The title is so apt. The book encapsulates the man and his ideas. It demonstrates his upstanding character, his fortitude in overcoming every obstacle and hurdle thrown at him, his commitment and love towards his wife and his pragmatic thought process. His purpose is to better the lives of the people he lead, and he has achieved that in ways no other could have done.
I am proud to be a Singaporean. I am grateful for the country he has founded and built. I am thankful for the characteristics tied to being a Singaporean. My hope is that the integrity, the hardworking ethos and the ambition to constantly innovate and improve will carry on with the future generation of Singaporeans.
Some of his words which made me laugh, made me tear and kept me inspired:
"You can ask any taxi driver - he is a most uninhibited Singaporean you can think of. You can ask any bartender in any hotel. He'll let off a bellyache. But at the end of the day, when he puts his cross, when election comes, he has given me and my colleagues over 18 years in office, which I think is cause for some satisfaction." (In 2020, it's been 61 years where PAP holds office.)
Good government was not so much about fine liberal slogans and championing the rights of the people, but more a practical matter of strong leadership which would deliver material progress and improve the people's lot. "Houses are going up, chaps are earning money, there are lots of scooters around. Last year, they registered nearly 8000 scooters. You just imagine that. Three in the family using it, you've got 24000 people kept happy. With 24000 girlfriends, you've got 48000 chaps happy."
"In other parts of the world, when their pigs suffer from swine fever, they hush it up. They pretend they do not have it. Net result: all pigs get infected, the position becomes permanently chronic. We can do likewise. But we will become permanently a chronic society: sick. So when we get swine fever, we announce it, alert everyone so that we can arrest the spread of the disease and bring back normalcy. This is what is required of this community: all the time, that push, that thrust to counter the natural sluggishness which this climate tends to build into our physical system, and all that while, we must have an awareness of the realities of life."
"We have what sociologists call a highly 'achievement-oriented' type of society. Not all societies have this. In many societies, they are quite happy just to sit down under the banyan tree and contemplate their navel. So when there is a famine, they just die quietly. Here, they will not die quietly. If there is no food, they will do something, look for somebody, break open stores, do something, plant something and if they have to die, they die fighting for the right to live. A good, striving, hardy people cannot be kept down."
"My great advantage was I have a wife who could be a sole breadwinner and bring the children up. And that was my insurance policy. I think without such a wife, I would have been hard-pressed."
"It is not by accident that we got here. Every possible thing that could have gone wrong, we had tried to pre-empt. That's how we got here, that's why we have substantial reserves. Because if we don't have reserves, the moment we run into trouble, who will lend you money when you've got no gold mines or oil fields? We've got nothing. All we have is this functioning organism which requires brains, specialised skills put together in a very intricate form, with inputs from many nations and their experts in financial services, manufacturing, tourism, all sorts of economic activities put together. It's not easy to replicate."
"I think you must have something in you to be a "have" nation. You must want. That is the crucial thing. Before you have, you must want to have. And to want to have means to be able first, to perceive what it is you want, secondly to discipline and organise yourself in order to possess the things you want, and thirdly the grit and the stamina."
"I know little of the mysteries of advertising and the soft sell. But I believe no magic set of initials, no logo, can sell, to more than the first few, something which is not good. By skillful publicity, the PR man can attract attention and get across an idea. But if the idea got across does not tally with the reality, then the value of the advertisement, however attractive, is soon dissipated."
"Our best asset is in the reputation of Singapore itself. To most people abroad - in governments, in finance, in business, and to many ordinary newspaper reads in the thrusting new nation rapidly climbing up the technological ladder. This is a reputation forged out of our struggle for survival."
When asked if he would live his life differently if he had to do it all over. "I may not be as lucky a second time in so many things. All I can say is, I did my best. This was the job I undertook, I did my best and I could not have done more in the circumstances. What people think of it, I have to leave to them. It is of no great consequence. What is of consequence is, I did my best."