Yes, Sinkies are rich, high income and high spending. Many are worth
half a million or more just be housing alone. But one thing the Sinkies
did not bargain for or fail to realise, the money in their pockets,
savings and bank accounts flies away faster than the money of their
peers in the neighbouring countries. Our money cannot be kept for too
long and keep flowing out and many would have serious problems on
retirements, selling houses and flats to get by.
Our neighbours may not have big incomes, but the money they have somehow
stay with them much longer. And when they look forward to retirement,
they have no fear of losing their homes, the homes they bought and lived
for their whole lives, just to have some money to get by.
Be careful with your money. They are here today, gone today. One can
have hundreds of thousands wiped out without knowing what is happening.
This is going to be the shocking reality that rich Sinkies would have to
come to terms with. The bulk of the ‘rich’ sinkies, notably the average
living in public housing, will realise that the equation will come to
nought when they reach the end of their life journey. In a way it is a
zero sum game, every cent planned to be used for just this life time.
Nothing left in their CPF or savings, not even their HDB flat when it is
game over.
The ability to plan to such details to perfection is really an amazing
art of ‘gum gum ho’. The precision is an engineering feat unmatched
anywhere in the world.
A normal kopitiam at night in Singapore. Typical night life of the average Singaporeans in a govt built housing estate.
11/18/2013
The New Heroes – A New Chapter
The most unlikely new hero in this queer little city state is an
anonymous masked man infamously called The Messiah. He hacked into the
websites of public institutions, including the PMO and the Istana. And
some people clapped and called him the Robin Hood of the oppressed. He
has been unmasked as James Raj, a drug addict on the run, and the hacker
that threatened the govt. This revelation still did not arouse a
barrage of attacks and criticisms for what he had done which everyone
would admit was not a proper thing to do.
The myth and mystery of the mask have been removed. In the eyes of the law, he is a criminal waiting trial and may serve terms behind bars. He is on the wrong side of the law. Then out of the blue came this ‘Support James Raj, victim of the Singapore Govt’. This is an article appearing in TRS and authored by Andy Xian Wong. Wow! This is another challenge to the govt, no longer anonymous. This is a very brave act indeed, literally condoning a wrongful act.
Nevermind, my discourse is about the making of New Heroes in this uncertain time. A hacker attacking and threatening the govt is received by quite a number of people as a hero. And he is not the only one. Many that were tarred and feathered are now seen as heroes in the eyes of some quarters of the population.
M Ravi, the famous and one and only human rights lawyer in this city is also worshipped as another new hero. He has taken up many high profile and politically tainted cases for the underdogs, motivated not by money but by a sense of justice and fair play. He has been victorious so far. Despite the saga when he was almost bundled into the Institute of Mental Health and not seeing daylight. Some learned people had claimed that he was mad or suffering from mental illness that made him unfit to be a lawyer, he is now standing taller than before. He is definitely not mad and every inch a lawyer, and a righteous one.
The victims of the Marxist Conspiracy and Operation Cold Store have written their stories and are seen with a different light. Dr Poh Soo Kai is quietly acknowledged as another hero in the hearts of many Singaporeans, and so were his comrades.
And there is Chee Soon Juan and his SDP. Charged in court several times, faced bankruptcy, branded, dishonest for claiming a few dollars more on taxi fares and using university postage instead of paying for himself, he is being revived, and gaining more popularity and support from the people. His party is growing and he is becoming more credible and a political force to be reckoned with in the next GE.
And of course there was the famous JBJ. His name will be forever etched in the history books of this city as the most tenacious politician that would not fall. He took all the body blows and stood up again and again. He fought a political career and lost everything, but gained everything in respect from the people. He is an icon of sort.
A new chapter is being written with New Heroes in the making. Salted fish resurrected. Many salted fish will be resurrected as the new heros of this queer city. They need not be scholars or eminent doctors or lawyers with a string of degrees. They are the ordinary citizens, the ordinary Singaporeans who care for this country and its citizens, the Singaporeans. They are standing up to take on an onerous and arduous task of reclaiming and reconstructing the country and the lives of its citizens, to write a new chapter of its history.
The myth and mystery of the mask have been removed. In the eyes of the law, he is a criminal waiting trial and may serve terms behind bars. He is on the wrong side of the law. Then out of the blue came this ‘Support James Raj, victim of the Singapore Govt’. This is an article appearing in TRS and authored by Andy Xian Wong. Wow! This is another challenge to the govt, no longer anonymous. This is a very brave act indeed, literally condoning a wrongful act.
Nevermind, my discourse is about the making of New Heroes in this uncertain time. A hacker attacking and threatening the govt is received by quite a number of people as a hero. And he is not the only one. Many that were tarred and feathered are now seen as heroes in the eyes of some quarters of the population.
M Ravi, the famous and one and only human rights lawyer in this city is also worshipped as another new hero. He has taken up many high profile and politically tainted cases for the underdogs, motivated not by money but by a sense of justice and fair play. He has been victorious so far. Despite the saga when he was almost bundled into the Institute of Mental Health and not seeing daylight. Some learned people had claimed that he was mad or suffering from mental illness that made him unfit to be a lawyer, he is now standing taller than before. He is definitely not mad and every inch a lawyer, and a righteous one.
The victims of the Marxist Conspiracy and Operation Cold Store have written their stories and are seen with a different light. Dr Poh Soo Kai is quietly acknowledged as another hero in the hearts of many Singaporeans, and so were his comrades.
And there is Chee Soon Juan and his SDP. Charged in court several times, faced bankruptcy, branded, dishonest for claiming a few dollars more on taxi fares and using university postage instead of paying for himself, he is being revived, and gaining more popularity and support from the people. His party is growing and he is becoming more credible and a political force to be reckoned with in the next GE.
And of course there was the famous JBJ. His name will be forever etched in the history books of this city as the most tenacious politician that would not fall. He took all the body blows and stood up again and again. He fought a political career and lost everything, but gained everything in respect from the people. He is an icon of sort.
A new chapter is being written with New Heroes in the making. Salted fish resurrected. Many salted fish will be resurrected as the new heros of this queer city. They need not be scholars or eminent doctors or lawyers with a string of degrees. They are the ordinary citizens, the ordinary Singaporeans who care for this country and its citizens, the Singaporeans. They are standing up to take on an onerous and arduous task of reclaiming and reconstructing the country and the lives of its citizens, to write a new chapter of its history.
11/17/2013
Do you know why Malaysia refused to introduce National Service?
I think we all know the answer. No country will train and
arm people who are suspects or potential enemies of the state. The Japanese had
an immaculate and ambitious long term plan to conquer the world by sending
their people as migrants overseas, to China
and Southeast Asia and as far as the USA.
They took several decades before they called on these Japanese in their new countries
to rise to serve their Empire against their host nations.
I dunno whether we are too smart to the verge to becoming
stupid, or too gullible and trusting to foreigners that we welcomed so many
with our legs wide open and waiting for something to shaft into the hole.
Foreigners are given citizenships so easily and so happy to make them serve in
our armed forces. We lost two of our brightest boys in Sydney
in the hands of a new citizen.
The latest, we want foreigners, PRs, to serve in our
volunteer army, to be trained to handle weapons and taught the art of war,
believing that they would not turn against us. They could be many sleepers now
in the armed forces, all appearing so loyal and obedient, perfect new citizens.
Some may even be in positions of high commands.
We are truly unique in our psychic, so naïve and gullible of
foreigners, the unknown elements, like the daft citizens welcoming strangers
into their homes to look after their young and old. So many families have met
with tragic ends. Is the risk worth taking, so foolishly? We do not believe is
guarding against strangers. We want to integrate them to be one of us. I think
training and taming the tigers would be a safer bet.
Rich communists
This is a recent photo of some Chinese villagers in the Northeastern
part of China. (Picture credit to China Daily). They were teachers and students standing in front of a school. China is hit by falling admission of students in the village
schools as the young migrated to the big cities. What is nice to note is
the clothing they are wearing, the warm clothings and shoes. The school building is also quite new. This is
2013.
In the 50s and 60s, and even 70s, looking at their photos was like looking into poverty. I still have some black and white photos of my relatives in the 70s, in their best for photo taking. The children were barefooted and the adults, at best, were wearing slippers or sandals. The shirts and dresses were worse than the cheap sales in our pasar malam.
Those were the days that we even had to send food and western medicine to them. They have come a very long way, from abject poverty, without pride or dignity, to become the second largest economy in the world and challenging the Americans with the number of billionaires and millionaires. This is the new China, a very rich communist country.
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