- Joined
- May 13, 2015
- Messages
- 1,998
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- 48
Without him doing the selling, the killing will not come from such initiative.
there must be cycle of things just like karma.
Without him doing the selling, the killing will not come from such initiative.
I think tuition business is good.
some of my friends started tuition centres.
Good or bad?
seems ok....
Without him doing the selling, the killing will not come from such initiative.
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Meet Fu Hai everyone, who I met this morning during my market visit. Fu Hai, 29, runs a stall selling fresh crabs at the Toa Payoh Market at Lorong 4. His stall is simple – just a few styrofoam boxes with live crabs in them. His work day is long, starting at 4am and ending at night around 8pm. He and his parents have three such stalls. Fu Hai graduated with an economics degree from NUS but decided to forge his own path. He has big dreams. He knows the network of crab suppliers from Sri Lanka, Indonesia and China. He knows what his customers want – which crabs are best for their sweet meat, and others for the roe. He thinks he can expand this business to semi-finished products working with our polytechnics. Welcome to Singapore’s Future Economy. Whatever shape that comes in, we will need young people like Fu Hai to forge new paths. The future belongs to people like him. Let's all wish Fu Hai every success as he chases his dreams.
- Ng Eng Hen
The guy is trying to put the statement across to Bargain Hen, but Bargain Hen is slow, couldn't catch the drift.
He is say: "NUS is crap !"
NUS graduates sell crabs, Mumbai University is PMET in IDA.
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Meet Fu Hai everyone, who I met this morning during my market visit. Fu Hai, 29, runs a stall selling fresh crabs at the Toa Payoh Market at Lorong 4. His stall is simple – just a few styrofoam boxes with live crabs in them. His work day is long, starting at 4am and ending at night around 8pm. He and his parents have three such stalls. Fu Hai graduated with an economics degree from NUS but decided to forge his own path. He has big dreams. He knows the network of crab suppliers from Sri Lanka, Indonesia and China. He knows what his customers want – which crabs are best for their sweet meat, and others for the roe. He thinks he can expand this business to semi-finished products working with our polytechnics. Welcome to Singapore’s Future Economy. Whatever shape that comes in, we will need young people like Fu Hai to forge new paths. The future belongs to people like him. Let's all wish Fu Hai every success as he chases his dreams.
- Ng Eng Hen
I also have BIG dreams. Can I open a mini-Casino in the wet market. Then slowly, upgrade it to a ten-storey Casino, oopps, I mean Integrated Resort?
and employing two thousand Singaporeans.
Bro, I think most people kill it before cooking and eating it. You suggesting to eat it alive? You are either very brave or very stupid. Remember to remove the carapace first!
Cheers!
That's why we should reserve more of our university spaces for foreigners. If sinkies feel that their path in life is to be a hawker, baker or crab seller, they should go join the ITE or straigh away enter the workforce instead of wasting 3-4 years in university.
he knows where the money is. His family will guide him along and in two years time, he will be a millionaire. Look at the father smiling. Doesn't look poor to me. but he dress modestly as that is appropriate for the place he works. No need to wear suite and neck tie. probably drive a benz.
Making a virtue of necessity-when your graduates from self proclaimed world class universities with course fees even higher than those in America lose out in the job market to "talents" from South Pacific University, Mumbai, Pinoy and PRC's colleges.
Do we need to pay ministers millions so that you go to a university to be a crab seller?