This concept seems very ancient in Singapore today. What is the point of wasting time and resources when talents are available from the rest of the world, fully trained and paid for and ready to work? This makes a lot of sense in its own ways, very cost effective, and the talents are there just in time when needed.
In the 60s and 70s, in the days of LKY and GKS, planting your own seeds and grow them, turn them into trees to bear fruits were an important policies for the nation builders. There is nothing like your own citizens to depend on, trained and grew over the years, tested and proven, to run the country. Many of the Pioneer and Merdeka generations benefited from this policy. Many were fresh graduates, many were non graduates, without real skills and experience to fill many jobs that needed to be filled. Many grew in the job, some failed, but the net result is a bunch of dedicated leaders in different fields, in the govt and ministries, to turn Singapore into a well managed, organised, discipline and rich city states.
In those days, many local corporations and ministries have executive training programmes, management trainees, taking in fresh graduates to train them from scratch to become the next generations of leaders. The system worked well then, Many of the top executives, ministers, civil servants were the beneficiaries of this system. But they have forgotten how they arrived where they are today. The scheme was quietly abandoned. Now every donkey will bray, foreign talents best, bring in more foreign talents. Without those schemes in the past, these donkeys would not have a chance to be where they are today. The foreign talents will filled their positions.
Today, the fast pace of change and the availability of easy foreign talents, all cooked and baked, to be consumed, makes such policies irrelevant and unnecessary. Today, when nation building is no longer important other than lip service, anyone will do as long as he can do the jobs and looks good for the job, locals or foreigners do not matter. Foreigners can be given the pink IC and turned into citizen with the stroke of a pen and be completely trusted with everything, with the most sensitive positions and information.
The priorities today are very different from the past. Today, citizenship, loyalty, trust, reliability do not have the same value and importance. A hotel does not need real and loyal citizens. Instant noodle is convenient and equally good. Why bother with the tedious and expensive process of training and grooming our own young citizens to be useful and productive over a longer period,... and also very costly? Just a call to the recruitment agency, there will be thousands of foreign talents available, so many to pick and choose. Chiat beh leow!
There is no need to plant your own seeds, water them, nourish them and wait for them to grow and to bear fruits in the long term. Too tedious, not cost effective. Instant tree, instant talents, instant citizens is the way to go.
What do you think?
Today everything must be fast, instant, high speed. Change comes at lightning speed. Patience is no longer valued. The wisdom that had guided us is now ditched and looked upon as a dinosaur.
ReplyDeleteUncle RB,
ReplyDeleteGood morning!
If not wrong, it has been more than 2 decades since you started blogging in MSN writing about what you think of the social aspects of this Lion City ...
Year in year out,
Month in month out,
Week in week out,
Day in day out,
For more than 2 decades ...
That is a phenomenal feat!
Below is a Chinese poem dedicated to YOU for your gallant and unwavering effort in your writing about the social issues in this Lion City;
Poem Title/ 题目:
【现代忠烈吟·赠镇龙大叔】
镇龙大叔年八十,廿载敲书未肯休。
三更梦醒阶前步,月冷帘虚绕指留。
笑看当年秦桧计,莫将社稷付东流。
人生自古谁无死,留取丹心照九州。
Author/ 作者: Leo81 【Lion City】/ 狮子座81 【狮城】)
Uncle RB,
Hope YOU like the above poem specially written for and dedicated to YOU.
In this Lion City, we are educated in English since young. Our working language is English. Hence, our command of the Chinese language is expectedly not as strong as Mainlanders who grew up in their native language. The above Chinese poem is expectedly far from Mainland standard (but still hope you will like it and file it up somewhere. Can get someone to print it in nice Chinese calligraphic scroll for you if you want).
Cheers ...
小弟Leo81
Over 10 years ago, i attended a talk by a a poly lecturer. he was said to be sitting in some of our G policy committees. He asked the audience how much do they think our G spend on each citizen education from primary to university. A few figure was floated, then he said it was around 100-200K. So if we have lot of kids than the amount will be huge, however to save this amount, the best way is to import graduates. There you have it, instant success with CECA and save tonnes of G money which can be better used to pay the ministers (they think they are not compensated enough).
ReplyDeleteThank you Leo81. I am impressed by your command of the Chinese language. I thought you were Chinese ed. Keep it up.
ReplyDelete@ Chua Chin Leng 蔡镇龍 aka redbeanJune 15, 2026 11:24 am
ReplyDelete"Thank you Leo81. I am impressed by your command of the Chinese language. I thought you were Chinese ed. Keep it up."
Uncle RB,
No worries. It"s my pleasure. In fact, I enjoy coining it while leveraging on the inspiration to word this poem based on your experiences (and motivation) that I perceived ...
As to being Chinese ed, perhaps if you realised that I did my "A" Level in Raffles Junior College, your perception might change...
Am always thankful to our founding PM LKY for creating the SAP school path (IMHO, a very far-sighted move) the year after China paramount leader 邓爷爷 (Deng Xiao Peng)visited Singapore in 1978 (which led to the subsequent China's reform and Open Door Policy ...)
As most if not all of you would have known, SAP schools conduct both English and Chinese lessons and examinations at the first language level ...
In my P6 year after the PSLE results were released, was (more than) qualified to enter RI (Raffles Institution). Somehow, the hunch was to choose a SAP school instead.
Previously was from an English-stream primary school. As a result, during Secondary One and Two had to undergo intensive Chinese Language remedial lessons twice a week after normal school hours to catch up (from far, far behind).
All in all, only four years of education in Chinese as first language from 13 to 16-yo. As a result of acing Chinese Language as first language in the "O" Level Exam, was EXEMPTED from having to take/ study the Chinese Language any further from then onwards. Effectively, the journey of Chinese Language study ABRUPTLY came to a stop at the (very young) age of 16 and since then was ("Jiak Kan Tongue" and) only/ solely using English in study, writing, speaking (even dreaming) etc until now ... [except very occasionally ordering food from aunties/ uncles in food centres etc).
Not sure why am still able to be fairly fluent in Chinese despite not using it frequently in daily life, work etc ever since after "O" Level exam at 16 years of age. Maybe the four years of SAP school Chinese Language grounding was "particularly strong"?
Lately, got bored with Economics, Finance, Geopolitics etc, hence at times turned to Chinese poetry as a release valve from the daily grind ...
Ultimately, IMHO our destiny as Chinese Singaporeas but English-speaking and Singapore geographically located between the East and West makes us technically a (natural) cultural bridge to connect both and as far as possible help avoid/ minimise miscommunication between them (if possible).
That, IMHO is our small contribution to this world as a tiny little red dot.
As to the poem dedicated to you, gather from your writings over the years that you have significant cultural sentiment towards your roots, hence the poem content featuring certain historical backdrop integrated with your blogging style etc. (Hope wasn't too presuming and unwittingly got it wrong somewhere, somehow ...)
Cheers,
Leo81
Good to know that you are from the SAP school, and also a RI mafia. With your acing of Chinese at O level, it will give you a strong foundation to be more efficient if there is an interest. Keep the language alive in you. Never forget your root. Be proud of your root.
ReplyDeleteCheers.