Why this American chose to spend his entire life in Singapore

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 416

  • @MaxChernov
    @MaxChernov  Год назад +4

    Watch the SECOND PART of the interview with Jim Baker here - ruclips.net/video/g-Ewy6MPWok/видео.html

  • @snow8888
    @snow8888 Год назад +25

    My father was a British Air Force pilot posted in Singapore in 1953. Much of what Mr Baker described was also what my father experienced. After Singapore declared independence in 1965, my dad was a pilot for Singapore Airlines and became a Singaporean. He also could speak Malay and later Mandarin.
    It's wonderful to listen to the various experiences of expatriates in Singapore, especially those who have lived there for decades..

  • @frostyphish7149
    @frostyphish7149 Год назад +179

    I went to Singapore American School and Mr. Baker was my teacher!! What a great guy

    • @chua2237
      @chua2237 Год назад

      Here we worship white man

    • @vorlon81
      @vorlon81 Год назад +2

      Do you miss the Food 😉

    • @SiaanLala
      @SiaanLala Год назад +1

      @@vorlon81He wouldn’t 😂

    • @frostyphish7149
      @frostyphish7149 Год назад +6

      @@SiaanLala Mr. Ho’s fried rice was 👌🏻

    • @cyndimoring9389
      @cyndimoring9389 Год назад +3

      he was my teacher when I went there too. Class of '73.

  • @yut576
    @yut576 Год назад +151

    Mr Baker is indeed a Singapore treasure as the witness to the history and insight into SG society then and now. I am quite surprised by how his insight on the little things such as :
    1) The use of Malay as a common language between the races including with white people too. Despite being SG's national language, this is not actively encouraged among Singaporeans.
    2) The effects of the EIP in the public housing system on minorities preserving the culture and norms on top of difficulties in resale.
    3) The fact that SG was already quite a modern and wealthy city/state as far back as in the thirties and not solely due to LKY and PAP - was another interesting fact that was rarely mentioned.
    4) Term he used such as "colour bar" is not commonly used today in SG to describe racial attitudes and segregationist practices.
    Great work, Max, for interviewing a living witness (an objective one) to SG history.

    • @yip2454
      @yip2454 Год назад +2

      yup back the south cbd today stretching to siglap was already well planned modern city of that time. its only the west north and mostly east were fishing villages and villages.

    • @jameslim3850
      @jameslim3850 Год назад +2

      So the Politicians in Singapore LIED and claim Singapore was just a fishing village when PAP took over in 1959 when in reality it was already a modern city since the British colonial days.

    • @yip2454
      @yip2454 Год назад +6

      @@jameslim3850 there were fishing villages, rubber plantation, but there were well built sea ports air ports and a cbd of that era. Singapore was a well equipped colony of that time compared to others because of the importance to the brits. To solely put as a fishing village is false. But the PAP did modernize us to a global level especially when sg hit the 80s.

    • @LDK447
      @LDK447 Год назад +2

      I don’t think anyone says Singapore was a fishing village in 1959. They say it was a fishing village in 1819, when Stamford Raffles came. This saying was never about the PAP or whatever. I think we all know Singapore was an established trading hub ever since the British came in the 1800s, since that’s exactly what they came for.
      They do however often quote than Singapore was a third world country, which the PAP rapidly transformed to a first world one. This is technically true, but yes Singapore was definitely on the upper end of the ‘third world’ countries. It’s not a very descriptive way to categorize countries anyway.

    • @jameslim3850
      @jameslim3850 Год назад +1

      It was the PAP politicians who created that fairy tale story from fishing village to so called vibrant city when it was already a metropolis back in the 1950s. this is called political narrative and brainwashing by PAP@@LDK447

  • @alemmat1750
    @alemmat1750 Год назад +70

    Please more interviews with Mr. Baker, a living history book.

  • @stephen2429
    @stephen2429 Год назад +75

    Good watch. I was a young British soldier serving in Singapore. Nee Soon camp between 1973- 75. Loved my time there, been back a couple of times over the years.

    • @panda63725
      @panda63725 Год назад +15

      Stephen, thank you for your service and to be part of Singapore's critical time in history. ❤

    • @limbehh8494
      @limbehh8494 Год назад +8

      Welcome u back.. thanks for your service. Greeting from a Singaporean

    • @esther2355
      @esther2355 Год назад +4

      I was staying in Nee Soon, near Transit Road. There was a camp there.

    • @georgepereira1277
      @georgepereira1277 Год назад +4

      My father worked at Nee Soon camp with the British Army. If I remember correctly the British pulled out of Singapore in 1972. After that there were the combined forces of Australia, New Zealand & UK called ANZUK

    • @CaptKenneth
      @CaptKenneth Год назад +3

      Hope to see you back here in Singapore soon 😊

  • @marcservos3790
    @marcservos3790 Год назад +15

    I'm an American who's been in Singapore since 2000 with the exception of three years back in the States during that time. Jim Baker wrote The American Journey in Singapore to commemorate the American Association's Centennial in 2017, which I have a copy of. In an article I wrote for the AAS periodical a year and a half ago, I cited Mr. Baker and that book. He gives a lot of interesting information in this video about Singapore life since the 1950s, which I appreciate. My thanks to Jim and Max.

  • @samraj3179
    @samraj3179 Год назад +43

    I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Jim Baker is living history of Singapore. I loved how he has noticed the loss of past structures with modernization that has changed almost everything except food. Thank you Max for your great find.

  • @eslgurucalif
    @eslgurucalif Год назад +29

    This fellow clearly has a sharp mind and invaluable perspective on the evolution of a singular country. I've visited Singapore many times but feel as though I understand it better today. Nice interview, Max.

  • @azfarissirafza
    @azfarissirafza Год назад +35

    One of your best interviews yet! 👏🏼

  • @chenyinmei6466
    @chenyinmei6466 Год назад +29

    he is Singaporean..he is not wearing shoes or slippers at home..love this conversation..thank you

    • @SethyTan
      @SethyTan Год назад +4

      he has a sandal tan, can't get anymore boomer singaporean 🤣

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад +2

      Takes more than going barefoot at home to make one Singaporean.

    • @blue-xb1cq
      @blue-xb1cq Год назад +2

      ​@@anchored555- he lived in Singapore longer than 3/4 of the "Singaporians"

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад +2

      Maybe, but he’s still very American in his speech and thinking. Surprising considering he came here at age 2. As they say, you can take an American out of America but you can’t take America out of him.

  • @sohfihamid4164
    @sohfihamid4164 Год назад +43

    Thanks for featuring Jim Baker. I know him as an educator at Singapore American School. I was hoping you featured his wife, Junia Baker. She is one of the best writers / editors I have worked with.

    • @MaxChernov
      @MaxChernov  Год назад +20

      She passed away 3 years ago unfortunately…

    • @sohfihamid4164
      @sohfihamid4164 Год назад +5

      @@MaxChernov that is very sad. I know her more in person when I was working at SAS a decade now. Thanks for sharing.

    • @syarifahnajwa5491
      @syarifahnajwa5491 Год назад +1

      ​@@MaxChernov😢

  • @vincenttravelsg
    @vincenttravelsg Год назад +27

    Thank you for the interview. It's insightful to learnt from someone living here for 70 years and sharing on the transformation of Singapore.

  • @graham263cox
    @graham263cox Год назад +35

    Hey Max, as a British person living in SG with a local wife for the past 12 years, I have really been enjoying your videos. Great content please keep up the good work :)

  • @multimj691
    @multimj691 Год назад +49

    Wow I'm so amazed with the point Jim made regarding cultural values. When you have finite resources but still inspire to achieve economical growth, it will come at the expense of diminishing cultural values. I have been enjoying your content Max, every videos have been insightful. Thanks Max!

  • @trickysicky
    @trickysicky Год назад +9

    Mr. Baker is awesome. He was my Track and Field coach at SAS around 2007

  • @Fiat-kl6lt
    @Fiat-kl6lt Год назад +9

    Despite having lived in SG for so long, he still retains the American accent n he sounds very articulate. Well done Mr Baker!

  • @nulnoh219
    @nulnoh219 Год назад +5

    2:57 That was deliberate. The point was to tear down those distinct Cultural Identities and forge a new one. One that is more "Singaporean". The alternative will look more like Malaysia right now. You have Chinese Kampongs, Malay Kampongs, etc...

  • @dschia2
    @dschia2 Год назад +22

    Hopefully there is a part 2 interview with Jim.. Love the way he articulates about the past Singapore and his perspective.

  • @janabertkau1621
    @janabertkau1621 Год назад +7

    I remember Jim in high school. He generally had a huge grin and was very friendly. Jim and I were voted most athletic in 1965. 😊
    Jana Svoboda Bertkau , class of 1965

  • @panda63725
    @panda63725 Год назад +15

    Yet another interview that tells thenuntold stories that was never ever told. Thank you Max! ❤

  • @IzwanRahman
    @IzwanRahman Год назад +6

    man this is wayy better than what I expect. I want more of this interview

  • @erickoo9554
    @erickoo9554 Год назад +25

    I now know why my Chinese-educated mother could speak Malay. It’s probably because living in a kampung then and being Chinese-educated, the only way she could converse with other races is Malay, the lingua franca. In fact, I notice most of the Singaporeans (including Indians) in the older generations, especially those who had lived in kampungs, are able to speak in Malay.

  • @tanchye1720
    @tanchye1720 Год назад +9

    I am 74 now myself.
    Hmm..your observations through the years are pretty accurate.
    Hope your years ahead will happy & be a blessed one. 🙏

  • @icten123
    @icten123 Год назад +5

    My husband graduated SAS in 1982. .Jim baker was his teacher. My husband is also missing old Singapore.

  • @MuhammadDanial-mo9ts
    @MuhammadDanial-mo9ts Год назад +12

    Wow, from your eyes Mr Baker there is sadness, as if you are missing part of yourself. Yes, i remember my time studying in Singapore and learned that my primary and secondary school are no longer there. Demolished and replaced! As if its all in your mind, not your history, deleted, gone! Sunken feeling!
    I never want to go back to Singapore again, i feel totally lost...now even Jurong Birdpark wil be gone.😢
    Stay save Mr Baker! May you live a happy life.

  • @retroworldnews
    @retroworldnews Год назад +10

    His table and chair is retro , last time Singapore coffeeshop the tables and chairs are like that. Nice and cool.

  • @devinkay1329
    @devinkay1329 Год назад +8

    So glad that you and Jim did indeed link up for an interview. Love the fact that some people are asking for a Part II video and recognize what insight Jim brings to your channel and audience.

    • @MaxChernov
      @MaxChernov  Год назад +2

      Hey buddy, thanks so much for your help organizing it! 🙏

  • @alvinkoh5556
    @alvinkoh5556 Год назад +14

    Among the many Ang Moh expats and permanent residents you have interviewed , I find this elderly American man to be the most genuine and non pretentious.
    Many of the Ang Mohs you have interviewed in the past, their views and perspectives of Singapore were borderline bullshit! Sometimes they gave me the goosebumps when they spill their BS.
    But this elderly American guy in this episode is one of the few exception. I like him, as I find him to be sincere and respectable.

  • @Towkeeyoh
    @Towkeeyoh Год назад +6

    What an excellent find for an interview! ❤ very insightful and you can see his love for his experience here!
    He’s such a gold mine of history of Singapore, I could watch a much longer or perhaps a more specific topic interview!

  • @azrinaz8993
    @azrinaz8993 Год назад +3

    What a great insight and perspective of the early days of Singapore from the eyes and memories of a foreigner. Hope you can do more of the interviews with the pioneer and older generation folks, to listen to their stories and experience of Singapore.

  • @colinfoo2856
    @colinfoo2856 Год назад +3

    This man is a living treasure... wish he write a book about his life in SG.
    His POV of the history of Singapore is very interesting coming from an American who has adopted a way of life here.

  • @lemontree9787
    @lemontree9787 Год назад +3

    Impressive that you can find such a gem to interview with.

  • @gera.w
    @gera.w Год назад +10

    agree with @ragsoh- Mr Baker’s impression of sg in 60s 70s are not quite the same as the memories recounted by my parents growing up in sg. my mom’s adopted mother worked for a wealthy chinese family, her house was small. no modern plumbing, showers are from cold large ceramic jar pouring buckets over oneself.
    my father only ate roti prata as the only meal on most days, no chicken or meat except on special days.
    so I would say Mr Baker’s perspective of sg as wealthy before lky? quite a bit different from what my parents’ stories. 😅
    But the part about lingua franca being malay back then is true I guess, my parents especially my dad, can speak malay.

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад

      SG being wealthy even before LKY came to power was probably true of the elite minority in society ie white people, wealthy merchants, the ruling class, the British colonial government etc. Not the masses living in squalid atap hut villages with poor sanitation, poor power and water supplies. Yes, there was a time when Malay was the lingua franca in the streets. That was a time when few locals (Chinese, Malays and Indians) could speak English, so Malay became the common language of communication among them. With the rise of education in English, English gradually replaced Malay as the common language for communication.

    • @bell-xk5dd
      @bell-xk5dd Год назад +3

      Jim speaks from the perspective of a privileged minority..he doesn’t know what was being poor like in the 60s.

  • @mhmnmy
    @mhmnmy Год назад

    this is the kind of video that we long waited for. Living history talks with unbiased view. Please do more interview like this. subbed

  • @rxdocteur
    @rxdocteur Год назад

    interesting interview. My wife is Singaporean, and we travel back to Singapore every few years to visit family and notice the changes each time.

  • @peacenowar6920
    @peacenowar6920 Год назад +9

    Should continue part 2 pls .

  • @AndorranStairway
    @AndorranStairway Год назад +22

    Yeah he’s pretty much completely right about the history of Singapore. Not surprising considering he lived through the rapid modernisation. I may not be as old as him, but many of the old buildings and grassy fields that I remember are now gone as well. For better or worse, Singapore will continue to develop.
    PS: Jim may not look or sound like your average Singaporean, but he’s certainly dressed like one!

    • @AppleMacGeek
      @AppleMacGeek Год назад

      He's a true "Ang Mo Ah Pek" in the most respected sense! 😜

  • @jcloiseau
    @jcloiseau Год назад +3

    One of your most interesting interesting interviews recently!

  • @sps6
    @sps6 Год назад +10

    He is absolutely true on the food..thumbs up

  • @balisaani
    @balisaani Год назад +5

    Excellent interview/video (even cut down). Having the personal perspective of someone who lived through those times is illuminating. Thanks to both of you.

  • @kwpf
    @kwpf Год назад +2

    This is a great interview. I learned something about Singapore's history from Jim's perspectives. Thanks!

  • @kris_tan
    @kris_tan Год назад +8

    🫡 Mr Jim Baker who shared with us the history of S’pore. This is another great video I will save to my playlist. I’m a proud specialist who serve our country for 10 years❤❤❤

  • @jpbweb2023
    @jpbweb2023 Год назад +1

    Truly excellent interview ! Jim Baker provides a much appreciated testimony of the early days of Singapore, that helps understand what we see today.

  • @grandcharm
    @grandcharm Год назад +3

    Lovely interview, Max. Congratulations on what seems to be a snowballing network of leads for more and more interesting interviewees! Keep up the good work! :)

  • @envitech02
    @envitech02 Год назад +10

    Great video Max! Do interview my boss Herr Andreas J. Walther, a German national who's been in Malaysia since the 80s. Most days you can see him at Subang Airport. Very friendly gentleman, boleh cakap Melayu.

    • @MaxChernov
      @MaxChernov  Год назад +7

      Can you make an intro for me with him?

  • @0o_KASHIII_o0
    @0o_KASHIII_o0 5 месяцев назад

    He lived through such an interesting time in Singapore. Yet another great interview!

  • @morganf963
    @morganf963 Год назад +2

    We need more videos with Mr. Baker!!! A city walk would be awesome. Tour of the old districts (whats left) !!!

  • @mrechbreger
    @mrechbreger Год назад +3

    it's somewhat so interesting, especially the end where he speaks about ASEAN that they will increase their wealthiness and improve. I left Germany because within 15 years all I saw was a horizontal line of development within the country - nothing really improved for the people, no things even got worse during that time. All the government did is refining their income source by establishing more cost and obstacles for people in economy.
    Now I'm in Taiwan myself I'm blown away by the freedom people have, during the building up stage no one bothers and puts obstacles into your way. Getting around in the world seems to be really important.
    There's no such country as a one fits all but things can turn out to be close in some situations.

  • @SuccessforLifester
    @SuccessforLifester Год назад +1

    One of the more interesting video as the gentleman has a wealth of experience to share

  • @jeslyny9692
    @jeslyny9692 Год назад +1

    So interesting and really thankful for these people who stay on🎉🎉.It doesn't matter if you are a foreigner or Singaporean as long as you love Singapore Thatz the most important thing

  • @Ianlee1977
    @Ianlee1977 Год назад +29

    I love his perspective of Singapore then and now and how much has changed. Being 47, i totally understand about seeing the changes in Singapore and how fast that change seemed. But wow, he was around when NS was implemented, that would have been when the Israeli army was here to assist in starting it. That was some tough training ( my uncles and dad went through that) as for the racial riots , yeah, my mum would tell me about that. Jim's knowledge is fascinating and amazing.

  • @dlmhdlmh
    @dlmhdlmh Год назад +15

    So interesting to see that they both do not have shoes on indoors.😊

  • @doodlemecrzy8075
    @doodlemecrzy8075 Год назад +4

    Yes, my grandparents and my Mum used to live by Beach Road and it was by the sea. Today you go to Beach Road and its hotels , malls & office buildings. The landscape changes often in Singapore that even if you come back to certain areas in 5 years time it looks very different. Re-development is a key component of Singapore's economic growth; but the re-development is always purposeful unlike the bubble property developments in Cambodia or some parts of China.

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад +4

      Yes, SG doesn’t have the luxury of keeping all old buildings just for sentimental reasons because we have so little land. Unlike some places in America where nothing changes much over 20-30 years. Land use needs to be constantly reviewed to keep up with changing needs eg the recent decision to shut down the Turf Club to free up 120 hectares of land for housing etc. Yes, we need to review decisions to tear down old buildings carefully and some decisions have been questionable, but bottom line, it’s a necessary evil because our usable land is limited.

    • @SuccessforLifester
      @SuccessforLifester Год назад +1

      It was only last year that I discovered that Shaw Towers had disappeared

  • @cukcan
    @cukcan Год назад

    educational video. I always enjoy listening elder people's story. They give information that you can't find in books. greetings from Turkey.

  • @kimyong7031
    @kimyong7031 Год назад +2

    He is totally correct..every corner in Singapore northern part yishun , sembawang, marsiling and woodlands, south, kampng glam, beach road, arab street, rochor and little india east coast, katong, marine parade , siglap, bedok, kallang airport and central orchard, holland , bukit timah , river valley , carnhill, thomson, newton , shenton way. All is unique with its own identity and thats Singapore.

  • @duffvader6731
    @duffvader6731 Год назад +30

    What he didn't tell you is if he had returned to the US in the 60s, he would probably be drafted and sent to vietnam to fight. That's what he meant by doing american NS.

    • @foureyeswonder
      @foureyeswonder Год назад +5

      Good point

    • @christan286
      @christan286 Год назад

      Spot on.

    • @bell-xk5dd
      @bell-xk5dd Год назад +3

      He’ll probably be the first to “siam” back to the US if there’s trouble in Singapore.

  • @msct8116
    @msct8116 Год назад +6

    Thank you for this video. It is nice to hear Jim's perspective of Singapore. It is spot on!

  • @ragsoh
    @ragsoh Год назад +16

    Good interview with Mr Baker. As a kid in the 1960s, I lived in poverty. The Singapore I know was a third world country. Maybe he stayed in the expat area and his view of Singapore was that it was a modern country. We lived in small houses and it often leaked when it rained. There was no modern sanitation and human waste went into buckets and would be collected every 2 days or so. I remembered eating chicken and meats only on special occasions. Life was tough then. His view on culture and demolished buildings were spot on. I can agree with him on most of the things he said. And yes, white people were treated differently in those days. Not anymore - among my generation, we treat them as equals now. They are not greater than us and we do not think we are inferior to them.

    • @chaotiongsai
      @chaotiongsai Год назад +1

      I don’t think any race is superior but as an Asian, who’s born and raised in Singapore I can sense an over compensation among many Asians regarding white people, they have inferiority complex you talked about that Instead causes them to over compensate and project racism and try to project that they are superior to white people. It is quite pathetic to be honest.

    • @christan286
      @christan286 Год назад +8

      I agree with you, my birth certificate says Colony of Singapore so you can guess my age. Singapore in the 50s & 60s was a third world country. My parent rented a small room along Armenian Street and we had a small kerosene lamp for light and yes I use the night soil bucket system. My late mother used to tell me to study hard or end up as one of those worker carrying the buckets for disposal haha. Mr.Baker mentioned the "Tuan complex" which kind of meant white superiority or privilege which is true at that time.

  • @fatpunk
    @fatpunk Год назад

    Such an interesting interview. I totally enjoyed every minute of it

  • @Ecia-x6n
    @Ecia-x6n Год назад +28

    He knows Singapore better than most Singaporeans. I learned a lot here.

    • @narutokun5765
      @narutokun5765 Год назад

      Local people now very well about singapura especially from name temasik again during melaka kingdom before portugis come here....

    • @zanm7407
      @zanm7407 Год назад +5

      That's a sweeping statement to make. How many Singaporeans have you spoken to, especially those whose family have been here for generations?

    • @Ecia-x6n
      @Ecia-x6n Год назад +1

      Ok chill..

    • @mholtebeck
      @mholtebeck Год назад +4

      You got a lot of hate from people who don't know, but that's an understatement. He is a historian who witnessed modern Singapore history first hand, and Singapore doesn't emphasize in its education, so he might be the best expert on Singaporean history.

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад

      @@mholtebeckAt best, he can only represent the views of a tiny elite white minority, but not the masses who did not enjoy his privileged “Tuan” lifestyle.

  • @EricK-mj7kr
    @EricK-mj7kr Год назад

    Great sharing & content. I served my national service at the former NZ army camp. Its quite an experience to stay in the airconditioned bunks.

  • @sonant_bwolfe
    @sonant_bwolfe Год назад

    I've been enjoying the trend of old guys with sagely life advice.

  • @garamgarum4898
    @garamgarum4898 Год назад +2

    Very good interview!! Interesting and insightful. I don't know about other things but there was one thing that directly adversely affected on us because of racial quota when we tried to sell our HDB unit (for some personal reasons), we couldn't sell to a specific ethnic group (they could give a matching offer to our asking price) and ended up accepting eligible ones at a reduced price than we initially inteneded resulting in a negative sale. And we suffered a net loss.

  • @applehead7942
    @applehead7942 Год назад

    Omg max! Another amazing interview! I hope you’d find more gems like Mr Baker.

  • @tanjoseph8922
    @tanjoseph8922 Год назад

    Thanks Max. Your work helps me better understand Singapore and Mr Barker insights were most insightful!

  • @whybotherha1021
    @whybotherha1021 Год назад +2

    This is good finding Max, This is what we afraid in Malaysia.. Losing our cultural value.. but here it is we still strong and love our culture.

  • @yvonnescully5037
    @yvonnescully5037 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing. Love my country, my home Singapore. Mr. Baker blends in well with Singapore. I'm Singaporean Eurasian and have uncles on both sides of the family with very Caucasian skin colour. So no problems for him as an Eurasian/Singaporean. God bless n thank you again🙏🙏🇸🇬🇸🇬

  • @boonluitang7727
    @boonluitang7727 Год назад

    Impressive + genuine interview 👍❤ Thank you very much for sharing.

  • @MaxChernov
    @MaxChernov  Год назад +11

    What new did you learn about Singapore from Jim?

    • @khairulhelmihashim2510
      @khairulhelmihashim2510 Год назад +9

      - he dispels myth of poor, undeveloped Singapore prior independence.
      - the ability of average Singaporeans to converse in Bazaar Malay.

    • @nusabudiman
      @nusabudiman Год назад +1

      Demographics changes. How Singapore from a Malay majority becomes Chinese majority. I think it has to do with their migration policy. This was written by Michael Barr if I'm not mistaken. Barr wrote how LKY's migration policy of encouraging Chinese from Malaysia, China, Taiwan and Hong Kong to migrate to Singapore in order to ensure that the Chinese population is at 70% of the whole Singaporean demography. It's done to ensure political and social stability.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 Год назад +1

      Sg was already a rich infrstructured country before the british left..

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад +2

      ⁠Even if true that SG had the 5th largest port in the world at the time the British left in 1959, it’s clear from the fact that most people were still living in squalid atap hut villages with poor sanitation, poor electrical and water supply into the 1970s, that these benefits did not percolate down to the masses. Probably because the British colonial government and ruling elite kept it for themselves or repatriated the profits earned back to Mother England. So what we had was a rich colonial government and ruling elite, but poor masses. Does this qualify as a “middle income country”?

    • @vincentsgp
      @vincentsgp Год назад +2

      As far as i can recall, environment started improving in mid 70s. We moved from rented flat (with shared toilets, kitchens, washing area) in 1976.

  • @capy222b
    @capy222b Год назад +13

    Studying racial relations when I was in university, I do notice that many academics prefer social and cultural enclaves, instead of the hdb racial quota policy used. This is because it's too interventionist, and smacks of social engineering, which has negative connotations. Those in the older generation prefers living within an enclave due to same culture, language and religion. I too felt it was very social engineered when I studied these academics' works in uni, until I ventured out of Singapore, and saw the divisiveness that race has created in other countries. I'm glad I am able to live beside another race, and smell the curries floating across the corridor. Singapore's society is by no means an organic occurrence. It is very engineered, but I think, it is a well thought through engineering project.

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад +7

      Well said. Remember we had race riots several times in our history, and as recently as 1969. So our government realised long ago that racial harmony isn’t a given and needs to be actively cultivated and protected. Racial enclaves develop easily because it’s natural for people to seek out others just like themselves. But the danger of allowing this to happen without controls is that people become less tolerant of those who are different from themselves, because of limited exposure to other racial groups, and this feeds misunderstanding and communal strife. So our government was very wise in trying to promote racial harmony in the schools, NS and even in HDB housing to ensure that all Singaporeans get used to racial diversity and learn to co-exist peacefully and harmoniously with each other. This is the opposite of the position during British colonial rule where their policy was to keep ethnic groups divided so the British could “divide and rule” them with ease. Maintaining the communal divide is great for the coloniser but bad for nation building, where your aim is to unify, not divide, the people, to promote social unity and harmony. The loss of strong racial enclaves may have diluted a culture slightly, but if the trade off is more racial harmony and social stability, I think this social engineering was worth it. Just look at the long history of systemic racism and ethnic segregation in the U.S. that has kept ethnic differences alive in a negative way which has divided the people and country.

    • @AppleMacGeek
      @AppleMacGeek Год назад +1

      Everything in Singapore is social-engineered to within an inch of its life. Nothing has changed. Not even now.

  • @veekwok5611
    @veekwok5611 Год назад +30

    Good interview but I disagree that Singapore was already middle-class back in the 50's and 60's. The majority of the population then were quite poor. Maybe we had a better infrastructure in the city area back then, as compared with neighbouring countries. Outside the city area were mostly kampungs with no electricity and proper sanitation. Most of the people living in these kampungs are farmers, odd jobs laborers, artisans or hawkers. Surely, these people living in such conditions cannot be considered middle-class. Like it or not, it was our first Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew and his team of capable ministers who painstakingly developed the nation after its independence in 1965. It was only by the 1970s that Singapore start to become a thriving economy. I am as old as Jim to testify the true situations of Singapore during the 50's and 60's.

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад +11

      Agree. I was born in 1958. I grew up in Serangoon Gardens and remember the huge kampong Cheng San nearby that stretched all the way to Upper Thomson Road. It was full of atap huts, fish ponds, dirt tracks, rubber estates, farms etc. It was just one of the many kampongs that existed in Singapore outside the city area, and looked quite similar to kampongs in rural Malaysia. It was only in 1973 that Kampong Cheng San was cleared to build the Ang Mo Kio HDB estate. Many other rural kampongs continued to exist into the 1980s. The Bukit Ho Swee fire that destroyed a big squatter settlement happened in 1961. I can’t agree that Singapore was already middle income in the 1950s and 60s. From my memories as a child growing up in the 60s, there were still many kampongs and fish ponds all over Singapore, featuring atap huts with well water, inadequate sanitation, etc. Many houses downtown still had no flush toilets and relied on daily night soil collectors. Does this qualify as middle income? We shouldn’t diminish the achievements of Mr LKY and other pioneer leaders in greatly improving living conditions for the people. In the 1950s and 60s, outside the downtown areas, the rest of SG was similar to kampongs in neighbouring Malaysia. How can this be described as middle income? Maybe as a white person, he lived a privileged expat lifestyle due to the “Tuan” complex he mentioned. That was only for the tiny elite minority, and certainly not for the masses in SG, most of whom were generally poor.

    • @mdjcsmith
      @mdjcsmith Год назад +10

      He was talking about compared to world standards at the time, it was demonstrably so a middle income country, as opposed to a poor or low-income country. But certainly compared to what it is now, it has developed a long way since then

    • @khairulhelmihashim2510
      @khairulhelmihashim2510 Год назад +8

      it's all due to distribution of wealth. back then, wealth was concentrated among merchant families, top administrators, and big corporations, and rarely invested for social development. So, despite being a regional economic and administrative hub, only the élites can get the best of it.

    • @grandcharm
      @grandcharm Год назад +5

      @@khairulhelmihashim2510 and @mdjcsmith thanks for stating two important points to help clarify what Mr Baker was referring to when he described Singapore as a "middle income" economy back in the 50s and 60s (comparing globally). To be clear for several people who have questioned this, he wasn't stating that Singapore had a large "middle class" back then.

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад +9

      ⁠​⁠Actually, the actual words he used were that SG was a “middle class country” and never really a third world one. Is this correct? Even if up to the time the PAP took power in 1959, SG had the 5th largest port in the world, the profits would have gone to the British colonial government and ruling elite, and little of it percolated down to the masses. Which explains why SG had the 5th largest port in the world and yet most people still lived in relative squalor, in atap hut villages with poor sanitation, poor electrical and water supply.

  • @gilchristhaas9865
    @gilchristhaas9865 Год назад +1

    Great interview. Very insightful.

  • @kevina2907
    @kevina2907 Год назад +28

    This man deservea a National award. He is the one walking on Singapore land withnessing the progress of Singapore even before LKY time. He is a more Singaporean American. How Irony?

    • @pinkymoon5039
      @pinkymoon5039 Год назад +4

      So do all the other singaporeans who witnessed it that are still living.

    • @pinkymoon5039
      @pinkymoon5039 Год назад +1

      Award for just living? 😅

    • @kevina2907
      @kevina2907 Год назад

      ​@@pinkymoon5039well..is a fact, the ones that withness the progress of Singapore are limited . You should be grateful this man still share with us what he see. Irony, he is not local.

    • @anchored555
      @anchored555 Год назад

      National award? Let’s not get carried away. At most he can speak only on behalf of the tiny segment of SG society ie the tiny minority white elite, that enjoyed privileges the vast majority did not. If someone took the trouble to interview others from the masses, we would have a more accurate picture of what SG was like back then.

  • @lorrainevlambert
    @lorrainevlambert Год назад +2

    This is such an interesting interview, I so wish Singapore had held onto more of the old architecture and look.

  • @leewn2319
    @leewn2319 Год назад +6

    Prior to HDB & even after HDB was formed, Hougang from 4 mile stone (where current NEX Shopping Mall is located) all the way to Punggol was predominantly Teochew enclave. When the kampongs made way for HDB, the Teochews are still the majority. In the old days even the Malays in Hougang, Punggol and Upper Changi Rd near Tanah Merah areas could speak Teochew. Election rallies at Hougang Constituency were fought in Teochew dialects and of course Workers’ Party Low Thia Khiang’s superior command of Teochew gotten the upper hand and won Hougang.

    • @tedlai6624
      @tedlai6624 Год назад

      Punggol end was a small fishery and fishermen wore only undies 😂

  • @drjennyli
    @drjennyli Год назад +18

    Wow, how did find him ? I love how he shared about his memory during LKY era.

    • @MaximChernovRu
      @MaximChernovRu Год назад +9

      My networking skills haha

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 Год назад +1

      google search and chat gpt can achieve wonders!

    • @bell-xk5dd
      @bell-xk5dd Год назад +2

      I prefer reading books by LKY for more accurate information...

  • @itsjustmax5208
    @itsjustmax5208 Год назад +3

    Jim Baker the living legend !

    • @bell-xk5dd
      @bell-xk5dd Год назад +1

      There are many living legends in Singapore too...not necessarily white..

    • @richmondang1591
      @richmondang1591 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@bell-xk5ddBesides kopi-O, we also have kopi & kopi-C. Likewise for the local teh (tea) too! Isn't these mixes of beverages all accepted by all individuals here?

  • @shta12
    @shta12 Год назад +3

    even the food is disappearing.. it's getting harder and harder to find food like char kway teow. they still do exist, but not as easy as it used to be to find

  • @NileBowie
    @NileBowie Год назад +1

    Fascinating conversation, thanks Max.

    • @NileBowie
      @NileBowie Год назад

      I think he meant "Tuan" complex, as is "lord" or "master" in Malay. That's a fascinating anecdote. Makes you think of the Michael Fay case in a slightly different light, in a sense that no one is above our rules.

  • @TheMscandy123
    @TheMscandy123 Год назад

    His insights on singapore is actually much more insightful than most Singaporean.

  • @chycahaya
    @chycahaya Год назад +4

    11:36 ‘Twan Complex’ which I think should be ‘Tuan’ - in Malay it means ‘sir’. First time I heard of this terminology & it answered a lot of questions why locals behaved the way we did towards caucasians/white people back then. As ‘tuan’ meant ‘sir’, locals were serving the British & thus we developed such a servitude complex. Nothing wrong, just helps me understand ourselves better. 🙏🏼

    • @AppleMacGeek
      @AppleMacGeek Год назад +2

      The "Tuan Complex" is still alive and hasn't gone away, unfortunately. At least in the minds of some expat Westerners. Remember Anton Casey? And Olivier Desbarres? They were the worst examples but I remember being a guest at parties which had expat Westerners in them and I overheard some discussing their "LBFM" and whether to "upgrade" them to "LYFM" on their next posting to Hong Kong. I later found out to my horror that "LBFM" was their acronym for "Little Brown Fucking Machine" (i.e., their Malay girlfriends) and "LYFM" was the acronym for "Little Yellow Fucking Machines" (i.e., their anticipated Chinese girlfriends upon posting to Hong Kong). Can you say "objectification"???

    • @chycahaya
      @chycahaya Год назад +1

      @@AppleMacGeek thank you for sharing your experiences, it is beyond appalling to know my community is being called LBFM. I want to be respectful & not scorn at colonists’ mindset, but it becomes a moral historical lesson for us now. To strive beyond our subjugated past. This video inadvertently became a reflection point, thanks for sharing the perspectives.

  • @heidi-hu1tv
    @heidi-hu1tv Год назад

    This guy was very insightful.

  • @TheMadAfrican1
    @TheMadAfrican1 Год назад +4

    Because Singapore is freaking amazing, that's why! Our country has issues, but compared to a lot of the rest of the world, we are actually trying to fix them.

  • @Photojouralist123
    @Photojouralist123 Год назад +3

    My sister Tobey and Bret Anderson taught with him at SAS

  • @zurinayahya
    @zurinayahya Год назад +8

    Max, I say this with love 😊 - it’s “Tuan” complex not ‘Twan’ as you spelled it in your subtitles. 😊 I’ve seen quite a bit of misspelling to Malay words also from your other videos. Nevertheless, I enjoy your videos. Thanks!

    • @MaxChernov
      @MaxChernov  Год назад +7

      Hiring a new subtitles editor now

    • @mr3111
      @mr3111 Год назад +2

      i was wondering about that. Tuan as in "master complex" . Meaning caucasians are often seen as the "Master" race. Fascinating.

    • @zurinayahya
      @zurinayahya Год назад +1

      Yes, it was or is perceived so by perhaps some whites but not necessarily so by the natives of Nusantara - especially in this day and age. 😊

  • @danielintheantipodes6741
    @danielintheantipodes6741 Год назад +3

    A really interesting interview. Thank you for creating it.

  • @karenedwards9999
    @karenedwards9999 Год назад +3

    He hit the nail on the head. Everything has changed in singapore, except the food. Nevermind showing your grandchildren anything, I can’t even show my children a single place from my childhood memories. It’s heartbreaking. Not a single house I’ve lived in, not a single school, all my favourite places I used to visit as a child or teenager, the place i met my husband, all the culture, everything is destroyed by the government.
    Even pulau ubin. Everything is torn down and rebuilt. It’s disgusting. Soulless.

  • @StarrySunnie
    @StarrySunnie Год назад

    Amazing insight. Thank you, Mr. max 🙏🏽🙇🏻‍♀️

  • @allansargeant3454
    @allansargeant3454 Год назад +1

    Now that was 13.32 minutes of my time well spent, very interesting

  • @lionelproctor82
    @lionelproctor82 5 месяцев назад

    He brings up a great point about how Singapore 🇸🇬 lost a large part of its identity when Malay ceased to be the lingua franca and the demise of Hokkien, Teochew, Cantonese, etc.

  • @mholtebeck
    @mholtebeck Год назад +2

    First of all, he was my Asian Studies teacher way back in 1988, and this how he talked back then. The class was Modern Asian Problems (which was his design) and it is still one of the best classes I've taken. BTW- the guy is a political genius because the last time I saw him was in 2016 (right before the US released the Kragen in November 2016) and even back then he knew what was happening.

    • @AppleMacGeek
      @AppleMacGeek Год назад +1

      Did you mean "the Kraken" (a.k.a. "The Manchurian Cantaloupe" or "The Cheetolini")? 😆

  • @JenOng-i5h
    @JenOng-i5h Год назад +16

    I don't agree that Singapore was a middle-income society when it became independent in 1965, . There are some very rich locals and a small proportion of locals doing ok (still not considered middle-class). Majority of locals were living in quarters and/or unsantized condition/environment. Later on after independence, most of these locals moved to rented flats and some could afford to purchase.
    Most of my primary classmates and schoolmates lived in rented flat; we too moved from kampong to rented flat.

    • @Ccb88888
      @Ccb88888 Год назад +6

      By world standards Singapore was a middle income country in the 1950s . It was already one of the top 5 biggest ports, and certainly not a fishing village.

    • @MaxChernov
      @MaxChernov  Год назад +2

      I guess Jim referred more for the industries development

    • @JenOng-i5h
      @JenOng-i5h Год назад

      That the British, other Westerners and the very rich locals (not many), but not the general common locals

    • @JenOng-i5h
      @JenOng-i5h Год назад

      Most were run/owned by Westerners

    • @JenOng-i5h
      @JenOng-i5h Год назад +1

      Not so sure about the figure of kampongs in Singapore, but there were still a few around Tiong Bahru/Bukit Merah area in 1971. I was living in one at Kim Tian, and some friends in others

  • @alvintan2970
    @alvintan2970 Год назад

    Wow… what insights… thank you!

  • @paragate1
    @paragate1 Год назад +2

    This interview should be part of Singapore's Oral History

  • @chocolatejellybean2820
    @chocolatejellybean2820 Год назад

    need more of this guy

  • @sngs9565
    @sngs9565 Год назад

    Oh yes! Jim really got that one RIGHT about Indonesia...! It is a MAJOR POWER in the making! AMAZING!

  • @richardchee2454
    @richardchee2454 5 месяцев назад

    The food is also changing. What you love to eat growing up is being nudged aside. Your grandchildren is loving food that is quite different from what you ate.

  • @mrtransmogrify
    @mrtransmogrify Год назад

    1:57 That's a vry good theory... I believe its partly true... I supported (technical) the SAS (S'pore American School) in the early 2000... Mr Baker probably has seen & experienced Sgpore change more than I ...

  • @sleepandrelaxation3395
    @sleepandrelaxation3395 Год назад

    Thoroughly enjoyed this interview with Mr. Baker ! His understanding, insights and perspective based on Singapore's history and culture.
    The only complain is that the interview is really too short, hope to see him again!