The Art of Looking Busy
In recent months, our public conversations
have been loud - full of condemnations and announcements made in the name of
“values.” We seem eager to prove that we stand on high moral ground. Behind all
that noise, the silence on more painful issues such as children being harmed,
systemic failures, the quiet injustices - says something uncomfortable about
who we really are, and what we choose to notice.
Lately, everyone seems very busy proving how moral we are. Announcements here, bans there - all to show that we’re a nation that stands firmly for “values.” It’s quite impressive, really. If public statements could fix society, we’d be perfect by now.
When it comes to symbolic issues, for example, whether alcohol should be served at official events, the machinery of morality runs perfectly. Meetings are held, declarations are made, and everyone gets to pat themselves on the back for protecting the nation’s soul. Crisis averted.
But when it comes to things that actually
matter, like children being abused, stabbed, or even forced into marriage -
suddenly, the response feels very different. Yes, statements are made. Words of
concern are expressed. Promises of “thorough investigation” are repeated. But
after a while, everything fades into silence. The headlines move on, and so
does everyone else. It’s as if these issues are too heavy, too uncomfortable,
or perhaps too politically risky to truly confront. The same remains unresolved
and the cycle continues.
Then comes the part that’s hard not to miss. The way religion gets pulled into everything. So many policies are made in the name of “upholding Malaysian values,” and yet, those very values - justice, compassion, and the protection of the vulnerable often go missing in action.
It’s almost as if some of the people up there have mastered the art of looking religious without being responsible. Loud about appearances, quiet about accountability. Quick to moralise, slow to empathise. It’s a kind of moral theatre. Looking holy matters more than doing what’s right.
Meanwhile, our attention drifts easily to problems happening elsewhere. We express solidarity, issue statements, and discuss the moral failures of other nations, while often overlooking similar injustices at home. It seems outrage is easier when distance protects us from responsibility.
Because fixing our own problems means asking uncomfortable questions - about broken systems, neglected schools, ignored warnings, and how we raise our children. It means leadership that listens instead of lecturing. And that, unfortunately, doesn’t make for good headlines.
So here’s to us, a nation of good
intentions and selective outrage. Let’s raise our glass (of whatever’s allowed
this week) and toast to our finest skill yet: looking busy while staying blind.
Written by: Eisyarmily Akhtar
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