I wrote earlier about this. And I am worried that another case is waiting to happen. Remember the students of Tanjong Katong Primary School after the Kota Kinabalu disaster? What did the school did to the students that knew those who perished? Yes,, they counseled them, to make sure mentally and emotionally they were able to cope with the shocking event and the after shock.
Children are just children and it is very difficult to know how they would react to stress, trauma and death of people they know. No one could envisaged Benjamin would take it so badly. It came like a thunderbolt.
And Shanmugam made a Freudian slip in Parliament by saying that the little girl could commit suicide. The parents and teachers must talk to her, counsel her and keep a close watch over her. Make sure she is emotionally supported and prepared to take this blow of Benjamin’s death. Be very careful and concern about this little girl.
And there are also the teachers and police officers to think about. Some may feel very guilty for what they did or did not do and guilt stricken for Benjamin’s death. Some may be so insensitive that it would just be water under the bridge and would not be affected in any way. But some adults, yes, some adults are very sensitive and vulnerable in a tragedy like this. They must also be counseled, the principal, the counselor, teachers, police officers, they are also human beans and would react like human beans.
Let’s hope the after shock would not hit anyone so badly to take his own life or go insane. The pilots that dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki were also mentally affected. This poor Benjamin’s case would prick at the conscience of many who have a conscience in them and they would feel really bad about it.
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.
3/10/2016
3/09/2016
The Truth Behind US Military Aggression In The South China Sea
Jeff Brown: The Truth Behind U.S. Military Aggression
In The South China Sea
The islands in the South China Sea
are mentioned in documents going back to China’s Han Dynasty in 200 B.C.
Currently China occupies just 8 of the 52 occupied Spratly Islands, Yet, the
overt U.S. military aggression in the South China Sea is directed specifically
at China. Viet Nam occupies 25 islands, the Philippines occupies 10 islands,
Malaysia occupies 7 islands, and Taiwan occupies some islands.
China occupies only 15% of the
occupied islands, while U.S. political/military sock-puppet countries control
the rest. What’s going on and why is the United States spending a lot of
money militarily confronting China over these 8 islands?
This is part of America’s grand
strategy to destablize China – and to divide Korea, Japan, and the Phillipines
from China – keep them at odds with each other. The old divide and conquer
strategy. – Jeff Brown (44days.net) on Shadow of Truth
Prior to 1949, the Rand-McNally map
always showed the South China Sea and the Spratly Islands as part of mainland
China. When Mao Zedong and the Communist Party took control of China in October
1949, thereby establishing the Peoples Republic of China, he kicked out all of
the western colonialists and Japanese imperialists. The Spratly Islands
disappeared from the Rand-McNally map. The United States ever since has never
stopped trying to overthrow the Communist Party since 1949.
So there’s 52 occupied islands and
China occupies only 8 of them. What about all those other countries? This is
the American Empire – the big bully – who hates the Communists and hates the
Chinese and can’t stand the fact that it does not lord over Chinese resources. – Jeff Brown
China took two reefs and built two
more small islands and and developed communities of economic
activity. If anything, because of its overt military aggression toward
China over these legal Chinese legal island, the U.S is forcing China to place
military assets on these islands in order for China to defend its interests.
What’s really going on here? China,
South Korea and Japan are trying to form a free trade zone, something which the
U.S. opposes. China was excluded from the TPP Treaty and this trade partnership
among China/S Korea/Japan – which represents 20% of the global GDP – would
partially undermine the U.S.-directed TPP Treaty in this region.
The presence of U.S. military power
in the South China Sea region is extraordinary. South Korea and Japan are
de facto U.S. military occupied countries. Viet Nam, the Philippines and
Japan are essentially U.S. lap dogs. The U.S. military aggression toward
China is part of a military strategy to destabilize and reassume control over
China politically and economically that dates back to 1949:
The U.S. will never stop trying to
destroy China as long as the Communist Party is in power. – Jeff Brown
The article above is written by Jeff
J Brown , a well known international writer and blogger
Donald Trump – The rogue for the President of the USA
The
Americans love him and are forming up behind this 21st century pipe
piper for good or for the worst. But in the eyes of the American elite he is
the father of all the rogues. Here are some accolades plastered onto this man
by Martin Wolf in the Financial Times and reposted in the ST on 3 Mar. Here it
goes:
‘Mr Trump is
the promoter of paranoid fantasies, a xenophobe and an ignornamus His business consists of the erection of ugly
monuments to his vanity. He has no experience of political office…Mr Trump is
grossly unqualified for the world’s most important polticial office.’
And
according to a Robert Kagan in Martin’s article, ‘Mr Trump is also “the GOP’s
Frankenstein monster”…’ What more glorious tribute could any American paid to
this rogue called Donald Trump?
And it is
precisely these attributes that made Trump what he is and what America is
today, the Number One super power. And rogue or no rogue, Donald Trump is
likely to be the Republican’s candidate for the Presidency and could be the
President of the USA?
Singaporean
leaders must be suffering in anguish at such a rogue that they would have to
deal with when Trump comes calling in his Air Force One. Maybe we should erect
a ERP in Changi Airport with a banner saying, ‘No rogue President in
Singapore’.
No wonder
Singapore can never be as great as the USA. The Americans will break any
barriers, any rules, to be great. Singapore will play by the rules, by any
rules, right rules, wrong rules, good rules, bad rules, as long as they are
rules, Singaporeans will obey the rules. And the new rules coming up, No rogues
can become the President of Singapore.
Donald, you
get that?
Oh, let me
return to say something good for Singapore in its pursuit for greatness.
Martin’s article also mentioned about why Rome was great and this was what he
said quoting Alexander Hamilton, ‘He notedthat Rome itself, with its careful
duplication of magistracies, depended in it shours of need on the grant of
absolute, albeit temporary, power to one man called a “dictator”.’ Martin went
on to say that in the end ‘Augustus, heir of the popular party teminated the
(farcical) republic and installed himself as emperor. He did so by preserving
all the forms of the republic, while he dispensed with their meaning.’’ The world farcical is mine.
Singapore
may not become as great as the USA with the prohibition of a rogue President
but can become as great as Rome like the times of Emperor Augustus.
Dominique Sarron Lee – Was it negligence?
Many things
have been written and reported about Dominique’s death. The officers had been
charged in a military court, found guilty and punished. But not criminal
charges were filed against them as the cause of Dominique’s death was due to
allergy to fumes from the smoke grenades.
To cut the
story short, the Today paper reported, ‘A Committee of Inquiry convened after
the incident found that the number of smoke grenades discharged (six), and the
distance between the smoke grenades were in breach of training safety
regulations.’ What does this mean?
In the
mypaper, BG Chan Wing Kai, commander of the army’s Training and Doctrine
Command was quoted to have said, ‘Based on the size of the training area, no
more than two smoke grenades should have been used. But Najib threw six, flouting the SAF’s
training safety regulations. BG Chan said they were convicted in a summary
trial “for negligent performance of lawful order or duty” and punished
according to military law.’
They were
charged and found guilty of negligent. Was the act negligent, rash or something
else? What does the word negligent imply?
Let me use a simply analogy. If a soldier is only allowed to dunk a
recruit in water for 5 seconds but instead dunked the recruit for 20 seconds.
Is it an act of negligence or a rash act, or more serious?
Let me use
another example, a medic is to inject some vaccine into a soldier. He is
supposed to inject 10 ml but chose to inject 100ml and killed the patient. Is
this an act of negligence or a rash act or something else?
If only two
grenades would be allowed but six were thrown in, why, what was the intent?
Unintentional, negligent?
What do you
think?
How much is
the life a Singapore son worth? Felicia handed her son to the SAF. The SAF
returned her son in a coffin plus $50,000 or a bit more. Would $100k be enough,
or $500k or how much you want? Obviously some people did not know the meaning
of what a son meant to a mother and the family. It is priceless!
PS. ‘Contrary to misrepresentations, SAF personnel
can be charged and punished in the criminal courts if they commit rash and
negligent acts during the course of their military duties that lead to injuries or deaths…said the
Army.’ Valerie Koh Today paper.
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