Category: Sosial

  • Touts Profiteering From Purchase Of Ed Sheeran Concert Tickets

    Touts Profiteering From Purchase Of Ed Sheeran Concert Tickets

    UK Singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran’s two-night concert sold out within hours of being put on sale.

    Given the demand, tickets for Sheeran’s first show are being touted on third-party sites – but at a premium. There have been offers circulating on online marketplace Carousell, with some advertising two pairs of tickets for as much as S$4,000 – up from the original price of between S$108 to S$248 for a ticket.

    One Carousell user, for instance, was selling Cat 1 tickets at S$2,200 for four or S$600 for one – up from the original price of S$248 per ticket – with a “guaranteed best view of Ed Sheeran”.

     

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Alfian Sa’at: The Voice (Nanyang Edition) Debacle A Lesson In The (Lack Of) Equality

    Alfian Sa’at: The Voice (Nanyang Edition) Debacle A Lesson In The (Lack Of) Equality

    Yes, I am tired of stuff like The Voice (Nanyang Edition) cropping up time and again, I am tired of some Chinese people who saw nothing wrong with it, of them seeing no problem when Chineseness is squarely equated with Singapore when it is just one square in the giant patchwork that is Singapore culture, I am tired of them mentioning Shila Amzah any chance they get as if that settles the debate, I am tired of the fact that they don’t see that it’s not just a matter of learning Mandarin to join the contest but that I’m not considered significant enough for the show to be marketed to someone like me, I am tired of having to remind others that I exist too, that my language is not the same as yours, that if I want to choose to learn your language it will be out of my own free will and not because I have to succumb to a monolingual environment that you have shaped in your image, whether out of thoughtlessness or convenience or a demonstration of majoritarian might…

    But I am aware that this fatigue will interfere with my own openness to other cultures, to my curiosity about the beauty and the wisdom contained within them, that I must never close myself to the other even when the other wears the garments of an oppressor, that I will continue to catch the offerings at the Huayi Festival and the M1 Chinese Theatre Festival even if I don’t see a reciprocal gesture of those catching Pesta Raya or the Kalaa Utsavam programmes, that I must always be conscious that in any multicultural society there is a relationship between language and power, that there are those who believe to speak another’s language is to submit to their rule and power (and this is the pathology of the vernacular school system in Malaysia), that however difficult it is to de-link language and power one has to do it because it will otherwise trap your ways of thinking, that there is no such thing as a superior or inferior culture, as there is no superior or inferior language, that though there are dominant languages they do not exist to dominate and though there are minority languages their fate is not to be subordinate, that however foreign a language might be one must always keep faith that it contains the word for ‘patience’, or ‘forgiveness’, or the very concept at the heart of this: ‘equality’.

     

    Source: Alfian Sa’at

  • Formula Milk Companies Use Premium Image, Consumer Behaviour To Drive Up Prices

    Formula Milk Companies Use Premium Image, Consumer Behaviour To Drive Up Prices

    Brand loyalty and a penchant for premium products among parents here have driven formula milk companies to invest heavily in marketing and research and development.

    And this, in turn, could reinforce such consumer behaviour, the Competition Commission of Singapore (CCS) said.

    This was among the findings in the commission’s report released on Wednesday (May 10), which showed that manufacturers have resorted to non-price competition and aggressive marketing to increase their share of a small Singapore market with limited growth.

    As a result, formula milk prices here as of May last year were found to be higher, compared with several other countries such as Australia, United States and United Kingdom. Total marketing expenditure by all six major manufacturers — including Abbott, Mead Johnson and Danone — soared by 42.4 per cent between 2010 and 2014, contributing to more than double the average retail price of formula milk over the past nine years.

    Triggered by public concern over the rising prices, CCS’ year-long market inquiry sought to understand the supply chain, suss out the nature of competition in the industry, and assess if there was scope to increase competition, among other objectives.

    Feedback was gathered from manufacturers, distributors, retailers, hospitals and government agencies.

    The commission found that manufacturers, which were well aware that the only alternative to formula is breast milk, have chosen to shun price competition. Instead, they focused on constructing a premium brand image and introducing new ingredients purporting attributes desired by consumers.

    “Such ‘premiumisation’ strategies further strengthen consumer perceptions and entrench consumer purchasing behaviours, which in turn give formula milk manufacturers the market power to increase wholesale prices, in the face of limited volume growth prospect due to low birth rate and rising breastfeeding rate,” said the CCS.

    The report cited the experience of an unnamed supermarket, which had previously brought in a “value-for-money” formula milk brand after receiving customer feedback on the high prices of other options.

    Although the new product belonged to an established brand and was priced lower than other premium brands, sales were poor and the product was discontinued by the manufacturer.

    Other retailers had similar experiences: Another supermarket noted that this product had been underperforming while a pharmacy stopped selling it after less than a year due to a lack of demand.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

     

  • An Apology To Brother Ridjal Noor

    An Apology To Brother Ridjal Noor

    Assalamualaikum wr wb.

    To Those Who Are Reading This, Especially Ridjal Noor.

    I would like to apologise to PullUpStand.com Pte Ltd, its director and owner, Mr Ridjal Noor, for allegations made based on testimonies I had received. Upon further investigation, the makers of these testimonies had since denied the allegations.

    As a fellow human being, I trusted what was told to me as truth. I truly believed what was told to me. I have since realised the company and its director, were victims of a vicious attempt at causing damage to their reputation and business. I sincerely apologise for mistakably being an indirect agent towards this heinous cause.

    I deeply apologise and will work towards making up for my mistake in believing and having trust in people who spread such allegations about this company and its director.

    Ridjal Noor, thank you for being extremely cooperative, patient and understanding as we resolve this. I am looking forward to be your partner in bringing more good to the business world. Do consider me your brother, and we’ll work closely together from now onwards.

    I seek your forgiveness for truly believing you were such a person. I deeply regret for having such thoughts of you based on such allegations made known to me.

    I am foolish to believe people who I thought I trust. I will learn from this episode.

    Let’s heal, and together, prosper.

    May Allah give us ease and strength, as we go through such struggles. Together, we stand.

    Alhamdullilah for the hikmah and light of truth.

    Thanks and Warmest Regards
    Wassalam
    Mohammad Nizam Abdul Kadir

     

    Source: Mohammad Nizam Abdul Kadir

  • Netizen From Elite Schools Sincerely Apologises To K Shanmugam

    Netizen From Elite Schools Sincerely Apologises To K Shanmugam

    I have spent several days reflecting on my conduct, in putting up a commentary that was neither accurate nor honest.

    I made a FB post on 24 April which misstated Minister Shanmugam’s views. I attributed to him views the very opposite of what he held, and then criticized him in a sneering tone.

    When the Minister pointed out (through his FB), that I got my facts wrong, I sent him an apology that was a non-apology. The apology was insincere, and self-exculpatory – I tried to claim I was commenting on the headline and not his remarks, when my comments clearly showed otherwise. [When I sent the apology, to make my apology appear true, I also deleted some comments I had made in my FB, which showed that I was in fact commenting on his remarks].

    Having thought further, I have written, as below, to the Minister, to convey my unreserved apology:

    ‘Dear Minister,

    On deeper reflection, I realize my first apology was insincere. I am therefore writing now to apologize unreservedly. I had misrepresented your views in the Today article, and had presented them in a careless, thoughtless and flippant way. To make things worse, my apology was self-exculpatory. I accept that my criticism of your views was untruthful, unfair and unsubstantiated. I have let the LKY School down. But above all I’m sorry for my original post; it was impulsive and reckless.’

    Many do not know this, but when I was out of a job in 2012, it was Minister Shanmugam who spoke with me and offered his help. He then put in a good word for me with LKYSPP, and gave me a recommendation. I decided that I should come clean about someone who had in fact helped me, and I should set out the facts in public.

     

    Source: Donald Low

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