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[h=2]Tungku: I don’t know why Mr Lee acted like that[/h]
October 11th, 2014 |
Author: Contributions
To the PAP, the words of its patriarch are biblical truth.
For this reason, it is re-releasing its founder’s monologue called “The
Battle for a Merger” and claiming this as the unvarnished truth to combat what
it calls “revisionist attempts” to reinterpret the events surrounding the
merger.
In philosophical terms, one would call this a circular attempt to win an
argument. It gives rise to the question of why we should choose to trust LKY
over the accounts of many other of his critics.
Nevertheless, we are interested to know if the monologue will shed some light
on the mystery of LKY’s tears when he announced the split, since Tengku Abdul
Rahman had said that LKY was actually quite pleased about it.
The Alternative
View
Source: www.facebook.com/pages/The-Alternative-View/358759327518739
Editor’s
note: The Tungku’s quote, “I don’t know why Mr Lee acted like that…he
was quite pleased about [the split]“, supposedly came from the book “Lee Kuan
Yew’s Singapore” written by T J S George and published in 1973.
[h=2]Tungku: I don’t know why Mr Lee acted like that[/h]
October 11th, 2014 |
Author: Contributions
To the PAP, the words of its patriarch are biblical truth.
For this reason, it is re-releasing its founder’s monologue called “The
Battle for a Merger” and claiming this as the unvarnished truth to combat what
it calls “revisionist attempts” to reinterpret the events surrounding the
merger.
In philosophical terms, one would call this a circular attempt to win an
argument. It gives rise to the question of why we should choose to trust LKY
over the accounts of many other of his critics.
Nevertheless, we are interested to know if the monologue will shed some light
on the mystery of LKY’s tears when he announced the split, since Tengku Abdul
Rahman had said that LKY was actually quite pleased about it.
The Alternative
View
Source: www.facebook.com/pages/The-Alternative-View/358759327518739
Editor’s
note: The Tungku’s quote, “I don’t know why Mr Lee acted like that…he
was quite pleased about [the split]“, supposedly came from the book “Lee Kuan
Yew’s Singapore” written by T J S George and published in 1973.



To the PAP, the words of its patriarch are biblical truth.
For this reason, it is re-releasing its founder’s monologue called “The
Battle for a Merger” and claiming this as the unvarnished truth to combat what
it calls “revisionist attempts” to reinterpret the events surrounding the
merger.
In philosophical terms, one would call this a circular attempt to win an
argument. It gives rise to the question of why we should choose to trust LKY
over the accounts of many other of his critics.
Nevertheless, we are interested to know if the monologue will shed some light
on the mystery of LKY’s tears when he announced the split, since Tengku Abdul
Rahman had said that LKY was actually quite pleased about it.

The Alternative
View
Source: www.facebook.com/pages/The-Alternative-View/358759327518739
Editor’s
note: The Tungku’s quote, “I don’t know why Mr Lee acted like that…he
was quite pleased about [the split]“, supposedly came from the book “Lee Kuan
Yew’s Singapore” written by T J S George and published in 1973.
[h=2]Tungku: I don’t know why Mr Lee acted like that[/h]



To the PAP, the words of its patriarch are biblical truth.
For this reason, it is re-releasing its founder’s monologue called “The
Battle for a Merger” and claiming this as the unvarnished truth to combat what
it calls “revisionist attempts” to reinterpret the events surrounding the
merger.
In philosophical terms, one would call this a circular attempt to win an
argument. It gives rise to the question of why we should choose to trust LKY
over the accounts of many other of his critics.
Nevertheless, we are interested to know if the monologue will shed some light
on the mystery of LKY’s tears when he announced the split, since Tengku Abdul
Rahman had said that LKY was actually quite pleased about it.

The Alternative
View
Source: www.facebook.com/pages/The-Alternative-View/358759327518739
Editor’s
note: The Tungku’s quote, “I don’t know why Mr Lee acted like that…he
was quite pleased about [the split]“, supposedly came from the book “Lee Kuan
Yew’s Singapore” written by T J S George and published in 1973.