Tag: Islam

  • Alfian Sa’at: Government Reaction To Sabah Tragedy Not Opportunistic Propaganda

    Alfian Sa’at: Government Reaction To Sabah Tragedy Not Opportunistic Propaganda

    Today is the National Day of Remembrance for the victims of the Sabah earthquake.

    I’ve seen some commentators wondering if there is some political mileage to be extracted from this observance. Whether there is opportunism involved, in putting a caring face on a government otherwise known to be indifferent to all the quieter tragedies happening in our country–like poverty, or the poor treatment of migrant workers.

    And I’d have to respectfully disagree that it is ‘propagandistic’. One can make the case that the SEA Games can be propagandistic. The flag on the winner standing on the rostrum, the currency of national pride in precious metals, the torch relay featuring Singapore’s favourite son (Fandi, and its favourite grandson? Irfan), the rah-rah of the Opening Ceremony.

    The Mount Kinabalu tragedy is so senseless–many of the victims so young, the disaster so unforeseen–that it beggars belief. And I doubt that anyone has any standard operating procedure for public mourning. Can one fly the flag at half-mast for ordinary civilians rather than statesmen? Should one enforce that minute of silence at SEA Games venues before the competitions? But I also think these kinds of state rituals are an attempt to give some meaning to something that resists any kind of meaning. People are trying to comfort one another as best as they can, and if they can’t bring the lost ones back to life then they’ll try to do something exceptional, including flying flags at half-mast and declaring a day of remembrance.

    And they do this not to demonstrate that they have the power to do so, but because they are powerless to do the one thing we all sometimes wish we could do. And if calling the children ‘little heroes’ and the teachers and guides ‘selfless spirits’ gives some amount of consolation and closure then oh God let them have this spoonful of mercy to help them face the void.

    Maybe it’s because I’ve lost someone recently, but when I think of this National Day of Remembrance I don’t think of the government or the PAP at all; I think only of the grieving families. I think of those bedrooms that you no longer simply walk into but which you have to confront and which confronts you. I think of my mother’s own bedroom, which I can’t walk into without feeling that it’s all too much. The watch I bought for her, whose battery had died, which I always thought of replacing but somehow never got round to it. The moisturiser we used to rub on her legs when she was undergoing chemo and then beside it the Johnson’s baby oil that I rubbed on her joints just after she passed away, on the doctor’s instructions, so that she would not stiffen into a crooked shape. All the things she used to keep–the pens (tested periodically for ink), the towels, the paper bags, stacked neatly but their handles an impossible jumble of plastic and twine–but never used because like all hoarders she believed that the day will come when they will be awakened from their slumber and find their use…but when they wake how do I tell them their owner has gone? And why do I invest those inanimate things with consciousness, as if…if they were alive then it would mean so is she.

    So maybe I can’t keep a critical distance and see some bigger picture, but on this National Day of Remembrance, I am thinking of those families, only those families, and the hairbrush that still has hair stuck in it, the set of keys with the keychain worn down by fingerprints, the exercise book only half-filled, the dent in the bolster foam, the cabinet shelf which someone could have reached one day without tiptoeing, and all those tender dreams where the loved one returns, the dreams that you don’t ever want to wake up from.

     

    Source: Alfian Sa’at

  • Syed Danial: Challenge The Pink Dot Ideology, Engage In Civil Way And Help Those Struggling With Same-Sex Attraction

    Syed Danial: Challenge The Pink Dot Ideology, Engage In Civil Way And Help Those Struggling With Same-Sex Attraction

    Dear friends (and various assortment of ‘spies’ from the other side),

    We should offer thanks to God Almighty for all the Favours and Mercies He has bestowed upon us.

    Although we are pleased with PM Lee’s remarks, we should not pat ourselves on the back. His statement is actually doubled-edged. And it is instructive of govt thinking on the matter. The operative phrase here is that SG is ‘still a conservative society’. And his remarks that it’s ‘changing’ offers sobering reminder not to rest on our laurels.

    I think right now it’s important to act strategically. Our opponents are adept at media manipulation. The biggest mistake we can do right now is to appear too aggressive. They would play the victims card. We should therefore continue our activism in a civil way. Even polite. And we challenge the ideology. Not individual persons. We extend a helping hand of mercy to those struggling with same sex attraction.

    There’s talk of wanting to ‘gatecrash’ Pinkdot to distribute pamphlets or carry placards etc.

    My view is that would be a mistake. It would just make them look like victims.

    Methinks we continue to engage in a civil way both online and off.

    And let’s not rest on our laurels. We should do as much as poss to ensure that society does not change. And remain conservative.

    We do what we can. God will do what we cannot.

    Have a wonderful day in the Remembrance of God.

     

    Syed Danial

    Source: We are against Pinkdot in Singapore

  • Walid J Abdullah: Sharon Au Incident Shows Racism And Majority Privilege Are Real Problems In Singapore

    Walid J Abdullah: Sharon Au Incident Shows Racism And Majority Privilege Are Real Problems In Singapore

    Sharon Au made an inexcusable mistake yesterday with her racist remarks. If it was a junior host/comedian, one could perhaps understand the mistake (though it still cannot be excused), but for someone as experienced as her, it is neither understandable nor acceptable. Truth be told, Indians (and other minorities) go through such situations on an almost daily basis.

    For me personally, it is most disappointing when religious teachers and people who are called ‘Ustaz’ make such comments in mosques, under the excuse ‘oh, it’s just a joke’. Racism persists because we allow it to: i strongly believe we should call these people out whenever they make such stupid ‘jokes’ (yes, i say these are stupid, because an intelligent person usually does need to resort to racism to get a laugh from his/audience). Do not let them get away with it.

    At the same time, Sharon has apologized unequivocally, and we should be forgiving. We should reserve harshest treatment for the recalcitrants, who perennially and unapologetically make racist comments despite being advised not to so. Many bigger names than her have made racist comments – including PAP Members of Parliament – and then used the excuses of ‘I was misquoted’, ‘You do not have a sense of humour’, ‘My words were taken out of context’, and so on, to
    justify their chauvinism.

    Hopefully, incidents like this remind Singaporeans not to delude themselves into thinking that racism is something ‘that happens in other countries’, and that majority privilege does not exist.

     

    Source: Walid J Abdullah

  • 103 Suspected Drug Offenders Arrested In Islandwide Operation

    103 Suspected Drug Offenders Arrested In Islandwide Operation

    A total of 103 suspected drug offenders were arrested in an islandwide operation carried out from Jun 1 to Jun 5, the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) said in a news release on Friday (Jun 5).

    The CNB seized about 88g of heroin, 9g of ‘Ice’, and a small amount of cannabis and opium powder during the operation, it said.

    The operation was supported by officers from the Singapore Police Force and covered Ang Mo Kio, Bedok, Boon Lay, Bukit Panjang, Choa Chu Kang, Geylang, Marsiling, Teck Whye and Woodlands, CNB added. Investigations against all the suspects are ongoing.

    SUSPECTED HEROIN, ‘ICE’ TRAFFICKER ARRESTED

    In an operation carried out on Jun 3, CNB officers arrested a 62-year-old male Singaporean in Bedok North, who is suspected of trafficking drugs. Officers recovered about 37g of heroin and 4g of ‘Ice’ from him, CNB said.

    The man was brought to his residence in the vicinity of Bedok North. Officers recovered a small amount of heroin and “numerous drug paraphernalia”, including an improvised drug-smoking apparatus there, CNB added. He will be investigated for drug trafficking, said CNB.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Four Must-Know Smoking Poses For Your Every Trip To The Smoking Corner

    Four Must-Know Smoking Poses For Your Every Trip To The Smoking Corner

    1) The cross arm, look far pose

    This is the look you want if you wanna act like you’re thinking about something deep at the smoking corner. Even better if you’ve a pair of shades, put it on and look far macam you thinking how to grow Singapore’s GDP by 5% this year, but actually you thinking what to eat for lunch.

    2) The hand on your waist pose

    This pose is especially useful when you’re smoking with your colleagues/bosses because putting a hand on your waist shows that you’re tired, which indirectly signals that you’ve been working hard in office. Good when promotion is round the corner.

    3) Cross arm, look cool pose

    This pose is especially useful if you’ve a wall behind you, so just lean back, cross your arm, straighten out your smoking hand, and look cool. Doesn’t matter if you actually bring your hand up to take a puff, the main point is to just look cool only.

    4) I just wanna smoke, not talk pose

    You know how some people like to strike up a conversation with you when you’re smoking? This is the perfect pose, with a phone in hand to signal that NO, mouth not available for talking, only for smoking/taking a puff.

     

    Source: http://sgag.sg

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