---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 10:37 AM
Subject: Recognize source of state's power
To:


**
*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
*October 13, 2010

*Recognize source of state's power
*
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

I had an uncle who liked to tell us kids, "To be interesting, you must be
interested."

Years passed, and through college I began to make connections with things
that
had seemed incomprehensible before. Many of the thoughts I had been exposed
to
began to make sense.

I ignored my father's teaching for years: "Live with cow, sleep like cow;
live
with parrot, fly like parrot" -- until I learned about the political
socialization process that molds man's behavior and his perceptions.

*Learning, growing
*

Growing up can be not so simple. Some in their 50s and 60s are still
struggling
to grow up. Others have used life's experiences to chart new courses in
life.
One can learn and grow. It can begin in small things.

Possessed, as my elementary school teacher told us, with one kilo of brain,
I
adopted my uncle's mantra: Learn and know about the world's simplicities and

complexities and its many interdependent things and become interesting and
relevant. Add your own capacity to analyze and evaluate and you can change
yourself and your surroundings.

But you must have a bedrock belief that change is possible.
*'Hyena and chicken'
*
Thanks to the freedoms we in the United States are guaranteed, we have
opportunities to publicly disagree; many lands don't allow it. Disagreement
is
not a problem; being provocatively disagreeable and quarrelsome is.

Last week, I wrote that there is no "people power" -- a term en vogue --
until
the people themselves understand -- and believe -- that the power is
actually in
their hands. I wrote that no power, force or barrier can withstand a
people's
determined efforts for rights and freedom.

Naturally, I expected anti-theses: A yin comes with a yang, just as day
comes
after night.

And so, one reader from Phnom Penh e-mailed, "Many thanks to you for having
reminded people of their unalienable rights and power." Another reader
wrote,
"Hyena or chicken can't give birth to lion."

But we deal with humans. We know all human minds can be taught.
*Power of the minds
*
Last June, I wrote about the movie "Invictus," about South Africa's black
anti-apartheid activist-turned-president, Nelson Mandela, who condemned the
white rugby team when he was in jail, then -- after he was released from
prison
-- successfully turned the white team into a national team for blacks and
whites. The team won South Africa the third Rugby World Cup in 1995.


A recently released movie, "Robin Hood," tells the backstory of Robin
Longstride, a veteran of the Third Crusade who traveled to 13th century
England's Nottingham, where people suffered corruption, crippling taxation
and
the abuse of a tyrannical sheriff. Longstride became Robin the Hood, led an
uprising against the crown and became the symbol of the people's freedom.

His father also led his people against tyranny when Robin was a boy. His
father
was executed by the royal sword. Hood's father's motto, inscribed on a
hidden
stone and on the handle of a sword, reads: "Rise and rise again until lambs
become lions."

The words mean don't ever give up fighting for the cause of liberty --
persevere, rise and rise again, until lions are born out of docile lambs and

liberty is achieved.

In the history of the Khmers, Khmer "lions" emerged and fought valiantly. As

with the builders of Angkor, Khmer ingenuity is not unknown.

*Nonviolent action
*
Political science professor emeritus Gene Sharp, holder of Oxford
University's
doctor of philosophy in political theory, founded the nonprofit Albert
Einstein
Institution in Boston in 1983 to promote research, policy studies and
education
on the strategic uses of nonviolent struggle in the face of dictatorship,
war,
genocide and oppression.

He wrote "From Dictatorship to Democracy: A Conceptual Framework for
Liberation"
in 1993, providing "guidelines to assist thought and planning" in liberation

movements against dictatorship, based on 40 years of research and writing.
It
was written at the request of the late exiled Burmese democrat U Tin Maung
Win,
editor of Khit Pyaing (The New Era Journal). It was supposed to be used by
the
Burmese.

But many freedom fighters in the world found it useful. The book has been
translated into 30 languages.

In Spring 2000, the International Republican Institute tapped retired U.S.
Army
Col. Robert Helvey, who has past experience in Burma, to conduct a workshop
in
Budapest, Hungary, on the nature and potential of nonviolent struggle. Some
20
young Serbs attended. Copies of Sharp's best-known book, "The Politics of
Nonviolent Action," were distributed.

These young Serbs later led the Otpor (Resistance) movement's nonviolent
struggle that brought down Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic.

*Sharp's Concepts
*
Political power is derived from the "subjects of the state." The state uses
specific institutions (police, courts, regulatory bodies) to extract
subjects'
obedience, based on sanctions (jail, fines) and rewards (titles, wealth,
fame).

Since any power structure is based on the subjects' obedience to the orders
of
the ruler(s), if subjects do not obey, then leaders have no power. If
subjects
recognize they are the source of the state's power, they can refuse to obey
and
their leader(s) will be left without power.

So says Sharp. And so say many who have understood and acted on his theses.

Khmers can learn from that, like the young Serbs did.

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam. Write
him
at [email protected].

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201010130300/OPINION02/10130316



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