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myo539! Come read this from NUS about Tin Pei Ling and Nicole Seah!

Debonerman

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Please don't bite your own PAP White panties okay darling?????:biggrin::biggrin::biggrin:

Nicole Seah
Why many have chosen Nicole Seah over Tin Pei Ling
WRITTEN BY Christopher Ong on Apr 21, 2011
NSP unveils 24-year old Nicole Seah as this GE's youngest candidate.
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The two FASS graduates may face each other in the elections.
The National Solidarity Party (NSP) has unveiled the youngest candidate of this General Elections — 24 year-old advertising executive Nicole Seah, who graduated from The National University of Singapore (NUS) with honors majoring in Communications and New Media. She was also part of the University Scholar’s Programme (USP) during her university tenure.

The NSP’s 24 year-old Ms. Seah was immediately compared to the 26 year-old Ms. Tin from the PAP, who had been the subject of a barrage of criticisms online ever since she was introduced as a candidate running for the General Elections. The heap of criticisms centered on Ms. Tin’s poor and seemingly trivial answers to television interviews, her lack of political nuance and also controversial political viewpoints such as her belief that the government had no responsibility to help the poor bridge the widening income gap.

The scrutiny even went personal — many questioned her motivations behind joining the ruling party, and placed her private life under an intense spotlight.

According to a Facebook poll that compared the two individuals, users overwhelmingly voted for Ms. Seah ahead of Ms. Tin.


While Ms. Tin’s name was thrust into the media spotlight like a fish out of water when her candidature was announced, for many it was a natural progression for the young Nicole Seah to be running in the coming General Elections.

Nicole Seah as a genuine individual

The young Ms. Seah had cultivated a strongly independent, critical and informed perspective of Singapore’s affairs ever since she was in the University.

Together with Belmont Lay, another Communications and New Media major, she was an editor at The Campus Observer — an independent student-run, student-led news publication on the NUS campus that even preceded The Kent Ridge Common.

The Campus Observer became the first publication on the NUS Kent Ridge campus to engage the student body on a wide variety of socio-political issues, providing an independent and critical alternative to the establishment-run NUS’ student union (NUSSU) The Ridge magazine.

While at The Campus Observer, Ms. Seah contributed critical perspectives on issues affecting the student population, such as the disconnect between Singaporeans and foreign students at NUS and the lack of suitable accommodation for foreign students living in Singapore.

Ms. Seah’s passion for engagement through her stint as the editor of The Campus Observer was telling — the publication was completely self-funded, and students were working out of a genuine interest to critically contribute to socio-political domain pertinent to the NUS population, and perhaps to affect a change or make a difference, rather than for purposes of personal gain or profit.

Her honors thesis was merely a reflection of her interest and passion for the issues confronting Singapore — for her final year in school, she wrote on how the hegemony could be strengthened without censorship. The title of her thesis was “Strengthening the hegemony without censorship: A study of the lack of censorship towards alternative online media in Singapore”.

Representing Gen-Y voters

A crucial body of voters whose support many political parties have sought to obtain are the Generation Y or Gen-Y Singaporeans. This coming election marks an ever greater increase in the number of post-75 voters who will be casting their support at the ballot boxes for the very first time. Gen-Y voters are known to be better educated and are more exposed to a spectrum of alternative viewpoints, owing to technological advancements such as the Internet that have been widely leveraged in Singapore’s political domain
 

Debonerman

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The anxiety to engage this body of voters have led many to try and understand the thoughts of this generation: The Straits Times recently conducted over 400 face-to-face interviews with Singaporeans of this generation to delineate their concerns and priorities. This generation has also been labelled widely and almost contradictorily as apathetic/involved, contented/dissatisfied and idealistic/realistic.

While many have been largely unreceptive to the idea of Ms. Tin as being a representative of the Gen-Y voters, Ms. Seah strikes a completely different chord.

In an interview with The Online Citizen, Ms. Seah talks about making politics “fulfilling” and meaningful for the youths.

“It is important that politics is a fulfilling vocation for the youth.” she tells TOC.

“(I) aim to bring across the merits of politics, and people have to see it as a productive activity over say, spending their weekends at Orchard Road. All this while, in any activity that we propose or execute, we are essentially hoping to get youths interested and to join the party.”

“We want to make politics relevant to the people and show them that it adds value to their lives.”

Direct, and honest

She also lays out in simple, honest terms her reasons for joining politics.

“For a long time I was a person who subscribed to the rhetoric of the PAP – that we are a fishing village transformed into a first class nation.”

“However, when I came to university, I took a couple of classes in politics and it was from there that I discovered alternative opinions and views,”

“They may be more complex and sometimes convoluted, but they make more sense than the simplistic rhetoric the current government tells us.”

From her time at university, Ms. Seah was already looking at NUS as a “microcosm” of Singapore.

“In university, I also joined an independent publication The Campus Observer. It was then that I started to get very interested about what people were talking about and what was the alternative ground view. NUS promotes itself to be a world-class university, but I noticed that there were still prevalent problems.”

“They had to be brought to the surface to improve the lives of students. I saw NUS as a microcosm of how Singapore is being run, and I started to think critically about the issues affecting the country as a whole.”

“It was then that I decided that I wanted to do something substantial and take ownership of my own country.”

“More Pertinent Issues”

Contacted by The Straits Times today, Ms. Seah declined any comparison with Ms. Tin. The NSP has confirmed that they will be fielding a team in the Marine Parade GRC to contest the PAP — heightening a possibility of a political face-off between Ms. Seah and Ms. Tin.

“There are more important issues in this election,” she said. “I would rather focus on them than on issues of trivial importance.”

Ms. Seah has made the plight of the working middle-class in Singapore who are grappling with rising living cost her key issue this coming elections
 
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