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Why the PAP and cronies keep demanding that we forgive Casey?

po2wq

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
y shud gahmen nid 2 tel peasants wat 2 do? ... peasants noe wat 2 tink ... gahmen shud tel 2 60% daft who cunt tink! ...
 

ginfreely

Alfrescian
Loyal
It u all have free time,go take a walk in the park or go to see a movie,
Don't ever waste your time reading trash from the lackey ex-ISD operatives infamous
Chia sisters.yes SPH is a nest or dumping ground for ex-ISD retired lackeys.

Yeah she repeated her master's view in the article by asking Singaporeans to do self reflection. Time to ignore all these noise indeed!
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
an emotionally scarred dipstick with a wounded psyche

takes one to know one.

Mark-Andrew-Yeo-Kah-Chong_final.jpg
 
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red amoeba

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Chua can write all she wants...anyway the broadshit that she is writing for, is read by a dwindling number. Ppl nowadays are reading what they want online.

Unless they pull the plug and plunge us back into N Korea, fat chance we will forget. Its the typical PAP style, write / talk / preach about it and hope ppl will turn to your thinking? You think we are like 1950 all crowding in CC in front of a communal TV?

the only communal today is the target painted on the ass of Anton Casey...communal urinal of insults n scorn.

Like Chua has the freedom to write to forgive, we have equally the freedom not to....
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Forgiveness, just like respect, is earned, not demanded.

The presstitutes of SPH and the PAP shills in this very forum had better get this point through their thick skulls.
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Anton Casey is not every expat

0742b90.jpg


Rob O'brien
The Straits Times
Tuesday, Jan 28, 2014

I'm not Anton Casey. I just wanted to say that in case anyone thought that I was. You always feel like making that clear when the actions of one get wrongly associated with the many, particularly when the response is so swift and furious.

The new poster child for Singapore's expat millionaires does not stand for all expats, but as with every social media ruckus these days - the haste for retribution has left quite a lot of collateral damage.

The behaviour of one should not be considered typical of everyone else who lives here. But there is no point beating around the bush: Singapore has loads of Anton Caseys - rich financiers and bankers whose lives rarely collide with ordinary Singaporeans. Nobody who has lived here for any meaningful time can be surprised by such characters, because they are a part of life here. There are Anton Caseys everywhere in Asia, but they are not everyone.

I am British-Australian and most of my expat friends appreciate their Singapore lives: They do not look down at this city, they travel to work every day on public transport - not when their car is being serviced, but because they find the system much better and cheaper than the ones they are used to at home. Paris, London, Sydney - you name it - while no city can claim to have a completely stress-free transport system, everyone I know here appreciates that Singapore is as good as it gets.

They also appreciate that they are living in a global city that is changing every day, in one of the most interesting and diverse parts of the world, among a grouping of vibrant South-east Asian economies. They live here because they want to - for their families and their careers - and they hope to leave better off than when they arrived, but in no way are they guaranteed that.

Not all expats are living here as millionaires or are here to increase an already huge net worth.

My children love travelling on the MRT and the buses. I have been travelling with them on public transport for three years now, from the very first day I arrived. Back then, I'd get on a bus with a baby strapped to my chest. Quite often, local men and women - and sometimes drivers - would pinch my son's cheeks: It always amazed me how many Singaporean men would go all soft and gooey around the children. There is a kindness in Singapore which gets lost in all of this noise.

I am here to work and learn about Singapore and Asia; I do not make lots of money and I am not interested in being condescending to the city in which my daughter was born. This is home for my family now. I drink Teh C in the afternoons, I eat local hawker food - with a particular penchant for xiao long bao.

On Sundays, I take my children for salted chicken at Lam's in Balestier Road; the staff there pull out their iPhones when the children arrive and take photos of them, which amuses me no end. Singapore has been kind to me: I have been lucky to meet and work with many incredible local people and foreigners, of all ages and persuasions, whom I count as friends for life.

There are plenty of expats who do not take public transport - they own cars or get taxis everywhere. They may not all frequent hawker centres or indulge much in the local delights of Singapore because the bubble in which they live is far removed from the lives of locals.

That is not helped by the enclaves that expat communities form all over Asia: you can work, holiday and socialise entirely within a community of foreigners, and many do.

You can live in a city like Singapore without rubbing shoulders with local people, without knowing their struggles, if you choose not to; the world you live in may allow only a couple of touchpoints with an ordinary Singaporean - most likely taxi drivers.

It is far too easy to take the foolish comments made by one man on a medium like Facebook and build up a distorted picture of the other foreigners who live here as aloof, wealthy and disinterested in local life. Social media does that; it distorts and paints pictures that are much uglier or more beautiful than the reality, and reinforces those narratives again and again, much like the media can.

Mr Anton Casey could have posted these comments in any city in the world, and had them ignored. His perspective is no more typical of the expats who live here than the online comments of one Singaporean is typical of all Singaporeans' views about foreigners.

He issued two apologies and has now lost his job. I'd imagine he would trade a portion of his wealth to turn back the clock and retract his various social media postings. But that obviously is not going to happen.

If the end result of this uproar is that we have a wealth fund manager signing up with one of Singapore's community projects, rubbing shoulders with people whose lives are far more difficult than his own, then that is a good thing.

However, if a Singaporean mother and child are forced to live elsewhere as part of the collateral damage, that is a fairly stiff price to pay for stupidity. It won't help to tar all expats here with the same brush; some perspective is badly needed right now, particularly online.

The writer is a freelance journalist and media consultant.
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Rob O'Brien lives like us but most angmo don't. There are more Caseys than O'Brien.

Aside, since when xiao long bao became a hawker food?
 

escher

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Those fucking PAPs and their running dogs and running cunts can write and demand about anything.

Some of it like multimillion paychecks they get , very obviously as those money stolen from all of us as they raped and tiew us in the arseholes and pockets
We seemed to be unable to stop them, for now.

Other shit like giving them respect and gratitude for the fuck shit that they do we always laugh at that kind of puke and no fuck care what they say or write.
This forgive business is just another of the shit they write to show their pay masters that they can write.
We determine if they get it or not.
Not that it matters, as they will lie and said becos of what they write we forgive that Anton Casey even though if we see that bastard, he get a fucking mug of beer from me on the head and a fucking case of beer from Leongsam on the head (LS going overboard)

Fuck!

Dont we have better things to do and say instead of analysing to death the verbal pukes of PAPs and their running dogs and bitches?
 

GoldenPeriod

Alfrescian
Loyal
Anton Casey is not every expat

0742b90.jpg


Rob O'brien
The Straits Times
Tuesday, Jan 28, 2014

I'm not Anton Casey.

They also appreciate that they are living in a global city that is changing every day, in one of the most interesting and diverse parts of the world, among a grouping of vibrant South-east Asian economies. They live here because they want to - for their families and their careers - and they hope to leave better off than when they arrived, but in no way are they guaranteed that.

Not all expats are living here as millionaires or are here to increase an already huge net worth.

I am here to work and learn about Singapore and Asia; I do not make lots of money and I am not interested in being condescending to the city in which my daughter was born. This is home for my family now. I drink Teh C in the afternoons, I eat local hawker food - with a particular penchant for xiao long bao.

However, if a Singaporean mother and child are forced to live elsewhere as part of the collateral damage, that is a fairly stiff price to pay for stupidity. It won't help to tar all expats here with the same brush; some perspective is badly needed right now, particularly online.

The writer is a freelance journalist and media consultant.

Yes, not all foreigners are like Anton.

But the question for Rob is this, why does he see the need to live and work in Singapore? Why can't he make a living in Britain or Australia? He is not doing a specialist job, he has no incredibly pertinent skills to offer Singapore.

Even if Rob doesn't take jobs away from Singaporeans, by him being here, he is a burden to the transport and housing infrastructure of this small island country.

I have said this again and again, there is no reason to import foreigners to do these normal jobs. If it were up to me, unless a foreigner has a minimum of $10 million invested into Singapore or created jobs for 500 native born Singaporeans or are a Nobel Prize/Fields medal winner, etc, foreigners should not be permitted to work and settle in Singapore.
 
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laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Hmm... an ang mo freelance writer suddenly gets his piece published on the Shitty Times.

Ponder on that for a moment. :wink:
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
we are an international financial hub
we are an international social hub
we are a global city
it makes sense to forgive people who insult our people
it shows our soft, kind and compassionate side
it also shows that we are a very forgiving and generous people
we need international support to survive
it makes sense to forgive and move on
politically expedient and socially acceptable and progressive
i say let us forgive those who cast aspersions and scorn and contempt ....and ridicule and mockery at our people
we should accept them with great magnanimosity ...majulah singapura!!!
pap is the world best governance!!! we have the best and the most competent leaders and speakers!!!

I like what you say. To show my appreciation, I have added to your points.
 
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