Tag: Singapore

  • Is PAP Still Relevant Today?

    Is PAP Still Relevant Today?

    Dear Editors,

    Last time PAP members fought for Singaporeans’ rights. Dr. Tan Cheng Bock push for us to be able to use our CPF to fund higher education because it was good investment for the future. It was small things like that which cause us to improve our lives. Let’s think about it really.

    At that time, parents won’t be financially strained from university fees and the result of having a better educated workforce also helped boost Singapore’s knowledge-based transformation in that era. People are thankful and voted for Dr. Tan for 5 terms with average 77%. Now people are angry!
    Today, PAP has changed and now spend more than $240 million a year of taxpayer’s money on scholarships and tuition grants to foreign student. Locals have to suffer from the opportunity costs of a 2-year NS and they are burdened with loans long after graduation.

    Look at all these millionaire ministers who don’t even talk sense because they are too disconnected with the ground thanks to their million dollar salaries. How will they add value to the policy making processes as compared to those people in parliament in the 1980s who are so much more hands on?

    Some netizen said that opposition movement was censored by PAP and LKY so badly that no one had the balls to act as a check on their “20/20” lack of foresight. Even as PAP try to make changes after GE2011, BTO is still not affordable and country still have infrastructural strain like crowded MRT.

    PAP government and their supporters have also start to act arrogant and self-entitled. They have spoken on high grounds and as can be seen in their “words of wisdom” like Tin Pei Ling and Koh Poh Koon. If you are paying top dollar for such quality of people then it really becomes a cruel joke!

    Nicholas-Seth Leong who himself is no big deal degrade MRT commuters as “common people” and “peasants” just because he had to take the MRT. Later he was so embarrassed that he had to deactivate his FB after people found out that he drove and old Honda Civic anyway.

    It’s like choosing to work for a company which not only the bosses are incompetent, damn show off but also push all the work and blame to you, talk down on you all the time and then when things go well they enjoy the rewards themselves, receive high bonus while they don’t care about you at all!

    Why do we need such people? If PAP cannot improve our lives then maybe time to vote them out.

    Joseph
    A.S.S. Contributor


    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Singapore Will Benefit When All Citizens Are Treated Equally

    Singapore Will Benefit When All Citizens Are Treated Equally

    I refer to the report, “Conservative S’pore ‘not ready for same-sex marriage’” (June 6).

    Law-making premised simply on the majoritarian position is dangerous. Democracy is not simply about majority rule; it is also about protecting minority rights. This is why we have the Presidential Council for Minority Rights.

    This principle, however, should apply to all minorities, including sexual minorities. In fact, to be truly impartial, the State should just protect individual rights. Minority rights are individual rights, as the individual is the smallest minority.

    Legalising same-sex marriage means respecting individual liberties. It does not mean promoting same-sex marriage. Singapore society may frown upon adultery, gambling or prostitution, but these are all legal.

    Scientific studies have shown that being inclusive improves public health. The New England Journal of Medicine even published a recent editorial supporting same-sex marriage. Is our Health Ministry not ready to improve public health?

    Also, research by economics professor M. V. Lee Badgett shows that anti-gay laws have an economic cost. Is our Trade and Industry Ministry not ready to grow our economy more?

    Singapore society may indeed be conservative and not ready for same-sex marriage. But is that justification for the state itself to dash any citizen’s dream?

    Many Singaporeans readily paid tribute to founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew after his death. As we celebrate our Golden Jubilee, let us honour his legacy of being a pragmatist and empiricist.

    The evidence is clear: Singapore stands to benefit when all its citizens are treated equally.

     

    This article, written by Bryan Kwa Jie Wen, first appeared on Voices, Today, on 10 Jun 2015.

    Source:www.todayonline.com

  • Where Europe Stands On Civil Marriages And Gay Unions

    Where Europe Stands On Civil Marriages And Gay Unions

    More than two-thirds of the 20 countries around the world that have legalized same-sex marriage are in Europe. Yet two of the biggest Western European states – Germany and Italy – do not allow gays and lesbians to wed. And all Central and Eastern European countries continue to ban gay marriage.

    Nearly 15 years after the Netherlands became the world’s first country to allow same-sex marriage, Ireland last month became the first nation to do so via popular vote, with 62% of voters casting ballots in favor of the change.

    That makes Ireland the 14th European nation to change its laws to allow gay and lesbian couples to wed. This number counts England and Wales as one country and Scotland as a separate entity, since those parts of the United Kingdom passed two separate pieces of legislation on same-sex marriage. (Northern Ireland, the other U.K. constituent state, has not legalized such marriages.) The list also includes Finland, which approved a same-sex marriage law earlier this year, although it will not take effect until 2017.

    It is unclear whether any other European countries will soon follow. Germany is among several European nations that grant civil unions or partnerships for same-sex couples, but is not seen as likely to allow gay marriages in the near future. Some Italian politicians, meanwhile, are calling for the passage of a civil partnerships law. Italy, with its historical ties to the Roman Catholic Church, does not currently recognize same-sex unions of any kind, and a senior Vatican official recently called the result of Ireland’s referendum a “defeat for humanity.”

    Greece also may soon allow civil unions for same-sex couples, and Slovenia’s legislature recently voted to approve same-sex marriage (though that measure faces additional hurdles before it can become law). At the same time, nearly two-thirds of Croatian voters recently voted to amend their country’s constitution to ban same-sex marriage.

     

    Source:www.pewresearch.org

  • Ismail Kassim: A Tribute To Iskandar Jalil

    Ismail Kassim: A Tribute To Iskandar Jalil

    From the Land of the Rising Sun, a fitting recognition of Iskandar’s contribution to the world of pottery. Congratulations. Two nights ago he received the Order of the Rising Sun Gold Rays with Rosette by the Japanese Ambassador to Singapore.

    Although the potter lives practically a stone’s throw from my sister’s place in Kembangan where my father also lives and I know his younger brother, Rahim, we never met until I joined a 12 day tour of Iran organized by friends from campus days.

    It was on the long dusty bus ride from Tehran to Kermanshah that I finally came face to face with the potter in the flesh – Iskandar Jalil, small-built, short, wiry and tanned, but warm and down-to-earth.

    Early next morning I saw him standing by the bus, dressed in a thin cotton T-shirt, track pants, sneakers, while others were holding tight to their jackets, as the cold spring winds swirled around us.

    ‘’Doesn’t he feel the cold?’’ I casually asked his wife, Saleha. She replied: ‘’He is always like that, quite immune to the cold.’’ I told myself that this potter might have been an Eskimo in his previous life.

    A few days later, while touring the ruins of Persepolis – once the capital of the mighty Persian Empire – I noticed the care that he took taking shots from his small but upmarket Sony digital camera, often giving instructions to Saleha on how to pose or how to take shots of him.

    I asked him on his photography and he let me view images from his camera; I would see the touch of professionalism reflected in the tightness of the composition and the attention given to perspective. In Malay, you say: ‘’ada standard lah.’’ (high standard )

    Next, I noticed he always had a tightly packed haversack on his back from which he often drew out a big, thick, black dairy-like notebook, to write. I was curious and on one occasion peeped over his shoulder; in big bold letters he was writing down the name of the place in addition to sketching the entrance. They took up almost the entire page.

    I told myself these are signs of ‘’a big heart and a bold spirit.’’

    On the second last day as the bus was taking us back to Tehran from Isfahan, except for the potter, the rest of us were slumped against our seat, a little weary and possibly a little home-sick.

    Iskandar, born in 1940 and could be considered as our ‘’abang ’’ (elder brother) was going round tirelessly from seat to seat with his big black notebook.

    Finally, he came to me and handing over his book, said: ‘’Ismail, can I have your name, address, e-mail and phone numbers.’’

    He was the only one in our party who did it.

    Toward the end of Iran tour, I told Saleha that I had heard much talk about their newly renovated home. The result was an open invitation for tea.

    After much procrastination, I finally asked Jailani who was also on the tour to arrange. He too needed a little prodding, before he rang up and that was how he and I, and his wife, Aminahton, ended up being graciously treated to a tour of the house.

    All I could remember is the minimalist-style, hardly any furniture except for basic wooden stuff and lots of artefacts from his travels and pots, big and small, in varying patterns, scattered all over.

    When it was time to say good-bye, the potter took out two small bowls from the cupboard – one dark black, the other light tan – and placed them on the table before us. He then took one in each hand, raised it to eye level and then threw them on the floor with some force.

    They landed with a loud thud, rolled a little and then remained still, intact. He picked them up and placed them on the table and asked us to examine the bowls.

    We were stunned, speechless. Incredible, there was not even a whiff of a hairline crack. ‘’They are almost unbreakable – a matter of heating technique,’’ he said.

    Added the potter: ‘’Take one each. Decide who wants what.’’

    I gestured to Jailani and he slowly reached out for the light one. I was happy to take the dark one. So unexpected, so generous, and I felt a little overwhelmed.

    Today, the bowl is prominently displayed in my study, perched securely on the topmost shelf above my writing table, flanked by a Sufi book and a Qigong book.

    Note: This is an extract from a longer piece, titled – My friend, Iskandar the great potter – that I wrote in 2011 and posted on my now defunct Nohardfeelings blog at WordPress..
    A gift from Iskandar

    A gift from Iskandar

     

     

    Source: Ismail Kassim

  • What’s Happening At Pink Street

    What’s Happening At Pink Street

    Pink Dot‬ 2015: As part of this year’s exciting line-up, shops around Hong Lim Park will ‘pink’ things up, for that extra spice and more things nice!

    So wander over to this ‘Pink Street’, pick up a free pink torchlight at Settler’s Cafe, re-hydrate at Elevate – Strength & Conditioning and pick up cute Pink Dot merchandise from Asia Wine Network, D’Bell Singapore and SaladStop! on George Street.

    All proceeds from merchandise sales will go towards defraying the cost of the event.

    Selected shops will also be offering special promotions on food and drinks – so be sure to drop by!

     

    Pink Street

     

    Official Pink Dot merchandise booths* @ Asia Wine Network, D’Bell and Salad Stop!

    Plushies

    Just in for Pink Dot 2015! These new designs feature Pinkie (in big and medium sizes) with a heart. Available in 3 sizes: Big (60cm), medium (20cm) and keyring (5cm) at $80, $20 and $10 respectively.

    Tote bags

    Make a statement with these “Supporting the freedom to love” tote bags. Available in 5 designs at $10 each.

    *The booths accept cash only. Please bring exact change if possible.


    Elevate Gym 

    45 North Canal Road #01-01

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ElevateGym
    Get free bottles of water here. Water dispensers are also available at the Admin Tent at the park. Please ensure you are well-hydrated throughout the event.


     Asia Wine Network

    44 North Canal Road

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/winesingapore

    10% off all wines by the bottle storewide (except promotional items)

    Special promos:

    White wines:

    Salentein Selection White (Argentina, Sauvignon Blanc/ Chardonnay) UP$40 / Now $24

    Kame Muscat (Spain, Muscat) UP$40 / Now $24

    Red wines:

    Combes Des Tourterelles (France, Syrah/ Grenache/ Cinsault) UP $40 / Now $24

    Muac (Spain, Caillet/ Manto Negre / Cabernet) UP $48 Now $29

    Sparkling Wines:

    Delapierre Cava (Spain, Macabeo/ Xarello/ Parellada) UP $48 Now $ 29

    Juve Y Camps Rose Brut (Spain, Pinot Noir) UP $65 / $39

    Small Bottles:

    Cab Merlot 187ml (Chile, Cabernet Sauvignon/ Merlot) UP $12 / Now $8

    Sauv Blanc 187ml (Chile, Sauvignon Blanc) UP $12 / Now $8

    Novelty Wine

    Wit Bordeaux Red (France, Cabernet Merlot) UP $15 / Now $ 10


    D’bell Singapore

    43 North Canal Rd

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DBellSingapore

    Special promos:

    Sandwich (chicken, ham and cheese, egg or veggie) + potatoes wedges + beer or soft drink/water

    $15 nett with beer, $10 nett with soft drink/water ($13/$8 nett for veggie sets)

    Singha Draught Beer: $10 nett per pint

    Wine: $8 Nett per gls

    Soft drinks / Water: $3 Nett

    Restaurant and Lounge

    Time: 7:30pm – 10:30pm

    Food: Buffet dinner featuring Indian and western cuisine

    Price: $35 Nett

    Lounge

    Freedom to Love party after 7pm till late

    Drinks Promo:

    Pink Cocktail @ S$12 Nett

    Pink Shots @ S$5 Nett

    Housepour Drinks & Beer @ S$10 Nett all night


    Settlers Cafe

    39 North Canal Rd

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SettlersCafe

    Get your free Pink Dot torches and/or pink cellophane sheet for your mobile phone here.

    Special promos:

    Pink Guava Juice $2 nett per cup

    Pink Guava ice cream $2 nett per cup


     Salad Stop!

    1 George St #01-01

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SaladStop

    Regular menu is available from 2pm till 8.30pm

    Get your free Pink Dot torches and/or pink cellophane sheet for your mobile phone here.

     

    Source: http://pinkdot.sg

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