- Joined
- Jan 18, 2012
- Messages
- 1,577
- Points
- 48
Happy Chinese New year to you. I wish you young and virgin again.Haha... glad that baby boomers hv 1 or 2 kids only.
Useless to hv spoilt millenium kids.
where money and time spend on them an investment not worth.
Now these kids are in self extinct time bomb.
A ratio of 0.8:1 kid per couple will send them to self extinct come 2050.
God save the planet.
Happy Chinese New year to you. I wish you young and virgin again.
Yr days are numbered for self extinct.
I don't know what you are talking about? Please take care of your health and prevent self-extinction. I wish you good health for this chinese new year.
Please send my regards to him and wish him a very happy chinese new year.See Fart Loong need this the most.
His rectum cancer surgery caused him to crap other than from his asshole, but a surgically made hole attached with a bag full of crap hidden inside his adult diapers.
Old fart, you sound pretty sore on the first day of chinese new year.Low IQ millenium kids, useless.
When last leave drop, the baby boomers are gone, they leave behind plenty of worthless bricks and mortars for you to demolish.
Over supply of buildings will crash the market and with no tenants to fill the rents millenium kids can start demolish the worthless buildings.
Glad we leave behind rubbish to you to fuck you up.
You even know about his rectum? Gosh.. not only there are people who busybody his family affair, and there are even people who check on his rectum?See Fart Loong need this the most.
His rectum cancer surgery caused him to crap other than from his asshole, but a surgically made hole attached with a bag full of crap hidden inside his adult diapers.
Now you hide the link..LOL... No other ways to advertise?SINGAPORE — When Ms Linda Wong first received an electronic hongbao for Chinese New Year last year, she was “surprised” by the gesture. The 24-year-old sales executive, who got it from a relative, told TODAY that it was the first time she had heard of such a concept.
“I was quite excited to get the e-hongbao. I think the novelty (of receiving one) made it more special,” she said.
Still, Ms Wong, who declined to reveal how much she received, said that nothing beats the excitement of receiving “the physical red packet” that are familiar to most.
It is customary for the Chinese to give each other hongbao — or a red packet containing money — during the festival, which begins this year on Friday (Feb 16).
In Singapore and Malaysia, the e-hongbao trend is starting to catch on, with banks here noticing growth in the number of transactions year on year.
More at
Gong Xi Fa ‘Click’: E-hongbao gaining popularity in SG