Serious Jialat! Only 300 out of 2400 new jobs in Q1 went to Sinkies!

Without 650,000 CECA Indians brought to Sindiapore, sinkies can't even have 300 good jobs with high pay created.
Thanks for our garment signed the CECA agreement!
The reason that 650,000 CECAs are in SG is because our ministers were so easily outsmarted and deceived by their Indian counterparts at the negotiating table.
 
This means that CECA is a complete failure as far as S'pore is concerned. What kind of free trade agreement did our overrated overrated ministers sign that is so lopsided in favour of India, and results in our own university graduates not being able to secure PME jobs, while these Indians enjoy the good life here? Our PAP leaders need to be charged with treason.
with
The reason that 650,000 CECAs are in SG is because our ministers were so easily outsmarted and deceived by their Indian counterparts at the negotiating table.
But why no other countries in the world signs CECA agreement with India, since the Indian ministers are so smart? In another word, are our ministers stupid and have no brain? then what are 65% voted them, retard?
 
with But why no other countries in the world signs CECA agreement with India, since the Indian ministers are so smart? In another word, are our ministers stupid and have no brain? then what are 65% voted them, retard?
You took the words right out of my mouth. SG taxpayers are not getting much value out of the millions that we are paying our greedy politicians.
 
how can a sinkie take a F & B job? We are in the most expensive city in Asia, and maybe the world. they need to pay housing loan for their overprice flat, pay for their kids tuition and school activities, pay for food, water and electricity, etc. How to survive on $1600 F & B job. They minimum need $4k a month. which F & B will pay that unless u are a cook
Don’t think is 1.6k anymore. Anyway, they fck care. Kb no job but the fnb all put poster hiring even managerial role.
 
Let the SG handsomest and smartest man leemind u…

CPF’s central philosophy of self-reliance remains as pertinent as ever: SM Lee​

Christine Tan
Updated Sat, 5 July 2025 at 6:35 PM SGT6-min read

Senior Minister Lee Hsien Loong delivering a speech at the launch of the CPF 70th Anniversary Commemorative Book on July 5.

Senior Minister Lee Hsien Loong delivering a speech at the launch of the CPF’s 70th anniversary commemorative book, Save & Sound: 70 Years Of CPF.
 
Pray the 65% are the only affected being retrenchment, dismissal. Since they supported the incumbent, it's only fair they face the brunt of their policy
Many Donald Trump supporters lost their US govt jobs after voting for him; they deserve it.
 

Is earning S$6.8K at 23 in Singapore impressive or just average? Young foreigner asks​


Gemma Iso
ByGemma Iso
July 5, 2025
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SINGAPORE: For most young professionals, the chance to live and work in a foreign country is as exciting as it is unnerving. That’s precisely where one 23-year-old finds himself as he equips himself to transfer to Singapore for a two-year contract, prepared with a newly issued job offer and a monthly remuneration of S$6,800.

With a Reddit post, he put his inquiries to the international online community: Is this a decent compensation for someone just starting? Can I afford rent at S$2,500/month? And significantly, how relaxed and sustainable will my lifestyle be?
 

Graduates are not screwed if they study engineering: James Dyson in response to Economist article​

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James Dyson in an interview with The Straits Times at his office at St James Power Station on June 30, 2025.

British inventor and billionaire entrepreneur James Dyson, 78, said design and science students will hold up well in the age of artificial intelligence.

ST PHOTO: GAVIN FOO


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Dyson

Published Jul 06, 2025, 05:00 AM
Updated Jul 06, 2025, 10:03 PM

SINGAPORE - Today’s graduates are not doomed if they study engineering, despite a poor job market.

This belief has long been held by British inventor James Dyson, 78, who has been thinking of bringing to Singapore his company’s degree apprenticeship programme in engineering, where undergraduates earn a salary and pay no fees.

“A country’s wealth is established by engineers and scientists,” the British inventor and billionaire entrepreneur told The Straits Times in a rare one-on-one interview on June 30 at the former St James Power Station, now

the global headquarters of Dyson

, the consumer electronics company he founded.
 
What did you expect? There are no journalists in Sinkieland, a totalitarian regime.

Reinforce the propaganda narrative. Play down the bad news. Exaggerate the good news. Publish 'feel good' trivial stories for distraction.

Sinkieland PAP = China CCP minus the Great Firewall and grandiose geopolitical ambitions. :cool:
Recap 2015 article by The Diplomat

https://thediplomat.com/2015/03/lee-kuan-yew-the-father-of-modern-china/


Lee Kuan Yew: The Father of Modern China?​

Lee Kuan Yew’s influence helped shape the China we know today.
Shannon Tiezzi

By Shannon Tiezzi
March 24, 2015

With the passing of Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s first prime minister and one of the most influential Asian politicians, leaders and media outlets all over the world have put in their two cents on his legacy. In the Western world, analysis of his influence is generally mixed; the Washington Post, for example, led off its piece by calling Lee “the democratic world’s favorite dictator.” But in China, where Lee’s mix of authoritarian governance and economic reform proved hugely influential, reflections are far more glowing.

China’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement on March 23 saying that “the Chinese side deeply mourns the loss of Mr. Lee Kuan Yew.” The statement praised Lee as “a uniquely influential statesman in Asia and a strategist embodying oriental values and international vision.”

For China, that high praise might actually be underestimating Lee’s importance. After the death of Mao Zedong, Beijing’s leaders knew that Maoist philosophy was not the way forward for China – but they were loath to adopt Western alternatives such as democracy and a free market economy. In Lee’s Singapore, Chinese leaders found an alternative path, a path they could sell as being uniquely suited for Asian (or “oriental,” as China’s FM put it) values. That choice, to combine economic reforms with authoritarianism, shaped China as we know it today.

Jin Canrong of Renmin University told China Dailythat Lee’s greatest contribution to China was “sharing Singapore’s successful experience in governance.” In his biography of Deng Xiaoping, Ezra Vogel wrote that China’s great reformed was inspired by the example of Lee’s Singapore. Xi Jinping himself has said that China’s modernization process has been undeniably shaped by the “tens of thousands of Chinese officials” who went to Singapore to study Lee’s model. Lee himself visited China over 30 times and met with Chinese leaders from Mao to Xi Jinping, offering advice.
 
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