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http://www.straitstimesreview.com/2...a-leader-like-lee-hsien-loong-for-my-country/
[h=1]Filipino: I want a leader like Lee Hsien Loong for my country!![/h]fred / 4 hours ago May 6, 2015
Screencapture from Facebook
A Filipino national who is currently working and living in Singapore was taken aback by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s revelation on Facebook that he knew basic computer programming. Feeling overwhelmed with awe, Orion Perez asked if his country could borrow the Singaporean Prime Minister. He also took a potshot at the Singapore Opposition and asked if the Opposition could beat PM Lee’s achievement. A check on Orion Perez’s facebook showed that he refers himself as ‘Lee Kuan Yew’s Number One Fan’.

With the influx of foreigners into Singapore introducing new people, new cultures, new languages and new attitudes, it is perhaps not surprising that Singaporeans fear the loss of their national identity and have begun to lose faith in leaders who are constantly praised by foreigners even for the simplest of things.
Contributor
Fred
May 6, 2015 in Contributions, Opinion.
[h=1]Filipino: I want a leader like Lee Hsien Loong for my country!![/h]fred / 4 hours ago May 6, 2015

A Filipino national who is currently working and living in Singapore was taken aback by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s revelation on Facebook that he knew basic computer programming. Feeling overwhelmed with awe, Orion Perez asked if his country could borrow the Singaporean Prime Minister. He also took a potshot at the Singapore Opposition and asked if the Opposition could beat PM Lee’s achievement. A check on Orion Perez’s facebook showed that he refers himself as ‘Lee Kuan Yew’s Number One Fan’.
On the fuckwarezone forum, when the question of whether Singaporeans would agree to lend their Prime Minister was asked by a forummer jigsaw, most netizens agreed that it was probably okay to lend PM Lee abroad since they felt that his policies have benefited more foreigners than locals anyway.
With the influx of foreigners into Singapore introducing new people, new cultures, new languages and new attitudes, it is perhaps not surprising that Singaporeans fear the loss of their national identity and have begun to lose faith in leaders who are constantly praised by foreigners even for the simplest of things.
Contributor
Fred
May 6, 2015 in Contributions, Opinion.