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Archive for January, 2010

Daily SG: 13 Jan 2010

Ronald McDonald: Pigs Out
- Nomadism: Singapore Mac Donald’s unilateral decide to drop the “Pig” from its zodiac collectibles
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: McDonalds Singapore remove pig from the Chinese zodiac
- Kaffein-nated: Food for Thought: Amusing piggy issues
- Let’s Go To Speakers’ Corner: Lobby Mcdonalds to restore the PIG; 16 Jan 2010

Religion
- Irreligious: Politics in Malaysia’s ‘Allah’ debacle
- TOC: Are evangelists religious extremists?

Road to Election
- On Nation and State: The 2006 PAP Scoreboard
- ST Forum: Surprised by ‘cooling off’ idea [Thanks Anthony]

Re education
- TOC: Rebutting Law Minister K Shanmugam
- The Temasek Review: Political education: Teach our children the real meaning of the National Pledge first

GIC, Temasek State Fund Investments
- Kaffein-nated: GIC, Temasek State Fund Investments
- The Temasek Review: GIC may lose more than SGD$20 billion dollars of Singapore’s reserves

Housing
- TOC: People of the tents

Singapore Coloring
- Mathia Lee: Choosing my race

Twilight in Paradise. CPF Life
- TOC: CPF: the risk of living too long

Daily Discourse
- TOC: The tabernacle of respect
- Jacob 69er: {Video} Part 1 of SDP’s Let’s Talk with Michael Fernandez
- Today In Singapore: Kids Say The Darndest Things
- Seelan Palay’s Blog: 2010 and the path ahead for activism in Singapore

Infoblogaramous
- Gerald Giam’s Blog: YouthQuake 6 – The Influence of Online Media on Singaporean Youths

Daily Tech: 13 Jan 2010

CES 2010 has come to an end. Lots of amazing stuff being shown off this year. But makes you wonder, which gadget will end up in the market and which is vaporware. We’ll see.

Oh, if you just bought your Nexus One, there is a 3G connectivity bug. Don’t worry, the workaround is pretty simple.

CES 2010 Round Up
- Cnet: Best of CES Awards
- Engadget: Engadget’s gear of CES 2010
- Engadget: Crapgadget Crapdown, CES 2010: the best of the worst
- Cnet: CES 2010 wrap-up: Computers and hardware
- Cnet: CES 2010: Gaming wrap-up
- Cnet: TVs from the third dimension, a wrap-up
- BBC: Microsoft and HP show off ‘slate’ PC
- Cnet: Sony Ericsson Xperia X2 available this spring
- Engadget: Inbrics M1
- Cnet: Ford brings smartphone Web apps to cars
- Telegraph: Palm unveils new Pre and Pixi handsets
- Engadget: Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.5.3 shown off very, very quietly
- TechieLobang: RCA Airenergy Charger, Harvest WiFi Energy and Charges Gadgets

News
- Lenovo Blog: Lenovo RapidDrive Technology
- PCWorld: Nexus One Has $174.15 Worth of Hardware
- TechinLobang: Summing Up Google Chrome OS Event
- Mad Shrimps: Intel Clarkdale vs AMD Phenom II with 785G

Reviews | Guides
- Tech65: Gear65 #51 – LG Chocolate BL40
- LesterChan.net: Sanyo Eneloop Mobile Booster KBC-L2S
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: Nexus One 3G connectivity issue

Daily SG: 12 Jan 2010

Road to Election
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: New Media: Where the most intensive fights will be
- On Nation and State: The difference between local level elections and a national election.

Housing
- Singapore Alternatives: People of the Tents — Joshua Chiang
- Tan Kin Lian’s Blog: HDB flats and population growth

Religion
- Desparatebeep: In the Name of Allah:Yahweh and so on.
- Singapore Life and Times: It is really really sad.
- My Thoughts: One Country’s Misfortune is Another’s Political Mileage [Thansk Ganga]

The Gospel of Harry
- Times They Are A-Changin’: To Be Or Not To Be…

Healthcare & Healthcare Providers
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: Sickness in Wealth and Poverty

Lee vs Chee
- Chee Siok Chin’s Blog: Going to jail is least of Chee Siok Chin’s concerns [Thanks Selan]

Little Green Dot
- ECO: Our Response to NMP Assoc Prof Pauline Tay’s questions to Parliament

Daily Discourse
- Furry Brown Dog: Productivity and Singapore’s economic growth model
- Barnyard Chorus: “the world becomes a nastier place for women”
- The Secret Political Blog: Taking “National Identity” to ludicrous heights

Life, the universe and everything
- Frankly Speaking: MioTV: Big on screwing preschoolers

Infoblogaramous
- Seelan Palay’s Blog: Join Singaporeans For Democracy for a discussion this Thursday (Jan 14)

Daily SG: 11 Jan 2010

Road to Election
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: Opposition Election Strategy – Part 2
- The Temasek Review: Yes Singapore, you deserve a dose of incompetent government

Housing
- TOC: HDB housing policies – tilting the advantage towards PRs?
- My sketchbook: The insatiable demand for flats

GIC, Temasek State Fund Investments
- Blowin’ In The Wind: GIC faces $575m loss in ‘biggest US real-estate blunder’
- Temasek Hedge: GIC at forefront of impending CRE disaster in America: Singapore boleh!

Re education
- The Temasek Review: Shanmugam’s grand design to “politicize” Singapore schools: The fine line between political education and indoctrination
- The Temasek Review: Straits Times continues to spread its “propaganda” in Singapore secondary schools
- The boy who knew too much: Singapore’s love of lying.

ERPains, Trains & Automobiles
- Musings From the Lion City: Revised OPC

Singapore Coloring
- TOC: We are Singaporeans, race should not matter?

Religion
- Irreligious: The Malaysian ‘Allah’ controversy: A matter of liberty
- The Magic Within: The politics of choice, faith and inclusiveness
- thrills, spills & flatliners: The Day The Music Died
- Gerald Giam’s Blog: Silver lining in the church attacks

Daily Discourse
- Growing your tree of prosperity: So Singapore is not good enough for Singaporeans. Now what? [Thanks Wai Chung]
- TOC: Unraveling his story
- Kelvin Teo Writes: Fear factor that gets really bad
- Singapore Life and Times: Kopi same

Life, the universe and everything
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: Nexus One 3G connectivity issue
- The Crunch Time Blog: 10 reasons I prefer Nexus One (Google Android Phone) over Apple iPhone.”>10 reasons I prefer Nexus One (Google Android Phone) over Apple iPhone. [Thanks Andrew]

Infoblogaramous
- Barnyard Chorus: 2010 Asia Internet MSM Sex Survey

Weekly Roundup: Week 02

“If native Singaporeans are falling behind because “the spurs are not stuck into the hide,” that is their problem”
Lee Kuan Yew

“Let me ask you, how much money does the government have? 350 billion dollars in assets! How come they can develop here, develop there, but got no money to help these people?”
Sunny Murugaya

“The reason children from ‘broken’ homes feel ‘broken’ is that they have been sold the idea there is only one type of home or family structure worth having and anything different is, well, broken.”
Tania De Rozario

“Why is it that a Singaporean has to pay at least $350 for a place to live, when an IR foreign worker can rent for as little as $140?”
Leong Sze Hian

“Here the fear is far more subtle, far less palpable and noticeable, but no less effective.”
Catherine Lim

“My dear people there is no need to be afraid. You are not children and should not be insulted as such. Live your lives with dignity and take pride in the society and come forward in your way to build the society you want in the future.”
Kenneth Jeyaretnam

“[The HOTA staff] kept on pressuring us to take off his life support. We begged repeatedly but they refuse to listen to our pleas.”
Yenny Young

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

Daily SG: 8 Jan 2010

Housing
- TOC: A question of supply
- Tan Kin Lian’s Blog: Asset enhancement
- Blowin’ In The Wind: The price of a four-room HDB resale flat

Strangers in a Strange Land
- The Temasek Review: Don’t forget about us, says university students

The Gospel of Harry
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: Singaporean workers clocked longest hours..

Re education
- The Crunch Time Blog: Singapore Child Prodigy Choose to Study in Malaysia. [Thanks andrew8]

Singapore Organ Trading Hub
- Today In Singapore: Guided By Expediency Rather Than Principle

Daily Discourse
- Singabloodypore: An open letter to Chief Justice Chan Sek Keong
- utopia8787: the rich and the poor
- The Temasek Review: Where is the support, Singapore?
- Asia Sentinel: Singaporeans Seek Asylum Elsewhere [Thanks Ben]

Life, the universe and everything
- Empty Vessel: SingPost fiasco: where was the creativity?
- Chee Wai’s Random Musing: Vandalism
- The Asia File: Straight-up Singaporeans not ready for viral marketing [Thanks Ben]
- Project Lucy: Much ado about nothing [Thanks lucy]
- The Magic Within: The Triumph of Unreason

Daily ChioBu: Yumi Sugimoto

Yumi Sugimoto (杉本有美 born 1 Apr 1989) is a Japanese model, actress and gravure idol. Her career began in elementary school, when she was chosen in a Grand-Prix semi-audition for the girls manga magazine Ribbon!. In July 2007 she received her first lead role in TV Tokyo’s TV drama series Boys Este. Her latest role is Miu SutōGo-on Silver in the 2008 TV Asahi’s tokusatsu series Engine Sentai Go-onger. This is her VYJ photoshoot Aloha Time released in July 2008.

Pictures from Natural Woman after the break.
More »

Daily SG: 7 Jan 2010

Remembering JBJ
- Random Thoughts Of A Free Thinker: Dr. James Gomez at JBJ memorial event — A case of selective reporting?
- TOC: It is Think Centre version 2.0, insists former WP member James Gomez

Road to Election
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: Opposition Election Strategy – Part 1
- The Temasek Review: Generation Y: the third force in Singapore politics
- Kelvin Teo Writes: Charming the voters

Housing
- Tan Kin Lian’s Blog: A new pricing formula for HDB flats
- Who Moved My Singapore Cheese: Golden rice bowl

The Gospel of Harry
- The Temasek Review: Open letter to PA’s CEO Mr Tan Boon Huat on MM Lee’s remarks that all grassroots organizations are part of the PAP
- Today in Singapore: The Truth Behind The Truth

Singapore Coloring
- according2ed: Singapore Requires Parents To Declare Race Of Child At Birth – comment [Thanks lary]

Healthcare & Healthcare Providers
- TOC: Heart-friendly for heartlanders

Lee vs Chee
- Jaslyn Go’s Blog: A Wake Up Call for Singaporeans

A jobless recovery
- Blowin’ In The Wind: Singapore 3% to 5% growth won’t be easy: FT

Daily Discourse
- Readings From A Political Duo-ble: Working Paper – Neoliberalism and its human rights impact on Singapore (Part I)
- Singapore Recalcitrant: The True Colour of a Disingenuous Romanian Government
- Today In Singapore: The Calm Before The Diplomatic Storm
- The Temasek Review: Did the YPAP just declare war on Singapore netizens?
- Ian On The Red Dot: Why Begrude Eric How’s Good Fortune?
- TOC: Press Muse – It shouldn’t be just business
- The Bosonic State: Unacceptable to have Dolphins in Captivity at IR
- My sketchbook: SingPost’s great marketing idea
- Your Daily OM: Questionable Ethics and Pure Hostility towards Community Cats [Thanks DK]

Daily SG: 6 Jan 2010

Remembering JBJ
- TOC: A subdued commemoration at Speaker’s Corner
- TOC: Stop re-writing history!
- Sgpolitics.net: Speech by Mr James Gomez commemorating JBJ on 5 Jan 2010 at Speaker’s Corner
- Singapore Alternatives: Commemorating JBJ – The Icon of a Lost Generation
- TOC: JBJ is my inspiration
- Seelan Palay’s Blog: JBJ: In our hearts forever

Housing
- The Temasek Review: Resale HDB flats hit a record high price fueled by demand from PRs
- Tan Kin Lian’s Blog: Price of new HDB flat

The Gospel of Harry
- Singapore Recalcitrant: Another Booboo of the Minister Mentor

Singapore Coloring
- The Grand Moofti Speaks: Race and Singaporeans, what’s all the fuss about?

Road to Election
- On Nation and State: Preliminary forecast for a likely 2010 GE

Twilight in Paradise. CPF Life
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: CPF Reform and Political Change..

Lee vs Chee
- Chee Siok Chin’s Blog: Chee Siok Chin begins jail term

Daily Discourse
- catherinelim.sg: A Climate Of Fear In Our Society?
- Hear Ye! Hear Ye!: Tackling the Malay-Muslim underclass issue
- Yawning Bread: Should Singapore’s Home Minister be thrown into a Vietnamese jail?
- Singapore Recalcitrant: The Disoriented Romanian Diplomat
- mrbrown: YPAP Member: No job? It’s your karma or your forefather’s fault!
- The Temasek Review: PA launches official investigation into business dealings of YPAP member Sear Hock Rong
- Singapore Social and Political Thoughts: Why should there be a TV License?
- My Very Own Glob: Forced to pay to watch crap

Life, the universe and everything
- kitchen tigress: Prying a Cake from OCBC’s Cold, Hard Fingers
- Midnight Monkey Monitor: Nature in the Heartlands: Toa Payoh Town Park
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: Startup shouldn’t pay to pitch to angel investors

The following is an article from the monthly Chinese magazine “Eye Asia”, first appeared in the July 2009 edition. [Thanks Patrick]

THE CURSE OF POLITICS

The word “politics” can have different meanings in different contexts.

The one that I wish to presently discuss concerns the processes of acquisition of power and authority in order to govern a state or a country; or in other words, to rule over a group of persons defined by geographical boundaries.

In this context, politics is widely regarded as something “dirty”, insidious, manipulative, devious, treacherous, often immoral, and sometimes downright evil. To be a successful politician, it is generally believed, one has to be cunning, deceitful, unscrupulous, and preferably with as little conscience as possible. Thus, many people stay away from politics, and discourage their children from being involved in politics. By staying away, it is as if one would avoid dirtying one’s soul or one’s conduct.

That kind of reaction (of distancing oneself from dirty politics) cannot be more mistaken, more dangerous, or more self-deceiving. Nevertheless, it is a viewpoint that is rather prevalent in many parts of the world, Malaysia included.

It is a pervasive practice that I wish to discredit.

It is politics that ultimately controls our lives, our dos and don’ts, our aspirations, and our hopes for our future generations. It is politics that causes poverty, creates discrimination and injustice, and brings wars and oppression to our doorsteps. That being the case, should we want to walk away and have no say in these matters? Do we do the minimum, and leave the rest to others or to chance? By staying clear of politics, and burying our heads entirely in making a living and minding our own business, will politics leave us alone and cease to regulate or govern us? The answers, I would imagine, are rather obvious.

If politics is dirty, it is only because we allow it to become so. It is our inaction and our abandonment that allows dirt to harden, and rust to corrode.

On each occasion when someone complains that politics is dirty, the obvious question that should follow would be to ask that person whether he is prepared to be governed or controlled by something so dirty? If he is, he truly deserves what he gets. If he is not, then he cannot hope to simply wash his hands of the dirt, by turning his back and pretending that he sees not.

Neglect and desertion are not neutral positions that one could take. Inaction and insufficient action may seem passive at first blush, but are in truth an active contributor to the perpetration of wrongs against both oneself and others. Closing a blind eye to a wrong is a betrayal of one’s social responsibilities. Declaring that politics is dirty, and therefore refusing to have anything to do with it (including non-participation in its broad cleansing process), in fact promotes the furtherance and worsening of an already bad situation.

Democracy is self-governance, as opposed to being ruled by an emperor whose word must be obeyed. Democracy is never a system that enables the people from time to time to vote in a group of angelic saviours who would miraculously put things right, provide fair and equal treatments, and let everyone prosper. A democratic system merely allows its inhabitants to vote into (and out of) office their representatives to temporarily perform the job of governing, on their behalf and for their benefit. The multiple tasks of self-governance always remain on the shoulders of the citizenry. What takes place is that the citizens have delegated those tasks to their elected representatives, not indefinitely, but for a (revocable) period of time.

Therefore, the strength of a democracy, and hence the well being of a society, does not, ultimately, depend on the strength and integrity of its elected leaders. Rather, at the end of the day, it depends on the vigilance and constant participation of its ordinary citizens. Democracy cannot rely on a few good men or women; it needs to be cultivated by a large number of ordinary but diligent participants.

Things go horribly wrong in a democracy, usually because the vast majority of voters go into a long slumber in the period between elections, simply expecting their representatives to do the right things while they themselves disown continuous participation in politics. Such prolonged hiatus plays into the hands of those who have acquired power. Hibernation of the governed is such fertile ground for the exponential growth of the greed and self-gratification of the governors. The scourge of inaction is a gift to the corrupt. The crime of silence is sweet sound to the ears of the political robbers of national wealth.

The saying that every people deserve the government they have is only partially correct. In a democracy, even after disregarding the cheating mechanisms, it is still a numbers game. Often it is the majority of the people who deserve any disgraceful government that they have allowed to be in power, while the minority (or some of them at least), despite their persistent struggles, are victims of the follies of those who outnumber them. The fact that many of these outnumbered victims continue at personal risk to educate and empower the majority is a source of both inspiration and admiration for those of us pessimistic about the future of human societies.

In fledgling democracies, politicians in power would do their best to discourage the general masses from political activism, except of course for their own supporters. Even with the latter, what is asked of them is blind loyalty, rather than participation with independent thinking.

There is an endless number of ways in which a population can be hoodwinked, deterred or cowed. Censorship and control of the media are common tools, as is harsh treatment of dissent. Subtler forms include the farcical delineation of politics from other spheres of life, as though political activities can be detached from other aspects of everyday life. In Malaysia, for example, an association of persons is not permitted to be involved in activities touching on politics, unless the association is registered as a political party. This is as absurd as saying that any group of persons who wants to play football must first register themselves as a football club, or that anyone wishing to advocate a healthcare system must be a doctor or a worker in the medical field.

Its absurdity lays bare the real motive of disenfranchising the people.

Politics ought to be a competition of ideals and ideas. It ought to be about the people. Politicians ought to race against one another to see who can better serve the public good. Politics, that which regulates our every breath, ought not to be dirty.

But in reality it is. Most of the time politics is only about winning, by hook or by crook. Acquiring power is an end in itself; its benefits for the corrupt are aplenty. Politics is no more about the people. It is no more about right and wrong. This is the curse that we have come to inherit. Unless we quickly do something about it, this will be the curse we will pass on to our future generations, with our own brand of voodoos added to it.

No lightening is going to come down from heaven to strike our decadent, corrupt, virulent and incorrigible politicians. Only we, the people, can cleanse their dirty politics and free our future generations from its curse.

First, we get rid of the monopoly structure of power.

Yeo Yang Poh

3/11/09

Original article in Chinese after the break.
More »

Daily Tech: 6 Jan 2010

Happy 2010 everyone! CES is starting this coming Thursday (Friday morning for us in Singapore) Google started everyone talking by officially announcing their Superphone last night. Google will be selling the Nexus One on their web store starting today. Currently, only US, UK, Hong Kong and Singapore will get it.

Yes, you heard me right. Singapore is getting the Nexus One.

News
- Gizmodo: Google Nexus One: Everything You Need to Know
- Cnet: Chrome passes Safari in browser usage
- PCWorld: Gigabyte GA-P55A-UD3: First USB 3.0 Motherboard with USB-IF Certification
- Cnet: Lenovo meshes tablet and Netbook in one device: IdeaPad U1 Hybrid Notebook
- LA Times: Facebook fights back, disallows the Suicide Machine
- Cnet: Eye-Fi Pro enters its next generation
- Engadget: Lenovo Skylight: its first ARM / Snapdragon-based smartbook, coming in April for $499
- Engadget: Canon debuts A3100 IS, A3000 IS, A495 and A490 low-end shooters

Reviews | Guides
- Engadget: Nexus One review
- Cnet: ThinkPad Edge 13-inch First Take
- Sweska Says: Access Calendar anywhere

Daily SG: 5 Jan 2010

The Gospel of Harry
- Barnyard Chorus: Put a ring on it
- Carpe Diem: Responses to MM Lee’s NatGeo Interview
- Singaporean Skeptic: The Minister Dementor Strikes Again!

Singapore Coloring
- Seelan Palay’s Blog: Is multiracialism also just an aspiration?
- I’m getting personal: Racial Profiling

Housing
- Sgpolitics.net: Mah: HDB flat values will always go up
- Today In Singapore: Two Sides Of A Coin

Road to Election
- Kelvin Teo Writes: Significance of a contest at Tanjong Pagar GRC

Twilight in Paradise. CPF Life
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: ST Headlines: 10,000 get 1st CPF Life Payout

A jobless recovery
- Blowin’ In The Wind: Straits Times’ GDP goof-up

Daily Discourse
- Sgpolitics.net: JBJ: Let us not insult our people
- TOC: To catch a diplomat
- The Temasek Review: “Report” made against Alex Tan for “harassing” YPAP and “intimidating” PAP MP
- The Magic Within: The Word Allah [Thanks Jeremy]

Life, the universe and everything
- ALVINOLOGY: Save the trees, say NO to junk mails from SingPost
- Aussie Pete: The Known Universe – Be Prepared to be Blown Away!!

Daily SG: 4 Jan 2010

Strangers in a Strange Land
- Dee Kay Dot As Gee: What is my govt’s stand on foreign workers/immigrants anyway?
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: Latest Reason for Chinese Influx : Maintain China-Singapore ties!
- Singabloodypore: Mr Lee – Apologise
- Singapore Dino: Lee Kuan Yew: If S’poreans fall behind, it’s their problem
- My sketchbook: Being a Singaporean has its privileges
- Growing your tree of prosperity: Why foreign talent will trounce your asses. [Thanks Wai Chung]

Road to Election
- The Temasek Review: Son of PAP founder and former Barisan leader Dominic Puthucheary may be fielded as PAP candidate in next GE
- Blowin’ In The Wind: Downturns and elections in Singapore
- On Nation and State: “Its the economy,stupid!” with a twist [A new site! Thanks J]

2010 New Year Message
- Diary of A Singaporean Mind: Happy New Year!
- Singaporean Skeptic: Lip service of the PAP

Housing
- TOC: HDB flats – a precious resource for foreign workers?

The Gospel of Harry
- Molitics: Kuan Yew’s Confession

We are against Capital Punishment
- TOC: Why I support the death penalty and a second chance for Yong Vui Kong

Singapore Coloring
- Yawning Bread: Mixed-marriage babies now given race choice

Daily Discourse
- Barnyard Chorus: People we love: Ms Tania De Rozario for “Avoid being judgmental with children”
- Singapore Dino: Preventing Lee Kuan Yew from perverting history
- TOC: From political party member to homelessness
- utopia8787: email letter on Eunos Grassroot Matters to Singapore Government
- TOC: Young Singaporeans reading history and the politics of age
- The Secret Political Blog: The most under-reported story of 2009: The Straits Times is liberalising

Life, the universe and everything
- TOC: Online petition set up on hit-and-run incident involving Romanian diplomat

Infoblogaramous
- Jacob 69er: JBJ Memorial Day @ Hong Lim Park aka Speakers Corner, Jan 5 @ 7pm






You Will Not Be Forgotten
Joshua Benjamin Jeyaretnam
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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