Singapore’s masters athletes signed up in full force to run in the
Singapore National Games 2018. Everyone was there for a bit of fun and
camaraderie. Nothing much was expected except for the individual
athletes to try to do their best for a PB or to test their timings.
In the course of two weekends at the Home of Athletes in Kallang and
Bishan Stadium there were a few pleasant surprises for the ah pehs and
the ah mahs participating in the competition.
The first surprise came when they were told to open a PayNow account as
all winners of individual events would be receiving a cash award. Wow,
that’s a nice thought regardless of the amount. All the ah pehs and ah
mahs happily gave their names and ICs/mobile numbers and agreed to
register for their respective PayNow accounts to await the cash awards.
Oh, they knew that no cash awards would be given to individual event
winners except for overall winners of the respective age groups. That
was stated in the rules and regulation of the Game.
The next pleasant surprise was when uncle and team won the 4x100m relay
event. Again we were told that we would be receiving a cash award which
we knew the rules and regulations said no. Only winners of events with 4
teams or more would be entitled to cash awards. We took it with half
belief. The cash award was confirmed during the prize presentation
ceremony when a letter stating the cash award in black and white was
given to us. Too good to believe but it was a nice feeling.
The organizers cannot be so stupid to make such mistakes, to tell us
that we would receive cash awards and even presented us a congratulatory
letter with the amount stated. We were all very happy for such
surprises. No one is complaining for sure. How can a nation going to
turn itself into a smart city make blunders by saying one thing and
doing another? We went home and registered for our PayNow accounts and
very hopeful that we would be richer by a few dollars.
We waited and waited but nothing was deposited into our PayNow accounts.
Then we received confirmation that all the pleasant surprises were just
pleasant surprises and too good to be true. The only thing that we
don’t believe is that the organizers could made such elementary mistakes
and telling us things that should not be. This could happen in third
world countries but not in a first world smart nation. We are going to
turn the city into a smart nation. It is not that we were hard up for
the few dollars that we knew we were not entitled. But the false hope
was unnecessary. Was the false hope a gimmick to con the ah pehs and ah
mahs to open PayNow accounts that otherwise they would find no reason to
do so? Is this another ‘pain ah peh’ exercise? The mistakes were
totally unwarranted. The organizers knew the rules, could not be so blur
or so stupid to commit such basic errors right?
The ah pehs kena ‘pian’ another time. Or at least the ah pehs in my
relay team were. We were presented medals for winning our events. We
were at the podium and Kunalan the sprint legend shook our hands and
placed the medals over our necks and photographs were taken. After the
presentation ceremony we were told to return the medals. Why? Because
nothing was inscribed on the medals. The medals were blank, no
description of which event they were meant for. They promised to call us
to return the medals to us after inscribing the events on them.
Three weeks have gone by and we even asked them what had happened to our
medals. So far no reply. It seems that no one bothers after the end of
the Game. It’s over. Let’s move on. We paid to run in the competition
and the least we could expect is our medals. Did we kena conned again a
third time? Cannot be lah. I think they are running short of metals and
have to return to the mines to get some to mint into medals. And this
would take time especially if the metal is coming from Australia or some
foreign land. And it would take more time to print the words on the
medals before delivering the medals to us. 3 weeks after the event is a
short time. Just be patient. The Ah pehs must wait for their medals,
hopefully they will arrive before the next National Games in 2019.
I think the Indonesians did a better job in Jakarta in organizing the
Asian Games. At least the winners got their medals on the same day,
after the event. Some, like the case of the swimmers, had their names
printed on a certificate on the spot. That’s efficiency. How smart are
we as a smart nation? Or is it smart nation but stupid people?
8/29/2018
8/28/2018
Asian Games and the takeaways
The 2018 Asian Games are progressing well in Jakarta and Palembang.
Everything is going as fine as if they were to be held here or in any
other Asian countries. The Games have been going on for years and
organizing it is more or less using a carbon copy of the processes of
the previous Games. No need to reinvent the wheel.
There are a few takeaways from the Games so far. First is the appearance of North Korea, a country suffering from abject poverty if one is silly enough to believe the western media, and the medals they are winning. At this point of writing, 28 Aug, they have already won 12 gold medals, far ahead of rich and prosperous Singapore and even all the Asean countries except Indonesia that have 1 more gold. How could they produce so many sports champions when they did not have enough to eat, no proper training facilities, definitely cannot afford to hire super talented and expensive foreign coaches. If you are to believe in the western narrative, the North Koreans would be training with antique equipments and with half full stomachs. Their total medal tally is 12 golds, 6 silver and 7 bronzes, ahead of Thailand, Taiwan, India and of course Singapore with 3 golds, 4 silvers and 10 bronzes. And this is not counting their medals in the combined Korea team.
As the top medal winner nations are the richer Asian nations, it is foolish to say that North Korea is an exception, that it is very poor and still did better than the supposedly rich Asian nations. Sports competition today is a very expensive hobby that only the rich and able could afford. It is no longer simply about brawn and raw power but about training, systems, nutrition, equipment, medication and plenty of money for travelling, competition and coaches.
The other nation that stood out in the Games is Kazakhstan. This is a newly rich country, thanks to the wealth brought along by becoming a new transportation hub in the New Silk Road. The wealth of this landlocked country, once written off for good for many centuries, its natural resources untapped due to poor transportation network, is now a prosperous central Asian country. They sent in a huge contingent of 440 athletes, something they could not afford before and never dreamt of. Nevermind if they were not medal winners, they could afford to travel all the way from central Asia to Jakarta/Palembang to have a bit of fun and competition, to tell the world that they are around.
The other notable country is Bahrain. This Middle Eastern oil rich country is splurging its money on acquiring the best sports men and women from Africa. And their acquisitions are almost all winners and record breakers. This is how to use money cleverly. They have a lot of OPM to splurge and splurge they did, to buy winners. Singapore can learn a lot from them and turn our 3 miserable gold medals to a dozen at least. Money, especially OPM, if used cleverly, can achieve a lot of fame and glory, never mind if they are worthy of it or not. Compare to the OPM spent on footballs and table tennis, I think the Bahrainians are wiser or at least smarter in how they spent OPM.
Singapore can have a lot of sports heroes from Africa and a lot to cheer about if we go the Bahrainian way. There is still hope to hitch a ride on the New Chinese Silk Road, if we have not messed it up for good, and be as prosperous as the Kazakhstan. Our wealth cannot last if we are replaced as a commercial and transportation hub by our stupidity, arrogance and poor strategic thinking.
How many are still out there laughing at the ‘poor’ North Koreans, deceived and deluded by the western media? Without all the American sanctions and economic isolation pressure, North Korea would be as rich as South Korea. There are the same people, with the same DNA and intellect.
There are a few takeaways from the Games so far. First is the appearance of North Korea, a country suffering from abject poverty if one is silly enough to believe the western media, and the medals they are winning. At this point of writing, 28 Aug, they have already won 12 gold medals, far ahead of rich and prosperous Singapore and even all the Asean countries except Indonesia that have 1 more gold. How could they produce so many sports champions when they did not have enough to eat, no proper training facilities, definitely cannot afford to hire super talented and expensive foreign coaches. If you are to believe in the western narrative, the North Koreans would be training with antique equipments and with half full stomachs. Their total medal tally is 12 golds, 6 silver and 7 bronzes, ahead of Thailand, Taiwan, India and of course Singapore with 3 golds, 4 silvers and 10 bronzes. And this is not counting their medals in the combined Korea team.
As the top medal winner nations are the richer Asian nations, it is foolish to say that North Korea is an exception, that it is very poor and still did better than the supposedly rich Asian nations. Sports competition today is a very expensive hobby that only the rich and able could afford. It is no longer simply about brawn and raw power but about training, systems, nutrition, equipment, medication and plenty of money for travelling, competition and coaches.
The other nation that stood out in the Games is Kazakhstan. This is a newly rich country, thanks to the wealth brought along by becoming a new transportation hub in the New Silk Road. The wealth of this landlocked country, once written off for good for many centuries, its natural resources untapped due to poor transportation network, is now a prosperous central Asian country. They sent in a huge contingent of 440 athletes, something they could not afford before and never dreamt of. Nevermind if they were not medal winners, they could afford to travel all the way from central Asia to Jakarta/Palembang to have a bit of fun and competition, to tell the world that they are around.
The other notable country is Bahrain. This Middle Eastern oil rich country is splurging its money on acquiring the best sports men and women from Africa. And their acquisitions are almost all winners and record breakers. This is how to use money cleverly. They have a lot of OPM to splurge and splurge they did, to buy winners. Singapore can learn a lot from them and turn our 3 miserable gold medals to a dozen at least. Money, especially OPM, if used cleverly, can achieve a lot of fame and glory, never mind if they are worthy of it or not. Compare to the OPM spent on footballs and table tennis, I think the Bahrainians are wiser or at least smarter in how they spent OPM.
Singapore can have a lot of sports heroes from Africa and a lot to cheer about if we go the Bahrainian way. There is still hope to hitch a ride on the New Chinese Silk Road, if we have not messed it up for good, and be as prosperous as the Kazakhstan. Our wealth cannot last if we are replaced as a commercial and transportation hub by our stupidity, arrogance and poor strategic thinking.
How many are still out there laughing at the ‘poor’ North Koreans, deceived and deluded by the western media? Without all the American sanctions and economic isolation pressure, North Korea would be as rich as South Korea. There are the same people, with the same DNA and intellect.
8/27/2018
Belt tightening versus belt loosening
Hsien Loong’s key speech during the National Day Rally was to teach the
people how to change their habits to save some money given the high cost
of living in this most expensive city in the world. To the masses, it
is belt tightening time and this has been going on for the last few
decades. Their lives have been a serial of downgrading and downgrading,
from the 5Cs to smaller flats or even selling part of their leases, from
country clubs to community clubs, from car ownership to riding
bicycles, from eating in restaurants to foodcourts to hawker centres.
And to make eating in hawker centres more palatable, without being
undignified, like the best thing in the world, Singapore is going to
apply for UNESCO recognition that hawker centre is Singapore’s treasured
way of life.
minister has come out in support of this belt tightening exercise. “The Government will do its part – that is our commitment … But at the same time, we hope that people will also think through what they are able to afford and manage and also to make the right choices”: Second Minister for Finance Indranee Rajah on the cost of living in Singapore. Channel NewsAsia
On the other side of the rich poor divide, Chok Tong is telling the people that the ministers are underpaid. Is this the first hint that minister’s exorbitant salary, out of this world’s salary, is going to be raised and is he hinting that the ministers are not happy with their high salary? Are the belts of the ministers too tight and need loosening so that they could fatten themselves more? Looking at everyone one them, ruby and oily cheeks, they really look very well fed. And one MP is driving a Bentley, only an MP and can afford the luxury of a Bentley. Still salary not enough?
The people are told to tighten their belts and the ministers are thinking of loosening their belts, to consume more with higher salary? We are in it together, in the same boat? Anyone hallucinating?
minister has come out in support of this belt tightening exercise. “The Government will do its part – that is our commitment … But at the same time, we hope that people will also think through what they are able to afford and manage and also to make the right choices”: Second Minister for Finance Indranee Rajah on the cost of living in Singapore. Channel NewsAsia
On the other side of the rich poor divide, Chok Tong is telling the people that the ministers are underpaid. Is this the first hint that minister’s exorbitant salary, out of this world’s salary, is going to be raised and is he hinting that the ministers are not happy with their high salary? Are the belts of the ministers too tight and need loosening so that they could fatten themselves more? Looking at everyone one them, ruby and oily cheeks, they really look very well fed. And one MP is driving a Bentley, only an MP and can afford the luxury of a Bentley. Still salary not enough?
The people are told to tighten their belts and the ministers are thinking of loosening their belts, to consume more with higher salary? We are in it together, in the same boat? Anyone hallucinating?
8/26/2018
Crazy Rich Asians - The Awakening
I read some of the reviews about Crazy Rich Asians to find out what people were crazy about. Here are a few paragraphs from a Bourree Lam, she called herself American, about what was so startling to her about this movie. It is about Asian men, that there are Asian men that are really men, just like Joe and John, that can be desirable, and can speak and believe it or not, are human beans on this world. Before this Crazy Rich Asians, there were no Asian men, only white men. Wow! What a great discovery.
This is a little bit from her article in Yahoo News titled Crazy Ripped Asians.
'This has hardly been the case in America.
Before the 1900s, Asian males
were often portrayed as dangerous to Western society. In the era of the
Chinese Exclusion Act and Yellow Peril, Asian men were depicted as
cartoonishly cold-hearted villains.
Anxieties that Asian men may marry white American women led to racist
portrayals of Asian men as evil, feminine, and generally undesirable.
“The Asian male figure was conjured as an Other who is threatening and
dangerous at worst, and distasteful and dismissible at best,” said L.S.
Kim, an associate professor of film and digital media at UC Santa Cruz,
of that era.... But I posit that there’s one aspect of the movie that we can all agree on: I’m talking about the abs. All one thousand of them.
Serving
up male bodies to gawk at is one of the oldest tropes of the rom-com
genre. These movies are made for swooning, and swoon we did. Have you
ever seen so many Asian Adonises who have misplaced their tops in one
movie? Singapore is known for its tropical climate, but is it codified
that a man must spend half of his waking hours (and 100% of his sleeping
ones) airing out his upper half?
It’s
not superficial, either. This display of Asian male beauty is fighting a
decades-old narrative in America, a racist one where Asian male bodies
were either portrayed as made for kung-fu or made for being laughed at.
If you know the history, you might end seeing the abs in Crazy Rich Asians in a slightly sharper light.'
This Bourree Lam must have swooned over the male Asian bodies that she had never seen before all her adult life. Is she 25 or 35? She could not be older as she remembered this western bias existed only for decades, not centuries. Where had she been? Oh in America of course, she is American. And there were no Asian men in America, or at least in her life or in her association.
This is not the only awakening. Since Bruce Lee kicked open the white men's only door of Hollywood nothing really happened after that. Perhaps if Bruce Lee could carry on kicking for a few more years, think would have changed a bit more. It was like they repaired and put back the broken white men's door after Bruce Lee left.
It seemed that every writer or actor/actress, I mean of Asian origin has suddenly woken up to the fact that there were no Asians in Hollywood other than the stereotyped, very nerdy, no character, the cartoons, or kung fu fighters. They have awakened, they have removed their blinkers, that Asians are also human beans but strangely non existence in Hollywood or in the USA!
Wow, unbelieveable. This is a great scientific discovery since they discovered the theory of gravity or homo sapien originated from apes. Now every Asian actor/actress is standing up and asking the same question that they did not think should be asked in the world of movie making. But this is the world of the bananas. They did not know the existence of Bollywood and the movie world of Hongkong, Taiwan and now China. These movie industries don't exist or don't count. Their only world of make belief is the Hollywood stereotyped of James Bond, Tom Cruise, and who else, their white gods. And they were comfortable living in this world of white gods and nothing else. Now why would Hollywood want to cast Asians when their stories are western and catering to a western audience?
This is perhaps the greatest happenings of Crazy Rich Asians, the awakening of the bananas, that before this movie, they don't exist and they did not know. Now they know. But unfortunately this is going to be another flash in the pan incident and would be over when the light is out.
8/25/2018
Electricity tariff in Singapore versus oil price
Hsien Loong startled the audience of his National Day
speech asking the people to ‘kee chiu’ if they think electricity tariff is
lower than 10 years ago. Many got it wrong, believing that electricity today is
higher instead of lower. He then showed two graphs, one on electricity tariff
and another on oil price to show the complementarity of the movements of the
two items. When oil price is up, tariff is up. The audience was astonished that
electricity price today was lower than 10 years ago. Hsien Loong supplement his
discovery with this statement:
‘”Describing the issue of electricity tariffs as “more
complicated”, he noted that the current rate of 23.65 cents/kwh is more
affordable than it was in the third quarter of 2008 at 25.07 cents/kwh.
’––Singapore’s electricity tariffs are dependent on
the fluctuations in oil prices as the nation uses natural gas – all imported –
to generate almost all of its electricity, he explained.’ Yahoo News
Many in the audience or watching the TV must be amazed
for seeing that electricity tariff has actually gone down and their perception
was wrong, that electricity price is high. Here are the two charts.
For flashing the two charts in a speech and giving the
audience very little time to ponder and understand what they were shown is a
clever way of getting one’s point across. Now we have a bit more time reading
the charts and see what they meant and whether they really made sense. Yes, the
tariff is lower today, 23.65 cents against 25.07 cents. What about the relative
oil prices for the respective time? I could not figure out the scale of the above oil price chart. To me the numbers were funny. Below is a 10 year oil price chart by Macrotrends.net. Oil price peaked in 2008 to US$140 per barrel and hit a low of US$30 in 2009 and below US$30 in 2015.
Oil price in 2008 was $140 per barrel against $60 per
barrel today. If electricity tariff is to fluctuate in sync with oil price,
when the oil price is halved, should not the electricity tariff be halved as
well or somewhere near there? The 23.65/25.07 numbers showed that electricity
tariff has fallen by 1.42 cents or 5.66%! Should it not be bigger for the
80/140 or 57% difference in price of oil? The latter is the percentage of change when oil price fell from $140 to $60.
Yes they both swing in the same direction but the
quantum is vastly different. Does it make sense that one changed by 57% and one
by 1.42%?
What is the problem with the numbers? What is the problem with the charts? Should the
people be happy that electricity prices have fallen by 1.42%? Or should it go
down by a bigger percentage? Why is the fall so miniscule?
The above chart shows the prices of oil over the last
10 years. The chart Hsien Loong presented showed the prices of electricity of
the same period but the fluctuation is not more than 5 cents each way.
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