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Serious 7Cs to survive an anti-jobs future: Jack Sim the Toilet Man

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http://www.straitstimes.com/opinion/7cs-to-survive-an-anti-jobs-future

I was always talkative in class. This irritated my teachers who always made me stand outside the class.
Standing outside meant I didn't know what was happening inside.
I failed my O levels.



I enrolled to do my A levels at a private school, Our Lady of Lourdes, in Ophir Road. Teacher and staff turnover were high and often there were no teachers in class. (The school closed after some years.)
I failed my A levels, as did nearly all my 40 classmates.

But despite having no university education, many of these "failures" ended up doing well later on, and include a mining tycoon, a top forex dealer, a bond trader, TV broadcaster, top fashion designer, top deejay, Talentime winners (equivalent to Singapore Idol), and many businessmen - plus myself, Toilet Man (I am founder of the World Toilet Organisation).
These "misfits" are talented in ways not recognised by our education system, because we measure them by the same one-dimensional ruler.
After failing my A levels, I went to the hotel and catering school at what is now the Institute of Technical Education, where I studied accommodation operations. However, I ended up working as a building material salesman instead.
A large number of people don't follow the path of their original studies. Such people develop a resilience built on a foundation of their particular soft skills and way of thinking. We need to have more emphasis on these non-academic skills.
Despite being the top salesman in the Swiss company that I worked for, having no degree meant no chance to be promoted to manager.
I was shocked to learn that every top-level technology is going to replace human resources at a very rapid pace and they are anti-jobs technologies... These technological meteorites are going to strike the planet in an unprecedented blast of joblessness.
So I started a business at age 24.
I created a series of 16 successful businesses in 16 years and reached financial independence. I retired at 40 to devote myself fully to social work.
LESSONS FROM MY PATHWAY
Bad things can turn into good.
If I had a degree, I would never have started my businesses, because the comfort zone might have trapped me.
Every child has different gifts. We need to help them discover what they are.
Failing in school does not mean failing in real life. But the key is to maintain resilience so that one's self-esteem stays intact. Conversely, having good grades cannot promise a good career if you lack soft skills and cannot get along with other people.
Too many students are told that they are failures. Once they believe this, they behave in ways that block them from success.
One example is art teachers who judge a child's ability to get higher scores in the subject on just finger dexterity and accuracy of drawing. These teachers often discourage those without dexterity and control from taking art as an elective. Those who are told, "You're not good in art", believe this message for life. And the damage done by a teacher's simple comment can ruin a child forever.
In reality, there is no one who is no good in art or the arts. The arts involve every child's imagination. Imagination is useful in anything from running a business to product design, where you create a logo that projects the company's image.
The arts also help children learn communication, philosophy, empathy, balance, aesthetics, fun, pleasure, and so many more attributes needed for survival in today's world. Case in point: Steve Jobs' love of fonts brought him to create Apple.
My mother often lamented that none of her three kids made it to university. So at 52, I went to the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy and studied part-time for four years. I graduated with a Master in Public Administration at the age of 56, and am now an adjunct associate professor at the same school.
Last month, at 59, I graduated from a Silicon Valley think-tank - Singularity University - at the Nasa campus in Mountain View, San Francisco.
The university admits 80 students a year on scholarships and taught us about the highest-level technologies, including biotechnology, 3D printing, med-tech, sensors, robotics and artificial intelligence, machine learning, bio-mimicry, genetic engineering, cellular farming, nanobots, hyperspectra imaging, virtual reality,* renewable energy, cyber security - the list goes on.
I was shocked to learn that every one of these technologies is going to replace human resources at a very rapid pace and they are anti-jobs technologies.
Whether it's airport self-check-in or McDonald's self-order or self-driving cars or chatbots replacing millions of call centre operators, these technological meteorites are going to strike the planet in an unprecedented blast of joblessness.
THE FOURTH INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
If I had not gone there, I would still be complacent and unaware of the issues to do with this technological growth.
So, how do we prepare ourselves and our children for this anti-jobs future that is called the Fourth Industrial Revolution?
Every sector of society is due for disruption. Hotels are challenged by Airbnb. Taxis are challenged by Uber. If employers can use robots, they would prefer not to employ humans. If machine learning can make things cheaper, faster, better and easier, who needs humans?
As I sat through the 10-week course at Singularity, it dawned on me that it is not the technologies I should be worried about.
These technologies are transient; they, too, will become obsolete and be replaced with newer ones . And new technologies appear because someone has the imagination to create them.
What is constant is my ability to mobilise them as they emerge.
This means that beyond hard skills, what we need to teach in schools are soft skills such as:
Curiosity to question;
Courage to imagine and implement;
Commitment to complete challenging and tedious tasks;
Compassion to empathise with all people: customers, colleagues, bosses, and the world at large. The power of love is infectious to boosting teamwork;
Collaboration. The ability to mobilise others into win-win alignments;
Community circumspection so as to be able to use an "ecosystem approach" to solutions, instead of thinking only in fragmented silo views; and
Communication skills to inform, equip and motivate actions by others.
Every child needs this list of 7Cs to survive the future.* Because these are the seeds of genius that can create leaders in every field.
Rote-learning and memory tests are the domains of the robot. We should depart from a tendency to emphasise these in the education system and move towards unleashing the untapped gifts in every child.
Humans have spirituality, morals, ethics, aesthetics, philosophy and love. Our future competitiveness against robots lies in these human virtues. Our ability to care, love and imagine will allow us to continue to be masters of robots, and not their servants.

The writer is the founder of the World Toilet Organisation.
 
What 7 Cs? :rolleyes: 1 L is all we need in Singapore - Lee. And one L to succeed in Singapore - Loyalty. :cool:
 
Some of us will be masters of robots. Others will just be servants of money. :rolleyes:
 
One Lee to rule them all,one Lee to find them.
One Lee to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.
 
Excellent article by jack Sim. I'm very impressed by how he has remade himself from toilet man to adjunct associate prof at LKY school. He makes excellent points on the few advantages humans have against the impending rise of the machines.

But this is the easy part - identifying the 7,8 or 9 Cs our kids need to thrive. Getting a national school system centred around quantitative outcomes to teach/drill/train soft skills will require yet another massive overhaul of our education system. Soon we'll have tuition Centers teaching "compassion" etc etc as our genius scholars figure out a way to quantitatively assess soft skills.


http://www.straitstimes.com/opinion/7cs-to-survive-an-anti-jobs-future

I was always talkative in class. This irritated my teachers who always made me stand outside the class.
Standing outside meant I didn't know what was happening inside.
I failed my O levels.



I enrolled to do my A levels at a private school, Our Lady of Lourdes, in Ophir Road. Teacher and staff turnover were high and often there were no teachers in class. (The school closed after some years.)
I failed my A levels, as did nearly all my 40 classmates.

But despite having no university education, many of these "failures" ended up doing well later on, and include a mining tycoon, a top forex dealer, a bond trader, TV broadcaster, top fashion designer, top deejay, Talentime winners (equivalent to Singapore Idol), and many businessmen - plus myself, Toilet Man (I am founder of the World Toilet Organisation).
These "misfits" are talented in ways not recognised by our education system, because we measure them by the same one-dimensional ruler.
After failing my A levels, I went to the hotel and catering school at what is now the Institute of Technical Education, where I studied accommodation operations. However, I ended up working as a building material salesman instead.
A large number of people don't follow the path of their original studies. Such people develop a resilience built on a foundation of their particular soft skills and way of thinking. We need to have more emphasis on these non-academic skills.
Despite being the top salesman in the Swiss company that I worked for, having no degree meant no chance to be promoted to manager.
I was shocked to learn that every top-level technology is going to replace human resources at a very rapid pace and they are anti-jobs technologies... These technological meteorites are going to strike the planet in an unprecedented blast of joblessness.
So I started a business at age 24.
I created a series of 16 successful businesses in 16 years and reached financial independence. I retired at 40 to devote myself fully to social work.
LESSONS FROM MY PATHWAY
Bad things can turn into good.
If I had a degree, I would never have started my businesses, because the comfort zone might have trapped me.
Every child has different gifts. We need to help them discover what they are.
Failing in school does not mean failing in real life. But the key is to maintain resilience so that one's self-esteem stays intact. Conversely, having good grades cannot promise a good career if you lack soft skills and cannot get along with other people.
Too many students are told that they are failures. Once they believe this, they behave in ways that block them from success.
One example is art teachers who judge a child's ability to get higher scores in the subject on just finger dexterity and accuracy of drawing. These teachers often discourage those without dexterity and control from taking art as an elective. Those who are told, "You're not good in art", believe this message for life. And the damage done by a teacher's simple comment can ruin a child forever.
In reality, there is no one who is no good in art or the arts. The arts involve every child's imagination. Imagination is useful in anything from running a business to product design, where you create a logo that projects the company's image.
The arts also help children learn communication, philosophy, empathy, balance, aesthetics, fun, pleasure, and so many more attributes needed for survival in today's world. Case in point: Steve Jobs' love of fonts brought him to create Apple.
My mother often lamented that none of her three kids made it to university. So at 52, I went to the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy and studied part-time for four years. I graduated with a Master in Public Administration at the age of 56, and am now an adjunct associate professor at the same school.
Last month, at 59, I graduated from a Silicon Valley think-tank - Singularity University - at the Nasa campus in Mountain View, San Francisco.
The university admits 80 students a year on scholarships and taught us about the highest-level technologies, including biotechnology, 3D printing, med-tech, sensors, robotics and artificial intelligence, machine learning, bio-mimicry, genetic engineering, cellular farming, nanobots, hyperspectra imaging, virtual reality,* renewable energy, cyber security - the list goes on.
I was shocked to learn that every one of these technologies is going to replace human resources at a very rapid pace and they are anti-jobs technologies.
Whether it's airport self-check-in or McDonald's self-order or self-driving cars or chatbots replacing millions of call centre operators, these technological meteorites are going to strike the planet in an unprecedented blast of joblessness.
THE FOURTH INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
If I had not gone there, I would still be complacent and unaware of the issues to do with this technological growth.
So, how do we prepare ourselves and our children for this anti-jobs future that is called the Fourth Industrial Revolution?
Every sector of society is due for disruption. Hotels are challenged by Airbnb. Taxis are challenged by Uber. If employers can use robots, they would prefer not to employ humans. If machine learning can make things cheaper, faster, better and easier, who needs humans?
As I sat through the 10-week course at Singularity, it dawned on me that it is not the technologies I should be worried about.
These technologies are transient; they, too, will become obsolete and be replaced with newer ones . And new technologies appear because someone has the imagination to create them.
What is constant is my ability to mobilise them as they emerge.
This means that beyond hard skills, what we need to teach in schools are soft skills such as:
Curiosity to question;
Courage to imagine and implement;
Commitment to complete challenging and tedious tasks;
Compassion to empathise with all people: customers, colleagues, bosses, and the world at large. The power of love is infectious to boosting teamwork;
Collaboration. The ability to mobilise others into win-win alignments;
Community circumspection so as to be able to use an "ecosystem approach" to solutions, instead of thinking only in fragmented silo views; and
Communication skills to inform, equip and motivate actions by others.
Every child needs this list of 7Cs to survive the future.* Because these are the seeds of genius that can create leaders in every field.
Rote-learning and memory tests are the domains of the robot. We should depart from a tendency to emphasise these in the education system and move towards unleashing the untapped gifts in every child.
Humans have spirituality, morals, ethics, aesthetics, philosophy and love. Our future competitiveness against robots lies in these human virtues. Our ability to care, love and imagine will allow us to continue to be masters of robots, and not their servants.

The writer is the founder of the World Toilet Organisation.
 
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Sharing economy and open source

What u seen today high tech is different 10 years ago. Many software programs are made free and available through open source from a group of communities sharing source codes and coding methods. Sharing source codes is of putting yr codes in library file to share with the coder communty.

Jobs are lost becos open source innovation technology are not for sales to Wall Street companies to dominate the market. We don't want Wall Street companies to kill innovations or control technology. Many sustainable technologies were killed by Wall Street companies. These companies bought the technology and apply copywrite laws to kill the innovation.

New low cost sustainable technology will affect the company existing product profit margins or make obsolete. Way to do buy it then kill and bury it deep into the ground never to been seen again.

So open source is the way to stop Wall Street companies to control or kill technology. kill Wall Street companies comes with loss jobs.

But Open source create more jobs and improve technology through sharing of ideas and talents openly.

go to these open source sites

https://blenderartists.org/forum/

https://create.arduino.cc/projecthu...f=platform&ref_id=424_respected___&offset=228


Time to shut down Wall Streets companies which is controlled by RothsChild family, and the evil British Empire.

Today u don't hear about pirated copy of software programs. All are open source free to use and become one of their community members if you like to contribute to the development, even Google is open source.

Microsoft is also open source software. Microsoft employed 3,000 Indian coders screwed up their software but to have 300,000 coders to improved your software is much better and is free development in exchange for free to use by everyone in this world.




Excellent article by jack Sim. I'm very impressed by how he has remade himself from toilet man to adjunct associate prof at LKY school. He makes excellent points on the few advantages humans have against the impending rise of the machines.

But this is the easy part - identifying the 7,8 or 9 Cs our kids need to thrive. Getting a national school system centred around quantitative outcomes to teach/drill/train soft skills will require yet another massive overhaul of our education system. Soon we'll have tuition Centers teaching "compassion" etc etc as our genius scholars figure out a way to quantitatively assess soft skills.
 
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Copyright laws were supposed to encourage innovation but has stifled it instead. Shutting down Wall Street will shut down the world economic order. Chaos will follow, not good. We're stuck in catch-22.

Sharing economy and open source

What u seen today high tech is different 10 years ago. Many software programs are made free and available through open source from a group of communities sharing source codes and coding methods. Sharing source codes is of putting yr codes in library file to share with the coder communty.

Jobs are lost becos open source innovation technology are not for sales to Wall Street companies to dominate the market. We don't want Wall Street companies to kill innovations or control technology. Many sustainable technologies were killed by Wall Street companies. These companies bought the technology and apply copywrite laws to kill the innovation.

New low cost sustainable technology will affect the company existing product profit margins or make obsolete. Way to do buy it then kill and bury it deep into the ground never to been seen again.

So open source is the way to stop Wall Street companies to control or kill technology. kill Wall Street companies comes with loss jobs.

But Open source create more jobs and improve technology through sharing of ideas and talents openly.

go to these open source sites

https://blenderartists.org/forum/

https://create.arduino.cc/projecthu...f=platform&ref_id=424_respected___&offset=228


Time to shut down Wall Streets companies which is controlled by RothsChild family, and the evil British Empire.

Today u don't hear about pirated copy of software programs. All are open source free to use and become one of their community members if you like to contribute to the development, even Google is open source.

Microsoft is also open source software. Microsoft employed 3,000 Indian coders screwed up their software but to have 300,000 coders to improved your software is much better and is free development in exchange for free to use by everyone in this world.
 
some uneducated dahlit uncouth barbarian neanderthal french peasant le monstron avedecc don fon fon decides to get some edumacation at 52 and decides to tell the whole world about it,insecure much toilet man?who gives a fuck?u stupid sinkie nigga.starting a WORLD TOILET ORG doesnt change the fact ur a toilet bowl construction company.these is exactly the kind of shenenigans PAP will pull,give themselves fancy allocades to cover up the fact they are just some ordinary shit piece of gum on the sidewalk outfit.

4 years of some part time study at LKY school of policy and all of a sudden u are some adjunct professor?must be some royal big time PAP ass kisser,really once u got ur millions u can be anything u want and justify anything even ur sorry ass past,even become some pretend professor,what a bunch of crooks.

also didnt lee hsien loong have this same degree masters of public administration and some of the other PAP elites?didnt know it was a part time degree and could be gotten by any low class beng from the streets.

sixteen businesses in sixteen years,it could only mean one thing,either u are a billionaire or a centimillionaire now or u are unfocused and a addict with ADD,u can only see a company from start up out of embryo stage to a couple million dollars before u get bored of it and move on to the next one,u have zero focus and vision and no idea how scale a tiny business to a billion dollar empire,into a true giant.the other hardcore entrepreneurs i know sheldon adelson and richard branson and li ka shing,sheldon started over 50 businesses in his life,initially when he was young it was the ikan billis stuff,one or two million dollar size companies,gradually it got bigger and bigger until he hit the big time and sold a company for 210m and another for 650m to a jap conglomerate,then he started building 400m hotels which cumulated to the 5.5 bil dollar MBS in singapore.
 
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So much hate and venom. Be happy for the success of others. I doubt an institution bearing the name of old man will take in just any ah Seng or ah lian.

When u achieve your success, we will be happy for you too.
 
I'm willing to bet u $1000 School of lky is a even bigger empty shell than our NUS or NTU,we spend billions every year trying to boost the rankings of NUS and importing thousands of PRC and shutdown scholars and it's still a joke.no one outside of singapore gives a damn about lky except for a handful of shitskin and Pinoy bootlickers.so far I have yet to see any PRC lick LKY's ass.no self respecting chink
 
Excellent article by jack Sim. I'm very impressed by how he has remade himself from toilet man to adjunct associate prof at LKY school. He makes excellent points on the few advantages humans have against the impending rise of the machines.

But this is the easy part - identifying the 7,8 or 9 Cs our kids need to thrive. Getting a national school system centred around quantitative outcomes to teach/drill/train soft skills will require yet another massive overhaul of our education system. Soon we'll have tuition Centers teaching "compassion" etc etc as our genius scholars figure out a way to quantitatively assess soft skills.

lets not worry about robots and all that bullshit alright,before we even get to robots theres roughly about 6 billion hungry and starving foreign talents waiting to take our jobs away,robots are not a threat,its those fucking shitskins and 3rd world monkeys having five or six children that are a threat to us.fuck them robots.theres people in china willing to work for $2 an hour,people in india willing to work for $1 an hour and people in bangladesh willing to work for 57 cents an hour.

the problem with Singapore is not robots or globalisation,the problem with Singapore is CAPITALISM,the rest of us 90 percent smucks are working our asses off to make the top 10 percent or top 1 percent or 0.01 percent filthy rich......go youtube and look how bad the wealth inequality in america is.the truth is Singapore is rich beyond belief,we have dollar dollar bills coming out of every ying yang,our soverign wealth funds are the top 10 largest in the world, but all that money is going to the top of the capitalism pyramid,the elites in PAP that are making millions their cronies that are making millions and even hundreds of millions,mps making six figures,liutenant colonels making six figures,paper general ceos making millions,while the rest of us poor smucks are struggling to get by on less than $2.4k per month........ministers getting $8 heart bypass while the rest of us are having to chop off our gangrene foot and legs with a cleaver thanks to diabetes.some of the mp professionals own two cars,he drives one his wife drives one,estimated cost over 200k while the rest of us have to top our our $10 ez link card.no matter how many fucking foreigners we import there will never be enough money why?because the top 1 percent are taking it all!!!!their incomes skyrocket while our incomes stagnate and even go down from inflation!!!!

the solution of course would be to kill the rich and eat them but we cant do that,this is the 21st century we are civilised people.the only solution would be to introduce socialism into the country,implement a flat tax rate for everybody of 35 percent from the rich to the poor,implement a minimum wage of $17 an hour so nobody gets exploited in this country,no such thing as elderly working as toilet cleaner for $800 a month or maid working for $400 a month,or bus driver working for $1200 a month.everyone gets paid $17 an hour flat.make education free for any singaporeans that wants it.bring back the estate tax.make Singapore a socialist paradise just like australia,scandinavia and swissland!!!!!
 
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[video=youtube;QPKKQnijnsM]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPKKQnijnsM[/video]
 
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