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official proof that sinkie men are getting more and more fuckup and low ses...haaaa

kaninabuchaojibye

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More Singaporean women marrying foreign sweethearts
1,727 Singaporean women tied the knot with a non-resident groom in 2019 - up 52% from 2009

dummy.gif

Singaporean Rena Foong, 36, with her Brazilian husband, Mr Expedito Fabiano, 36, and their one-year-old son Emmanuel. Mr Fabiano came to Singapore to work in 2015 and got to know Ms Foong at the workplace. After dating for about two years, the couple
Singaporean Rena Foong, 36, with her Brazilian husband, Mr Expedito Fabiano, 36, and their one-year-old son Emmanuel. Mr Fabiano came to Singapore to work in 2015 and got to know Ms Foong at the workplace. After dating for about two years, the couple got married in 2019.
ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG

Theresa Tan
Senior Social Affairs Correspondent
  • PUBLISHED
    2 HOURS AGO
When it comes to Mr Right, more Singaporean women are marrying their foreign sweethearts.

In 2019, 1,727 Singaporean women tied the knot with a non-resident groom - a 52 per cent jump from the 1,134 such couples in 2009. Whereas, in 1999, there were 1,043 such pairings..
 
This proves that Singapore needs foreigners in order to succeed.
 
More Singaporean women marrying foreign sweethearts
1,727 Singaporean women tied the knot with a non-resident groom in 2019 - up 52% from 2009

dummy.gif

Singaporean Rena Foong, 36, with her Brazilian husband, Mr Expedito Fabiano, 36, and their one-year-old son Emmanuel. Mr Fabiano came to Singapore to work in 2015 and got to know Ms Foong at the workplace. After dating for about two years, the couple
Singaporean Rena Foong, 36, with her Brazilian husband, Mr Expedito Fabiano, 36, and their one-year-old son Emmanuel. Mr Fabiano came to Singapore to work in 2015 and got to know Ms Foong at the workplace. After dating for about two years, the couple got married in 2019.
ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG

Theresa Tan
Senior Social Affairs Correspondent
  • PUBLISHED
    2 HOURS AGO
When it comes to Mr Right, more Singaporean women are marrying their foreign sweethearts.

In 2019, 1,727 Singaporean women tied the knot with a non-resident groom - a 52 per cent jump from the 1,134 such couples in 2009. Whereas, in 1999, there were 1,043 such pairings..



another proud dumb fuck spg thinks white cock will be happily ever after, she will be a divorcee single mom soon but still proudly holding on to her amdk trophy kid
 
thanks to these (blindly in love) angmohs, fugly (and otherwise left on the shelf) spg’s can finally hook up, get impregnated, and produce offsprings way better looking than they are. it improves the gene pool and looks department.
 
thanks to these (blindly in love) angmohs, fugly (and otherwise left on the shelf) spg’s can finally hook up, get impregnated, and produce offsprings way better looking than they are. it improves the gene pool and looks department.


u not getting an amdl trophy wife in amerika? :D
 
More Singaporean women marrying foreign sweethearts
1,727 Singaporean women tied the knot with a non-resident groom in 2019 - up 52% from 2009

dummy.gif

Singaporean Rena Foong, 36, with her Brazilian husband, Mr Expedito Fabiano, 36, and their one-year-old son Emmanuel. Mr Fabiano came to Singapore to work in 2015 and got to know Ms Foong at the workplace. After dating for about two years, the couple
Singaporean Rena Foong, 36, with her Brazilian husband, Mr Expedito Fabiano, 36, and their one-year-old son Emmanuel. Mr Fabiano came to Singapore to work in 2015 and got to know Ms Foong at the workplace. After dating for about two years, the couple got married in 2019.
ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG

Theresa Tan
Senior Social Affairs Correspondent
  • PUBLISHED
    2 HOURS AGO
When it comes to Mr Right, more Singaporean women are marrying their foreign sweethearts.

In 2019, 1,727 Singaporean women tied the knot with a non-resident groom - a 52 per cent jump from the 1,134 such couples in 2009. Whereas, in 1999, there were 1,043 such pairings..
A lot of Singkies ladies had been dating with Malaysian guys.
 
A lot of Singkies ladies had been dating with Malaysian guys.
a lot of singkie men have been marrying tiong and viet women too
haaaa
my singkie neighbour has a tiong wife
sweet and courteous lady
at least when i am in conversation with them
in the bedroom with him i won't know
her cheebye smell or not, i won't know too
haaaa
 
These women are over aged lao kuay bu hang and left on the shelf and greedy angmohs will devoured anything without looking.

Moreover, CAM have herd mentality where like Mark Zuckerberg married Chinese, all chao angmoh follow fashions copy him.

Put it this way, one chao male angmoh married out of their own race, their angmoh neighbour chao dotters will be left on the shelf no takers.

When that happen angmoh dotters will be sluts go steal husband or have threesomes or sex orgy parties....
 
scully @eatshitndie get a tiongbu chiobu gf cum wife
the world really gone mad lor
haaaa
bang bang will do. after age 36.9 they becum cows and ogresses all rolled into one.
sometimes, or rather often opposite attract
haaaa



funny how local spgs view amdk as trophy catch, while amdk view asian chabors as trophy wife...even asian guys are stereotyped as hardworking, smart and rich
 
thanks to these (blindly in love) angmohs, fugly (and otherwise left on the shelf) spg’s can finally hook up, get impregnated, and produce offsprings way better looking than they are. it improves the gene pool and looks department.
Same as in Cantoland...if the niggers werent there..the fuglies would be left on the shelf...

African-Chinese couples on the rise in Guangzhou, China

Published March 1, 2015 at 6:34 PM
Updated May 27, 2016 at 3:36 PM
In China, parts of the southern city of Guangzhou have become a melting pot of Chinese and African cultures. The number of marriages between African immigrants and local Chinese has been on a steady rise. CCTV’s Audrey Siek reported.

Kingsley Azieh is a businessman from Cameroon. In 2007, he started work as a trader in Guangzhou. From building materials to clothing, Kingsley is supplying Africa with what it needs. He has become a leader of the African business community in Guangzhou. It’s Guangzhou he put down roots. He met his future wife in northwestern Shanxi province where they married. Kingsley said the beginning wasn’t easy.


“Secondly, the language barriers. To be able to communicate with the family friendly, it was a little bit difficult. And the Chinese food, it was very difficult for me to accept,” Kingsley said.

“At the very beginning, my family and friends rejected our marriage. Cultural differences and the distance between China and Africa were daunting,” Kingsley’s wife Wang Shuang said.

But their love bridged the gap. Kingsley adjusted to Chinese culture and won over his wife’s family and friends. Now they have two children. Wang Shuang sometimes finds herself having to explain why they stand out from the other children around. “Sometimes someone will ask my son why he is so black. I want him to be proud. I tell him you’re the color of chocolate while some other children are the color of milk,” Wang said.

Despite Kingsley’s success, for mixed marriage families in Guangzhou, visas, access to social welfare and education for their children are big concerns. The Guangzhou government has set up over 70 service centers in areas with a large foreign population. Social workers are trying to help with the difficulties.

“We think there are about 200 African-Chinese children on this street. Our center provides information and consultation services. We also provide language lessons, advice on how to deal with legal and medical issues, and help with cultural adjustment,” Xing Han, director of Dengfeng Community Family Integrated Service Center, said.

Many Africans in Guangzhou have to renew their visa every few months. Kingsley is now applying for his Chinese green card, but he doesn’t know whether he’ll get it, and that is his biggest wish. “Generally, China has an open visa policy. Anyone who is eligible can apply for permanent residency. Our policy is not country specific, but based on economic criteria,” Peng Yunfei, deputy director of Guangzhou Exit and Entry Administration, said.

Around 20,000 Africans live in Guangzhou, which is thought to be one of the largest groups of foreigners in the city. It’s also estimated there are 400 African-Chinese families. The belief that love conquers all is alive and well for many there. Social workers like Xing Han expect the Guangzhou authorities and local community to do more to welcome people who want to call China home.

Commercial in China uses racial stereotypes to sell detergent
 
Same as in Cantoland...if the niggers werent there..the fuglies would be left on the shelf...

African-Chinese couples on the rise in Guangzhou, China

Published March 1, 2015 at 6:34 PM
Updated May 27, 2016 at 3:36 PM
In China, parts of the southern city of Guangzhou have become a melting pot of Chinese and African cultures. The number of marriages between African immigrants and local Chinese has been on a steady rise. CCTV’s Audrey Siek reported.

Kingsley Azieh is a businessman from Cameroon. In 2007, he started work as a trader in Guangzhou. From building materials to clothing, Kingsley is supplying Africa with what it needs. He has become a leader of the African business community in Guangzhou. It’s Guangzhou he put down roots. He met his future wife in northwestern Shanxi province where they married. Kingsley said the beginning wasn’t easy.


“Secondly, the language barriers. To be able to communicate with the family friendly, it was a little bit difficult. And the Chinese food, it was very difficult for me to accept,” Kingsley said.

“At the very beginning, my family and friends rejected our marriage. Cultural differences and the distance between China and Africa were daunting,” Kingsley’s wife Wang Shuang said.

But their love bridged the gap. Kingsley adjusted to Chinese culture and won over his wife’s family and friends. Now they have two children. Wang Shuang sometimes finds herself having to explain why they stand out from the other children around. “Sometimes someone will ask my son why he is so black. I want him to be proud. I tell him you’re the color of chocolate while some other children are the color of milk,” Wang said.

Despite Kingsley’s success, for mixed marriage families in Guangzhou, visas, access to social welfare and education for their children are big concerns. The Guangzhou government has set up over 70 service centers in areas with a large foreign population. Social workers are trying to help with the difficulties.

“We think there are about 200 African-Chinese children on this street. Our center provides information and consultation services. We also provide language lessons, advice on how to deal with legal and medical issues, and help with cultural adjustment,” Xing Han, director of Dengfeng Community Family Integrated Service Center, said.

Many Africans in Guangzhou have to renew their visa every few months. Kingsley is now applying for his Chinese green card, but he doesn’t know whether he’ll get it, and that is his biggest wish. “Generally, China has an open visa policy. Anyone who is eligible can apply for permanent residency. Our policy is not country specific, but based on economic criteria,” Peng Yunfei, deputy director of Guangzhou Exit and Entry Administration, said.

Around 20,000 Africans live in Guangzhou, which is thought to be one of the largest groups of foreigners in the city. It’s also estimated there are 400 African-Chinese families. The belief that love conquers all is alive and well for many there. Social workers like Xing Han expect the Guangzhou authorities and local community to do more to welcome people who want to call China home.

Commercial in China uses racial stereotypes to sell detergent

The main attraction is their big dicks. Chinese men have tiny penises.
 
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