Category: Singapuraku

  • Fahmi Rais: Having A Voice To Communicate With Malay Community A Priority

    Fahmi Rais: Having A Voice To Communicate With Malay Community A Priority

    Singaporeans First’s (SingFirst) candidate Fahmi Rais, the only Malay among all the candidates contesting Tanjong Pagar Group Representation Constituency (GRC), said a voice for his community is important, especially if the Government wants to have its policies communicated to this group.

    Noting that Tanjong Pagar has not had a Malay Member of Parliament (MP) since becoming a GRC in 1991, Mr Fahmi said: “I’ve come across so many Malays during my walkabouts and many of them are from the lower-income bracket and they may not be very educated, so how is the communication process trickling down to them, I wonder.”

    The ruling People’s Action Party’s (PAP) slate for Tanjong Pagar GRC for the Sept 11 elections does not include a Malay candidate. The 48-year-old media consultant said the main issue that has come up during his interactions with Malay residents is that of employment.

    The lower-income group is hit particularly hard by the influx of foreign labour as they have to compete directly with them for jobs. This worsens the income gap between the Malay community and others, he added.

    If elected, Mr Fahmi said he will make tackling issues concerning the community a priority.

    Mr Fahmi is contesting in Tanjong Pagar GRC along with SingFirst’s secretary-general Tan Jee Say, party chairman Ang Yong Guan, market risk manager Chirag Desai and sales executive Melvyn Chiu.

    The party plans to hold its first rally tomorrow (Sept 3) at Jurong Stadium.

     

    Source: http://www.todayonline.com

  • 5 Kinds Of First Time Voters That Will Endanger Singapore’s Future

    5 Kinds Of First Time Voters That Will Endanger Singapore’s Future

    Having spoken to many young or first time voters, I drew a personal conclusion that there will be 5 kinds of voters who will surprisingly and unknowingly turn the fate of Singapore to a dangerous state.

    1) One who knows that opposition parties are not ready to take over the government yet still vote for them
    2) One who wants opposition to be in parliament for the sake of having one and therefore vote for them
    3) One who decides to vote the opposition party because they assume that “anyway PAP is going to win”
    4) One who is easily sweetened by promises, blinded in reality and vote for the sales MP
    5) One who is angry with the government yet doesn’t look at the bigger picture of certain policy and do not even know what the other parties can offer.

    If you are one those 5 mentioned, you are endangering your own future and your children’s future. Look around you and ask

    A) Who can represent me, my children and my future?
    B) Which party is sensible, credible and honest
    C) Will I see a future in this country governed by a new party?
    D) Which party will be for you and with you even in times of crisis?
    E) Who will you vote if you are that one deciding vote for your own future?

    So I urge you to vote wisely and vote with your future in mind. Don’t be short term and naive, look at every candidate and see if this is the person you want to represent you. I am not asking you to vote for a particular party but to use not just your heart and also your brains to look beyond the promises and proposals made at party rallies. ‪#‎ge2015‬
    Share this with your friends and parents who are voting.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • New Citizen Samir Neji Don’t Deserve To Stand For Elections, He Is Not True Blue Singaporean

    New Citizen Samir Neji Don’t Deserve To Stand For Elections, He Is Not True Blue Singaporean

    Bukit Batok Independent Candidate Samir Neji is a FRAUD and should withdraw his candidacy.

    As a resident and voter of Bukit Batok, I call on Mr Samir Neji to stop making a mockery of Singapore’s electoral process and withdraw his candidacy to give voters a chance to chose between two credible parties instead – parties that are run by Singaporeans for Singaporeans.

    In the meantime, I am considering filing a police report over this matter

    Bt Batok SMC now faces a three-cornered fight created by an independent candidate who sneaked in out of no where. Samir Neji comes from Kerala and has lived in Singapore for 15 years, making him a new citizen( his 15 years of stay here has not been verified yet though) . That aside, what is disturbing is the fact that he has absolutely no visible or verifiable grassroots or local civic involvement in Singapore to begin with. Absolutely NOTHING ! – and yet here he is standing as candidate to be an MP in parliament ! All that is known about him is that he owns a business and has a family here, but even his business ( Anaplan Asia Pte Ltd ) does not have a website and numerous calls to his office has been unanswered.

    For the record, he came in very late on nomination day, just about 30 minutes before filing closed and without meeting the basic requirement of having four assentors with him. Nomination rules require that each nominee should have a proposer, a seconder and four assentors, whose names must appear in the register of electors for the constituency that the candidate seeks election in. It then transpired that supporters from one of the parties contesting in the same SMC, namely the PAP came forward to make up the requisite four assentors, thus ushering him into the election.

    Surely, a candidate who takes his candidacy seriously would have read and understood the nomination rules. To come so ill-prepared and to have Assentors from another political party is akin to making a mockery of the electoral process .

    Here is a new citizen, trying to springboard straight into parliament with a blank record as far as civic and grassroots involvement is concerned. This is in stark contrast to the incumbent party, the PAP and the opposition party (SDP in this case), both of which has worked the ground, has a manifesto on how to improve Singaporeans’ life as well as ample information about the party that is publicly accessible. Samir Salim Neji has absolutely NONE of this .

    Singaporeans should be voting in candidates who will be their representatives and voice in parliament. By that token, the candidate must understand the aspirations, needs and psyche of Singaporeans. Samir Neji is a fraud and has no proven qualities to be an MP of Bukit Batok.

    One facebook comment regarding this issue puts this in its proper perspective: ” Sonia Gandhi was not allowed to be PM as she was not born in India, but this joke is happening here . I am feeling so disgusted ”

    From Facebook also : ” I thought only those born in that country can stand for elections. Alberto Fujimura was born in Peru and hence became their president but not him. ( Samir ) He did not serve NS and does not know the history of SG. Its make a mockery of our politics.”

    Another facebook comment : ” But there are other dicey stuff emerging. ( about Samir Neji) .. by checking through LinkedIn it appears he’s the nightmare PAP created through their crap immigration policies. Found that the top posts in Anaplan Singapore are all Indians from his kampong.. all with qualifications from lousy source. So basically he’s hiring his own kind. Thats always the main strategy to game the system. If the core consists of true blue Singaporeans we would have called his bluff early … so must gang up with country mates. So country mates also use high position to apply for PR and citizenship. PAP allows foreigers to con us in our own country. He ( Samir Neji ) has not integrated,.. ”

    As a resident and voter of Bukit Batok, I call on Mr Samir Neji to stop making a mockery of Singapore’s electoral process and withdraw his candidacy to give voters a chance to chose between two credible parties instead – parties that are run by Singaporeans for Singaporeans.

    In the meantime, I am considering filing a police report over this matter.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • SDP: Vivian Balakrishnan Should Examine PAP’s Own Policies

    SDP: Vivian Balakrishnan Should Examine PAP’s Own Policies

    Dr Chee Soon Juan transcript:

    Dr Vivian Balakrishnan characterised the SDP’s alternative policies as one of “tax and spend” and that they will lead the country to bankruptcy. He did not, however, cite any specific policy but merely said that the SDP had copied policies from “other parts of the world”.

    Dr Balakrishnan should be looking at his own party’s record on such practices.

    Experts cite the low interest rates of the CPF (even though the government claims its ROI is high) as an implicit tax. In addition, the slew of taxes, fees, and levies open up for the PAP government large streams of revenue.

    All this has resulted in our large reserves which are handled by the GIC and Temasek Holdings. In 2008, the two sovereign wealth funds admitted that thay had lost between $120 billion to $140 billion in failed investments in Western banks such as Merril Lynch, Citigroup and UBS.

    If it had not been for the intervention of the US government in the form of bailout out money under the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP), these banks would have collapsed, and our reserves would have been irretrievably lost.

    Given such a record, Dr Balakrishnan should be looking at his own party’s track record when he talks about policies of tax and spend.

    On a related noted, the criticism from Dr Balakrishnan is reminiscent of the one he made in the 2011 GE about the SDP’s proposal to raise taxes for top earners (those in the top 1 percent) closer to the 30-percent mark.

    He said then: “If you had to choose between the opposition parties who would be the most middle-class unfriendly of them, (the SDP) would certainly be in that shortlist.”

    In 2015, however, Finance Minister Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam said that the Government would raise taxes for the top 5 percent earners. It seems that Mr Tharman did exactly what Dr Balakrishnan attacked the SDP for.

    This is not the only instance that the PAP has at first criticised the SDP ideas only to adopt them later. Other examples are:

    Minimum wage
    SDP proposes: Minimum wage in 2001.
    PAP criticises: Minister Lim Swee Say criticises that Minimum Wage will erode Singapore’s competitiveness.
    PAP copies: Government introduces the Progressive Wage Model where some low-income workers are paid a minimum wage of $1,000.

    Universal healthcare
    SDP proposes: Individual healthcare risks are pooled.
    PAP criticises: Mr Lee Kuan Yew said: “…nobody derails the idea of having individual accounts for CPF and Medisave. Whatever you earn, it’s yours.”
    PAP copies: Medishield Life now says that “everyone shares in the national risk pool”.

    Singaporeans first policy
    SDP proposes: Employers must try to hire Singaporeans first before considering employing foreigners.
    PAP criticises: Senior Minister of State Amy Khor said that such a policy will not work.
    PAP copies: MOM introduced the Fair Compensation Framework which “require employers to consider Singaporeans fairly before hiring Employment Pass holders.”

     

    Dr Paul Ananth Tambyah transcript:
    Minister Vivian Balakrishnan made some rather perplexing statements yesterday

    http://www.straitstimes.com/politics/ge2015-sdp-policies-will-set-spore-on-the-road-to-greece-says-vivian-balakrishnan
    First of all, he alleged that the SDP had copied policy prescriptions that had failed elsewhere. He does not provide any evidence to support these assertions and in fact, his assertion contradicts the World Health Organization which ranked the French Healthcare system which is probably closest to the SDP’s National Healthcare Plan as the best performing healthcare system in the world (http://www.who.int/healthinfo/paper30.pdf). The SDP healthcare system is benchmarked against the best healthcare systems in the world unlike the Greek social support system which has ignored the advice of international experts.

    Second, according to the ST report, he selectively attacks parts of the SDP economic policy specifically raising taxes on the top earners and increasing social spending. Oddly enough, those are precisely the features of the 2015 budget proposed by Finance Minister Tharman (http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/singapore-budget-2015-personal-income-tax-for-top-5-of-earners-to-be-raised-says-tharman). I do not think that Minister Balakrishnan seriously believes that Minister Tharman is setting Singapore on the road to Greece. The SDP economic policy goes further than Minister Tharman’s budget proposals which we welcome – we also advocate a minimum wage, retrenchment insurance, and increasing transparency and accountability in social services including housing and healthcare.

    Finally, it appears that the Minister has an incomplete understanding of the Greek crisis. The Greeks actually spend below the OECD average on healthcare (http://www.oecd.org/els/health-systems/Briefing-Note-GREECE-2014.pdf) and have levels of social spending far below the Nordic countries or even Germany. The reason for the Greek crisis is thought to be primarily a profligate approach to spending. This is quite different from the SDP proposals which are well thought out and balanced. We do not believe in uncontrolled overspending. In order to implement our policies, we need to be elected to parliament so as to help make those policies a reality for the good of Singaporeans.

     

    Source: http://yoursdp.org

  • Chee Soon Juan: Waiting For Tonight

    Chee Soon Juan: Waiting For Tonight

    I’ve been waiting for tonight when I will finally get the chance to address my fellow Singaporeans again after 15 long years. I’ve been invited to speak all over the world but I would trade all those events for the opportunity to address my fellow citizens in a heartbeat. The biggest insult was when they got a foreigner (I was told he was from Israel on a special assignment to the SPF) to prevent me from just getting on stage to greet my own people in my own country.

    Come tonight to our Opening Rally at the Choa Chu Kang Stadium. It’s been a long journey but we’re not looking back. The next mile starts tonight. Bring your family, tell all your friends – tell them that I have something important I want to share with them.

     

    Source: Chee Soon Juan

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