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Lee Kuan Yew threatens again: Singapore will lose ‘vitality’ without migrants[/h]
August 14th, 2011 |
Author:
Temasek Review
Facing a growing backlash at his ridiculous pro-foreigner and ultra-liberal immigration policies, PAP supreme leader Lee Kuan Yew has resorted to his usual fear-mongering tactics to threaten Singaporeans again to toe HIS line.
Speaking during a community event yesterday, the 88 year old MP who appeared to be lethargic claimed that Singapore will lose its ‘vitality’ and ‘drive’ without the continued inflow of migrants without substantiating his statements.
“That is a fact of life, we either have them or like Japan, our population will shrink and the economy will stagnate. These are the stark choices we face.”
Due to the PAP’s open-door policies to immigrants, foreigners now make up 43 percent of Singapore’s population. Of the remaining 57 percent who are citizens, an increasing number are born overseas.
“So if we do not take in migrants, we will become an old, diminishing society with no vitality and no drive,” Lee added.
The PAP is so desperate for migrants that even cleaners, hawkers, construction workers, bus drivers, masseurs, sale assistants and prostitutes are given Singapore PR and citizenships all within a short span of time.
One PRC teacher Zhang Yuanyuan proclaimed to the world during an interview with China’s CCTV that she received her Singapore PR within TWO MONTHS of application.
A staunch advocate of eugenics and social engineering reminiscent of the Nazis, Lee once said in an interview with National Geographic magazine in December 2009 that it is a good thing that Singapore is welcoming so many Chinese immigrants from China as they are ‘harder-driving’ and ‘harder-striving’ than Singaporeans, a point he tried to drive home again yesterday:
“On competition for jobs, and especially competition, pressure on their children to do well in schools. The new migrants having left his home must go all out to succeed in the country that he or she has adopted. That is to be expected and therefore, we must accept that they are going to do their best and if doing their best puts pressure on us, our children, it may be good for them because they will also have to put in effort to do their best to keep up.”
Having lived high up in his ivory tower for the last twenty years and surrounded by sycophants and ball-carriers, Lee still doesn’t realize he is completely out of touch with the ground.