Author Archives: Elijah Lim

What’s a lecture for?

The title of this post is of course a pathetic attempt at spoofing a well-known oldie containing the phrase “What’s forever for?” Having become acquainted with several online conversations, mainly from the Hoover Institution and many others, I have often wished that all lectures, sermons and the like be conducted in a similar fashion from […]

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The Free Market has run its course?

After what seems to me to have been a long hiatus, Thomas Sowell returned recently to Uncommon Knowledge where he talks to Peter Robinson about his latest book “Social Justice Fallacies” over two episodes. The videos are embedded below for easy reference. Do watch them. Like most Uncommon Knowledge videos, they are very well worth […]

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Champions Eat Feedback?

There are posters and “quotations” and others of similar ilk declaring to one and all that “Feedback is the breakfast of Champions”. And so all sorts of “surveys”, “feedback forms”, “hotwashes”, “debriefs”, “town hall meetings” and so forth are held every so nauseatingly often. Why? Because “Feedback is the breakfast of Champions”, of course. Ok, […]

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You’ve read it? What did it say?

Someone who hails from somewhere north of the Mediterranean happened to be in Singapore on an internship as part of his “Gap Year”. We had a short and perhaps somewhat desultory conversation on how his work was going to mitigate the effects of climate change and so forth. You know what comes next. I asked […]

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Fudge It!

I don’t like eavesdropping. There is nothing people talk about that I want to eavesdrop on. If eavesdropping were ever necessary, then what the eavesdropper was straining to hear was definitely not worth hearing. I say the same goes for “state secrets” and whatever Heads of Nations or Heads of Governments say in “secret” meetings. […]

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Dashboards. Dots and Dashes.

I casually asked a young man what he was studying in the university, and he replied “Info Systems”. “Dashboards? UX?” I prompted. “Something like that” came the reply, as though trying to answer a six-year-old and having that six-year-old stop asking. It brought two things to my mind. The first was a remark made by […]

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Masculinity isn’t toxic. It’s essential.

Someone sent me a short article and asked me whether population decline in Korea and Japan were due to declining masculinity. I didn’t ask him to define what “masculinity” meant. It doen’t mean having the ability to attract many women to want to mate with you anytime or anyhow you feel like it. It does […]

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Culture vultures?

I had an interesting conversation with someone from Nigeria this morning. He deals in producing clothes which help people with “multiple identities” define themselves. So here he is on a Southeast Asian tour getting the feel of the various cultures in this little corner of the world. That feel, combined with the different feels he […]

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Wheat and Tares. Same Benefits.

This post is meant for Christians and those who think they are. If you are neither, you are also welcome to read. If you are Singaporean, you are welcome to read also. In Matthew Chapter 13 verses 24 to 30, the parable of the wheat and tares was given in order to illustrate what the […]

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Read the text. Mind the context.

The book of 2 Peter Chapter 1 verses 5 to 7 is often taught as there being a “ladder” of “attainment”, perhaps similar to the “Five Levels of Leadership” taught by John Maxwell. The verses are here: 2 Pe 1:5-7 5 And beside this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue; and to virtue […]

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Delta Dawn’s Minimum Wage was Zero

One of the lines from the song “Delta Dawn” went like this: “Then a man of low degree stood by her side And he promised her he’d take her for his bride” This song came into my head again, and it made me think about minimum wages, which rob the unskilled and the young, trying […]

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Speaking slots full for the year?

Over the mid-April 2023 weekend, I was privileged to have been involved supporting a few talks on Creation at a few churches. In the weeks leading up to these few talks, I had also been involved in the planning and coordination for the talks. One of the things which I kept hearing was that “speaking […]

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The Orders Joab issued to the Army

In 2 Samuel Chapter 11, we read the whole sorry episode concerning King David’s adultery and the murder of Uriah the Hittite. Most people seem to be very focused on the adultery and murder and almost nothing else. We seem to take this whole episode as telling us that, had we been in King David’s […]

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Of Maids and Military Preparedness

There has been so much talk about military preparedness recently. No wonder, with what’s been going on. So much discussion and vituperation over which strategy to choose, ad nauseum. There’s really no point discussing who is more prepared than the other. Instead, we should be talking about maids. Domestic help. My countrymen live in a […]

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Come Teach Me!

This post is really an ad. Ok, now that you’re totally put off, let me announce the availability of someone who needs you. Someone who is SAD, which means Severe Attentiveness Deficit. Ok, it can also be Severe Appreciation Deficit or any number of other things you might like to conjure up. This Someone, or […]

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Read and watch these. Come back and discuss.

I’ve never studied Economics, and some topics bore me to tears because they are just talking about how to keep consuming more and more while producing less and less. Watch this first, then read the two articles: Central Banks, Gold, and the Decline of the dollar. China as a lender of last resort. Come back […]

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Covering up for each other?

In II Samuel Chapter 11, we read the whole grim episode of how King David committed both adultery and murder. Most people I know seem to think those were grievous sins, but in King David’s case, was pardonable because King David had lived a life with a perfect heart towards the Lord God. Well, those […]

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Can we bear being Berean?

The Bereans were a group of early Christians from Berea who had a reputation for checking the Scriptures daily to see if any particular preacher, even such a one as the Apostle Paul, was actually speaking truth or confusion as measured against the Word of God. That seems to be a rare enough quality, not […]

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We the people. Blame the people. Citizens too.

One of the common leadership cop-outs is the propensity for us leaders, at any level, to blame our own lack of effective leadership on “The will of the people…” In the Bible, we are given the example of King Saul, who disobeyed the instructions that God gave him through Samuel the prophet. Instead of owning […]

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Lower voting age? Why?

Listening to a video conversation this morning, I heard that the proposal to lower the voting age from 20 to 18 in Taiwan didn’t get through. That didn’t get my attention as much as the expressed disappointment of the person presenting that fact. I am not surprised at his expression of disappointment, I am just […]

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DNA and Singapore Police. Using text as data?

As time goes on, we will acquire more and more data, information and hopefully, increased understanding of “How Things Work”. The CNA article on empowering Singapore’s Police to collect DNA samples in more situations is part of that growing body of information, knowledge, etc. This is natural, and we can expect more to come. Understanding […]

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Who’s your guru? Is your guru your god?

That might sound like a strange title for a post, but as I see more and more people talking about things like having your house full of books, which is supposed to ensure literacy for your children, having personal coaches, mentors, and so on, and of course, whether you are “fans” of sports teams, stars […]

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Same, same, but different?

The title might remind you of a catchphrase some time ago, advertizing for the “Life!” section of The Straits Times. It sort of summarizes what was going through my mind as I read the article from Geopolitical Futures again. The article link is below. 1991: False Dawn History repeats itself. History rhymes. What these people […]

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To serve our generation

I read with sadness this morning that Queen Elizabeth II died on 8 Sep 2022 at Balmoral Castle in Scotland. She had been Queen for 70 years and will be missed by many. The only question on my mind was “Did she truly know the Lord Jesus Christ”? That, after all, is all that really […]

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Dependence on Institutions Breeds Corruption

A post by Geopolitical Futures’ Dr George Friedman on the state of universities nudged me to share this. The link to his article is attached. So are links to videos of separate conversations between the Honourable John Anderson and Professors James Tooley and Salvatore Babones. Do take the time to read and watch. I assure […]

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Why are we so dependent on fertilizers?

When I was younger, I was all for the idea of only using organic fertilizers, meaning animal manure, fish waste, encouraging helpful nematode proliferation (meaning earthworms, but not too much) and rotating land under cultivation to let portions lie fallow every seventh year. Recently, after hearing so much talk about how food production has actually […]

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Official overseas visits by the legislature

Why do legislatures make official overseas visits? Simple. To get more money by establishing relationships and thus increase the flow of trade, which is good for everybody. I also said before that “Navies are for networking”, with tongue in cheek, of course, but they are, if you think about it. Are you “concerned” over such […]

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Intentions. Counterfactuals.

The author of this piece, Ted Gover, PhD, Associate Clinical Professor at Claremont Graduate University, seems to know what Xi Jinping’s intentions are vis-a-vis third term prospects and armed conflict over Taiwan. I would tread carefully, since it is manifestly difficult to know what any world leader is thinking at any particular time. It might […]

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Reminders for journalists

I call this “Reminders for Journalists” because nothing I will write here is anything new, either for them or for the reading public, which includes me. Straits Times’ Opinion Editor Grace Ho writes about the often ad hominem attacks journalists, especially female journalists, face when engaging with audiences online via email and social media. Many […]

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Five Million. Let’s make it Five-Oh.

I attach the video link and also embed the video in this short post. It is a discussion between three eminent historians of today about the “Big Three” of the Second World War, namely Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin and how they fared vis-a-vis their national strategic goals as they went about defeating Hitler. This is […]

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Octopus. Octopers?

Surveys, polls and the like are nice, quick and easy tools to use, especially when they can be crafted to elicit responses one is looking for. Companies, governments, research folk and the like, seem to love using surveys, polls, modelling and so forth because they can be made to produce faster results, “conclusions” and they […]

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The god of war modelling studio

War games, business simulations, fantasy feeder games and the like are all models. Models are fantasies we create about people and places as we’d like them to be. Advertisements are models. Marketing is one big model. Political hackphrases are models. They primarily attempt to put flesh on the dry bones of the greatness we aspire […]

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The Tragic Trajectory

I have just watched George Friedman on Mauldin Economics discussing, of course, the situation in Ukraine, what it means for the rest of the world, etc. The video can be found below, and I would encourage you to watch it in its entirety, and maybe yet again if you need to in future. One of […]

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Absence of Evidence. Absence of Malice?

“Absence of evidence is not necessarily evidence of absence”, or so we have been told. Just because the water seems fresh and clear doesn’t mean the liver flukes aren’t there. We shouldn’t get paranoid over that, but we ought to still boil the water before drinking or make sure the water gets filtered or otherwise […]

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Tax, tax, tax. Thank you to my upline.

Once again, I see arguments over more tax, how to tax, whom to tax, ad nauseum. By the way, it’s “whom” to tax, not which corporations to tax. You can’t tax companies, you can only tax people. Once again, when will we take to heart that raising tax rates lowers tax revenues, and vice versa? […]

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