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2026年5月3日 星期日

The Cane is Back: A Lesson in Primal Logic

 

The Cane is Back: A Lesson in Primal Logic

Singapore, the pristine city-state where even chewing gum was once a felony, has hit a snag in its social engineering. Recent data shows a steady climb in school bullying. In response, the Ministry of Education has dusted off the old rattan cane, announcing a return to corporal punishment alongside a new set of "standardized" disciplinary measures.

From a behavioral perspective, this isn't a failure of education so much as a surrender to biology. We like to pretend that schools are sanctuaries of enlightenment where "values" are absorbed through posters and morning assemblies. But as any observer of the human animal knows, a schoolyard is less like a classroom and more like a savanna. Without a clear hierarchy or a tangible cost for aggression, the dominant young males (and increasingly females) will naturally resort to coercion to establish status.

Bullying is not an "accident" of the system; it is a primal strategy for social positioning. For years, modern pedagogy tried the "soft" approach—counselling, empathy workshops, and stern conversations. The result? A rise in incidents. The bullies calculated the risks and found them negligible. They realized that "reflection sessions" don't hurt, but social dominance feels great.

By reintroducing the cane, Singapore is acknowledging a darker, historical truth: the social contract is often written in ink but enforced by the fear of physical consequence. It is a return to the most basic business model of governance—increasing the "cost of production" for bad behavior until the "profit" of bullying disappears.

Is this a failure of education? Perhaps. But more accurately, it is an admission that thousands of years of civilization are just a thin veneer over a very persistent primate brain. When the "better angels of our nature" refuse to show up, the Ministry of Education has decided that a well-placed stroke of rattan is a much more reliable substitute for a conscience.



2026年4月19日 星期日

The Digitization of Vengeance: From Food Delivery to Fatal Hacks

 

The Digitization of Vengeance: From Food Delivery to Fatal Hacks

When a Chinese parent hires a delivery driver to shout insults at a school official over a bullying case, it isn't just a viral video—it’s a symptom of a decaying social contract. If we map the trajectory from the film Article 20 to this real-world "delivery protest," and finally to Albert Tam’s novel Justice of the Nemesis, we see a chilling evolution of how humans handle injustice when the state fails them.

Historically, the "Social Contract" suggests we give up our right to personal violence in exchange for state protection. But in the modern surveillance state, that contract is being shredded. In the film Article 20, there is still a flicker of hope: a prosecutor maneuvers through a rigid bureaucracy to find a loophole for justice. It’s a top-down "gift" from the system.

Contrast that with the "Food Delivery Shouting" phenomenon. This is the "guerilla warfare" of the marginalized. When a school protects a bully to maintain its "stability" metrics, parents realize that the law is a locked door. So, they weaponize the gig economy. For the price of a latte, they buy a public execution of a teacher’s reputation. It is cynical, humorous, and deeply tragic.

However, Albert Tam’s Justice of the Nemesis takes us to the logical, darker conclusion: the era of Digital Vigilantism. In Tam's world, the protagonist doesn't beg a prosecutor or hire a driver; they exploit the Internet of Things (IoT) to enact physical retribution. This is the ultimate irony of the surveillance state. The same cameras and data points used by governments to monitor citizens become the very tools a tech-savvy avenger uses to hunt the "untouchable" elite.

Human nature hasn't changed since the Code of Hammurabi; we still crave an eye for an eye. What has changed is the "delivery method." We are moving from the warmth of idealistic law to the cold, hard logic of the algorithm. When justice becomes a luxury item, revenge becomes the only affordable alternative.