Friday, December 02, 2005

The Real Loss

Today marks the day where one young man has lost his life. To many, that particular loss is justified. Principally, because it is to prove a point. A show of face. And to that same "majority", that has been interpreted as a sign of courage. Perhaps a demonstration of sensibility, rationality and justice to do the "right thing". For that man has been condemned as a deviant, an outsider, a criminal, and fortunately demands no respect or sympathy from us. That's how, in fact, this same "majority" expects all of us to treat people whom are labelled as that sort. So the loss of this person's life comes as no challenge to our conscience.

This man has lost more than that. He has lost the ability to live a fulfilling life, one that few of us take privilege of. He has lost the ability to experience the moments of joy, happiness, anger, anguish, sadness, and other indescrible human moments that we also have reasons to cherish. He has lost the experiencing these moments with his friends, family, peers and other fellow human beings that we probably stll have a lot to learn from. All of this has been stripped from him, because we have lost the priceless ability to judge our fellow human beings with some degree of humanity, but rather treated him like a statistic that will "save us all".

That's great reason, just as this man has passed away in a most "barbaric" manner (as described by the Attorney General in Australia, Phillip Ruddock), to reflect and introspect on our position in this situation. But it's also an indication of a prerogative, that has not always been demanded of us, to sit back and observe ourselves for who we really are, and how much of a more sincere and more cooperative society has been diminished due to our ignorance and our fears. The execution of Nguyen Tuong Van is, as blown up as it is, a microscopic event that has shown our fallability to fear campaigns and propaganda, and rather aptly eroded our better judgment and conscience.

I will not repeat the same points I made in my below article, but suffice to say, I wish to demolish a central claim that has been made about the death penalty acting as a deterrent to drug trafficking. What this claim asked us to implicitly assume is that behind every human being, there is a rational being who is taking a cost-benefit analysis to his/her everyday decision. That surely, death must be the most scary thing of all, and that the rational human being would construe no benefit that exceeds the spectre of death. This rather simplistic assumption is, naturally, the ethos of every public policy in Singapore, thus condensing all our complex psychosocial factors and phenomena into a robotic cog in a machine, who only knows how to make the rational cost-benefit analysis in his/her head. What this silly assumption has been truly done is to rationalize drug users/traffickers as well, ignoring that drug use is a multi-faceted complex social phenomeon, that goes beyond the benefit of "getting high", and actually requests that we "solve" this problem with more than just a rope, but with more indepth understanding of how do people come to take and transport drugs.

A researcher (whose work is as yet to be published, hence I can't cite) who has interviewed drug traffickers, came to the conclusion that 1) these people were mostly poorly-educated about the laws of drug trafficking 2) were in desperate situations that forced them to undertake this illegal activity, and 3) even if aware of the harsh penalties, had decided to continue with the activity for various reasons or factors (i.e. no other way to make money, threatened by the drug lords, etc). Does the person who perform acts of murder, arson, and other criminal activities perform the "cost-benefit" analysis before the commercement of the act? Does the suicide bomber who pulls the cord think rationally of his actions, or even care about the cost? In fact, do we, as normal human beings, always act as calculating robots in all of our decisions?

The death penalty, as a social practice (one that is interpreted symbolically but never supported empirically), is a dreadful practice that we would like to imagine "works". But it has never worked, except to strip our humanity and our ability to go beyond the retributive bias in our heads. Whatever the debate is between Singapore and Australia pro or anti death penalty supporters, one undeniable point is clear: to ask that someone be executed for a crime that is disproportionate to the act, to take away a person's life to construct a symbolic meaning but has no empirical utility, and to label someone with a stigma without understanding farther, only diminishes our humanity. Singaporeans, or Australians, who only imagine there is no alternative, have become almost identical to those "holy" men who engage in vicious, gratitious witch-burning in the past.

Singaporeans may gain a brief moment of relief that this man has been killed. They would also continue enjoying feeling "free" from the scourge of drugs. They may think they are protected, and that this state-sanctioned practice may affect them in only positive ways. But as they churn and turn in this mechanistic society of ours, as they continue bringing in the dough, either struggling to make ends' means or secure more financial stability, as they continue relatively unfazed in their every day, not in search for meaning and understanding but in unabridled pursuit for wealth and material goods, never have they thought that the loss of their compassion, reason, conscience and humanity is the most priceless thing of all.

This post is dedicated to Nguyen Tuong Van and his family and friends who have to contend with more than the loss of their son, brother and friend, but the loss of faith and trust in fellow man.

7 Comments:

Blogger boy_fromOz said...

I don't think any of your researcher's tbree conclusions apply to Nguyen. Nguyen wasn't poorly educated, he wasn't in a 'desperate situation' and I doubt there were no alternative means of paying his brother's legal fees.

But your point about the absurdity of applying rational analysis to drug addiction was well-made. By its very nature addiction displaces rational calculation, so the idea that more severe sanctions for trafficking will improve deterrence doesn't hold water.

Conversely this provides an argument against legalising heroin (as opposed to less addictive drugs like marijuana), which is a running debate here in Australia.

11:31 PM  
Blogger chemgen said...

I agree that the death penalty as a deterrence argument is flimsy. But its supporters would instead insist that if capital punishment itself does not scare drug traffickers (in the context of Nguyen), what else can scare them? Their position would be that if there is no death penalty imposed, there would be greater instances of drug trafficking.

Maybe all should propose a better deterrence solution. Life imprisonment Guantanamo Bay style is one option but it might fall under "unusual" punishment though.

10:44 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

chemgen,

To summarize your statement then is to ask the question: Would there be more or less incidences of drug trafficking to/through Singapore if there was no death penalty?

The question is not would one single trafficker change his mind but whether any will.

Logic dictates that at least one trafficker would choose to traffic through some other airport that is not Singapore's. There are easier ports of call in Asia to get your drugs through than Changi and the penalty would be lower if caught. Maybe Singapore is just catching the dumb ones - I don't know. If one less human dies because he/she didn't overdose because that load did not hit the streets because the trafficker went elsewhere or didn't want the risk, that alone would be worth it.

Too many keep forgetting that the lives of the drug consumers outweighs the money that a drug courier gets.

12:22 AM  
Blogger chemgen said...

To Anonymous 1222

Admittedly, nobody can agree if the death penalty is the best sort of deterrence for drug traffickers as a whole.

To go off-topic. Relooking at the whole problem from another perspective, what the death penalty signals, apart from accusations of an inhumane justice system in Singapore, is that Singapore is recognised in the international community as a player who is willing to do its part, however brutal, in the drug trafficking industry. Note the use of 'despite' in the description of Singapore's efforts. It suggests some failure although there is commitment. Singapore's transport hub and financial success is its drug trafficking problem in a way.

http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/fields/2086.html

10:50 AM  
Blogger Binty McShae said...

It never ceases to amaze me how many people claim that the Death Penalty reduces crime because people are too afraid then to commit it. If that was the case there would be no crime, right? The problem is that people who break the law usually do so because they do not think that they will get caught....

I despise the Death Penalty for any crime. I do not think it is right to kill at all, and certainly not out of some sense of justice / revenge. Two wrongs do not make a right, and all that.

Anyway, interestingly enough I wrote a related piece recently (about the Koh Samui murderers) which the bloggers in my 'community' ended up debating about. With you coming across as far more eloquent than the rest of us I would be interested if you wish to add anything. The post is at http://averagetosser.blogspot.com/2006/01/justice-and-revenge.html and contains a link to an earlier post I did about Nguyen.

Incidentally, I completely stumbled on this blog through random search...

3:18 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

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» »

11:21 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree: very interesting!

2:36 PM  

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