayed by
interested parties to a gamut of citizenry with access to the Internet.
The government, in each case, either ignore the threat, or grin and grimly
push on. In every country in Asia, except India, the official view
predominates. Or did until Internet became so widespread.
In Malaysia, the Internet is the preserve of the Opposition, which
embraced it with verve and gusto, using it not to affirm its modernity but
as a tool to gets its message across. What egged this along is the
political crisis of confidence Malaysia found herself in when her former
deputy prime minister, Dato' Seri Prime Minister, was forcibly dismissed,
arrested, beaten-up, jailed and harrassed. His supporters used the
Internet to spread his case through the Internet. At one time more
than a hundred websites pressed his case. These were often downloaded,
copied and widely distributed. So widespread did this become that the
government's version, when it came, was disbelieved. The Internet gave
the Opposition, not just the political parties but any whose views
differed from the official. The two political parties who use the Internet so efficiently in
Malaysia is the Islamic party PAS and the Democratic Action Party, both
from the opposition ranks. When restrictions were put on the PAS organ,
Harakah, it began publishing an Internet edition, with daily updates
through another website. The DAP has its bungaraya mailing list and
localists websites. The governing National Front parties have a token
presence, but little else. But those whose views run counter to the
official have come in to fly the flag. The UMNO dissident, the former
cabinet minister, Dato' Shahrir Samad, who surprised everyone by being
returned to the party's supreme council, has now established his own
website in which not only does he present his views on current politics,
not necessarily compatible with his party's, but an opportunity for
on-line discussion. It is a hit. In the first week, by little more than
word of mouth, he had 800 hits. But he created a trend. This one-line debating with constituents is
new. The UMNO youth leader and cabinet minister, Dato' Hishamuddin
Hussein, did so through the Internet newspaper, Malaysiakini. The Parti
Rakyat Malaysia president, Dr Syed Husin Ali, followed. The chairman of
the DAP, Mr Lim Kit Siang, recently had an online conference with his
supporters on Bungaraya. More would follow. Interestingly, all this is
done without the citizen barely knowing about this. The mainstream media
ignores this, with the Dato' Shahrir initiative reported by only
one. But this is an important development which the governing parties
can ignore at its peril. It is not money or the latest equipment that counts at the end of the
day. It is determination. Which is why Washington could not defeat
Hanoi, whose national resilience for a thousand years required it to
remove every foreigner who dared conquer his country. But the political
scene in many Southeast Asian countries is fixated in this paradox,
believing that its high moral ground should overcome opposition political
savvy. It would have at one time. Not any more. It is practical use of
what it has, than the equipment, that determines who gets the
advantage. The opposition parties and those out of sync with the ruling
party who agilely work through cyberspace to spread the word.
The Internet ensures that the citizen gets as different views and
opinions as there are. It has become the preferred choice of all who has
a message to impart, not just politicians, but everyone. The profusion of
mailing lists on the Internet, for just about any group. It enables me,
for instance, to ward off the mental vaccuum that retirement brings. I
had not expected my Sang Kancil mailing list to take off as it did.
Indeed, it languished in its first two years, until the Anwar saga pushed
it into the centre stage. It succeeds because what I, and several others,
write, with its warts and shortcomings, express a point of view. They are
often hotly challenged, but usually from anonymous critics, or those who
insist upon questioning motives. I stayed clear of personality attacks,
challenging the views expressed and not descending to the gutter. I stand
my ground. I do not claim omniscience, and my views for what it is worth
just one point of view. There is now one website just to attack me.
They were once on Sang Kancil, but had to unsubscribed because their view
of debate was to issues with personal attacks.
And it is points of view, not the news, that people want. The why of
events is more important than the what or how of when. The newspapers,
especially the mainstream, have given up the ghost, and present its
readers with a daily list of happenings, with little or no attempt to
analyse and present a view that the reader could accept or discard. The
mindless "infotainment" on television and radio dulls into soporific
irrelevance. When a man begins his day with looking at television
schedules, it shows his irrelevance. He resents it. And so when he is
given a choice to exercise his mind, and be part of a movement, he grabs
the opportunity. A cabinet minister told me how shocked he was when his
old golfing friend, with no interest in politics, suddenly champions the
cause of "reformasi". The man said he now felt he had a role to play,
something lacking in 25 years of retirement. It is this resurgence by the
marginalised that the Internet and cyberspace that awakens.
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