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OPEN LETTER To All PROSTITUTES At Toa Payoh North. Learn BIG The Lesson.

ahleebabasingaporethief

Alfrescian
Loyal
Gy said it. LHH said it. ZA also repeated it.

They were all surprised by the STRONG resentment.

WHY?

Because all along I have said that the people at the top were fooled by the GRASSLOOTERS; painting a very rosy picture to our top people with tainted and fixed gatherings and walkabouts where every resident were 'forced' to put up a smile and asked NO embarrassing questions.

Obviously, the GRASSLOTTERS have a self interest agenda. I am sure some made big money along the way for their own businesses.

BUT FOR YOU PROSTITUTES; I am appalled to see more GHOSTWRITERs in the FORUMs. What purpose do these "self praise" letters serve?

Except for saving 1 or 2 of your jobs, what good does it serve to PRINT ONLYNICE LETTERS about the ruling party?

S'pore ground swell is still very angry.

I do not want to see Singapore go the way of malaysian or thai politics. BUT the people are still very angry.

"Nice' letters like what your still printing serves no purpose except to stoke the flames of anger.

YOUR ERA OF "PIAN GI NA AND OLD UNCLES AND AUNTIES" ARE EFFECTIVELY OVER. The faster you PROSTITUTES understand this the better it is for the Singapore as a Nation.

Thank you for reading this.
 

Ash007

Alfrescian
Loyal
There is no such thing as journalistic integrity in singapore. In some way it's miws own doing.
 

Confuseous

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The oppos have a lot to thank the Bradell Brothel for their continued support of the opposition. They helped to cloud the real conditions from the ivory tower, allowing them to operated under the radar. The MIWs did not understand the basic concept that the moment you sincerely believe in your own press release, then you are on the slippery road to failure.

The Brothel's Newsletter helped to remind us every day that the oppos face tremendous odds, even in getting their message across. And we are not even talking about faked stories yet. Their everything is rosy approach in printing the press releases of the MIWs every day creates sublimal empathy and sympathy for the oppo. Over time, this turns to votes.

For a self-proclaimed newspaper to keep publishing those pandering and fawning Forum letters every day tells me that the limits of decency have been breached and that really, anyone with principle would have resigned, like Ken Kwek. The former NewPaper Balji said in an interview that there was NO censorship from the MiW ala the Soviet style where someone from the internal security department reads everthing before they are printed each day. But, the Brothel managers practised self-censorship.

Statistics show declining readership, the rise in English-speaking target audience notwithstanding. Which is why they ran the recent subscription campaign. No other national newspaper of any self-worth run any sort of subscription campaign in the history of journalism, I would imagine. Which is why they are now going heavy into the schools, using the Youth pages as excuses for the schools to subscribe. They are going down the slippery pole like their distant cousin the New Straits Times in Malaysia where the school population now accounts for a significant percentage of their readership, to help staunch the readership decline, averaging a 4 - 6% slide per annum for the past few years. Malaysia's national newspaper is now a tabloid, as advertisers declined to support an uncredible newspaper. The MCA-owned The Star has been outselling the NST for the past 8 years or so.

The Straits Times will go down that road. And help win more votes for the opposition; I hope they continue the way they are. Their newspapers' fawning coverage makes for good lunchtime laughter every day in the office. Long live Straits Times.
 

ahleebabasingaporethief

Alfrescian
Loyal
I expect such letters to flow from tomorrow with the 'retirement ' of both SM and MM.

I do not begrudge both gentlemen getting letters of praise; BUT please put in proper perspective. BUT, i hold my breath cos I know you people are going to ver do it again.
 

moolightaffairs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
chief editors of all the newspapers actually pissed the masses off than a effective propaganda machine for the pap. most of the people already know newspapers under sph publication on politics and policies are lopsided and bias. thanks to the main stream rank 154th media and mediacorpse, people are more fed with the pap and more willing to vote for oppositions. the funny thing is because of all the good news without bad news by the newspapers and tv news that made the pap lost touch of the ground and unaware of the resentment!!! lol!!! 154th media especially the evil chua sisters pls keep on writing good things about the pap, numb their senses. so that pap continue to piss the people off and the people will vote all of them out one day. this is actually like a story what lhl told the civil servants years back of a frog. when u heat up the pot with water and a frog inside, the frog will not jump out of the pot. but when the frog realise that the water is too hot, its too late to jump out of the water and got cooked. i think this is whats happening to pap now, especially with the media keep siding pap. instead of brain wash the people, they brain wash the pap!!!! lol!!! how ironic!!! well, maybe those pap mp act blur about the resentment and hear only the good things. but i think the media also give pap mp reassurance by their misleading articles.
 
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johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
this is actually like a story what lhl told the civil servants years back of a frog. when u heat up the pot with water and a frog inside, the frog will not jump out of the pot. but when the frog realise that the water is too hot, its too late to jump out of the water and got cooked. i think this is whats happening to pap now, especially with the media keep siding pap. instead of brain wash the people, they brain wash the pap!!!! lol!!! how ironic!!! ....

It's more like the fable of the Emperor's New Clothes:smile:

Everyone too scared to tell the emperor the truth, until he found out the Hard Truth.
 

myo539

Alfrescian
Loyal
I expect such letters to flow from tomorrow with the 'retirement ' of both SM and MM.

I do not begrudge both gentlemen getting letters of praise; BUT please put in proper perspective. BUT, i hold my breath cos I know you people are going to ver do it again.

If so many leaders from so many countries in the world can say nice things about your leaders and your government, why can't you? Do you not see things that they can see?

If so many big companies can see and believe that the government with the people of Singapore is one they can trust and a place to put their money, why can't you? You think WP can come up with solutions to compete with the Malaysians and others in the region?
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak announced oil and gas projects worth MYR20 billion (*S$8.4 billion) and Malaysia’s intention to transform the deepwater petroleum terminal in Pengerang, Johor, along the lines of Singapore’s Jurong Island petrochemical complex.
http://www.iesingapore.gov.sg/wps/p...gerang+project+to+draw+additional+investments

Competitors of Singapore are just waiting for the walls of Singapore to crack. This is the disunity that competitors are waiting to happen in Singapore. Already before the dust has settled down in Aljunied, the walls are already cracking.
 
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Confuseous

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
If so many leaders from so many countries in the world can say nice things about your leaders and your government, why can't you? Do you not see things that they can see?
Aiyah, it is a case of what WE the people can see, THEY cannot see lah.

If so many big companies can see and believe that the government with the people of Singapore is one they can trust and a place to put their money, why can't you? You think WP can come up with solutions to compete with the Malaysians and others in the region?
This, my friend is precisely the problem. PAP more interested in GDP development (their bonus based on the figure) hence, the courting of foreign companies. If I am ang moh, I will put my money into places where there are fake trade unions and where employees are daft and need spurs in their backsides.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak announced oil and gas projects worth MYR20 billion (*S$8.4 billion) and Malaysia’s intention to transform the deepwater petroleum terminal in Pengerang, Johor, along the lines of Singapore’s Jurong Island petrochemical complex.
http://www.iesingapore.gov.sg/wps/p...gerang+project+to+draw+additional+investments
Ah, Mudland's Najib needs to initiate lots of projects in order to create funds for his own erections. Non-bidding policy allows him to award contracts to cronies, gets cash kickback which he then uses to buy votes at branch levels etc etc. So, you get the case where the Crooked Bridge has not started work at all, but Mudland gahmen had to pay M$1 billion as compensation to contactor. BUT glad to say that we do not do such things here.

Competitors of Singapore are just waiting for the walls of Singapore to crack. This is the disunity that competitors are waiting to happen in Singapore. Already before the dust has settled down in Aljunied, the walls are already cracking.
Not sure whose walls are cracking? Singapore's or PAP's? Not the same leh. What is bad for PAP is NOT necessarily bad for Singapore hor?
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Competitors of Singapore are just waiting for the walls of Singapore to crack. This is the disunity that competitors are waiting to happen in Singapore. Already before the dust has settled down in Aljunied, the walls are already cracking.



Civil servants make lousy businessmen:rolleyes:

PAP has setup plenty of inefficient, uncompetitive GLCs. These entites can only make money$$ in Spore where they have a state sponsored monopoly.

Just take a look at the failures of these GLCs outside Spore where they have faced real competition.
 

ahleebabasingaporethief

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore / Singaporean needs to be like HK.

Welcome Fts. Welcome Competition but do not look down on your OWN KIND. Which is what is happening here with our COURTS and MIWs.

S Islawa announced 300,000 more Indian FTs coming to Singapore; 60,000 almost immediately. You think this is LAWA news? How come such companies are SO EASILY GRANTED 'permission' to come to Singapore? Already Singaporeans are forced to accept lower wages, bullied at workplace and condo homes, and being jobless.

Perhaps you PROSTITUTES or some other authority need to do some investigative work as to WHY? If need be, EXPOSE the so easy process.

How can any INDIAN COMPANY that is used to CHEAP LABOUR in their own country, set up shop in Singapore (without minimum wages); BE GOOD FOR SINGAPOREANS?

We need less GLC companies in Singapore.

Why STEAL money from Singaporean companies?
Why STEAL money from MOM and POP provision stores?
Why compete internally?
Why always lose money outside Singapore?

BECAUSE, high education means you people are BRAIN DEAD in the world of business.

High ego....fuels MENTAL MASTURBATION. I can see many females with such egos in the MIW as well.
 
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KuanTi01

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
There is no such thing as journalistic integrity in singapore. In some way it's miws own doing.

Actually, they feed off each other. In PAP-speak, it's called a symbiotic relationship along the line of PAP and NTUC! :rolleyes: Like that how to have journalistic integrity! 154th placing did not come about without proper reasons! :biggrin:
 

LeMans2011

Alfrescian
Loyal
Ladies and Gentlemen, my heartiest congratulations to the 154th press, it has moved up 4 notches to 150th together with Morocco and Iraq... please therefore start referring to it as 150th ! (* As there are 4 countries ranked 150, the placing for 151 to 153 does not exist)
 
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spotter542

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Ladies and Gentlemen, my heartiest congratulations to the 154th press, it has moved up 4 notches to 150th together with Morocco and Iraq... please therefore start referring to it as 150th ! (* As there are 4 countries ranked 150, the placing for 151 to 153 does not exist)

Whether it's 150th or 15th press , Braddell Brothel will always be filled with prostitutes :eek: :p
 

youtalkcock

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
227584_224937364187653_223421104339279_994018_5660335_n.jpg


"It's reporters with borders! hahahahaha"
 

bullfrog

Alfrescian
Loyal
Talking about me?

I agree with you. Dont teach them to be smarter. Let them continue in their old ways, sweep the dust under the carpet until the mites come out and bite them in their balls.

chief editors of all the newspapers actually pissed the masses off than a effective propaganda machine for the pap. most of the people already know newspapers under sph publication on politics and policies are lopsided and bias. thanks to the main stream rank 154th media and mediacorpse, people are more fed with the pap and more willing to vote for oppositions. the funny thing is because of all the good news without bad news by the newspapers and tv news that made the pap lost touch of the ground and unaware of the resentment!!! lol!!! 154th media especially the evil chua sisters pls keep on writing good things about the pap, numb their senses. so that pap continue to piss the people off and the people will vote all of them out one day. this is actually like a story what lhl told the civil servants years back of a frog. when u heat up the pot with water and a frog inside, the frog will not jump out of the pot. but when the frog realise that the water is too hot, its too late to jump out of the water and got cooked. i think this is whats happening to pap now, especially with the media keep siding pap. instead of brain wash the people, they brain wash the pap!!!! lol!!! how ironic!!! well, maybe those pap mp act blur about the resentment and hear only the good things. but i think the media also give pap mp reassurance by their misleading articles.
 

ahleebabasingaporethief

Alfrescian
Loyal
The GE 2011 Political Demise of Lee Kuan Yew: A Supreme Irony

One of the greatest surprises of GE 2011 was the people’s unequivocal rejection of the PAP style of government. But none could have imagined that the biggest casualty would be Lee Kuan Yew, one of the founders of the PAP, Singapore’s first prime minister and subsequently, de facto Chief despite holding only an advisory role as Minister Mentor.
Indeed, the nations’ shock on 14 May, just a week after the election, at the resignation of MM from the cabinet (together with Mr Goh Chok Tong, Senior Minister) could only be described as seismic in the Singapore political landscape. It reflected the uniquely powerful position of the father of modern Singapore, presumably the only political leader in the world whose name was synonymous with the party he founded, whose name, in turn, was synonymous with the country it rules. The equation Lee Kuan Yew = PAP = Singapore had scrolled across the collective consciousness of the society for nearly half a century.
He was once compared to the immense banyan tree in whose shade only puny little saplings could grow. He was once the mighty Colossus in whose shadow little people cowered.
Was. Had scrolled. Once. Cowered.
It gives one a feeling of surreality to write about Lee Kuan Yew’s influence in the past tense. But that is exactly how it is going to be from now onwardsIt gives one a feeling of surreality to write about Lee Kuan Yew’s influence in the past tense. But that is exactly how it is going to be from now onwards, judging from the various public statements made by the prime minister, MM himself, Mr Goh and other PAP leaders, following the announcement of the resignation. Almost in one voice, they spoke about the need for the party to move on, to respond to the needs and aspirations of the people, so painfully made clear to them in GE 2011. The courteous, deferential tone called for by the occasion masked the urgency of the message: the prime minister must be free to act on his own without any interference from the overpowering MM who is also his father.
Perhaps the announcement of MM’s exit should not have been so unexpected, as it had been preceded by a clear harbinger. For midway through the campaigning, when the PAP had already sensed an impending loss of the Aljunied GRC whom earlier MM had offended with his ‘live and repent’ threat, PM had hurriedly called a press interview in which he gently, but firmly, dissociated himself from MM, and assured the people that he was the one in charge. The necessary follow-up action for this public repudiation had obviously been part of the promised post-election ‘soul-searching’, which must have concluded that indeed MM must go.
Despite MM’s assertion, in the joint statement with Mr Goh, that the resignation was voluntary, in order ‘to give PM and his team the room to break from the past,’ doubts about his willingness will be around for a while. For right through the election campaigning he was in upbeat mood, declaring his fitness at age 87, his readiness to serve the people for another 5 years, and roundly scolding the younger generation for forgetting where they came from. Moreover, he had, amidst the gloom of the PAP campaign, confidently stated that the loss of the one Aljunied GRC would be no big deal, and contended, a day after the election, that his blunt, controversial remarks about the Malay-Muslim community, had not really affected the votes. In short, he was expecting to stay on, his accustomed ways of dealing with people, unchanged.
And then came the shock announcement of his resignation from the cabinet, and an uncharacteristic affirmation of the need for change.
That Lee Kuan Yew was prepared to do a drastic about-turn, so at odds with a lifetime’s habit of acting on his convictions, must have been due to one of two causes—either he had been driven into a corner and simply had no choice, or he had a genuine commitment to the well-being of the society, that was above self-interest. In either case, the decision to go into the obscurity of virtual retirement after decades of high political visibility both at home and abroad, must have been most wrenching.
The extent of the personal sacrifice can be gauged by the single fact that politics was his one overriding, exclusive passion upon which he had brought to bear all his special resources of intellect, temperament and personality. He had made himself the ultimate conviction politician with an unrelentingly logical and rationalistic approach to dealing with problems, dismissing all that stood in its way, especially sentiment and emotion. He had developed a purely quantitative paradigm where the only things that mattered were those that were measurable, calculable, easily reduced to digits and hardware, whether they had to do with getting Singaporeans to have fewer or more babies, getting people to keep the streets litter-free, getting children in school to learn the mother tongue. It prescribed a mode of governance that relied heavily on the use of the stick.
The related irony of course was that a man of admirable sharpness of mind, keenness of foresight and strength of purpose had failed to understand, until it was too late, the irrelevance of this paradigm to a new generation of better-educated, more exposed and sophisticated Singaporeans.The supreme irony of Lee Kuan Yew’s political demise was that the paradigm which had resulted in his most spectacular achievements as a leader taking his tiny resource-scarce country into the ranks of the world’s most successful economies, was the very one that caused his downfall. The related irony of course was that a man of admirable sharpness of mind, keenness of foresight and strength of purpose had failed to understand, until it was too late, the irrelevance of this paradigm to a new generation of better-educated, more exposed and sophisticated Singaporeans.
There is no simple explanation for such a paradoxical disconnect between a man’s massive intellectual powers on the one hand and his poor understanding of reality, on the other (complacency perhaps? political blindsight? political sclerosis?) A detailed analysis of the irony, substantiated with examples over more than four decades of Lee Kuan Yew’s leadership of Singapore will be instructive for understanding this unique personage.
Even a cursory review of the history of Singapore will show that it was Lee’s actions, driven by the passion of his convictions, that had saved the nation, at various stages in its struggle for survival in a volatile, unpredictable, often unfriendly world. With his characteristic strongman’s ruthlessness, he cleaned up the mess caused by Communists, communalists, unruly trade unionists, defiant students and secret society gangsters plaguing the young Singapore. Within a generation, he had created an environment where Singaporeans could live safely, earn a living, live in government-subsidised flats with modern sanitation. Ever conscious of Singapore’s vulnerability, he was ever on the alert to smack down its enemies and, even more importantly, to seize opportunities to raise its standard of living.
A special achievement showing Lee Kuan Yew’s foresight, boldness and determination in his espousal of the economic imperative deserves more detailed treatment. In the 60s, he foresaw the dominant role of the English language for international trade, business, scientific technology and research, and made an all-out effort to promote the language in the schools, as well as make it the language of public administration. This meant in effect distancing Singapore from the other newly independent nations such as India, Malaysia and some African nations which, in their nationalistic fervour, were kicking out the English language together with the British flag.
Even when Singapore joined Malaysia and Malay became the official language, Lee Kuan Yew quietly continued the promotion of English, so that after separation in 1965, it re-emerged, as strong as ever. The result was the creation of an English-speaking environment that was very conducive to international business, attracting huge corporations such as Shell and Esso. Through the decades that followed, the economic success of his policies was replicated, to put Singapore on a rising trajectory of stunning development.
Singapore’s remarkable development under Lee Kuan Yew, using the hard indicators of home ownership, level of education, degree of technological advancement, extent of foreign investments, etc, has seen few parallels, making it a poster child for economic progress in the developing world. Consistently ranked among the top three in international surveys on best-performing airports, sea-ports, world’s most livable cities, best infrastructure, etc, Singapore receives the most enthusiastic accolades from foreign visitors instantly impressed by the cleanliness, orderliness and gleaming appearance of the city state.
How could such a brilliant paradigm, a model of classic realpolitik, be the cause of the GE 2011 political demise of Lee Kuan Yew? The answer: mainly because it had no place for human values. It was a model of governance where, if there had ever been a conflict of Head vs Heart, IQ vs EQ, Hardware vs Heartware, it had been resolved long ago in the defeat of presumably worthless human emotions.
Once I was giving a talk to a group of British businessmen, on my favourite subject of civic liberties – or lack of them – in Singapore. During question and answer time, one of the businessmen raised his hand and said politely, ‘I have a question or rather, a suggestion. Could we please have your Lee Kuan Yew, and we’ll give you our Tony Blair, with Cherie Blair thrown in?’ Amidst laughter, I said, ‘Our Mr Lee won’t like your noisy, messy, rambunctious democracy,’ and he replied, ‘No matter,’ and went on to pay MM the ultimate compliment. He said, ‘You know, if there were but five Lee Kuan Yews scattered throughout Africa, the continent wouldn’t be in such a direful state today!’
the material prosperity that he had given Singapore, which many world leaders could never match, was no longer enough compensation to Singaporeans for the soullessness that was beginning to show in the society This light-hearted little anecdote is meant to provide a probable reason, though in a rather circuitous manner, for MM’s ironic downfall: the material prosperity that he had given Singapore, which many world leaders could never match, was no longer enough compensation to Singaporeans for the soullessness that was beginning to show in the society . For the fear that his strongman approach had instilled in them for so long, denying them the fundamental democratic liberties of open debate, public criticism and an independent media, that are taken for granted in practising democracies, had made them mere cogs in the machinery of a vast capitalist enterprise.
There are enough examples, going back to the early years of Lee Kuan Yew’s rule, of draconian measures of control, that had created this fear and its inevitable product, resentment. The most egregious instances include the higher accouchement hospital fees for a woman having a third child in defiance of the ‘stop at two’ population control measures, and the sterilisation policy, which had a particularly vile moral odour , for it required the woman wanting to get her child into the school of her choice, to produce a sterilisation certificate.
Years later when the demographic trend reversed, and more births were necessary to form the necessary future pool of expertise for the country’s industrial needs, the PAP government started a matchmaking unit , called The Social Development Unit, to enable single Singaporeans to meet, fall in love, get married and produce children. It singled out graduate women for favoured treatment, because Lee Kuan Yew believed that only highly educated mothers produced the quality offspring he wanted for the society, alienating many with the noxious eugenics.
By the 70s and into the 80s, Singaporeans were already waking up to the hard truth of the high human cost, in terms of the need for self-respect, identity and dignity, that they were paying for the material prosperity, and worrying about the creation of a society in complete and fearful subjugation to the powerful PAP government. Over the years, it became increasingly clear that the leaders, flushed with success and confidence, and following Lee Kuan Yew’s example, were developing an arrogant, highhanded, peremptory style that had zero tolerance for political dissidents, publicly castigating them or, worse, incarcerating them for years, bankrupting them through defamation suits or forcing them to flee into exile. Lee Kuan Yew had consistently maintained that the fact that the PAP was regularly and convincingly returned to power at each election over forty years meant that the people acknowledged the government was doing the right thing.
By the time of GE 2011, it would appear that the PAP leaders had reached the peak of hubris, making decisions with little regard for the people’s needs and sensitivities—increasing ministerial salaries, bringing in world-class casinos to attract tourists, engaging in blatant gerrymandering prior to elections. Then there were the policies that had created special hardships for the struggling wage earner, such as the increasing cost of living, the unaffordability of housing, the competition for jobs with a large number of foreign workers who, moreover, caused overcrowding in public transport.
The decision that had created most resentment was the one which enabled the PAP ministers to pay themselves incredibly high salaries, Lee Kuan Yew’s argument being that this was the only way to get quality people into government. (Resentful Singaporeans invariably point out that the Prime Minister of tiny Singapore gets about five times the salary of the most powerful man in the world, the President of the United States) Priding themselves on their intelligence, competence and efficiency, the PAP leadership nevertheless made huge losses on investments with public money, and glossed over the scandalous prison escape of a top terrorist, made possible by an unbelievably lax security system. In the eyes of the people, they had lost the moral authority to govern.
That the people’s anger broke out only in GE 2011 and not earlier was due to a confluence of forces, interacting with and reinforcing each other, to provide the most unexpected momentum and impact. These included the rise of a younger, more articulate electorate, the power of the Internet and the social media, which allowed free discussion on usually censored topics, and perhaps, most significantly, the emergence of a newly strengthened opposition who were able to present candidates matching the best in the PAP team. Or it was a simple case of the people waking up one morning and saying, ‘Enough is enough.’ The PAP were caught off guard.
Lee Kuan Yew stood firm on his convictions till the very end, clearly preferring to resign rather than to say ‘Sorry’. That word had never been in his vocabulary.While they were prepared to make conciliatory gestures and promises to stem the rising hostility during the election campaign, Lee Kuan Yew stood firm on his convictions till the very end, clearly preferring to resign rather than to say ‘Sorry’. That word had never been in his vocabulary. When he had to apologise to the Muslim-Malay community for disparaging remarks made months earlier, clearly because of some pressure from his PAP colleagues alarmed by the community’s rising anger, he could only manage a terse ‘I stand corrected.’
He is likely to carry this stance to his grave, believing till the end in his own misfortune of having an ungrateful people incapable of understanding him and appreciating all that he had done for them. Outwardly chastened but inwardly disillusioned, he must be particularly disappointed with his own PAP colleagues, for their failure to share his passionate belief that his was the right and proven way to achieve the well-being of the society. It is not so much megalomania as the sheer inflexibility that convictions sometimes harden into, something that will probably continue to give him a completely different interpretation of the devastation of GE 2011.
This kind of intransigence, for all its reprehensibility, can, rather oddly, have a commendable side. Years ago, on an official visit to Australia and taken on a sightseeing tour, he suddenly fell into a mood of somber introspection, turned to his Australian host and said, ‘Your country will be around in 100 years, but I’m not sure of mine.’ The same absolutism that had produced the unshakeable sense of his infallibility, had also produced an unqualified purity, selflessness and strength of his dedication to the well-being of Singapore, well beyond his earthly life, investing it with the touching anxiety of a caring parent.
In the event of a threat to any of these concerns, his old passion is likely to be fired up once more to make him come out of the coffin to do battle.When he made the famous pronouncement that even when lying inside his coffin , he would rise to meet any threat to Singapore’s security, he meant every word of it. In political limbo now, will he ever feel that need? I can think of three possible events, when he will experience that Coffin Moment, each posing a threat to what seems to be his greatest concerns for Singapore: 1) when the strong ties between the government and the unions that he had assiduously helped to build for nearly fifty years, are in danger of being broken 2) when the nation’s vast reserves, protected by a law he had carefully devised to allow only the president of Singapore to unlock, are about to be foolishly squandered 3) when the PAP leadership is in danger of being dominated by those same young Singaporeans whom he had regularly chastised for being selfish, thoughtless and heedless and for whom he had specially written his last book on hard truths about Singapore’s future. In the event of a threat to any of these concerns, his old passion is likely to be fired up once more to make him come out of the coffin to do battle.
Lee Kuan Yew’s legacy is so mixed that even his greatest detractor must acknowledge his very substantial achievements for Singapore, and even his greatest admirer must admit that along the way, alas, he lost touch with the ground. He puts one in mind of the great hero of epic tragedy, who is caught in a maelstrom of forces beyond his control, that destroy him in the end by working, ironically, upon a single tragic flaw in his character. Alone and lost, unbowed and defiant, he still cuts an impressive figure, still able to tell the world, ‘I am me.’

May 17th, 2011 — 9 comments
Respond
9 comments below


  • <cite>Tan Choon Hong</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 2:22 am Wow! What an eloquent essay on the life and times of our dear leader that can be both obituary and critique. A recommended read for all who have been brainwashed by the school textbooks and the government controlled media.
  • <cite>Falling leaves</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 7:29 am Catherine, another great article!!! It is time for The Straits Times to engage your services to teach them how to write. And NUS to invite you as guest lecturer to teach journalism. We need beautiful English like yours in Singapore to “continued the promotion of English” and set us apart from “India, Malaysia and some African nations” and China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, etc.
    Love how you beautifully ‘slap’ LKY (The related irony of course was that a man of admirable sharpness of mind, keenness of foresight and strength of purpose had failed to understand, until it was too late, the irrelevance of this paradigm to a new generation of better-educated, more exposed and sophisticated Singaporeans), then ‘stroke his ego’, then ‘slap harder’ (How could such a brilliant paradigm, a model of classic realpolitik, be the cause of the GE 2011 political demise of Lee Kuan Yew? The answer: mainly because it had no place for human values. It was a model of governance where, if there had ever been a conflict of Head vs Heart, IQ vs EQ, Hardware vs Heartware, it had been resolved long ago in the defeat of presumably worthless human emotions).
    As a father, I always allow my kids to explore and take each small step towards being independent so as to let them learn the real world. I think if LKY doesn’t let go so as to allow the younger generation to experience and learn how to govern, then he definitely will have his “Coffin Moment”.
  • <cite>end of hubris</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 7:41 am http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150195467697487.331510.703102486&l=c2fabcf882
  • <cite>Lucas</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 8:51 am This is a masterpiece, Catherine. Revere him or mollify him, Mr Lee Kuan Yew is who he is. His place in our nation’s history is etched forever.
  • <cite>Jimmy Lee</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 9:41 am Thanks for the insightful and might I say poetic article. You’ve articulated very elegantly what is on many people’s minds. And you can rest assured that the present government is no longer able to force you to apologize for this article and to declare that politics is only for politicians. This aspiring politician can’t wait for more!
  • <cite>JT</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 9:42 am This is a ‘must read’ article for those who already digested LKY’s memoirs-From third world to first,The man and his ideas,Hard truths. LKY had the vision and made the right policies for Singapore in the 50s and 60s.
  • <cite>CitizenSoldier</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 9:52 am Let me summarise for you: LKY has lost his heart long ago.
  • <cite>Jack & The Beanstalk</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 10:04 am The greatest loser must be Goh. He had neither LKY’s stature nor charisma to hang on in the cabinet as SM. By overstaying his welcome, he looks the biggest fool having squandered residual goodwill towards him. This election showed him up to be the loser that he is. The unanswered question is: was he the one responsible for recruiting Tin Tin?Why didn’t he leave pre-election? That’s how clueless they are and arrogant in their perceived invincibility. Did they really think people respected and loved them? All too little too late. Had they been gracious men, they might still command the people’s respect and even love.
  • <cite>jack toh</cite>
    May 17th, 2011 at 10:10 am ‘You know, if there were but five Lee Kuan Yews scattered throughout Africa, the continent wouldn’t be in such a direful state today!’
    The gentleman who said the above is incorrect in his assessment of LKY’s abilities. LKY would never have been able to duplicate his acts in another country, especially Africa. Singaporeans, unlike Africans, are intimidated easily. Kuan Yew’s actions in another country would not have borne the results we see in Singapore. He was given a chance to perform in a wider arena in the federation in the early 60′s. He failed. Kuan Yew’s leadership was rejected in Malaysia. His party performed poorly in the Malaysian elections.
    Yes, Kuan Yew helped Spore to prosper materialy but let us not blow the man’s signifance out of proportion.
 
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