Well, to be honest, our transportation system reached a saturation point some years back, and even our Government, after a lot of rumblings on the ground for years about the lack of improvement in transportation services, admitted at much and were getting about the business of expanding it. Though whether that helps or not, well, I don't really care much these days, unless it starts hindering my ability to go to work.AniThyng wrote:Perhaps so. I suppose we're somewhat on different wavelengths on this - I'm certainly a lot more tolerant of our governments autocratic tendencies.
To be fair when I was in Singapore, what I noticed was a terrific public transport system, clean streets and prices that made me feel poor (in Malaysia, I am comfortably middle class). I didn't exactly go out of my way to wander to an opposition HDB flat or consider that the old folks working is a symptom of a failing welfare state or whatever. I'm sure I missed many of Singapore's faults
We don't quite have a "welfare state". It's a dirty word insofar as the government is considered, but prefer some form of "passionate conservatism" where you fund your own retirement and the state won't give a swat if you didn't earn enough. As for old folks working, it's probably largely due to the fact that the old folks didn't have much of an education level to have earned enough CPF (if they even have CPF) to be able to retire well off enough.