Chinese new year is the time where Chinese people practice their cheating and bribing skill. Perfecting their already perfect skill.
If they think that they can bribe god and their god can easily be bribed. What is human being to them. What a sick culture is this.
Is there a law in Singapore that punish who takes bribe and giving bribe? Why in this case no punishment?
http://chinesefood.about.com/b/2009...n-god-with-chinese-sticky-cake-nian-gao-2.htm
Bribing the Kitchen God With Chinese Sticky Cake (Nian Gao)
Monday January 12, 2009
Countdown to Chinese New Year: 14 days
While food plays a major role throughout the Chinese New Year season, one food-related tradition takes place before the old year has even come to a close. According to legend, one week before the Spring Festival begins, the Kitchen God returns to heaven to report on a family's behavior throughout the previous year. In order to ensure a favorable report from the Kitchen God, the custom evolved of feeding him Nian Gao, both as a bribe and as a means of ensuring his mouth was too full of cake to pass on a negative report! Learn more about the legend of the Kitchen God, and try a basic recipe for steamed Nian Gao with glutinous rice flour and brown sugar.
If they think that they can bribe god and their god can easily be bribed. What is human being to them. What a sick culture is this.
Is there a law in Singapore that punish who takes bribe and giving bribe? Why in this case no punishment?
http://chinesefood.about.com/b/2009...n-god-with-chinese-sticky-cake-nian-gao-2.htm
Bribing the Kitchen God With Chinese Sticky Cake (Nian Gao)
Monday January 12, 2009
Countdown to Chinese New Year: 14 days
While food plays a major role throughout the Chinese New Year season, one food-related tradition takes place before the old year has even come to a close. According to legend, one week before the Spring Festival begins, the Kitchen God returns to heaven to report on a family's behavior throughout the previous year. In order to ensure a favorable report from the Kitchen God, the custom evolved of feeding him Nian Gao, both as a bribe and as a means of ensuring his mouth was too full of cake to pass on a negative report! Learn more about the legend of the Kitchen God, and try a basic recipe for steamed Nian Gao with glutinous rice flour and brown sugar.