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  • Singapore – More Pleasant Than Hong Kong?

    Singapore – More Pleasant Than Hong Kong?

    Whoever thinks Hong Kong is a cool place should take a look at Singapore because it is a mini paradise and an efficient one at that.

    Yes, the heat is unbearable, which is odd when you think of Christmas in Hong Kong, but it didn’t ruin our family holiday. We were happy. No sweat.

    But it seems nothing is “free” in Singapore. I mean free speech, for instance, is not really free.

    There are too many rules but compared with Hong Kong in general, Singapore stacks up rather well.

    It’s also smart.

    Catching an air-conditioned double decker is a pleasant experience which is multiplied when you see a digital display of how many seats are available in the upper deck.

    Driving in Orchard Road, you’re struck by digital signages that show the number of available parking spaces in major malls.

    These conveniences are just some of the little things you’ll fall in love with.

    I know some Hong Kong startups that are planning to develop an app that shows this kind parking data but they’re being hampered by difficulties including a lack of a proper business model.

    In Singapore, these apps are free.

    I wouldn’t be surprised if Singapore, already a popular stop in the Formula One circuit, will be the cradle of the driverless car.

    I’m sure the Ferrari and Lamborghini drivers I happened to bump into at the South Beach Hotel would have no objections.

    Big data works best in a small city.

    Look at how well Singapore organised itself to farewell its founder, Lee Kuan Yew, when he died in March.

    Lee left behind a proud nation which is often compared with Hong Kong, with its can-do spirit, but often comes out on top.

    Singapore taxi drivers, unlike many of their Hong Kong peers, have so much positive energy to share about their city.

    One of them asked us if we had seen a beggar.

    No, we said, why? Because the government knows when people are unemployed, he said.

    The government helps them find shelter and a job that pays S$800 (HK$4,385) a month.

    Singaporeans can use their pension fund to pay for a public housing flat, which in general is about twice the size of a Hong Kong apartment.

    If you’re curious if mainlanders cause any trouble there, the short answer is no, according to two drivers we spoke to.

    We haven’t seen any obscene things either in the five times we have spent a holiday there.

    Yes, Singapore is a small, smart and super.

     

    Source: www.ejinsight.com

  • Gay, Atheist International Student From Malaysia Disowned By Family

    Gay, Atheist International Student From Malaysia Disowned By Family

    A University of Winnipeg international student is turning to the kindness of strangers to help him stay in Canada.

    On a GoFundMe page, Hazim Ismail wrote because he is gay and atheist he has been disowned and funding for his education has been cut off.

    Ismail is from Malaysia, a country where sodomy is considered a criminal offense.

    In order to stay in Canada and keep his immigration status, Ismail says he needs to stay enrolled in three classes per term.

    On Monday morning, the psychology student reached his $5,000 goal covering the minimum amount to stay a student at U of W.

    He says he is very grateful for the outpouring of support from the Winnipeg community.

    The University of Winnipeg issued a statement about Hazim. It reads:

    “Hazim is both courageous and resourceful and we are proud to have him as our student. We have been monitoring his GoFundMe campaign and we will ensure, if needed, that he is able to complete his winter term here.”

    Ismail says he doesn’t know what the future holds, but he’s decided to concentrate on his upcoming exams and take it from there.

     

    Source: http://winnipeg.ctvnews.ca

  • Why “Creeping Islamisation” Is No Joke

    Why “Creeping Islamisation” Is No Joke

    If you were not bingeing on a TV show imagining a world where the Nazis had won, like I did, how did you spend your New Year’s Eve?

    Did you spend it indoors with your loved ones? Or perhaps you were one of the revellers who danced the night away, pausing only to admire the fireworks?

    Or maybe, seeking respite from the drizzle, you were planning to witness the countdown at the historic Dataran Merdeka? Only to bafflingly discover that the place was filled with thousands of men clad in robes and skullcaps chanting in Arabic?

    It would be too easy to dismiss and mock critics who highlight the so-called “creeping Islamisation” in Malaysia. Especially those who cite the event — the recurring Malam Cinta Rasul, or Love the Prophet Night — as a pointed example.

    After all, the notion of “creeping Islamisation” plays right into the narrative of anti-liberal reactionaries, who often speak of concerted attacks to undermine the position of Islam and the Malay race in this country.

    For them, it evokes their favourite caricature of a hysterical Malay-hating Islamophobe strawman who would rant against anything tied to the two topics.

    How could Islamisation creep up on you when Islam has been here for centuries? So, the argument could go.

    Or they would conflate being Islamic and Islamised, claiming that many Muslims were happily drinking the night away on New Year’s Eve, among other vices.

    Fact is, institutionalised Islamisation has been around for so many decades that even those who have not been completely indoctrinated, would have normalised the situation and can see nothing wrong.

    Islamisation has less to do with people becoming more pious or religious, than it is with Islam permeating into institutions and spaces that used to be secular and have no religious value.

    To the clueless, let me start the year right by painting a picture of Islamisation by using Malam Cinta Rasul as an example, and another “creeping faith” that haunts the dreams of paranoid clerics: Star Wars.

    Malam Cinta Rasul might be optional, it is not mandatory for all Malaysians, let alone Muslims. Nonetheless, it has now been held on a grand scale annually since 2013 — mostly on New Year’s Eve — not counting several other events sharing the same name in other states.

    This is only possible with backing from the state, and so it was. The event was organised by the Cheras Education Foundation, a foundation under Cheras Umno, led by influential grassroots chief Syed Ali Alhabshee.

    And the foundation can afford to do so, when it is backed by the state itself. Co-partners included the Federal Territories (FT) Ministry, Communications and Multimedia Ministry, the Kuala Lumpur City Hall, and the FT Islamic Council.

    Present as guests of honour at the event, complete with comfortable lounge seats, were Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, FT minister Tengku Adnan Mansor, Perak Mentri Besar Dr Zambry Kadir, KL Mayor Amin Nordin Abdul Aziz, and Syed Ali himself.

    Essentially, this means Putrajaya has no qualms holding an event that costs hundreds of thousands ringgit (last year’s cost was roughly RM200,000), for something that panders exclusively to Muslims.

    Doesn’t sound too ridiculous? Imagine then, Putrajaya co-organising a massive, costly Star Wars convention, and only Star Wars, year in year out.

    Not to forget, the event was held in a public space, commonly associated with New Year’s Eve celebrations which was completely accessible to people of all backgrounds. Or at least it was, before 2013.

    Drawing on the same analogy, this is akin to a Malaysian coming every week to his pasar malam spot, only to discover that suddenly the lot is used for a Star Warsscreening. For the next month, there has not been any pasar malam on that day of the week. Just Star Wars, week after week.

    Unconsciously, the public is made to perceive that such an Islamic-themed events — regardless of its actual religiosity — is a norm, despite its relatively late introduction to Malaysia.

    Not only that, by endorsing such an event, Putrajaya is promoting it as a “preferred” way to usher in the new year. Which spells good news for conservative killjoys who cannot stand others enjoying their non-Shariah-compliant celebrations.

    Once secular, the new year has now been co-opted as a day to assert Islam’s dominance, by the many Malays who came in droves, over the rest of the public.

    This, insidiously, carries repercussions beyond just ringing in the new year.

    This endorsement of a seemingly Islamic way of life as the only “right” way for a Malay to live will result in an ugly divide and demonisation, especially when Malays have no way of shedding the “Muslim” label in the first place.

    Left unchallenged, it would solidify the position of Islamic dogma as the basis of the country’s governance.

    We see it in Islamic agencies Jakim and Yapeim’s impunity, even in the face of public uproar over its lack of transparency in handling funds.

    We see it in the Langkawi homes where the roofs were painted over simply for resembling a cross at a certain angle.

    We see it in the clergy wing of Islamist party PAS, suggesting that marrying children off is the best way to prevent sexual crimes.

    We see it in Terengganu, which like some other states have banned vaping, but only after the National Fatwa Council deemed it “haram” for Muslims.

    We see it in the civil court handing over the power of child custody in cases of forced Muslim conversions, to the Shariah courts. A decision which PAS Youth has proudly claimed as a “victory” against liberals, although it is more likely a trumping win against non-Muslims.

    Yes, Malaysians are yet to turn more Islamic.

    But slowly and bit by bit, unnoticed by most, there is a shift on imposing Islamist views on matters where religion previously had no place. That surely qualifies as creeping, and does not sound as funny.

    * This is the personal opinion of the columnist, Zurairi AR.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

     

  • Man Kills, Then Eats Penis Of Wife’s Rapist

    Man Kills, Then Eats Penis Of Wife’s Rapist

    Jakarta: Rudi Efendi on his wedding night discovered that his wife is not a virgin and demanded explanation, she told that she was raped by a man she dated.

    According to news published in Zeenews.com, Efendi ordered his wife to contact the alleged rapist and set up a meeting. When the ex arrived, Efendi stabbed him to death and set him on fire, before chopping off his penis.

    “I was so outraged,” Efendi told reporters. The only way “to cure my heartache” was to eat the victim’s genitals, the frontpagemag.com quoted him as saying.

    Efendi ordered his 20-year-old wife to cook for him. He also insisted that she sit down and eat along with him.

     

    Source: www.siasat.com

  • Malaysian Islamic Preacher Cautions Against Growth Of “Jediism” Amidst Star Wars Craze

    Malaysian Islamic Preacher Cautions Against Growth Of “Jediism” Amidst Star Wars Craze

    An Islamic preacher has expressed concern over the “Star War” craze in Muslim-majority Malaysia, days after the latest installation of the epic cult movie series premiered here.

    Rohidzir Rais took to Facebook to warn against the growing influence of “Jediism” in the country that was spread by fans of the movie, after reading a newspaper article titled “gila Star Wars” or “Star Wars craze” in English.

    “In the West, there is a new religion called Jediism which makes this film the basis of their ‘faith’. Do you not realise this? Do you still want to defend your ‘faith’?” Rohidzir wrote in Bahasa Malaysia last Sunday, in an open appeal to Malaysian Muslim fans of Star Wars.

    He claimed that Malaysia’s Gen-Y have become “lost” in the “3S”, which he said stood for “screen, sports and sex”.

    In a separate post a day earlier, the Al-Azhar University graduate had mocked the creator and director of the Star Wars series, George Lucas, as a prophet who was proselytising the “Jedi religion” worldwide with his “magical sabre”.

    “With the chaos in the battlefield and false fights in the imaginary world, we forget the real battle are against Muslims across the world,” he wrote.

    His post drew mixed responses from Facebook users, with some fans castigating the preacher over his views.

    “Pitiful, expecting those learned in religion but the antiquated thinking is as deep as the sea. Because of that many of our Malay Muslims have such backwards thoughts because preachers like you exist,” user Rusdi Muhammad responded and urged Rohidzir to watch a TV Hijrah programme that had provided a positive discussion of the movie.

    Others, like Syed Fadzil urged Rohidzir to speak based on facts.

    “There are a lot of fans from Generation X who are knowledgeable about this film and thank God there is no news of them who have lost their faith. You need to study the root of this issue,” he said.

    “Don’t be like the black metal case. Even Black Dog Bone has been classified as Black Metal… because of the word black,” he added, referring to a 1980s pop group.

    Another Facebook user Mohd Hayat said he sympathised with the Star Wars characters but could also feel for Muslims in strife-torn Yemen, Syria, Palestine and Ukraine.

    “So what’s the problem? Don’t be a bonsai religionist,” he wrote.

    Rohidzir was unperturbed in the face of the criticisms against him and responded in a similar mocking vein.

    “The Malaysian galaxy is fortunate to have Muslim Jedi fighters that are brave and strong to defend their galaxy. We are convinced if World War 3 ever happens, they are ready to be martyrs with the Force that are strong in them.

    “Congratulations once again to the Jew George Al-Lucas for succeeding in giving birth to Jedi martyrs who are ready to attack anyone who challenge their galaxy,” the author of 30 books who regularly appears on TV9’s “Tanyalah Ustaz (Ask Uztaz)” show wrote.

    Star Wars: The Force Awakens is the seventh installation of the sci-fi hit dating back to 1977 and premiered in Los Angeles on December 14.

    The last movie in the series, “Revenge of the Sith” hit the silver screen 10 years ago as part of a prequel trilogy.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

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