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The Religion of 'peace'

These people fail to understand the sneaky government in implementing GST!...each & every day...one primate open the eyes....that one will contribute to GST one way or the other....that is why they abolished the STOP AT TWO.

The more you have, they more GST they can collect...just open the eyes in the morning...

That is why, I always insists on buying value for money stuff,,why buy expensive stuff and pay more GST? And yet trailer park trash can save for months to buy an Iphone when its not even used for productive revenue generating activities. Just for selfies and to show off to frens and strangers alike,,,and when the next Iphone is release the same cycle repeats itself.
 
That is why, I always insists on buying value for money stuff,,why buy expensive stuff and pay more GST? And yet trailer park trash can save for months to buy an Iphone when its not even used for productive revenue generating activities. Just for selfies and to show off to frens and strangers alike,,,and when the next Iphone is release the same cycle repeats itself.

Agree with you on that, not only the iPhone, anything that the next door ' ah huat' has & they can't afford, but can get Hire Purchases to buy...they will buy!.
 
Agree with you on that, not only the iPhone, anything that the next door ' ah huat' has & they can't afford, but can get Hire Purchases to buy...they will buy!.
That is why the best customers at Courts used to be the m&ds,,,,now its the trailer park trash,,,,and the m&ds. People with decent jobs etc do not do hire purchase as it cost more in the long run,,,unless it is 100% interest free,,,,,which is highly unlikely
 
That is why the best customers at Courts used to be the m&ds,,,,now its the trailer park trash,,,,and the m&ds. People with decent jobs etc do not do hire purchase as it cost more in the long run,,,unless it is 100% interest free,,,,,which is highly unlikely
Without malays, chinese loan sharks will be unemployed and forced to be pimps.
 
Talking about trailer park trash....you just jolted my memory, came across one very recently, a tattooed woman, huge as a sow ( wonder how they have sex?), carrying a toddler & a young child with one hand, four more older ones running ahead...I counted altogether SIX!.

Firstly must be shapely & beautiful & pedas before 1 came along. yah!...then one after another & up to SIX...where they have time to have sex? & look at her size...the Sow will be shy, standing next to her.

Secondly, where did they get the money & resources to raise so many kids.

Lastly, she will be the typer, who will cry mother, & father...I am poor!
Minorities and natives need the numbers to counter persecution by immigrants.
 
Its only sad and sorry if you ask for chinese yucky mucky food. How anyone can eat the stuff baffles me.
Remember that when u eat Rex Chicken rice and other halal cina food,,,and alot of the deliver is actually for ang mor foods,,,,like pizza hut and mcdonalds,,,we need m&d delivery riders ,,,
 
If u tink tat way i cant help it. As far as true practising Muslims are concerned we know killing innocents one the greatest sins.
Oh Yes,,,killing is such a sin by the mudslimes,,,,and yet their practice is different from what u preach,,

Pakistan PM under fire for deal with hardliners in blasphemy row
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The protests broke out while Khan was in China. (Photo: AFP/Rizwan Tabassum)
05 Nov 2018 07:44PM
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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan will return home to a deepening political crisis Monday (Nov 5), with pressure mounting over a deal struck with Islamist hardliners that analysts say has eroded faith in his government.
Khan spent the last four days on a state visit to China, trying to win some desperately needed relief for his country's parlous finances, as his homeland fractured over the fate of Asia Bibi - a Christian woman cleared of blasphemy charges last week by the Supreme Court.

The overturning of her conviction, which Pakistan's top judges ruled was based on flimsy evidence, ended Bibi's eight year ordeal on death row.
But it enraged Islamists hardliners who took to the streets, blockaded major cities and demanded her immediate execution.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan and China's Premier Li Keqiang. (Photo: AFP/Jason Lee)

Blasphemy is an incendiary charge in Muslim-majority Pakistan, where even the whiff of an unsubstantiated allegation of insulting Islam can spark death at the hands of mobs.

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The protests were only brought to an end once Khan's administration agreed to a deal with the hardliners, where Bibi would remain in Pakistan while a final review of the Supreme Court's ruling takes place.
Many critics saw the climbdown as another capitulation to Islamist hardliners who called for the assassination of the country's Supreme Court justices and mutiny against the army's top brass in the ruling's wake.
"The government seems to be directionless and it does not seem to have a proper strategy," said analyst Fasi Zaka.
"The government has just bought time and we?re still waiting to see what they do."
PRAISE DISSIPATES
Only a few days earlier, Khan had been riding a wave of positive energy.
Shortly before his departure for China he delivered a speech vowing to confront the protesters head on, winning widespread praise from those detractors who had long accused him of courting extremists and for defending the blasphemy laws.
The protests calling for Bibi's execution were being headed by the Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan party (TLP), which is known for whipping up anger over blasphemy and successfully achieved a minister's resignation under the previous administration in 2017 by blockading roads into Islamabad for more than three weeks.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Some protesters have called for Asia Bibi's execution and the murder of judges. (Photo: AFP/Rizwan Tabassum)

Many critics of Khan noted that it was the second time his young administration had folded to TLP demands after his government sacked an economics advisor belonging to the persecuted Ahmadi religious minority following pressure from its outspoken leader Khadim Hussain Rizvi.
"Khan may have won the election, but it is Rizvi who seems to be ruling Pakistan today," wrote columnist Fahd Husain in an editorial published in the English daily the Express Tribune over the weekend.
"The government must act against the TLP to sustain its popularity," added security analyst Amir Rana. "The government looks weak and fragile."
The deal has left Bibi in legal limbo and her family fearing for her safety. Her husband has appealed for Britain or the United States to grant the family asylum while her lawyer has fled overseas.
Khan's first wife, British activist and filmmaker Jemima Khan, joined the chorus chiding the premier for backing down, saying his administration had effectively signed Bibi?s "death warrant."
"Not the Naya (New) Pakistan we'd hoped for. 3 days after a defiant & brave speech defending the judiciary, Pakistan's gov caves in to extremist demands to bar #AsiaBibi from leaving Pak," she tweeted Sunday.
FEAR OF BACKLASH
The government continued to defend the deal Monday, saying the agreement had averted violence.
"We dispersed them in a peaceful way which is an achievement," Information Minister Fawad Chaudry told reporters.
Analysts said Khan's government had little strategy in place for following through on the vow to confront the protests, which were quickly snow-balling.
"I think there's a huge fear of a backlash," said analyst Zahid Hussain, adding that the powerful army also did not appear to support a potential crackdown.
Adding to the weekend's woes, Khan appeared to be returning from traditional ally China empty-handed as he tries to reduce the amount of funds Pakistan will likely seek from the International Monetary Fund in bailout talks.
A statement released late Sunday hinted at new assistance from the Chinese but made no mention of the billions the government had been hoping to secure.
"The prime minister is facing a real problem as he went to China to get an aid package, but he was given a cool reception," said Zaka.
The reception that awaits him on return might get much hotter.
Source: AFP/zl
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Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...al-with-hardliners-in-blasphemy-row--10899864
 
How many times i must repeat and repeat. No such thing as blasphemy law in any faith. Blasphemy law was created by the clerics to protect their priesthood.
 
How many times i must repeat and repeat. No such thing as blasphemy law in any faith. Blasphemy law was created by the clerics to protect their priesthood.
So why dont u tell that to the clerics? go to the mosque and show it to the attendees,,,than u become a martyr than I say there are good mudslimes
 
They are busy fighting some IS members in their homeland too.

Yeah right,,,this guy is really a good muslim,,,,and yet the local Mudslimes have kept quiet about the whole affair,,,,

Singaporean ISIS fighter was in combat, sought to recruit family
st_20170927_vnisis3_3447911.jpg
Megat Shahdan Abdul Samad is the third Singaporean known to have joined ISIS in Iraq and Syria.
PUBLISHED
SEP 27, 2017, 5:00 AM SGT
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The Singaporean fighter who anchored a recent propaganda video by terror group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has been fighting on its front lines since he entered Syria three years ago.
Megat Shahdan Abdul Samad, 39, suffered an injury in combat, and was deployed to areas in Iraq and Syria, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) said on Tuesday, without giving further details.
It confirmed that he is the third Singaporean known to have joined ISIS in Syria and Iraq.

The other two, Haja Fakkurudeen Usman Ali and Maimunah Abdul Kadir, are believed to be still in Syria with their families. Both left for Syria in 2014.
"Their involvement in an overseas armed conflict jeopardises Singapore's security," MHA said.
"In Shahdan's case, it is compounded by the fact that he is also actively propagating ISIS' violent ideology and rallying others to engage in combat in support of ISIS. This is of particular concern as we have seen a spike in the number of self-radicalisation cases following the rise of ISIS and proliferation of its propaganda materials."


MHA issued the statement in response to media queries on Shahdan, who appeared in an ISIS video that surfaced online at the weekend under the assumed name "Abu Uqayl from Singapore". Among other things, he called on viewers to join ISIS fighters in East Asia or travel to the Middle East to fight.
The ministry had said on Sunday that Shahdan left Singapore in 2014 to work in the Middle East, where he is believed to have been radicalised. Home Affairs and Law Minister K. Shanmugam also said the Internal Security Department (ISD) had been keeping tabs on Shahdan.
Yesterday, MHA released further details of Shahdan's background and how he turned radical, as well as of his continued contact with family members - and attempts to radicalise them - while there.
Shahdan grew up in Singapore, and dropped out of school at a young age. He was a secret society member with a string of drug and criminal convictions. Between 1997 and 2009, he was in and out of jail, and was also on drug supervision regimes. MHA said: "He did not hold down any stable work and took up odd jobs. He did not show any obvious signs of being religiously inclined. Nor did he show any radical tendencies."
Sometime in early 2014, Shahdan left Singapore for the Middle East. He took up different jobs in tourism and renovation, and tried unsuccessfully to start a business. "At the same time, family members who visited him there noticed that he had become more observant of his religious obligations," said MHA.
"He reportedly attended religious gatherings, and was believed to have subsequently become radicalised by ISIS' violent ideology. He told at least one of his family members of his interest to perform jihad."
In September that year, Shahdan made his way to Syria to join ISIS.
He is believed to have contacted one of his family members while he was at the Turkish-Syrian border, saying he was on his way to Syria. He later asked for the family member's prayers for his safe crossing.
PROLIFERATION OF PROPAGANDA
Their involvement in an overseas armed conflict jeopardises Singapore's security. In Shahdan's case, it is compounded by the fact that he is also actively propagating ISIS' violent ideology and rallying others to engage in combat in support of ISIS. This is of particular concern as we have seen a spike in the number of self-radicalisation cases following the rise of ISIS and proliferation of its propaganda materials.
MINISTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS​
Related Story
ISD keeping tabs on Singaporean fighter in ISIS video
MHA also disclosed that while he was in ISIS-controlled territory, Shahdan dispensed religious advice to family and friends in Singapore.
"He has expressed the hope that his family would migrate to ISIS' self-declared caliphate, as in his view, it is a sin to live in an infidel country. He has also said that he would intercede for 70 of his relatives should he achieve martyrdom, and exhorted his family members to support ISIS," it said.
"None of them is known to have responded to his overtures."
But MHA noted that Shahdan's case, as with other recent cases of radicalised Singaporeans who had to be dealt with under the Internal Security Act, illustrates the important role that family, friends or any individual who may be close to a potentially radicalised individual can play in reporting such individuals as early as possible.
"The Government continues to urge the public to do its part in countering the threats of terrorism and radicalisation," it said.
"The Government has consistently taken the view that anyone who supports, promotes or undertakes or makes preparations to undertake armed violence, regardless of how such violence is rationalised, or where such violence takes place, poses a security threat to Singapore and Singaporeans."
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on September 27, 2017, with the headline 'S'porean ISIS fighter was in combat, sought to recruit family'. Print Edition | Subscribe
 
Btw msm dont event know wtf they are talking a out. Watch the video. Theres nothing jnteresting at all. Idont get how seeing that is going to convert anyone. And the idiots dont even get that people join isis to kill angmoh, retarded reporting. He will never be coming back because their jihad is always in middle east.
 
That was nearly a 100 years ago,,,,now the main reason for poverty is breeding,,especially amongst the m&ds and the trailer park trash. Look at singkieland now,,,the breeders are mostly the m&ds,,,,look at mudland,,the m&ds outnumber the other groups bcos they breed more,,,and same as indonland. Pinoyland which have the catholic m&ds breed the same too,,,one poor family 5 kids,,,,than kpkb poor
When you don't breed and is poor, you are "poor and alone"
 
So Syed is a liar?
I don't know exactly how the prophet made decisions in Islam. It was said alcohol is 50-50, half good and half bad; somehow the prophet had it banned. He did explain alcohol had some good points. This is well known in Chinese medicine, but it could easily be abused.

If alcohol in TCM is used with medicinal intent, it should be ok. Only drinking alcohol for kicks is banned. I think there is a similar problem with the ban of marijuana; it is said there are some good use of it for certain circumstances.
 
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