Category: Singapuraku

  • LGBT Community Given A Lot Of Public Space In Singapore, Why Pushing For More?

    LGBT Community Given A Lot Of Public Space In Singapore, Why Pushing For More?

    Dear All Singapore Stuff,

    This is what I saw this Sunday on my MRT ride back home. Two men openly kissing on the train. Everyone was looking at them. I was kind enough to take the pic without a direct shot of the boy’s face.

    I respect everyone’s rights, but this is Simply Disgusting in a public space.

    What if my children saw this and asked “Mummy, why are the two men kissing?”

    Would I have to answer “It’s the same as normal love and marriage. The only difference is that one man opens his buttocks for the other man to put his private part inside but in the end, no babies come out. They only get AIDS”?!

    Is this another publicity stunt by the gay community?

    Most people in SG already know they exist but would prefer that they just go back inside the closet and stop seeking attention.

    Recently, Minister Chan Chun Sing bravely spoke out against public displays of homosexuality in Singapore. These were his words “I’m not going to discriminate … (You’re free to do) whatever you do behind your bedroom doors … It’s not my problem. I’m not a sex policeman … But if you tell everyone to champion pro-LGBT or anti-LGBT (causes), it (might) cause social divisions, so (I have to step in) to be the policeman in the middle.” (source: http://m.todayonline.com/singapore/chan-chun-sing-urges-youth-go-beyond-…)

    It seems that we really need sex policemen like Mr Chan and stricter laws to keep the urges of the gay community in check. The gay minority can do whatever they want in their bedroom but they should not be going around promoting the gay lifestyle and demanding for gay marriage. They can be gay but we have our right not to accept their behaviour in public. A vast majority of Singaporeans do not approve of gay marriage and are unlikely to change our minds anytime soon. Singapore should not degenerate into a free-for-all where gay men can brazenly go around wrecking young boys’ buttocks in the name of love, without fearing the consequences of their actions.

    Homosexuals should be thankful that they have their annual Pink Dot. We as the moral majority have already given them enough public space. What more do they want? Gay sex parties? Gay parades? To be able to teach kids about gay sex? Some of them are not contented with Pink Dot and intimacy in private. Instead, they want to flaunt their gayness in public and ‘confront’ normal heterosexual couples until they accept them as normal and see them as equally ‘married’. No, homosexual relationships are not normal and therefore will be never be equal to a real marriage between a man and a woman. We have to draw the line at some point. For many of us, life is not just about fulfilling sexual fetishes that are falsely attributed to genetics.

    Melinda
    A.S.S Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

     

  • Huttons Asia Hit By Massive 1 Star Review After Hit, Curse And Run Accident

    Huttons Asia Hit By Massive 1 Star Review After Hit, Curse And Run Accident

    Animal Lovers League (ALL), a registered charity which is a shelter to about 700 abused and rescued dogs and cats on 23 Oct, appealed for information on the driver of a car which ran over their dog. The incident happened on 23 Oct at about 10.45am near 61 Pasir Ris Farmway 3.

    ALL said in a Facebook post: “Two Witnesses asked her to stop and help them with the injured dog. The driver’s response was “F*** you. It’s only a dog,” and drove off. If you know who the woman driver is, please TEXT or whatsapp Cathy on 91546422.” The car plate number is: SJR9248E.

    The animal shelter in saying that it would file a report on the incident with the Police as well as AVA, described the injured dog as a “really sweet dog who loves his pats and treats.”

    The unfortunate event which happened just outside their shelter was witnessed by several volunteers.

    “When the car ran him over, the wheel rolled over him and he was also hit several times by the mud guard as the driver didn’t stop, while he struggled under the car,” said ALL. The dog is currently being attended to by a vet.

    The owner of the car that ran over a dog belonging to an animal shelter in Pasir Ris has now been identified as 38-year-old woman living in Tampines. A commenter on All’s volunteer Lixin Tan’s Facebook post said that he paid the fee to extract the information using the car’s registration plate.
    1Facebook user Jessica Yeow said that the hit-and-run driver is a real estate agent.

    After Jessica’s post revealing where the hit-and-curse driver worked went viral, Huttons Asia which is believed to be the real estate agency in which the driver works, started getting massive 1 star ratings in Facebook.
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    Source: http://theindependent.sg

  • Another Foreigner Refuses To Pay $5.40 Taxi Fare

    Another Foreigner Refuses To Pay $5.40 Taxi Fare

    This fuking drunk amg mo which i pick up at geylang lor 16 to lor 8.

    When reach the destination the fare was just $5.40 and he just alighted from my car without thinking of paying it and show me his duno wat card telling me he was from new zealand embassy..

    at 1st i just thought just my luck and wanted to take his luggage down and ask him to fuck off but after the behaviour and words make me HOT..and these are partial of what happen..

    Sorry of the vulgar language that i use..i really cannot tolerate it

     

    At 1st i just wanna fuck it and go off,but he dun allow me to unload n touch his luggage bag and told me i be sorry if i did..and challenge me to fight with him ..Thats trigger me off..i alway tell myself to tolerate with pax but so sorry this time i cant

    Anyway the fare is not an issue,i will not report to police as i seen alot of cases online that police cant help us with these..i only just cant stand the behaviour and the words he said that we are low iq..as if like we Sporean have to follow and do what they say

    Source: RichArd Hao Koh

  • Habib Hassan Nama Baru Disenaraikan Dalam Buku 500 Muslim Paling Berpengaruh Di Dunia

    Habib Hassan Nama Baru Disenaraikan Dalam Buku 500 Muslim Paling Berpengaruh Di Dunia

    Imam Masjid Ba’alwie Habib Hassan al-Attas menjadi nama baru yang disenaraikan dalam buku baru 500 Muslim paling berpengaruh di dunia.

    Habib Hassan diiktiraf dalam kategori pendakwah dan panduan rohani.

    Beliau digambarkan sebagai tunggak kekuatan dan perpaduan ke arah membina keharmonian agama di Singapura dan Asia Tenggara.

    Habib Hassan juga mengutuk pengganasan dan memainkan peranan utama dalam memupuk persefahaman dengan agama-agama lain di Singapura.

    Turut disenaraikan dalam buku itu ialah mantan Menteri Negara Kanan Ehwal Luar Zainul Abidin Rasheed yang sekali lagi disenaraikan dalam bidang politik.

    Buku ini menyenaraikan 500 orang yang paling berpengaruh dalam dunia Islam.

    Mereka dibahagikan kepada beberapa sektor seperti ilmiah, politik, pentadbiran hal ehwal agama, pendakwah dan panduan rohani, kebajikan dan pembangunan, isu-isu sosial, perniagaan, sains dan teknologi, seni dan budaya, Quran, media, selebriti, bintang sukan dan juga pelampau.

    Senarai ini diumumkan kepada orang ramai setiap tahun sejak 2009.

    Sebelum ini, antara tokoh Singapura yang diiktiraf pada tahun-tahun yang lalu, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, Menteri Perhubungan dan Penerangan, yang juga Menteri Bertanggungjawab bagi Ehwal Masyarakat Islam dalam bidang pentadbiran dan Iskandar Jalil, pakar tembikar dalam bidang budaya.

    Buku itu terbitan Pusat Pengajian Strategik Islam Diraja di Amman, ibu kota Jordan, dengan kerjasama Pusat Putera Alwaleed Bin Talal bagi Persefahaman Muslim-Kristian di Washington DC, Amerika Syarikat.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Singaporean Loses $270k In Bogus China Cops Scam

    Singaporean Loses $270k In Bogus China Cops Scam

    A Singaporean in his 60s thought he was protecting his family’s savings when he cooperated with “police officers” from China who accused him last month of being involved in money laundering.

    He ended up losing close to $270,000 from five POSB accounts linked to his name over eight consecutive days last month. This was money that he needed for his family’s expenses and children’s education.

    The case took place as scams involving the impersonation of China officials rose from 179 cases in the first half of the year to 249 in the July to September period. Victims lost at least $21 million from January to September, with one losing $2.38 million, said the police.

    There were 74 impersonation scams from January to last month, where scammers pretended to be from local agencies such as the police force or Ministry of Manpower.

    In the man’s case, it all started one morning when a caller claiming to be a policeman told him that a female “bank employee” who previously contacted him had been arrested abroad. He was told that his accounts, which had been implicated in her crimes, would be frozen unless he called Chinese police officers and followed instructions for them to help.

    The man provided his details and applied for an Internet banking token – a gadget he had never used before. He then called a Chinese number, speaking to a man named Liew for up to an hour every day. About seven times a day, he was asked to read out codes on the token after pushing a button.

    It was not until almost two weeks later that he realised that five of his family’s bank accounts, which were linked to his name, had been cleaned out.

    Money from his children’s and sister’s joint accounts with him had been transferred to one of his own before being siphoned out in sums of between $417 and $2,029. This was done multiple times in a row, mostly recorded as a transaction to a merchant under D2Pay – a direct debit payment system. Other inter-bank fund transfers were also made.

    “It was as though I had been hypnotised, I believed everything they said,” said the victim, who declined to be named. “They told me not to update my bank book, or they would tell the Monetary Authority of Singapore to hold my accounts.”

    When his two children, both in tertiary institutions, realised that money had vanished from their bank accounts, they asked him about it. He had only recently transferred money that he received from their insurance policies into their accounts. “I told them that I took the money out for investments,” he said.

    He has since come clean with them and reported the case to the police. He said he asked the bank why it failed to alert him when multiple transactions were made and was told only that the case is under police investigation. The bank also told him to close his accounts.

    “I don’t know what is going to happen. My life savings… are all gone just like that,” he said.

    In response to queries, a DBS spokesman said the bank is unable to comment on this specific case as it is under police investigation. POSB is a part of DBS Group.

    When asked about D2Pay transactions, the spokesman said: “We inform our customers via SMS of transactions done on their accounts. The same protocol is used for D2Pay transactions.”

    He said the bank has “a robust due diligence process in place” for those who become merchants on D2Pay, as “they first need to become our corporate customers to obtain a corporate account”.

    Instead of allowing customers the option of receiving one-time passwords via SMS, DBS switched to only token authentication last year for better security, he said.

    Other banks said they have security measures such as fraud-monitoring systems to detect irregular activity, as well as two-factor authentication (2FA).

    United Overseas Bank said that once an irregularity is flagged, investigations will take place immediately and it will call the customer to verify the transaction.

    Mr Patrick Chew, head of operational risk management at OCBC Bank, said customers need 2FA for online transactions. While its number of unauthorised transactions has been low, “in such an instance, it is often a case of the individual having inadvertently divulged his security information”.

    A spokesman for Maybank said it introduced an eight-digit code last week for customers who access their accounts online. Users receive this code on their registered phones and key it into a token to generate a one-time password to complete the transaction. In the past, users needed only the one-time password on their tokens.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

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