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Serious Minister Shan- How out of touch can you be? Fucking unbelievable

Papsmearer

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Edmond Lim Sir , Maybe we could just call ourselves SINGAPOREANs regardless of race, language or religion ........Like · Reply · 11 · 2 hrs





Samuel Balraj Hello minister why it's too hard for you to say that simply we are all Singaporeans? Why need to mention of the race after the country.? Why 1st your identification?

Victor Tan I think just say we are Singaporean is good enough. Once we start to compartmentalise, we start to compare, problems start. Let's stop all these, just say we are One Singaporean. Cheers
 
He shd resign immediately. Paid million of dollars to minister get trash like him.

Jesus christ.
 
If he was selected from the tea party with PM. I think it is not tea but opium.
 
The more I repeatedly read it the more I am confused.

Like telling we are not chinese Christian. We are not English Christian. We are not Malay Christian. We a God Christian.

Hmmmm. I am confused.
 
Is he a shitskin or a shitskin shit?

Is he indirectly tell those filthy india indians leeching in East Coast to fuck off since they don't belong here?
 
This WW2 veteran even tells Shan that there we should look at each other as Singaporens. Not as Chinese, Malay, or Indians.

SINGAPORE: In Mr Ishwar Lall Singh's Yishun home, the fragments of his military past have lost their shine. A faded peak cap sits on a worn coffee table, sharing the space with long service medals, epaulettes and an old sword caked in rust. But while parts of his uniform have faded, the 87-year-old's memories of Singapore’s fall to the Japanese remain fresh.
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[h=3](Photo: Kenneth Lim) [/h]​
"I was a young 12-, 13-year-old boy,” Mr Ishwar said. “There was a lot of shelling and bombing, a lot of destruction of property, a lot of people being killed - I saw some dead people, with worms crawling in them. I saw that myself."
Mr Ishwar is a survivor of World War II and part of a group of 61 former veterans and national servicemen who share their experiences regularly with students and active servicemen, as part of a Ministry of Defence programme. Since the programme began in early 2015, the group has reached more than 12,000 individuals, including students from more than 80 schools as well as more than 8,000 people in the Singapore Armed Forces.
"We had to queue up for a few rations of corn bread (which was) difficult to eat, rice and some vegetables,” said Mr Ishwar. “This was given on a whim and fancy - it was not a regular thing. Sometimes we queued up and waited for the ration truck to come, and it never came."
But for him, the Japanese Occupation was about more than going without food.
"We lost our independence; we were not able to do what we wanted when we wanted. We lost that,” Mr Ishwar said. “The Japanese restricted us from doing quite a lot of things. For example, if you wanted to go to a cinema, there was a fear that if you went to a cinema, you may not come back."
According to Mr Ishwar, Japanese soldiers would pack cinema audiences into trucks at the end of the shows, driving them to Bahar in Johor.
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[h=3]Mr Ishwar showing old photos from his collection. (Photo: Kenneth Lim)[/h]​
“We were under British rule, who were not actually looking after us at that time,” he said. “The Japanese were able to force themselves into Singapore because we were not willing fighters. We did not have Singaporeans who were fighting to defend their own country."
But Mr Ishwar was not one of them. He joined the Indian National Army in 1943. Years later, after working as a trishaw rider, storeman and laundry clerk, he joined the Singapore Volunteer Corps, known today as the People's Defence Force.
"We kept growing,” he said of the Singapore Armed Forces’ predecessor. “We kept getting better, we started to build camps, we had our National Day Parades, which were very obvious to show that the people were united. We realised the importance of being a free people.”
This year marks the 75th anniversary of Singapore's fall. And today, the father of three and grandfather of seven said his fight is against complacency, or making sure Singaporeans do not forget “the price of freedom”.
"I am afraid that people in Singapore are not yet aware of this - partly I blame the Government,” he said wryly. “Because we have been at peace for 50 years - that's the Government's efficiency, the Government's effectiveness, but this has made people (assume) that nothing is going to happen."
"WE WILL HAVE TO UNITE"
While Mr Ishwar regularly shares his story as part of the engagement programme, this is only the beginning for the retired major.
"My hope for Singapore is that it will grow, (that) it will grow peacefully, it will be allowed to grow,” he said. “We will not be bullied, we will not accept bullying - we will have to unite."
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He said one way to do so is to ensure racial harmony truly exists in Singapore.
"The word 'Singaporean' must be understood by everybody,” he said, citing weddings or festivals as one way people of different races could get to know each other better.

“We should look at each other as that - not as Chinese, Malay or Indian. This is something we need to understand, to raise our children to think along those lines. If we can begin to understand these things, we will begin to respect each other's religion. We will begin to respect each other's race; we will begin to respect each other's doings."
“We must always remember that a little spark in the wrong time at the wrong place can cause a lot of problems for Singaporeans,” he added. “And we don't want that peaceful time that we've had for 50 years to be shattered."
 
...what can we expect from a snake..with fork tongue...never ending venom..
 
So old! Lousy lah SPH. That's nothing compared to the 56 year old chap awarded the Victoria Cross that Victor Lye found while doing walkabouts at Aljunied.
 
Thats the muthafarking truth,we are singaporean chinese,singaporean malay and singaporean indian and thats different from china chinese,India Indian and Malaysian Malays.

So stop inviting all these trashes and telling us we are all fucking singaporeans.....they are not fucking singaporeans.just like im not a fucking australian chinese or american born chink.maybe one day their grandchildren will be one of us,but until SINGAPORE IS for Singaporeans!!!!!
 
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chow bayee sinkie telling us what we already know
 
When I was young malays, indians, eurasians and chinese kids and adults mix together. Some can speak Hokkien well and there were seldom any disputes. Playing football then was truely fun.
All these changed when LKY and PAP came into power. Through the years fault lines between races became more distinct and they keep asking why.
 
Talk about racism.. The PAP is the one that plays the race card to achieve its own ends. Look at Tang Liang Hong n Chinesechauvinist n m&d president etc.. Bloody hypocrites
 
When I was young malays, indians, eurasians and chinese kids and adults mix together. Some can speak Hokkien well and there were seldom any disputes. Playing football then was truely fun.
All these changed when LKY and PAP came into power. Through the years fault lines between races became more distinct and they keep asking why.

Very true, I experience the same thing when growing up. and why the fuck are u staying in the same place as me?
 
When I was young malays, indians, eurasians and chinese kids and adults mix together. Some can speak Hokkien well and there were seldom any disputes. Playing football then was truely fun.
All these changed when LKY and PAP came into power. Through the years fault lines between races became more distinct and they keep asking why.

education bro and class warfare.....back then everyone was uneducated and kampong dwellers.all was equal in the land of the fishing village.

now u only encounter mats at mcdonalds or NS or when buying nasi lemak,occasionally theres one or two at my poker games.eurasian iv only ever met one in my one and half years of playing live poker.they are just too rare to talk about.

indians are indians,sonsabitches cannot be trusted.i first encountered the smelliness of indian B.O. in NS which ruined my innocent childlike naivete non expectations to their race.these people are extremely friendly,smooth talkers and great people persons,but u gotta watch ur backs all the time.they use their friendliness and smooth jiving like a ninja uses a smoke bomb.and its not just a isolated incident its a systemic problem,iv seen way too many of these snake examples to believe its just a coincidence.no wonder all the bankers are shitskins.
 
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education bro and class warfare.....back then everyone was uneducated and kampong dwellers.all was equal in the land of the fishing village.

now u only encounter mats at mcdonalds or NS or when buying nasi lemak,occasionally theres one or two at my poker games.eurasian iv only ever met one in my one and half years of playing live poker.they are just too rare to talk about.

indians are indians,sonsabitches cannot be trusted.i first encountered the smelliness of indian B.O. in NS which ruined my innocent childlike naivete non expectations to their race.these people are extremely friendly,smooth talkers and great people persons,but u gotta watch ur backs all the time.they use their friendliness and smooth jiving like a ninja uses a smoke bomb.and its not just a isolated incident its a systemic problem,iv seen way too many of these snake examples to believe its just a coincidence.no wonder all the bankers are shitskins.

Bro, you are quoting from a era much further back and I am not so old. You are too cynical in character. Condominiums were already in existence during that time and the matas are already wearing long pants.
 
When I was young malays, indians, eurasians and chinese kids and adults mix together. Some can speak Hokkien well and there were seldom any disputes. Playing football then was truely fun.
All these changed when LKY and PAP came into power. Through the years fault lines between races became more distinct and they keep asking why.

Not only played football with Malays, Indians, Eurasians,
flew kites, played marbles, fought spiders, etc.
 
no such thing as sinkie identity as it is only a myth and imagination among losers pining for one.
 
Not only played football with Malays, Indians, Eurasians,
flew kites, played marbles, fought spiders, etc.


Yep in those days there was really no
such thing as chinese, malays whatsover, I never considered myself chinese and my other races friends never did either.
 
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