You die, your business

The core concern of a Govt made up of the rich i.e. when political power is concentrated in the hands of the wealthy, is that their interests would naturally diverge from, and even harm the interests of the general population. We have seen this with the PAP, which consists of the elites who got to where they are due to both nepotism and cronyism.
 
This is life in the HDB slums for many neglected seniors here

cluttermain.jpg
 
This is life in the HDB slums for many neglected seniors here

cluttermain.jpg

this type not "neglected senior" .... this type is mental problem senior .... they mental problem but yet the whole government and senior family cannot do anything to make her go treatment go hospital go clean up go stop hoarding .... whole government together with MPs only suck thumb when those sinkies suffering beside these hoarders seek help .... jialat!
 
this type not "neglected senior" .... this type is mental problem senior .... they mental problem but yet the whole government and senior family cannot do anything to make her go treatment go hospital go clean up go stop hoarding .... whole government together with MPs only suck thumb when those sinkies suffering beside these hoarders seek help .... jialat!
My company did some CSR cleaning of rental HDB flats on a few occasions. The stench, filth and hoarding at some of these units were awful.
 

Forum: Disturbing trend at zebra crossings​


Jan 09, 2025

I refer to the report (Cyclist dies in accident with private bus in Pioneer Road North; driver arrested, Jan 7). The accident highlights a pressing concern of mine.

As a frequent pedestrian, I have noticed a disturbing trend: an increasing number of drivers refusing to yield to pedestrians at zebra crossings. This blatant disregard for pedestrians’ right of way puts vulnerable groups, such as the elderly, children, and those with mobility challenges, in harm’s way. Furthermore, some drivers recklessly cut in front of pedestrians already on the crossing, endangering lives.

Another safety issue occurs at bends. Drivers often focus solely on oncoming traffic to the right, neglecting to look ahead at the zebra crossing. Consequently, they may accelerate without noticing pedestrians directly in front of them.


While we do not know the circumstances of the latest tragic accident, it serves as a stark reminder of the urgent need for greater attention to the safety of users of zebra crossings. To address this, the authorities must strengthen enforcement and raise awareness among drivers, ensuring that pedestrians can use zebra crossings with confidence.

Mohamad Nurhafiz Mohd Noor
 
Forum: Disturbing trend at zebra crossings
There is also a disturbing trend of pedestrians (many with eyes glued to their phones) at the zebra crossing who presume traffic will stop for them so they pay no heed to vehicles in close proximity before stepping off the pavement. Many cyclists also believe that they qualify as pedestrians and do not stop to watch out for cars as they ride across.
 

Elderly couple who lived on their own in Jurong flat found dead together​


ST20250106_202550400457 Kua Chee Siong/ ajdeath06/ Relatives and friends attending the wake of an elderly couple who died at home together, at a funeral parlour in Sin Ming Drive, on Jan 6, 2025. They were found decomposed.

Relatives and friends attending the wake of an elderly couple who died at home together, at a funeral parlour in Sin Ming Drive, on Jan 6.

ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG

Published Jan 19, 2025


SINGAPORE – Around two weeks before Christmas, Jurong resident Lim Chwee Guan noticed a strange smell wafting along the corridor of his 18th floor Housing Board unit.

After three days, the 78-year-old retiree alerted the police when he suspected something tragic had happened.

A number of residents who live in Block 338B Kang Ching Road, near Lakeside MRT, are senior citizens.


His fears came true on Dec 15, 2024, when police discovered the decomposing bodies of an elderly couple who lived on the 18th floor. They had died of natural causes.

While there have been reports of , trauma cleaner Rahman Razali, of DDQ Services, said the Kang Ching Road incident was unusual.

His company is one of three firms in Singapore that are engaged by town councils to clean up a flat after such cases.

Said Mr Rahman: “My company attends between two and three cases every week involving seniors dying alone at home.


“But it is very rare to hear of two people dying together like this. I have only encountered one or two such cases after 10 years in this line of work.”

There was a similar incident in 2022, when a 70-year-old man and his 92-year-old mother were found dead in their Tampines Street 22 flat.


Residents of Block 338B Kang Ching Road knew the couple as Mr Lim Eng Keong, 71, and Madam Mary Ong, 67.

Mr Lim Chwee Guan, who lived directly opposite the couple, told The Straits Times in Mandarin: “I had not seen them for three days, so I thought they could have been hospitalised.

0c395ce572b868a22ae183ccb2701659ed2329f9a490c1e6061b757c40053a91

Lim Chwee Guan, 78, who called the police when he realised something was amiss at his neighbour’s flat at Block 338B Kang Ching Road.

ST PHOTO: MARK CHEONG

“But when the smell grew stronger, I knew something was wrong.”

He said Mr Lim Eng Keong had several chronic ailments, and Madam Ong relied on a wheelchair to move around. She was dependent on her husband for most of her needs.

Mr Billy Ng, who lives alone on the 19th floor, said he last saw Mr Lim Eng Keong about three weeks before Christmas.

“He used to visit me at least once a week. I asked the neighbours but nobody seemed to know what happened,” the 84-year-old retiree said.


32885ba6a9d857b57174601e9dba79f64c0fa4317e7beecad9703be09bc8ea67

A joss stick placed by a neighbour outside the unit at Block 338B Kang Ching Road where a couple were pronounced dead.

ST PHOTO: MARK CHEONG

The Straits Times approached Thye Hua Kwan Moral Charities, which operates an active ageing centre at a nearby block in Taman Jurong, about programmes for senior citizens in the estate.

It declined comment.

Mr Lim Chwee Guan and Mr Ng said Mr Lim Eng Keong had diabetes. They recalled that before the tragedy, one of his legs was swollen and looked darker.

Neighbours said the couple rarely had visitors, but some people did turn up at a wake held in Sin Ming Drive on Jan 6 to pay their respects.

4076d4dfc8dbfb9308c6d66d0d7faa063fc4284afe8635cff380ad2eb418d171

The unit (right) at Block 338B Kang Ching Road where a couple were pronounced dead in their Housing Board.

ST PHOTO: MARK CHEONG

Mr Shawn Huang, MP for Jurong Spring ward in Jurong GRC, said Mr Lim Eng Keong and Madam Ong were jovial, loving, and well-integrated in the community.

He added that they took part in activities organised by the Active Ageing Centre in the estate. The recreational centre extends support to seniors living in the community.

“I have met them during house visits. In fact, I met both of them just a few weeks before they passed. It is always difficult news,” he added.

Dying alone​

The Ministry of Health does not track the number of elderly who die alone at home, but the Health Sciences Authority reportedly handles fewer than 100 unclaimed bodies each year.

Trauma cleaning company One Heart Cleaning said it has been receiving more calls for its services.

The company’s project manager, Ms Felicia Mak, said the firm can get up to three calls a week to perform deep cleaning when seniors die alone at home.

The calls can come from relatives, town councils and the police.

“We receive inquiries but sometimes they decide not to engage our services. This can be because of pricing or our availability, as these cases are usually very abrupt,” said Ms Mak.

Cheng Hong Welfare Service Society (CHWSS) chairman Kenny Sim said his organisation attended to 270 cases of lonely deaths across 2024, compared with 190 cases in 2023.

The organisation had established a free afterlife memorial service in 2012 to help seniors prepare their last rites.

Mr Sim said 108 out of the 270 seniors who died alone had signed up as members in 2024.

The charity accepts members who meet certain requirements such as being 65 and above, or those who have financial difficulties and are living in rental HDB flats.

“We get these members through our outreach efforts, which could involve knocking door to door to speak to these seniors.

“We want to let them know that we are here to help and that they are not alone,” said Mr Sim.

They also receive referrals from medical social workers in hospitals, old folks’ homes and hospices, he added.

CHWSS’s 500 volunteers currently look after 2,500 seniors islandwide. The organisation is aiming to reach 3,000 seniors by the end of 2025.

Social service agency Lions Befrienders said it leverages technology to ensure it can reach more lonely seniors.

Ms Karen Wee, executive director of the organisation, said: “We have been using technology, such as motion sensors, inside the homes that will alert us of movement. We also have apps that seniors can use to give us regular check-ins so we know they are there.”

This is all done to give the seniors a dignified send-off, she said.

“We need to assure them that they will not die a lonely and undignified death. Of course, there will be cases where the death occurs very suddenly but even then, we aim to find their bodies within 24 hours,” Ms Wee added.

The organisation’s 150-member team served 13,000 seniors in 2024. It is aiming to assist 27,000 seniors by 2030.

Mr Andy Ang, head of Touch Active Ageing, said that while organisations can try to engage seniors, some people prefer to be left alone.

“It is challenging when seniors refuse help, even when there are major issues that need to be promptly addressed,” he said.

“Isolated frail seniors suffering from dementia or cognitive impairment, health or mental health issues are the hardest to reach out to.”

He said the organisation’s staff and volunteers would still visit the seniors regularly, to persuade them to accept their help.

Living alone​

Government figures showed that there were 79,000 residents aged 65 and above in Singapore living alone in 2022, a number likely to grow with one in four citizens reaching 65 or older by 2030.

Older housing estates such as Bukit Merah, Ang Mo Kio, Hougang and Toa Payoh have relatively larger elderly populations.

Mr Huang, who is Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Education and Finance, said the issue of seniors living alone is one that is close to his heart.

“In Jurong, we believe in creating as many opportunities for interaction among seniors,” he said, adding that these include strengthening and expanding their social circle, promoting communal activities among neighbours and new friends in the community.

He also advocates a culture of self-initiated activities, which could be as simple as going for a coffee or exercising together.

“We have to curate programmes that will create an environment for seniors to thrive and lead fulfilling lives. And make meaningful relationships new or old.

“The best start is to have strong and expanding networks and relationships.” he added.

The Government has been , when 21 per cent of the population is aged 65 or above. Singapore is expected to attain the status in 2026.

Healthier SG, launched in July 2023, is focused on major preventive care – where individuals are encouraged to work with a general practitioner to take charge of their health.

The programme will complement Age Well SG, a $3.5 billion national drive by the Ministry of Health, Ministry of National Development and Ministry of Transport to support seniors in ageing well in their homes and their communities.

Mr Lim Chwee Guan said his neighbours in Kang Ching Road, where he has lived for nearly two decades, have always looked out for one another.

He added that it was tragic that Mr Lim Eng Keong, who often stopped to check on residents, died that way.

“He was a very nice man. He would always go out during the day to buy snacks like curry puffs and give them to me,” said Mr Lim Chwee Guan.

When ST visited the couple’s unit on Jan 7, there were joss sticks placed on both sides of the gate.

Mr Lim Chwee Guan said it was his way of saying farewell to the couple, who were Buddhists.

“When I found out they had died inside, I went to buy some vegetarian food to offer to them and also pray for them as I considered him my friend.”

He added: “At the end of the day I’m also in the same position as them. I am here alone and I do not know when I will die.”
 

Forum: Let’s try to prevent cases of the elderly dying alone at home​

cc5be56da2104518ea679444b2032e1e4d26a0ab358abc1cc5fa86ce51bbbc7f


Published Jan 20, 2025

As a senior Singaporean of the Merdeka Generation, I’m saddened by the recent case of an elderly couple found dead in their flat (“, Jan 19).

Incidents of elderly people dying alone at home are still happening despite efforts put in by government and charitable organisations.

Hence, people, especially seniors, are wondering whether measures in place to help elderly people living alone are effective.


We may not be able to eradicate such incidents totally but it is possible to reduce the number of cases if all of society work together with care and concern for the elderly.

The elderly themselves must also be prepared to change their mindsets and be willing to socialise in the community and seek help.

Incidents of elderly people dying alone will rise in Singapore as the population ages.

Although this is a tough and challenging problem, we must still try our hardest to resolve the issue.

Ng Choon Lai
 
If this kind of Dying Alone cases happen to DINK couples, then its their expected and planned way of dying .... no need to bother and just dump the bodies to incinerator like rubbish suah .... :whistling:

those with kids and still end up like that .... its time the Government need to reflect upon themselves on their Education quality, Law coverage and their governance policies and make timely improvement rather than waiting oppies to form replacing government to deal later :unsure:
 
May 30, 2025, 12:04pm

Blood leaking from ceiling, overwhelming stench lead to grim discovery in Bedok South flat​

bloodmain_0.jpg


Teo Yan Ting
TNP
May 27, 2025

Blood leaking from the ceiling of a flat in Bedok South led to a grim discovery on May 25 - the rotting body of a 77-year-old woman who had died alone in the unit above.

The incident happened at about 2.05pm at Block 163 Bedok South Road.


According to Shin Min Daily News, the woman's downstairs neighbours first noticed something was wrong when they saw blood dripping from the ceiling of their master bedroom and detected a foul stench.

One of them, Ms Zeng, 70, said her son made the discovery at around 1pm and alerted her immediately.
"I saw blood dripping and even smelled a foul odour," she told reporters.


"We realised something was wrong, so we went upstairs and found the victim's sister standing outside the unit. We persuaded her to call the police," she added.

Police arrived at the scene shortly after, and by 4pm, the corridor outside the unit had been cordoned off.

A crime scene investigation (CSI) vehicle was also spotted parked at the foot of the block.

The smell upstairs was reportedly overwhelming.

Residents said the woman, known affectionately as "Nancy", had lived in the flat alone for more than 25 years.

Ms Zeng's husband, Mr Ou, 72, said: "We don't know what to do now. The smell is unbearable. We will sleep in the guest room first and contact the authorities later to see how to solve the problem."

Another neighbour, Mr Salama, 61, said Nancy's sister had turned up at around 10am that day to check on her, but no one answered the door.

"I got home at around 11am and she asked me if I'd seen Nancy," he recalled.

"We knocked on the door and could already smell a stench coming from inside."

Separately, another neighbour said a food delivery bag had been hanging on the doorknob for two days - a sign that something might have been wrong.

The sister returned home to search for a spare key but couldn't find it, and later called a locksmith. But the locksmith refused to open the door after detecting the foul smell.

It wasn't until the neighbour downstairs came up to complain about blood seeping through the ceiling that the woman decided to alert the authorities.

A black vehicle from the undertaker arrived at around 6pm to remove the body.

When contacted, the police confirmed they received a report and found the 77-year-old woman lying motionless in the unit. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

Preliminary investigations ruled out foul play. Police said investigations are ongoing.
 
If this kind of Dying Alone cases happen to DINK couples, then its their expected and planned way of dying .... no need to bother and just dump the bodies to incinerator like rubbish suah .... those with kids and still end up like that .... its time the Government need to reflect upon themselves on their Education quality, Law coverage and their governance policies and make timely improvement rather than waiting oppies to form replacing government to deal later
My parents live with a maid, but my siblings and I make it a point to visit once a week. If I have a parent living alone, I would check up on him/her daily, but we live such busy lives so how do we ensure that my dad or mom does not pass on suddenly while I am overseas or at work?
 
My parents live with a maid, but my siblings and I make it a point to visit once a week. If I have a parent living alone, I would check up on him/her daily, but we live such busy lives so how do we ensure that my dad or mom does not pass on suddenly while I am overseas or at work?

this is typical textbook example of EXCUSES proudly cited as REASONS by majority sinkie charsiews .... :thumbsup:
 

Forum: Gym should have been included in CC’s plans​

Aug 05, 2025

I live near Thomson Community Club, which is finally opening in August, looking grand and beautiful. As an older person nearing 60, I was looking forward to having a cost-effective gym near me so that I can heed the Government’s call to stay healthy and strong.

When I went to the community centre to inquire about gym facilities, I was told that a tender is being conducted for an operator.

The centre has been closed for six years, since April 2019, and I can’t understand why it has taken so long to conduct a tender.

The Government is pushing Healthier SG and Age Well SG programmes, and we all know Singaporeans have long lifespans (84 years on average) but poor healthspans (74 years on average).

The call to healthy living in Singapore as we age seems to be thwarted by poor planning.

Chen Jia Shuan
 
Aug 28, 2025, 04:17pm
pioneermain.jpg



Submitted by Stomper
Anonymous
Welcome to Stomping Ground - a space where Stompers share reflections, personal essays and social commentaries that spark conversation and insight.

Singapore is progressing, but are its people prospering along with it?

One citizen, who asked to remain anonymous, feels like he is being passed over and left behind despite decades of contributions - and penned his thoughts in an open letter.


Here is the letter in full:

I'm an ordinary Singaporean who has quietly spent decades contributing to our systems. I modelled security over glamour, responsibility over ambition.

This letter is my reflection, unfiltered, from the ground up. It's anonymous - and it's heartfelt.

We built this nation, but now we're part of the silent majority risking everything and we're quietly being pushed aside.

As a born-and-bred Singaporean, I write not out of anger, but from exhaustion and a quiet desperation shared by many like me.

For decades, we toiled, contributed, adapted. We upgraded. We reskilled. We stayed the course. But today, our voices are increasingly drowned in policies and promises that rarely reflect the daily realities on the ground.

We are told Singapore has no natural resources - but we, the people, have always been the nation's greatest asset. Yet many of us now feel like disposable parts in an overcrowded machine.

Yet today, we're told to reskill again and again, accept decreasing wages, to compete not only with each other, but with new immigrants, permanent residents (PRs), foreign PMETs (professionals, managers, executives and technicians), and even long-term visit pass holders for roles we once filled."

And while we struggle, we're told this is progress.

Meanwhile:
  • Housing, healthcare and daily expenses keep rising.
  • MRTs break down and our once-proud identity fades.
  • Our birth rate halts as too many of us cannot afford to raise a child here.
  • Our sandwich-class families are stuck under unending debt.
The steady influx of new immigrants, PRs, foreign PMETs and long-term pass holders has intensified competition not only in jobs but across all facets of daily life: housing, education, healthcare and basic living standards.

The Singapore We Remember… and Miss

We remember:
  • Neighbours who greeted one another, not strangers packed in silence.
  • MRTs that ran on time, without fear of sudden breakdowns.
  • National Day when flags flew proudly outside HDBs - not as an obligation, but a true celebration.
  • Jobs that gave meaning, not anxiety.
  • We were once proud of our clean streets and cohesive society.
Today?
  • We were once proud of our clean streets and cohesive society.
  • We're packed shoulder-to-shoulder in trains, struggling to afford homes with shrinking space and rising prices.
  • Our children compete in an overstretched school system, while elderly Singaporeans clean tables and push trolleys just to make ends meet.
  • Our voices feel drowned out by imported noise.
  • Our tiny dot feel overcrowded, but our hearts feel empty.
  • We are working longer, harder, but falling behind.
All in the name of economic growth.

But who's really growing?

The Price We Pay
  • Sandwich class families suffocate under the weight of expectations.
  • Our birth rate drops, because raising a child feels like a financial risk.
  • Owning a flat means 20/30 years of loan chains, not pride.
  • Healthcare is top-tier - if you can afford it.
  • The poor suffer quietly; the rich get louder.
Retirement? It's not a dream. It's a deadline we can't reach.

All of this, while we're told to be "resilient," "adaptable," "grateful."

But can resilience be eaten?

We're told to keep upskilling. But no certification can undo the bias that comes with age or the invisible wall that appears when an employer opts for a cheaper foreign hire.

We Deserve Better in Our Golden Years

We're not asking for handouts. We're asking for dignity:
  • Local-first hiring that truly prefers locals.
  • Affordable living, not inflated metrics to mask hardship.
  • Retirement with security - not working till our bodies break.
  • Long-term immigration policy that values local lives, not just GDP growth.
  • To not be pushed into gig work or dishwashing at 65.
  • To not constantly fear retrenchment because we're "overqualified" or "too expensive."
  • To not watch others leapfrog into the jobs we once fought so hard to get.
We built this place. Brick by brick. Shift by shift. Don't treat us like we're replaceable.

We're not angry because we hate Singapore. We're heartbroken because we love it - and it feels like it stopped loving us back.

Worse, our voices are often dismissed. Raise a concern, and you're labelled resistant to progress, anti-globalisation or simply "not competitive enough." But this isn't about fear of foreigners. It's about dignity, fairness, and the right to a livelihood in our own country.

❤️ What Do We Ask For?
  • Policies with empathy, not just efficiency.
  • Real local-first hiring, not tokenism or checkbox compliance.
  • Affordable living, not inflated metrics hiding uncomfortable truths.
  • Retirement dignity, not working till our bodies collapse.
  • A system that values contributions, not just qualifications.
We ask only for policies that protect Singaporeans first, not last. We want transparent hiring practices, fair wage protections, and limits on how foreign hiring is managed in essential roles like sales, marketing, admin, and customer service etc. Jobs that do not need "talent" to do it.

Is this too much to ask?

We are tired. Not lazy, not ungrateful - just worn out from trying to survive in the very country we helped build.

Let our voices be heard - not just on National Day, not just when it's convenient, but in the daily decisions that affect our future. Because Singapore doesn't need to be No.1 in the world. It just needs to be home for the ones who have given it everything.

Let us age with grace, not with fear. Let us rest, not rust. Let us hope, not hustle forever. Let us grow old in peace, with basic income, security and a home to rest our bones. Let us spend time with our grandchildren, not a lifetime of sacrificing just to stay afloat.

We built Singapore. Now please don't make us feel replaceable.

Lastly, wishing Singapore a happy SG60 birthday

- A Singaporean who still believes in dignity over drive. A worried and worn-out but still hopeful Singaporean.
 
Aug 28, 2025, 04:17pm
pioneermain.jpg



Submitted by Stomper
Anonymous
Welcome to Stomping Ground - a space where Stompers share reflections, personal essays and social commentaries that spark conversation and insight.

Singapore is progressing, but are its people prospering along with it?

One citizen, who asked to remain anonymous, feels like he is being passed over and left behind despite decades of contributions - and penned his thoughts in an open letter.


Here is the letter in full:

I'm an ordinary Singaporean who has quietly spent decades contributing to our systems. I modelled security over glamour, responsibility over ambition.

This letter is my reflection, unfiltered, from the ground up. It's anonymous - and it's heartfelt.

We built this nation, but now we're part of the silent majority risking everything and we're quietly being pushed aside.

As a born-and-bred Singaporean, I write not out of anger, but from exhaustion and a quiet desperation shared by many like me.

For decades, we toiled, contributed, adapted. We upgraded. We reskilled. We stayed the course. But today, our voices are increasingly drowned in policies and promises that rarely reflect the daily realities on the ground.

We are told Singapore has no natural resources - but we, the people, have always been the nation's greatest asset. Yet many of us now feel like disposable parts in an overcrowded machine.

Yet today, we're told to reskill again and again, accept decreasing wages, to compete not only with each other, but with new immigrants, permanent residents (PRs), foreign PMETs (professionals, managers, executives and technicians), and even long-term visit pass holders for roles we once filled."

And while we struggle, we're told this is progress.

Meanwhile:
  • Housing, healthcare and daily expenses keep rising.
  • MRTs break down and our once-proud identity fades.
  • Our birth rate halts as too many of us cannot afford to raise a child here.
  • Our sandwich-class families are stuck under unending debt.
The steady influx of new immigrants, PRs, foreign PMETs and long-term pass holders has intensified competition not only in jobs but across all facets of daily life: housing, education, healthcare and basic living standards.

The Singapore We Remember… and Miss

We remember:
  • Neighbours who greeted one another, not strangers packed in silence.
  • MRTs that ran on time, without fear of sudden breakdowns.
  • National Day when flags flew proudly outside HDBs - not as an obligation, but a true celebration.
  • Jobs that gave meaning, not anxiety.
  • We were once proud of our clean streets and cohesive society.
Today?
  • We were once proud of our clean streets and cohesive society.
  • We're packed shoulder-to-shoulder in trains, struggling to afford homes with shrinking space and rising prices.
  • Our children compete in an overstretched school system, while elderly Singaporeans clean tables and push trolleys just to make ends meet.
  • Our voices feel drowned out by imported noise.
  • Our tiny dot feel overcrowded, but our hearts feel empty.
  • We are working longer, harder, but falling behind.
All in the name of economic growth.

But who's really growing?

The Price We Pay
  • Sandwich class families suffocate under the weight of expectations.
  • Our birth rate drops, because raising a child feels like a financial risk.
  • Owning a flat means 20/30 years of loan chains, not pride.
  • Healthcare is top-tier - if you can afford it.
  • The poor suffer quietly; the rich get louder.
Retirement? It's not a dream. It's a deadline we can't reach.

All of this, while we're told to be "resilient," "adaptable," "grateful."

But can resilience be eaten?

We're told to keep upskilling. But no certification can undo the bias that comes with age or the invisible wall that appears when an employer opts for a cheaper foreign hire.

We Deserve Better in Our Golden Years

We're not asking for handouts. We're asking for dignity:
  • Local-first hiring that truly prefers locals.
  • Affordable living, not inflated metrics to mask hardship.
  • Retirement with security - not working till our bodies break.
  • Long-term immigration policy that values local lives, not just GDP growth.
  • To not be pushed into gig work or dishwashing at 65.
  • To not constantly fear retrenchment because we're "overqualified" or "too expensive."
  • To not watch others leapfrog into the jobs we once fought so hard to get.
We built this place. Brick by brick. Shift by shift. Don't treat us like we're replaceable.

We're not angry because we hate Singapore. We're heartbroken because we love it - and it feels like it stopped loving us back.

Worse, our voices are often dismissed. Raise a concern, and you're labelled resistant to progress, anti-globalisation or simply "not competitive enough." But this isn't about fear of foreigners. It's about dignity, fairness, and the right to a livelihood in our own country.

❤️ What Do We Ask For?
  • Policies with empathy, not just efficiency.
  • Real local-first hiring, not tokenism or checkbox compliance.
  • Affordable living, not inflated metrics hiding uncomfortable truths.
  • Retirement dignity, not working till our bodies collapse.
  • A system that values contributions, not just qualifications.
We ask only for policies that protect Singaporeans first, not last. We want transparent hiring practices, fair wage protections, and limits on how foreign hiring is managed in essential roles like sales, marketing, admin, and customer service etc. Jobs that do not need "talent" to do it.

Is this too much to ask?

We are tired. Not lazy, not ungrateful - just worn out from trying to survive in the very country we helped build.

Let our voices be heard - not just on National Day, not just when it's convenient, but in the daily decisions that affect our future. Because Singapore doesn't need to be No.1 in the world. It just needs to be home for the ones who have given it everything.

Let us age with grace, not with fear. Let us rest, not rust. Let us hope, not hustle forever. Let us grow old in peace, with basic income, security and a home to rest our bones. Let us spend time with our grandchildren, not a lifetime of sacrificing just to stay afloat.

We built Singapore. Now please don't make us feel replaceable.

Lastly, wishing Singapore a happy SG60 birthday

- A Singaporean who still believes in dignity over drive. A worried and worn-out but still hopeful Singaporean.

LW say already give U so many CDC and freebies liao ... still write essay comprain so ungrateful ah? :whistling:
 
this is typical textbook example of EXCUSES proudly cited as REASONS by majority sinkie charsiews .... :thumbsup:
I doubt that most adult children visit their elderly parents even once a week, unless they stay together of course.
 

Comments

NSF nearly court-martialled before case collapsed, Reddit post alleges; SAF yet to respond​


A self-identified ex-NSF alleged on Reddit that he was nearly court-martialled after being charged with disobedience, insubordination, and AWOL while on medical leave. He said the charges were later withdrawn after his defending officer presented WhatsApp records and medical certificates. The post, citing alleged excessive demands by a DXO, has sparked debate over accountability in the SAF. Queries have been sent to SAF, which has not responded.

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Published on 29 August 2025
By The Online Citizen
NSF1.jpg

Update: The Ministry of Defence (MINDEF) has responded to online remarks by an individual who claimed on Reddit to have had a dispute with a superior during his full-time national service and subsequently faced charges that were later withdrawn.

MINDEF stated that it found no record of such a case. The ministry added that it had reached out to the online account owner more than a day earlier to request further details in order to conduct a more thorough investigation, but had not yet received a reply.

Emphasising that allegations of unacceptable workplace conduct are taken seriously, MINDEF noted that established reporting channels are available to service personnel. These include their chain of command, human resource departments, and senior management. The ministry also stressed that all investigations are conducted fairly and that servicemen will not face penalties for making good-faith reports.


SINGAPORE: A Reddit post by a self-identified former full-time National Serviceman (NSF) alleged he was nearly court-martialled after being charged with disobedience, insubordination, and absence without leave (AWOL) while on medical leave.

However, all charges were later withdrawn after review by the SAF legal system. He credited his defending officer for ensuring the case did not proceed to a court martial.

The post, which has drawn significant attention online, sparked public debate over accountability in the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF), particularly regarding the authority of Defence Executive Officers (DXOs) in handling servicemen on medical leave.

The NSF, who had recently completed his service, claimed that disciplinary proceedings stemmed from excessive demands by a DXO.

These included weekly mobile phone checks, constant live location sharing, and compulsory selfies outside his home, even while he was wheelchair-bound following surgery for a leg injury.

According to his account, tensions with a DXO began when he was ordered to notify his whereabouts at all times, including during medical leave, and to submit to weekly checks of his mobile phone.

The superior allegedly justified these demands by citing personal accountability to higher command.

The situation escalated when the NSF suffered a leg injury after falling into a drain on his way to camp.

Following surgery, he was warded for 10 days and placed on extended medical leave.

Despite his condition, he claimed his superior required him to send frequent selfies outside his home and to keep his WhatsApp and Google live locations activated around the clock.

Order to return to camp despite medical leave​

Twelve days into his medical leave, the DXO allegedly ordered him to report back to camp within an hour for medical verification by the unit doctor.

The NSF, still on a wheelchair and crutches, explained he could not physically ascend the hilly terrain to the camp’s medical centre. His refusal led to further disciplinary proceedings.

The NSF alleged that his superior, along with a lieutenant colonel, subsequently referred him to the regimentation and disciplinary department and Military Police Command on charges of disobedience, insubordination and AWOL.

He argued his medical certificate should have exempted him from these charges.

Attempts to appeal to senior officers, including a colonel and camp commander, were unsuccessful.

Charges withdrawn after defending officer’s intervention​

He claimed he was repeatedly told to accept responsibility and follow orders. Only when his case was escalated to a defending officer did the charges collapse.

The officer reportedly submitted documentary evidence, including WhatsApp records and hospital-issued medical certificates, which resulted in all charges being withdrawn following investigation.

The NSF was later transferred to another unit after a psychiatric consultation, where he described being treated with greater respect during the remainder of his service.

Public reaction and calls for accountability​

The post, which drew significant attention online, sparked strong reactions from fellow Reddit users.

Some expressed disbelief at the alleged micromanagement and questioned whether it constituted an abuse of power. Others suggested that if true, such conduct amounted to dereliction of duty.

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Several comments urged the former NSF to escalate the matter to Members of Parliament or directly to Defence Minister Chan Chun Sing, warning that continued inaction would damage the credibility of National Service.

One Redditor remarked that “NS is an institution close to the hearts of every Singaporean son,” and that systemic abuses, if widespread, would weaken public trust in the SAF.

Others stressed that pursuing accountability would not only bring justice for the individual but also protect current and future NSFs from similar treatment.

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However, the former NSF indicated reluctance to publicise his identity, citing fears of being blamed for past mistakes and a desire to move on as he begins university.

Not all were sceptical of his claims.

A Redditor noted that regardless of the NSF’s personal history, “what you faced was basically mental and physical abuse, and no reason conscripts should face this kind of treatment.”

Others assured him that “every Singaporean son will come defend you” if such abuses were proven.

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Queries sent to SAF to verify Redditor’s claims; response pending

Queries, copied to Minister Chan, have been sent to the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) to verify the account, including whether a DXO has the authority to require an NSF to share live locations, undergo repeated monitoring, and report to camp while on valid medical leave.

As of publication, the SAF has not responded. While the claims remain unverified, it is evident the SAF is aware of the post.

According to the Central Manpower Base’s official website, NSFs may be granted medical leave when issued a valid MC by a government doctor, SAF medical officer, dental officer, or a private practitioner registered with the Singapore Medical Council or Singapore Dental Council.

In a written reply to Parliament in November 2018, then-Defence Minister Dr Ng Eng Hen clarified that SAF medical officers do not revoke MCs issued by external doctors.

However, unit medical officers may conduct clinical reviews and, if necessary, propose amendments to the MC. Such amendments are made in consultation with the issuing doctor or by referring the serviceman to a relevant specialist.

Amendments, which may cover duration or activity exemptions, are infrequent, and servicemen may request a further review at any time.
 
The alleged demands by superiors, particularly DXOs over a NSF such as mandatory weekly mobile phone checks, constant live location sharing and selfies outside the NSF’s home, go beyond standard military protocol and appear to be an overreach of authority. These actions, directed at a NSF on valid medical leave and with an injury, is harassment and micromanagement that amounts to abuse.
 
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