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Alex Tan failed english or he has selective reading? Chan Chun Seng states said it wasan ANALOGY. Analogies are not to be literally. dumbass.

Further proof that oppo IB have very low IQs.
Also, Kee Chiu should take up some English lessons.
Learn to make proper analogies, then know the difference between similes and metaphors.
http://examples.yourdictionary.com/analogy-ex.html
Further proof that oppo IB have very low IQs.
Using the pizza analogy of his:
We have an overpaid, incompetent pizza chef who serves shit pizzas.
Instead of finding out why the customers wouldn't take a bite, he mocks them for failing to appreciate 'good pizza' and suggests that they make the pizzas themselves.
Also, Kee Chiu should take up some English lessons.
Learn to make proper analogies, then know the difference between similes and metaphors.
http://examples.yourdictionary.com/analogy-ex.html
How he got to be even a paper general, a fucking paper general is beyond me.
And Arseloon depend on keechiu to save him from hooting?
HA HA HA HA
hahaha....again talking through your arse....The issue is not Alex but the Minister.
He picked a poor analogy. And he is a cabinet minister. How to articulate the makeup and need for policies effectively if he can't even pick an appropriate analogy. People increasingly want to be more involved in the decision making process because the trust in the govt doing it right has diminished significantly. It does not help when the calibre of senior leaders are wanting. Remember the population White Paper.
Remember also the Brompton Case. Despite calls from social media and availability of pricing information on the web, Khaw ruled that it was done right. It took an internet CSI to show the relationship between Khaw's staff and the vendor, the suspicious timing of the tender etc to show how smelly it was.
If this Govt can't even tender for a bicycle properly and if this Govt can't even recognise that something is wrong from the rising crescendo of concerns expressed by numerous citizens, can we trust this govt to even make a pizza.
The correct pizza analogy is as follows:
There was a pizza chef who continually brags that he is super talented and the best pizza chef in the world. As such, he wants a ridiculous income and so he charges an outrageous price for people to eat his pizza. People don't want to pay this high price for the pizza, so he justifies it by saying how clean his restaurant is, how hygienic the toilet is, how crime free and beautiful is the neighbourhood in which his restaurant sits. People still don't want to pay for his overpriced pizza, so he puts all the other restaurants in town out of business. How does he do that? Well, it turns out that his brother in law is the Police Chief, and his wife issues the business licenses in the town, and his brother is the town's health inspector, etc. So, colluding with his family members, he ends up chasing out all the other eateries. Now the people have no choice but to pay high price for a mediocre pizza.
Is that the analogy that Kee Chiu was trying to use?
The issue is not Alex but the Minister.
He picked a poor analogy. And he is a cabinet minister. How to articulate the makeup and need for policies effectively if he can't even pick an appropriate analogy. People increasingly want to be more involved in the decision making process because the trust in the govt doing it right has diminished significantly. It does not help when the calibre of senior leaders are wanting. Remember the population White Paper.
Remember also the Brompton Case. Despite calls from social media and availability of pricing information on the web, Khaw ruled that it was done right. It took an internet CSI to show the relationship between Khaw's staff and the vendor, the suspicious timing of the tender etc to show how smelly it was.
If this Govt can't even tender for a bicycle properly and if this Govt can't even recognise that something is wrong from the rising crescendo of concerns expressed by numerous citizens, can we trust this govt to even make a pizza.