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Song Hing's space

A Singapore Journalist's Perspectives on the World

Song Hing, Cheong

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Wonderful article and quotes from Thomas Jefferson.  I hope that your courage is contagious, and that our press decides it is
time to be truly free and search for the truth with this encouragement.  Also, it was wonderful to see the pictures of women
serving and fighting and supporting their countries.  Thank you.
May 6

Singapore News

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May 22

David M. Deems, a common but great American volunteer in China

In a rural area at the Wild Wild West of China, there is an American volunteer teacher working humbly and quietly to educate the poor children for years. His name is David M. Deems. To many Chinese, he is a "Yang Lei Feng" (Foreign Lei Feng); to me, he is a Albert Schweitzer in the modern day. I strongly believe that his story should be known be his fellow compatriots, and that is why I write this email to all of you. Below are some links about him, unfortunately only two are in English and the rest are in Chinese, so if you are really interested, get someone who know Chinese to translate for you.

Web page in English:

David M. Deems - A Great Teacher
May 16

A dialogue between two common folks in Singapore and the USA

Song-Hing Cheong: Hi, Jason, nice to meet you.

myrla5: Thank you--it is my pleasure.

myrla5: You are a journalist by profession I assume.

Song-Hing Cheong: yap, in a Chinese Daily in Singapore.

Song-Hing Cheong: I believe you know Chinese too, aren't you?

myrla5: Well I am much honored--I am not a journalist, but I have learned some Chinese.

Song-Hing Cheong: Where you learnt Chinese? Taiwan? Hong Kong? China? Or in the US

myrla5: US---mostly educational CDs and computer, but also chat with Chinese speakers on the internet or phone--very helpful.

Song-Hing Cheong: I see. I have blog in Chinese too. If you want to read it, I can give you the link.

myrla5: Sure.

Song-Hing Cheong: hand on a second.

Song-Hing Cheong: http://blog.sina.com.cn/zhangcongxing

Song-Hing Cheong: are you a teacher or a researcher?

myrla5: Truly I am neither--I just become curious about Chinese culture after learning some Chinese Qi Kong and Tai chi chuan.

myrla5: So I learned some Mandarin.

myrla5: very great website.

myrla5: You come from Buddhist tradition I see.

Song-Hing Cheong: ha-ha, after reading your blog, I thought that you are a journalist, because you commented on Communism and Iraq war that are the issues we in the newsroom monitoring every minute. Ha-ha!

Song-Hing Cheong: yap, I am a Buddhist.

myrla5: ha-ha -- no I just have very strong opinions.

myrla5: I am an average American.

Song-Hing Cheong: may I know what are you doing for a living?

myrla5: lab technician.

myrla5: medical health field.

Song-Hing Cheong: I am an electronic technician by training too, but I decided to go into the news business.

myrla5: very interesting--I would probably do the same if I could make enough money--how do you like it?

Song-Hing Cheong: I just came back from the USA, took a lot of pictures, you can see them in my Chinese blog.

myrla5: That's great--I will do that--what city?

Song-Hing Cheong: aha, about 18 years ago, I wrote a piece of commentary about the Tiananmen Incident in 1989, and the editor of the paper I working in now, decided to employ me.

myrla5: That is wonderful--a great career change.

Song-Hing Cheong: I visited the D.C, the Twin cities in Minnesota and the Tampa Bay area in Florida.

myrla5: How did you like DC?

Song-Hing Cheong: I read your profile in details and find that we have common interests, enjoy travel, picture taking, museums, politics, and Chinese cultures.

Song-Hing Cheong: I like DC; it is very European in terms of Architecture.

myrla5: Yes--you are very right

myrla5: Since the first settlers were from England.

myrla5: but of course America now has many different people and cultures.

Song-Hing Cheong: I hate skyscraper, and DC does not has high rise buildings, that is another reason I like it.

Song-Hing Cheong: Although the first settlers were from England, but the French helped the American to fight the British.

myrla5: yes and native Americans helped.

Song-Hing Cheong: That is why DC was original designed by the French that was what I was told.

myrla5: You may be right--I am no expert --but The Statue of Liberty was from France--and some of the architecture is more like Greek design.

myrla5: The round pillars are like Greek coliseum.

Song-Hing Cheong: yes, the Lincoln memorial is a replica of the Parthenon.

myrla5: ha--you know more things about America in some ways.

myrla5: more than me.

Song-Hing Cheong: believe you or not, we in Asia know more about the American than the American know about us.

myrla5: I think you are right.

myrla5: I think the rest of the worlds are very curious about America.

Song-Hing Cheong: In my Primary School text book, written in Chinese, there was a lesson about the honest boy who chopped down a cherry tree...

myrla5: hen you yisi

Song-Hing Cheong: you know who he was.

myrla5: Washington.

Song-Hing Cheong: This story is also teaching in the schools in mainland china now: 华盛顿和一棵樱桃树

myrla5: I think it is great that other people are learning about America.

Song-Hing Cheong: A beautiful Taiwanese singer even has a song about this story.

Song-Hing Cheong: http://music.ent.tom.com/2007-05-10/0050/22240932.html

myrla5: So, I think many in China are very curious about America and its founding.

myrla5: and system of government.

Song-Hing Cheong: maybe, but the main reason is for moral education - Washington is a model of honesty.

Song-Hing Cheong: A virtue which the Presidents of the modern USA lack of.

myrla5: I agree.

Song-Hing Cheong: that is a pity,

myrla5: I do not like our leadership

myrla5: Yes, it is a pity--because America can be so much greater with better leadership.

Song-Hing Cheong: I was invited by the State Department to participate in the Edward R. Murrow Program for journalists.

myrla5: That seems like a great honor.

Song-Hing Cheong: The main reason is to let people from all over the world to come to America to have a better understanding of the American.

Song-Hing Cheong: To be frank, I think that what the US government needs to do is the opposite.

Song-Hing Cheong: They should try to let more American elites to understand the world outside the New Continent.

myrla5: Interesting how we agree on so many things.

myrla5: although we are from different countries and cultures.

Song-Hing Cheong: you know Chinese, so I can share something with you.

Song-Hing Cheong: The Chinese believe in Qiu Tong Cun Yi (求同存异), that is what the American believe in Agree to Disagree.

Song-Hing Cheong: The Chinese believe in He Er Bu Tong(和而不同), that is what the American believes in Unity in Diversity.

Song-Hing Cheong: In fact, the American and the Chinese share more in common than differences.

myrla5: I think most Americans and Chinese people think that way, but not the elite.

Song-Hing Cheong: Yes, that is also a pity.

myrla5: Yes, I agree that most people regardless of culture believe in truth and justice

Song-Hing Cheong: in fact, what happening in China now is a revival of an old civilization; it is not a rise of a new superpower, as advocated by some of the Hawkish.

Song-Hing Cheong: even if you want to phrase it as a superpower, the Chinese Communist is also not a replica of the Soviet.

myrla5: Yes, I agree the soviet model is gone.

Song-Hing Cheong: The reality in China now is a capitalist system lead by a Communist Party.

myrla5: Yes---capitalism is a reality that no one can avoid.

Song-Hing Cheong: more capitalist than the USA.

myrla5: I agree---and that seems to be a contradiction because the Communist have always spoke against the capitalist dogs.

myrla5: It is in so many ways contrary to Communist principles.

Song-Hing Cheong: it is a very interesting episode. What happening in China now, for examples, the explicit exploitation which you can never find in Japan, the EU, the USA, etc,

Song-Hing Cheong: was what condemned by Karl Marx in his writings.

myrla5: Yes--America is more for the proletariat-an interesting reversal.

myrla5: There will always be people in power under any system--I think there needs only to be balance and harmony in society.

Song-Hing Cheong: that is why I still believe in what Marx predicted; Communism can only be achieved after the highest stage of Capitalism.

Song-Hing Cheong: America is more socialist than the Communist China - my observation after three-week stay in the US.

myrla5: I agree with you absolutely---and I think there are principles that remain no matter what form of government.

Song-Hing Cheong: My other observation is that the American is more Confucianist than the Chinese.

myrla5: Without work there is no production---without reward, there is no incentive to work--these are important principles.

Song-Hing Cheong: for instant, many of the old virtues of the ancient Chinese were abandoned by the modern Chinese, but you can still find these virtues in modern American common folks live.

Song-Hing Cheong: Caring of family, proper manners, honesty, etc.

myrla5: That is very interesting, but I think most people have some good and some bad.

Song-Hing Cheong: agree.

Song-Hing Cheong: what I am saying is an impression from a foreigner like me who is a totally stranger.

Song-Hing Cheong: I never visited the USA before, this was my first time.

myrla5: I see---that is very flattering to the American people.

myrla5: That is a great compliment.

Song-Hing Cheong: The America I knew before my foot touched the New Continent was from the media, Hollywood Movies for instance.

myrla5: I can understand that -- was the old impression accurate or not accurate?

myrla5: Did your impression change?

Song-Hing Cheong: Then I found out that the common folks in the streets are not those heroes or devils portrayed in the films.

myrla5: Truly I think all people are basically the same inside although sometimes different language and culture.

myrla5: Scientists have traced all humans to a common ancestor in Africa where they believe the first humans lived and then migrated to the rest of the world.

Song-Hing Cheong: Yap, if you are a religious fellow, then I will say, "We are all the same because we are the same off springs of Adam and Eve."

Song-Hing Cheong: If you believe in Darwinism, than I will say, "We are all the same because we are the same offspring of the Apes."

Song-Hing Cheong: No manner we are offspring of Adam and Eve or the Apes, we are the same.

myrla5: I completely agree.

Song-Hing Cheong: So we are all brothers and sisters in a big family.

myrla5: We agree on so many things, we are like brothers.

Song-Hing Cheong: maybe different in colors, different in faiths, different in cultures, but why not we look in what we are common in and forget about the differences.

myrla5: Yes -- and in America one must learn to accept others because there are so many different people -- or we live in a very small world.

Song-Hing Cheong: If the political elites in the different governments in different nations can think in this way, we can live in a better world.

myrla5: Yes I agree, but unfortunately power o the elite always lead to arrogance.

myrla5: power creates arrogance.

myrla5: So, perhaps the people need more power and less power for the elite.

Song-Hing Cheong: Oops! I have to prepare my lunch now. Enjoy chatting with you. This is a very meaningful discussion. If you agree, I shall publish it on my blog under this title: A dialogue between two common folks in Singapore and the USA.

myrla5: No problem.

Song-Hing Cheong: Great! Thank you.

May 15

My favorite oldies - Five hundred miles, Country Roads and Massachusetts

                                                               
   
       I Have A Dream by ABBA
        
         Five Hundred Miles by The Brothers Four        
                
Country Roads by John Denver       
                
Massachusetts by Bee Gees     
 

Charming waitress and delicious oyster

In April 21, 2007, Zhongxiao Guo, Chong Wang , Sonia Ng and me visited the Central Ave Oyster Bar, located at 249 Central Ave, St Petersburg, Florida. We ordered four dozen of oysters and some side orders. The oysters were very delicious and the price are reasonable. Environment was conducing. The service of Holy, the waitress, was very good. You can never believe this: we went back to the same restaurant two more times in the next four days!


Sonia, Guo, Wang and me visited the Central Ave Oyster Bar at 4/21/2007. Sonia told the Boss we are coming again
I took a photo with Holy the waitress. Finally, the delicious and soothy oysters.

May 14

The newspapers headlines of the Armageddon Day

If tomorrow is the the Armageddon Day (The End of the World) and the newsroom editors already knew that, then the above headlines may appear on the Front Pages of some newspapers......

 
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