6/18/2014
PRs versus citizens – taking a cue from Jeff Cueller
‘Yahoo! Finance Singapore, 17 Jun 2014
What enrages you more? The fact you can’t cash out your CPF account unless you renounce your citizenship, or that Singapore PRs can withdraw all of their CPF funds And HDB sales proceeds with them when they leave Singapore.
Understandably you’re pissed off because it’s not fair that someone from another country cant take part in your social security program(CPF), use it as a glorified savings account, and withdraw all of it when he/she moves back home.
Let’s not forget the property issue as well. A PR flipping his/her property before leaving Singapore can easily make several hundred thousand dollars – more than enough to buy a huge landed property in 75% of the world.’
And to cap this with a little more icing, PRs that have withdrawn their CPF could return to work and start the whole process all over again. And the Sinkies are banging their heads against the wall, crying and begging for the return of their life savings locked up in the CPF. Why PRs are so privileged and citizens are not?
What Jeff Cueller did not mention are the advantages attached to citizenship, like the minimum sums schemes in the Medisave and Retirement Accounts. The Govt is so worried that the citizens would squander their life savings away if they allow for premature withdrawal and thus depriving the citizens the orgasm they duly deserved for staying in for the full duration. This satisfaction is not extended to the PRS. The PRs can take out prematurely and miss all the fun or they die their business. The PRs think they are very smart. The Govt is only thinking of the good of the citizens, to ensure that they will all retire very rich, if they ever retire at all. The PRs are likely to end up poor by squandering their CPF savings in the casinos or in Batam and Bintang. If Sinkies were to squander away their monies, the Govt would have to help them out at least with hawker food.
Many citizens are so enthralled by this great saving schemes that they do not mind keeping their money in the CPF to feel rich and safe, with no fear that their savings will run away. Oops, many mean 60% who are strong believers of this great scheme and are happy to leave their savings there forever. Jeff Cueller is misinterpreting the values of PRs versus citizenship.
Kopi Level - Green
The Art of Good Communication
Taking a leaf from Apple, Hsien Loong wrote in his Facebook exhorting his super talented colleagues to use simpler words when talking down to the people or the message may not get through. It is as simple as that. For Hsien Loong to say this, it must be something that his talented colleagues have been doing and resulting in miscommunication or poor communication of govt policies. They would not have so much problems with the CPF if they have said things in simple and clear words.
The honour of saying or speaking simply to the people must go to Lim Swee Say. He has coined many fabulous words and phrases that are uniquely Singaporean and very easy to undertand. The more frequent he uses his catchphrases the betterer he communicates.
In my view, communication is a very simple process involving two parties. One speaking and one listening. The one speaking must speak the language the listener can understand. But more crucial is the listener. Does he want to understand? Many failures in communication were not that the speakers spoke in bombastic languages or using high falutin words that no one understood. The words could be simple and easy to understand. The problem is that the listener refuses to listen, intentionally.
A good example is the phrase, ‘Return My CPF’ or ‘Return My CPF at 55’. Not simple enough? Any school children would also be able to understand. But the message is not getting across simply because the listeners refused to listen.
Has anyone heard of the philosophy of the deaf frog? It is not that the frog is deaf. The frog chooses to be deaf. In such a situation, no matter how simple one speaks, how simple the words are, nothing goes in, nothing heard, and no understanding.
How to communicate when the listener is not listening?
Kopi Level - Green
Kenneth Jeyaretnam – Gaining acceptance and credibility
After the fiasco in the Punggol East by election when Kenneth and Desmond both lost their deposits, the political fortune of Kenneth was at its lowest. I could not imagine how miserable he must have felt in that 4 corner fight. His dismal performance was not totally due to his fault, the voters there were just too sophisticated to allow their votes to be splitted. It was crucial to send an opposition candidate into Parliament. They simply made a decision on who they wanted to win against the PAP candidate and threw all their votes at him. It was a case of since the opposition parties could not avoid a 3 corner fight, it was a 4 corner fight, the voters would have to make sure that it was not. They made it into a 2 corner fight with only one opposition candidate against the PAP.
Kenneth should not take it too hard that he was not the chosen one. The voters could not have decided on two opposition candidates and ended like the Presidential Election with all the opposition parties ended the losers. Kenneth must take the lesson from Punggol East and move on. It is good to see him still standing and fighting and not losing that fighting spirit and the will to want to be in Parliament. Just make sure that it is not going to be another 3 corner fight.
Since then, I have been hearing many good words about Kenneth. His façade as a bit aloof, his Englishman accented English that made Singaporeans uncomfortable used to be an issue. Today, the people seem to have accepted what he is and also appreciate him better, as someone of substance and deserving of a place in Parliament. And from the people whom I spoke and interacted with, and from what I have heard in the kopitiams, they wanted someone like Kenneth that can stand up and fire away on his feet with good, factual and relevant arguments to be in Parliament.
Kenneth’s appearances with Roy at Hong Lim and at Hri Kumar’s honest conversation at Thomson-Toa Payoh were well received. He made Hri looked very uneasy in his presence. His forceful articulation of the IMF loan issue was well researched and detailed and his effort did not go unnoticed. All I can say is for Kenneth to keep pounding the streets and keep fighting for what he believes in and what is good for the people. Many are quietly wishing that he should stand in a single seat constituency to raise his chances of winning a seat in the next GE.
Well Kenneth, you listening, keep it up.
Kopi Level - Green
6/17/2014
How low can you go? It is a shame!
The cries of the 76 year old aunty did not go unheard. Her sad and pathetic tales, for begging in public, for the return of her life time savings in the CPF is now free chowder for the unscrupulous to ridicule her. This has made Andrew Loh feeling so disgusted that he had to write something about it. And here is what Andrew wrote.
‘Andrew Loh: I never post things from this odious PAP page but this, I find, is well below the belt and is totally irresponsible.
I’ve blanked out the address (road name) of her house which FAP had included at the bottom of the picture.
The old lady is asking for her CPF money back. What does where she lives have anything to do with it?
I hope the PAP will have some decency and condemn this by FAP, and find out how FAP came to know of her address and even a picture of her house.’
[Source]: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=822788644412753&set=a.196460927045531.49833.100000448763402&type=1
Like they said, the fish rots from the head. When the head is rotting, the body will follow suit. The plight of this senior citizen is not political. The issue of the people’s money locked up in the CPF is not political. It is about the people wanting their money back. It is about the rights to one’s own property, in this case money.
Politicians may want to treat this as a political football. But people, ordinary people, must not be embroiled in this issue to bash the hapless elderly lady when all she was asking is for the return of her money that rightfully belongs to her. Have some decency, have a little sense of right and wrong.
Don’t be an asshole! This is a very bad reflection of the kind of people backing them. People who condone such despicable acts are no better than them. Don’t ridicule an old lady for the sake of scoring political points. She has the right to demand for the return of her money. It is her money!
Kopi Level - Green
Singapore 20 or 30 years forward
What would Singapore be like in 20 or 30 years’ time? At the top, would govt leaders like ministers be new citizens? Would the top civil servants also be new citizens? Would the top management in IT, banking and finance be filled by new citizens and foreigners? Would the medical, legal and teaching professions in the universities be dominated by foreigners?
What about the properties? Would the top end and good quality properties be owned by foreigners with a sprinkle of local elite sharing a small portion of them? Would the HDB flats be occupied by new citizens and PRs? Would they still be as clean as before, like how we maintained them in the last 40 years? Or would the HDB estates be turned in modern slums, dirty, filthy and smelly befitting a 3rd World city filled with 3rd World people? Our trains smelling like filth, with people clinging on the windows outside?
Would there still be a Singaporean middle class left? Or would the society be so extremely stratified that you only have a small obscenely rich upper class and the rest consisting of poor lower middle class and the new poor, all eking a living in this grossly expensive city?
Would Singaporeans become an absolute minority in this city state and actually ended up working as maids and manual labourers, taxi drivers and security guards and all the good jobs taken over by foreigners who are hiring Singaporeans as housekeepers and drivers?
What would become of our lovely city state that we called home? Would all the daft Sinkies realise that things have gone too far and there is no return and regretted their foolishness yesterday for wearing a blinker and congratulating themselves that everything was fine and there was nothing to worry about when they should be worrying about?
I really hope that we are really on the right path and not rotting into oblivion. I hope we are not so short sighted that we cannot see further than the tip of our nose. Where are we heading as a people, as a nation, as a country? Are we being robbed as a people, as a nation, as a country right under our nose? Can we see the changing patterns of things that are detrimental to us as a people, a nation and a country?
No, everything is fine, everything is going as planned? I am just looking at 20 and 30 years forward. What about further down the road?
Kopi Level - Green
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