Is this what
you want to happen to your country? We own this country. Our parents and
grandparents built and willed this country to us and our children. Why are we
giving our country away to foreigners for free and giving them additional
rebates, subsidies, national bonuses and financial incentives to occupy our
country?
Chinatown hawker centre. Hawker Centres are a national heritage, selling a wide variety of food at very reasonable prices. They are spread across the whole island and is part of the Singapore way of life.
7/02/2015
GE 2015/16 issues for the voters to consider – Issue 5 – Do you want to give your country to foreigners?
Maybe there are
now 50% new citizens among the Singaporeans and with many more as PRs or
Employment Pass holders. This is as good as giving away half of the country to
foreigners who are now new citizens. And if the population goes to 6.9m or 10m,
we are as good as giving our country away, have been occupied by foreigners,
now holding pink ICs.
Amos Yee – Heckling special needs children
When special
needs children were in the wrong place, many cried outrage, vile, vile, vile.
How can people heckled children with special needs? That was the kind of
reactions from caring and righteous people out to protect special needs
children. What a show of nobility and compassion.
Would a boy
suffering form Autism Spectrum Disease be called a special needs child? Would such a child need the protection of
caring adults from wicked people out to do harm to him? Got diminished
responsibility or not? Any clever lawyer wants to comment?
What if such
a child is snatched away from his mother, pronounced mad and thrown into a
mental hospital where serious mental patients are locked up? Is it vile? Is it
the right thing to do? Is this to help the child, to protect the child, to save
the child? What would a child affected by ASD ended up in the company of mental
patients?
And the
child is screaming for justice. Would anyone listen and offer a helping hand?
While the child’s plea gone unnoticed, abandoned by the caring and righteous
men and women with halos above their heads, a lonely mother cries. The world
turned to look the other way.
First World
or Third World? What happens to human
decency? Where are the people of kindness, the people of God or Gods, the
angels and immortals?
After this
shameful ordeal, would anyone dare to talk about moral high grounds, about
righteousness, about kindness, about compassion, about a caring society?
And a mother
cries.
Freedom of expression at its best in Sin City
Many of you
may not have noticed this. Freedom of expression is the new thing in Singapore.
Everyone is freely expressing himself in the freest way unmatched by any other
country in the western hemisphere. And this is not confined to just foreigners
expressing themselves with their special privileged positions as the darlings
of this island, the most sought after talents from the world, and must be
handled with care and sensitivity in case we offended them and they choose to
go to our neighbouring countries where the conditions are more hospital than
this piece of rock. Cannot rock the boat
and see them fleeing.
Let me offer
a few examples of freedom of expression by the citizens. One guy said he would
cut off the cock of a boy and shaft it down the boy’s throat. Now there is
another guy saying he will pay someone to rape a boy remanded in the mental
hospital. The price for such freedom is quite cheap and did not bother them.
They can afford to pay for it. Was it a stern warning?
Another guy
went even further by exercising his freedom of expression and slapped a boy
outside the court house in front of the media. Stylo milo. One was caught
talking about shooting the PM but released and given a stern warning. Where
else can you find people so daring and bold in expressing their feelings so
freely? Sin City got no freedom of expression? Cannot be right? These are clear
daylight evidence that freedom of expression is alive and practiced freely
here. What about Amos? What Amos?
As for the
foreigners, they even have more leeway in expressing themselves. They feel very
free to mock or insult the citizens, calling them stupid and daft, poor, no
talent, and the citizens were chided not to take it out on them personally.
Beating up a foreigner, taking the law into one’s own hand, will be dealt with
harshly by the authority. We are a rule by law country. Violation of the law is
unacceptable unless one is mentally insane. Then one could enjoy the comfort of
a mental hospital stay with tender loving care from all quarters.
What else
did the foreigners enjoy? When they are unhappy with the taxi drivers, if the
taxi drivers got the audacity to insist they pay the taxi fares after a drunken
spree, they simply expressed their unhappiness at the taxi drivers by beating
them up. Again, the price for such freedom of expression is cheap. They can
afford to pay for it.
Freedom of
expression is flourishing and well at a small price and many would be encouraged
to express their feelings freely. Would there be a time when someone say he
will pay for a hire gun to take out someone he is not happy with?
7/01/2015
Amos Yee - Protest at Hong Lim Park Sun 5 Jul 15 at 4pm
For Amos, For our
children:
Hong Lim Park event on Sunday to rally for Amos Yee’s release.
A protest will be held in Hong Lim Park this coming Sunday, 4 pm, to ask for the release of Amos Yee, a 16-year-old blogger who is currently being held in the Institute of Mental Health (IMH).
The above is a comment in TRE and Andrew Loh's post on the same topic confirmed that there is a protest this weekend.
A protest will be held in Hong Lim Park this coming Sunday, 4 pm, to ask for the release of Amos Yee, a 16-year-old blogger who is currently being held in the Institute of Mental Health (IMH).
The above is a comment in TRE and Andrew Loh's post on the same topic confirmed that there is a protest this weekend.
GE 2015/16 issues for the voters to consider – Issue 4 – Do you care for the future of our next generation?
I like to
borrow a quote from Katherine Tseng and Lim Tai Wei’s article on China’s rise
and Taiwan’s dilemma with a little Singaporean twist.
Do you want
a younger generation of Singaporeans that does not enjoy the same career
opportunities, stable employment and competitive salaries as their parents?
Think before
you vote. Think very carefully about people who want to bring in foreigners to
replace Singaporeans regardless of nationalities to compete with our children.
Who is
responsible for the well being of our future generations?
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