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Weekend Roundup: Week 07

“there is a flaw somewhere in the logic [that the young need constant protection]; for one it presupposes that conflict is necessarily bad for kiddies and all we should really do is protect them from dawn to dusk.”
Darkness

“It is clear to me, from the Minister’s speech, that the direct intended outcome of JCS is essentially to give money to businesses, for them to spend as they desire. It is, as I said in my speech, a handout for businesses.”
Siew Kum Hong

“All men are fallible. Donning a white uniform does not put one above scrutiny.”
Gerald Giam

“Yet, by expressly forbidding its officers to “[speak] disparagingly of the Government”, MOE’s obvious corollary is that it is alright to speak glowingly of the Government. One is impelled to make comparisons with Communist regimes, where you could (and were expected to) praise the Party, even if your Trabant was belching smoke and out of style.”
Agagooga

“There has been a lot of talk even at coffee shops, at the grassroots level and among our residents, about the losses by our SWFs and whether this government has undone what our past government has so painstakingly built up.”
Inderjit Singh

“$58 billion is the [amount of Temasek’s losses]! I am Flabbergasted, astounded, stunned, bewildered, and shocked. And we have not even looked at GIC’s numbers yet!”
Dr. Huang Shoou Chyuan

“..so what is the difference in putting them in Johor Baru?”
Khaw Boon Wan on shipping old Singaporeans to Malaysia

This week’s roundup and recommended reads after the break.

Ho Chin Quits Temasek | State Fund Investments
- Yawning Bread: Ho Ching had 10-year term at Temasek; leaves early
- TOC: Madame Prime Minister bows out
- ringisei: Shock over Kah Ching’s departure
- Blowin’ In The Wind: Singapore fund handover after worst losses: FT
- Readings From A Political Duo-ble: Temasek under Goodyear ? – Debunking the CEO’s glorious track record – Part I
- Hear Ye! Hear Ye!: Ho Ching is out of Temasek!
- Yaw Shin Leong: Singaporeans Deserve Better
- Everyday’s Life in a Snapshot: Ms Ho’s best friend, no not their family’s dog
- My sketchbook: Ho Ching says goodbye
- Yawning Bread: Re: suggested career path for Madam Ho Ching
- Under The Willow Tree: Bank of America / Merrill Lynch Watch (Feb 09)
- Yummy BBQ Chicken Wings: Even Ho Ching is joining the unemployed
- SgForums: Ho Ching to leave Temasek Holdings
- HWZ: Ho Ching resigned from Temasek; new CEO is ex-BHP head Goodyear
- nofearSingapore: 58B!
- TOC: Looking forward to (more) Goodyear
- Blowin’ In The Wind: Temasek Holdings poorer than three years ago
- Everyday’s Life in a Snapshot: Die also must look alive, ugly also must look good
- Mindblogging Stuff: Ho ho ho
- Yummy BBQ Chicken Wings: Singapore boasts another Number 1
- The Singapore Enquirer: More accountability and transparency needed in management of Singapore’s Sovereign Wealth Funds
- Chemical Generation Singapore: Temasek Caught in the Maelstrom
- Singapore Angle: Temasek’s Rebranding
- Wayang Party: Expect more goodies to be rolled out in the days ahead, thanks to Temasek
- Yaw Shin Leong: Super Ultra Extraordinary Losses
- Hard Hitting in the Lion City: Best Foot Forward for The Strait Times
- The Lycan Times: Temasek Losses & Lui-sms
- Sg Enquirer: Questions about Temasek, GIC losses
- Under The Willow Tree: Temasek’s Performance – A Dismal Failure of Singapore’s Elitism [Recommended]
- Sgpolitics: The Global Economy: A patient on life-support. Lessons for GIC & Temasek, and the Finance Ministry

We Don’t Need No Regulation: MP burnt
- A long and arduous road of an entrepreneur: The Voice Of The Void [Recommended]
- This lush garden within: Lui Tuck Yew’s one-sided argument
- Yawning Bread: Behind Today’s Lui story
- TOC: RADM Lui’s comments highlight growing divide that needs to be bridged
- Wayang Party Club: Real culprit spreading lies about cause of fire attack on Seng Han Thong is SPH!
- a writer’s blog: Engaging creatively online
- Gerald Giam: My response to RAdm Lui’s remarks about “self-regulation”
- SilentAssassin’s Archive: Internet Regulation: more to come?
- My Little Corner: Online Self Regulation?
- Digital Terrorist: Nothing Changed Since 1994
- Singapore Alternatives: Reflections: Voice of the People
- Mathia Lee: Recent comments not to control, but to discredit internet content [Recommended]
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: Did the bloggers squander an opportunity or the government still doesn’t get it?
- Sam’s thoughts: Tangled in the Internet
- Wayangparty: 3 feasible strategies the government can adopt to counter rising anti-establishment sentiment in cyberspace
- TOC: Discrediting the “new media”

Khaw wants to ship me to another country when I get old
- Feed Me To The Fish: Please Mr Khaw, have a heart
- TOC: Nursing homes in Johor Bahru – revisited
- A Lesser Mortal: A Heatless and Thoughtless Proposal [Thanks Newcomer]
- Everyday’s Life in a Snapshot: what will YOU defend?
- To Fix a Mocking Peasant: Sg Gahmen, Thanks for Cheaper Health Care in Johor
- The Secret Political Blog: Lets take our Old on a trip to Malaysia – One which they will never forget
- HWZ: SINGAPOREANS could consider living in nursing homes in neighbouring Johor Baru
- EDMW: Should KBW Apologise for his Insensitive Remarks?
- My sketchbook: Mr.Practical and logic of nursing homes in JB
- Sgpolitics: First retirement villages in neighbouring countries, now nursing homes in Johor
- I’m talking, can’t you hear?: Appalled
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: Putting our old folks in Johor
- Feed Me To The Fish: We don’t need no thought control
- Yummy BBQ Chicken Wings: 10 preparations to a successful nursing home industry in JB

Singapore Budget 2009
- Yawning Bread: No need to know how President uses his second key, says government
- TOC: Deliberations of President shrouded in mystery
- a blog day’s work: A reversal of roles?
- Gerald Giam: Trust, but verify
- StaticVariable: Track Record
- To Fix a Mocking Peasant: Subterfuge and Survival
- Siew Kum Hong: More thoughts on Jobs Credit scheme [Recommended]
- The Kway Teow Man: The Untruths About Jobs Credit! [Recommended]
- Feed Me To The Fish: Is Singapore Cracking Up?
- Making History Relevant: Why S’pore should keep GST
- Mr Wang Says So: $330, One Youth and a Minister
- TOC: Together we save jobs?
- The Kway Teow Man: The Road to Hell
- The Legal Janitor: Education for economics illiterates
- Anonymous_X: STATS ChipPAC sends a wrong message by retrenching 650 people?
- Making History Relevant: Why S’pore shouldn’t have handouts

Opposition – where to Forum
- Wayang Party Club: Proposal for the opposition, civil society and blogging community to get their act together
- Seelan Palay’s Blog: Forum: Opposition needs to come together
- Tan Kin Lian: Challenges faced by alternative parties
- Chia Ti Lik’s Blog: The Oppostion – Where To?
- Yawning Bread: Opposition unity still illusory
- Making History Relevant: Tan Kin Lian is Right, But..
- UncleYap: Oppositions’ Forum Still On-Going Now @ 1630Hr
- Opposition: Where to?: Videos
- SgForums: Opposition – Where To?: A public forum
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: Opposition Parties : The road ahead..
- Young PAP Blog: The Singapore Pakatan?
- Seelan Palay’s Blog: My speech at the Opposition Unity Forum

Housing
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: HDB to help home owners avoid default..
- Information Read By Me: Prices of HDB up 10 ~ 30 whereas Pay only 3 ~ 5 [Thanks JJ]
- This lush garden within: MPs solution to HDB housing woes – build slums
- HWZ: The HDB Flat prices you pay for includes playgrounds, covered walkways & BBQ pits?
- En Bloc Block Blog: Purpose of “Purposive”
- TOC: HDB’s unclear LUP policy causes wastage
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: No playgrounds for children…

Singaporeans A Dying Breed
- Anonymous_X: My answer to Nominated MP Loo Choon Yong’s “Reconsider 5-day week?”
- The Lycan Times: More babies or back to work
- EDMW: Dr Loo Choon Yong says: “Procreation ‘not our forte” and want gov to reconsider 6day work week
- Information Read By Me: Have 6 Children: NMP should Lead By Example [Thanks Jaunty Jabber]

High Notes and Minibombs
- Tan Kin Lian: Compensation for the Credit Linked Notes
- Tan Kin Lian: Opinion of Queen’s Counsel
- Mr Wang Says So: The Saga of the Structured Notes – What Next for the Struggling Investors (Part 3)

Truth, Justice, and the Singapore Way
- actionslavehero: Where is fairness in efficiency?
- Yawning Bread: Female teacher admits to sex with boy aged 15
- Where Bears Roam Free: Is the law protecting boy victims or women sex offenders?

Freedom, Choice and a place for my Voice
- Only “objective” and “factual” political films please, we’re Singaporeans: Just show me the money, says S’porean filmmakers
- Journalism.sg: Films Act changes target civil disobedience videos

ERPains, Trains & Automobiles
- TOC: Listen to us! Student activist group engages the transport authorities
- simpled: infrastructure? but we’re first world!!!
- Petition4fairtransport.org: Coverage for Plaza Singapura Outreach [Vid]

Re Education
- The Sun Chair Critic: NUS ranks as one of world’s most expensive college!
- The boy who knew too much: Singapore’s educational edge
- FWD: Teaching: A Glamourous Job? [Thanks Wayne]

Strangers In a Strange Land
- TOC: “Singapore law good for boss”
- The Kway Teow Man: Idea to Offload Foreigners More Cheaply?

Tan Yong Soon can cook
- Jaslyn Go’s Blog: I say, Thank you Mr Tan Yong Soon..

Healthcare
- nofearSingapore: Medical Guideline on Fees should be reinstated now

Association of Bloggers Singapore
- Discuss the Net: Overlooking and Underestimating PR [Thanks Renhao]

Parliament
- TOC: Parliamentary report — Debates on HDB rental flats, upgrading, e-engagement and Gaza crisis
- Sgpolitics: Parliamentary Snapshots – 05 Feb 2009, 06 Feb 2009
- Sgpolitics: Parliamentary Snapshots — 09 Feb 2009
- Sgpolitics: Parliamentary Snapshots — 10 Feb 2009
- Workers’ Party @ Parliament: Review of Criminal Procedure, Poor Judgement on Budget 2007, Vote Secrecy
- Sgpolitics: Parliamentary Snapshots — 11 Feb 2009

Daily Discourse
- Feed Me To The Fish: Talk is Cheap & Bully is Mean!
- Balderdash: contract MOE made him/her sign
- Alice Cheong in Wonderland: Should ERA be ordered to pay $257k?
- Empty Vessel: The Great Divide between the creative and the conservative
- Dotseng: Why Do We Need To Put A Policeman In The Head of Every Kid?
- Journalism.sg: The future of journalism in a post-newspaper world
- ringisei: Lesbian triathletes not slapped with ban
- The Secret Political Blog: The Stomp out STOMP movement
- Jacob’s Weblog: Holding Lee Kuan Yew accountable – Part 1
- actionslavehero: Leadership and Perspective
- The Itch to Write: Work VS Making babies
- Sam’s thoughts: Tackling Underaged Sex
- Hard Hitting in the Lion City: Get rid of the PSLE
- groundnotes: Glamour and Public Service: A Vicious Circle
- A Singaporean: Did Obama just describe how some Singaporeans feel?
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: Seletar Cat Killer
- TOC: Is our politics any different from China’s? [Recommended]
- Gerald Giam: Graciousness out of whack
- Sg Enquirer: Limit Pay Scale: Why Limit to Banks? [Thanks JJ]
- TOC: Total Defence – (Total Control)
- Jacob’s Weblog: Undercurrent of public discontent with the PAP government
- Balderdash: Dubai vs Singapore
- NUSSU the Ridge: NUS students take no pride in NUS sports achievements

Life, the universe and everything
- Tribolum: Soul Searching
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: Happy Birthday Singapore!!!
- Bernard Aw’s Blog: Writing for SIIA
- The Banzai Effect: S.O.Y.A Cosplay 2009 – Have You BEAN There?
- AngryAngMo: Weird Things Made In Singapore?
- Yummy BBQ Chicken Wings: Are you suffering from socio-political blogs’ addiction? [Recommended. Funny]
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: Oh no, not another naming contest
- Making History Relevant: Wayang Party Club Proposal Is Irrelevant
- Angry AngMo: How To Survive Valentines Day In Singapore During The Financial Crisis And Still Make Your Loved Ones Happy
- Singapore Entrepreneurs: Stealing Cupid’s Bow [Thanks BL]
- Random Thoughts Of A Free Thinker: Let’s boycott Valentine’s Day!
- Sg_Ljers: Plagarise much?
- Singapore Watch: The Bank’s Historical Interest Rates

Books and Papercuts
- Blowin’ In The Wind: Naipaul and his women
- Rambling Librarian: Book: LibWorld – library blogs worldwide

Football, not Soccer
- inter alia: Brazil v. Italy at the Emirates Stadium – Feb 10 2009

Infoblogaramous
- My Way: Dating Violence Awareness Week 2009
- Mathia Lee: Singaporean film – by Joshua Lim : The Olive Depression
- Food Fads: Recall Of “18″ Sports Drink (Blueberry, Lemon Lime, Grape & Original Flavours) 600ml Imported from Malaysia [Thanks Joel]
- Midnight Monkey Monitor: National Sustainability Conference
- nussu the ridge online: Ticket Giveaway: NUS Arts Festival 2009 (NAF ‘09)
- Kaffein-nated: Help for bushfire victims
- Seelan Palay’s Blog: The Rice Project photo exhibition
- Singapore Social Activist: Candlelight Vigil for Peace

2 Responses to “Weekend Roundup: Week 07”

  1. 1
    Watcher:

    This is a lesson to the PAP on the pitfalls of relying too much on FDIs and foreign workforce.

    PAP. it is time you turn your attention back to your forgotten SMEs and citizens. Remember that when the shit hits the fan, we are your only hope to defend and rescue you. Do not forget your people.

    Laid-Off Foreigners Flee as Dubai Spirals Down
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/12/world/middleeast/12dubai.html?_r=2&th&emc=th
    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Sofia, a 34-year-old Frenchwoman, moved here a year ago to take a job in advertising, so confident about Dubai’s fast-growing economy that she bought an apartment for almost $300,000 with a 15-year mortgage.

    An abandoned car in a parking garage in Dubai. One report said 3,000 cars were sitting abandoned at the Dubai Airport.

    Now, like many of the foreign workers who make up 90 percent of the population here, she has been laid off and faces the prospect of being forced to leave this Persian Gulf city — or worse.

    “I’m really scared of what could happen, because I bought property here,” said Sofia, who asked that her last name be withheld because she is still hunting for a new job. “If I can’t pay it off, I was told I could end up in debtors’ prison.”

    With Dubai’s economy in free fall, newspapers have reported that more than 3,000 cars sit abandoned in the parking lot at the Dubai Airport, left by fleeing, debt-ridden foreigners (who could in fact be imprisoned if they failed to pay their bills). Some are said to have maxed-out credit cards inside and notes of apology taped to the windshield.

    The government says the real number is much lower. But the stories contain at least a grain of truth: jobless people here lose their work visas and then must leave the country within a month. That in turn reduces spending, creates housing vacancies and lowers real estate prices, in a downward spiral that has left parts of Dubai — once hailed as the economic superpower of the Middle East — looking like a ghost town.

    No one knows how bad things have become, though it is clear that tens of thousands have left, real estate prices have crashed and scores of Dubai’s major construction projects have been suspended or canceled. But with the government unwilling to provide data, rumors are bound to flourish, damaging confidence and further undermining the economy.

    Instead of moving toward greater transparency, the emirates seem to be moving in the other direction. A new draft media law would make it a crime to damage the country’s reputation or economy, punishable by fines of up to 1 million dirhams (about $272,000). Some say it is already having a chilling effect on reporting about the crisis.

    Last month, local newspapers reported that Dubai was canceling 1,500 work visas every day, citing unnamed government officials. Asked about the number, Humaid bin Dimas, a spokesman for Dubai’s Labor Ministry, said he would not confirm or deny it and refused to comment further. Some say the true figure is much higher.

    “At the moment there is a readiness to believe the worst,” said Simon Williams, HSBC bank’s chief economist in Dubai. “And the limits on data make it difficult to counter the rumors.”

    Some things are clear: real estate prices, which rose dramatically during Dubai’s six-year boom, have dropped 30 percent or more over the past two or three months in some parts of the city. Last week, Moody’s Investor’s Service announced that it might downgrade its ratings on six of Dubai’s most prominent state-owned companies, citing a deterioration in the economic outlook. So many used luxury cars are for sale , they are sometimes sold for 40 percent less than the asking price two months ago, car dealers say. Dubai’s roads, usually thick with traffic at this time of year, are now mostly clear.

    Some analysts say the crisis is likely to have long-lasting effects on the seven-member emirates federation, where Dubai has long played rebellious younger brother to oil-rich and more conservative Abu Dhabi. Dubai officials, swallowing their pride, have made clear that they would be open to a bailout, but so far Abu Dhabi has offered assistance only to its own banks.

    “Why is Abu Dhabi allowing its neighbor to have its international reputation trashed, when it could bail out Dubai’s banks and restore confidence?” said Christopher M. Davidson, who predicted the current crisis in “Dubai: The Vulnerability of Success,” a book published last year. “Perhaps the plan is to centralize the U.A.E.” under Abu Dhabi’s control, he mused, in a move that would sharply curtail Dubai’s independence and perhaps change its signature freewheeling style.

    For many foreigners, Dubai had seemed at first to be a refuge, relatively insulated from the panic that began hitting the rest of the world last autumn. The Persian Gulf is cushioned by vast oil and gas wealth, and some who lost jobs in New York and London began applying here.

    But Dubai, unlike Abu Dhabi or nearby Qatar and Saudi Arabia, does not have its own oil, and had built its reputation on real estate, finance and tourism. Now, many expatriates here talk about Dubai as though it were a con game all along. Lurid rumors spread quickly: the Palm Jumeira, an artificial island that is one of this city’s trademark developments, is said to be sinking, and when you turn the faucets in the hotels built atop it, only cockroaches come out.

    “Is it going to get better? They tell you that, but I don’t know what to believe anymore,” said Sofia, who still hopes to find a job before her time runs out. “People are really panicking quickly.”

    Hamza Thiab, a 27-year-old Iraqi who moved here from Baghdad in 2005, lost his job with an engineering firm six weeks ago. He has until the end of February to find a job, or he must leave. “I’ve been looking for a new job for three months, and I’ve only had two interviews,” he said. “Before, you used to open up the papers here and see dozens of jobs. The minimum for a civil engineer with four years’ experience used to be 15,000 dirhams a month. Now, the maximum you’ll get is 8,000,” or about $2,000.

    Mr. Thiab was sitting in a Costa Coffee Shop in the Ibn Battuta mall, where most of the customers seemed to be single men sitting alone, dolefully drinking coffee at midday. If he fails to find a job, he will have to go to Jordan, where he has family members — Iraq is still too dangerous, he says — though the situation is no better there. Before that, he will have to borrow money from his father to pay off the more than $12,000 he still owes on a bank loan for his Honda Civic. Iraqi friends bought fancier cars and are now, with no job, struggling to sell them.

    “Before, so many of us were living a good life here,” Mr. Thiab said. “Now we cannot pay our loans. We are all just sleeping, smoking, drinking coffee and having headaches because of the situation.”

  2. 2
    Newcomer.:

    Dear Editor,

    There is a new article on HDB’s Lease Buyback Scheme – Just another smart scheme.

    http://amortal.wordpress.com/2009/02/17/hdb-lease-buyback-scheme/

    For your info, please.

    Many Thanks.

    Newcomer.

    [Thanks]

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5 Jan 1926 - 30 Sep 2008

For the sword outwears its sheath, and the soul wears out the breast. And the heart must pause to breathe, and love itself have rest.

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