6/04/2007
Trees are attacking Singaporeans
The trees are striking at Singaporeans, killing 3 in a row. And so is our water. Wild water and safe water, they are still life threatening. It is time to cut down all the trees and warn Singaporeans not to go near them or the water. The building of dykes would come in handy to keep the water away. And all pools should be covered up to be used only as water containers.
What have we done to the trees and water that they are picking on us? Is there any infidelity on our part to deserve the wrath of nature? It is very strange for trees to attack people. And swimming pool incidents should not have happened again and again. We are now so experience in picking dead children bodies from the pools. Do we want to continue to do so?
6/03/2007
myth 141
Peasants are inept to understand
This is a glaring fact and is proven everyday. The latest call by Lim Hwee Hua to raise taxi surcharge is the most effective and practical solutions to get taxis running on the road again. Peasants just cannot appreciate the real meaning behind the proposal.
How so? The current rate is too low, so too many calls and all the taxi drivers have no problem taking one call and follow by another in quick succession. So why should they be so stupid to drive around and burning petrol dollars?
The surcharge should be raised to $50. Then only those few who can afford to pay for the surcharge will call. Bet you, the calls will drop to 1%. And all the taxi drivers who think that they will can get continuous calls will think twice. For they may not even get one call a day. tan ku ku.
And when the calls are not coming, and when they have to pay the rentals, oh yes, the rentals must go up also, they got no choice but kuai kuai ply the roads and rush for passengers. Then they cannot afford not to drive the taxis and wait at home for calls. It will create a real buzz on the roads with taxis zigzaging every where for passengers.
I support the $50 per call surcharge.
MSM in 2015
Could it happen, that comes 2015, the msm will be renamed The Money Times? And the style and vocabulary used will be distinctively monetised.
For example, $10 million visited the US and was greeted by $2 million. And $10 million, being thicker in the pocket, and definitely thicker also in the head, gave a pat on the back of $2 million for doing a good job. And before leaving the US, $10 million said he approved of how $2 million was handling the terrorists crisis around the world. And he left some good advices for $2 million to ponder over.
Back home, $10 million was welcomed back at the $500 million airport by hundreds of $100,000 and $200,000. And lining the roads were thousands of $10,000 and $20,000 cheering and waving when the motorcade of $10 million drove by.
Names are more difficult to remember huh? Digitising is much easier for the computers to recognise.
The best govt
We have the best and a world class govt that the world admires. Citizens of our neighbouring countries and far and wide all had a Christmas wish, that they could have a govt like ours.
And the govt has pledged to the people that it will look after the people, no man will be left behind, all the policies are for the good of the people. Now the paradox.
Increasingly the mood is that the govt is no longer the govt for the people. It may be just a perception. It may not be true. It may be a false reading by the ignorant and not so talented citizens who are not up to it to understand what the govt is doing for them. But it is their perception, like it or not.
When the people think otherwise, does it matter?
6/02/2007
Means testing already in practice?
Is this true? Mrs Yeun Yik Kwong wrote to the ST forum page on her personal encounter with means testing at a polyclinic. All we have been hearing is that means testing is still an option in govt hospitals. OK, polyclinic may technically not be a hospital, it is a clinic. So has means testing been introduced into polyclinics and not in hospitals?
Whether it is introduced in polyclinics or hospitals, would it make a difference that means testing is already in practice? What is the truth?
Administratively it is brilliant, worthy of the high pay for talented minds. If a referral from a polyclinic is the first door to a hospital admission, and if this door is closed, no further need for means testing in hospitals. Now is this true or false?
Simply brilliant.
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