Terroist leader escape from singapore prision

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PainRack
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Post by PainRack »

AniThyng wrote: So, is the Singaporean media using Islamist PAS's newfound clout and the teething problems in the totally unexpected Malaysian opposition coalition's state governments as a bogeyman for why singaporeans must never let the Opposition win? ;)
Nope. Not yet.
Certainly over here Malay supremicists are whining that the DAP will turn Penang in a Singapore, where Malays are oppressed. (yeah, right, Malays in singapore are so oppressed they flee to Malaysia, home of the words only affirmative action program for the majority race, *I'm a smarmy asshole*?)
To be honest, I rather they change the affirmative action laws here in Singapore. The air stinks of unofficial discrimination against the malays..... Its a topic that just never gets sufficient discussion
How the Chinese community is splintering
The state of the Malay community.
The Indian community rich/poor divide and need for assistence.

Racial community policies are screwed up in that regard. The government uses the old tactic of racial orientated policies in terms of aid, but refuse to open up racial issues due to fears of racial division. The censorship means that its difficult to actually address any issue regarding race and religion.
Let him land on any Lyran world to taste firsthand the wrath of peace loving people thwarted by the myopic greed of a few miserly old farts- Katrina Steiner
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PainRack
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Post by PainRack »

Fingolfin_Noldor wrote: How misleading is it?
Because your argument was that they focused entirely on economics as opposed to society development. The truth is, they DID. That was one of the reasons for opposition, due to the vast changes they made. The real crux is they didn't enforce the changes YOU want.

Jaya "caring society" of the 80s wasn't enacted then, but the trend is in that direction now.
As it is, the quality of education wasn't stellar back in those days, and not enough was done to keep students in school, especially the poor ones.
Errr....... what do you base this on?
A lot of the current social problems stem from the fact that many up to the 80s did not have education beyond secondary school level and only a few made it far into the university.
Again, on what do you base this? By the late seventies, O level completion was already routine. Granted, degree completion only began to blossom in the nineties.
If you mean developing a culture of fear and a rather progressive society, I will concede that. But developing a culture of innovation did not feature on that list. Rather, they decided to just raise a country of factory workers, and kept following that path till the shit hit the fan in 1997 and 2001 when the manufacturing sector imploded.
So, you're going to blame the Dutch UN economist?
Virtually all the East Asian countries, including Japan adopted the industrial model of economics and education. Japan education is even more rote based and industrial, yet, its also the key hub of R&D in electronics. You're simply condemning whats is the natural maturation of industry and economy. You can't simply leap from having no manufacturing base to becoming a leading hub of R&D. Similarly, you also can't expect a country with no economic base other than that provided by services to the Malayan hinterland and British trade to suddenly offer research science. Much less a country with poor literacy and education in the 60s.........
Any attempt at innovation or research was a joke, not least NUS and NTU's nonsensical and stupid attempt to publish papers on banana paper and making research a joke in Singapore. The leap into biotech is almost too little too late and it will take decades and tonnes of money to catch up, assuming the bureaucrats have that much patience.
Except that government support into R&D actually began back in the nineties. ASTAR itself is just one of the many projects linked. You may question the efficiency of the policies, but you're simply raising up red herrings.
And how does this relate to the lack of a vocal society? Destroying power structures relate to a vocal society how?
I'm not. I'm merely pointing out YOUR mistakes. You claim that the reason why society isn't vocal is because the people have been bribed into silence. Its not. Its because the various traditional means of political organisations and powers were literally crushed during the Communist troubles as well as racial riots.
The only community to emerge intact surprisingly has the largest voice. Get what it is? Big Business.
As some of the other board members, such as Stas Bush and Stuart will tell you, the jostling between Communist Russia and the West is simply another tangle between the Great Powers than anything else.
And where has I claimed otherwise? Oh wait, I haven't.
What simply happened was the PAP chose for us to stick with the British rather than choose the other Power to side with.
Actually, we chose to suck up to every single power under the sun save the Soviet Union until the late 80s. Note the concessions given to China and Japan.
Under that context, it is simply put "You are with me or against me." A threat? Between the Indonesians, which actually infiltrated commandos and bombed buildings, the Barisan Socialist party is a toothless tiger.
Actually, communist infiltration of the country continued until the late seventies. As for the Indonesians, you don't know the security measures insituted against them. The degree of British/Australian involvement remains classified to this day, although the main bulk of our security measures involved the real area of conflict, namely, East Malaysia.
Heck, they are practically only as bad as UMNO who infiltrated Singapore and stirred up race riots. I would like to see the PAP dare to lock up any UMNO sympathizers.
The PAP crushed the various Malay parties of the time and deported others.
If Barisan Socialist party were instead in power, the PAP would have viewed as an attempt by the British to seize power in Singapore and the positions would have been reversed. Why, by your argument, we should have had LKY locked up for colluding with the enemy. Have you considered that the history was written by the victors? You are mistaking righteousness for ambition.
lol. Why is it that your only attempt at argument is to always raise up false positions and attribute positions to others that they didn't take?
The Barisan Socialist were essentially the crux of Chinese chauvinists and communists that split away from the party. Coldplay was initiated using communists as the threat.
And yet, for all the so-called enhancement of power, the PAP still saw fit to lock up some of them for 30 years, refused entry to any of the exiles, or even allow books by them to be published. Even going so far as locking up and exiling 20 or so social activists under the ISA in the 1980s accusing them of communism. You are a supporter of George W Bush are you?
So? I'm not in favour of the anti-communist hysteria BTW or even the existing ISA. I'm merely pointing out that your arguments, that the Communists weren't actively trying to take power in Singapore is wrong. They were.
Commparing them to Confrontation is misleading because the government did insitute security measures, including bomb searches and border security against infiltration. Not to mention assisting the British and Malaysians in jungle operations in Sabah, as well as drawing in British/Australian intelligence support, part of which still remains classified.
The last issue would be whether anti-communist action was appropriate. Considering that the Malayan Emergency was still ongoing and the context of international and local politics, its certainly was. Becoming communist aligned would had cut us off from our traditional economic and political support in the world, from Britain and the Commonwealth, America and Malaysia. Much less Indonesia which adopted an anti-communist attitude after Confrontation.
For what fuck does this even fucking even matter anything on the scale of things?
Other than the fact that it shows your pathetic strawman about the people not caring is utterly false? Petitions for gay rights and parades, anti war movement and of course, 277a shows that there IS an active civil rights movement in Singapore as well as interest in Singapore laws and rights.

But hey, keep moaning that the people don't care, k? You can go to your emo corner right over there while us grown ups try to get things done.
Let him land on any Lyran world to taste firsthand the wrath of peace loving people thwarted by the myopic greed of a few miserly old farts- Katrina Steiner
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Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

PainRack wrote:Because your argument was that they focused entirely on economics as opposed to society development. The truth is, they DID. That was one of the reasons for opposition, due to the vast changes they made. The real crux is they didn't enforce the changes YOU want.
Er yah, it took you that long to figure it out did you? Or are you as usual opposing for the sake of opposing?
Errr....... what do you base this on?
:roll: Tell me now, has it failed to occur to you that education in those days weren't too developed and that a lot of the people of that generation weren't particularly well-educated? Or has the statistics flown you by? Or you haven't seen first hand school dropouts in the army? Or you forgotten the fact that the Army used to have entire companies of hokkien speaking people who are still alive today and most likely jobless?
Again, on what do you base this? By the late seventies, O level completion was already routine. Granted, degree completion only began to blossom in the nineties.
What use is an O' level cert these days? Or has it not occurred to you that many of the people who were permanently unemployed had an O' Level cert or less?
So, you're going to blame the Dutch UN economist?
Virtually all the East Asian countries, including Japan adopted the industrial model of economics and education. Japan education is even more rote based and industrial, yet, its also the key hub of R&D in electronics. You're simply condemning whats is the natural maturation of industry and economy. You can't simply leap from having no manufacturing base to becoming a leading hub of R&D. Similarly, you also can't expect a country with no economic base other than that provided by services to the Malayan hinterland and British trade to suddenly offer research science. Much less a country with poor literacy and education in the 60s.........
Mind then can you explain how the Cubans developed a significant Biotech R&D sector or the Israelis for that matter (Aside from the fact that the average Israeli is probably smarter than the average Singaporean, judging from the level of innovation)? The Cubans are even more ironic since they had little access to important raw materials for even a significant manufacturing industry. Could it have been done? Probably? Did I condemn the maturation of the economy? Who's the strawmaning moron now? The manufacturing sector was obviously necessary, but were attempts made with eye to the future? Obviously NOT.
Except that government support into R&D actually began back in the nineties. ASTAR itself is just one of the many projects linked. You may question the efficiency of the policies, but you're simply raising up red herrings.
How is this a red herring when I was being more specific about my complaints? Or are you looking for cheap feeble points as usual? All the attempts at R&D in the 90s were so pathetic, that Thomson ISI rated Singapore in the order of the 92nd in 2004 in terms of citations per paper, excluding self-citations: http://www.newsintercom.org/index.php?itemid=288 (THe old url for the list is dead or not free, but this post preserved the contents of the statistic.)
I'm not. I'm merely pointing out YOUR mistakes. You claim that the reason why society isn't vocal is because the people have been bribed into silence. Its not. Its because the various traditional means of political organisations and powers were literally crushed during the Communist troubles as well as racial riots.

The only community to emerge intact surprisingly has the largest voice. Get what it is? Big Business.
:roll: So... the past and the present relate how now? And er, where did the bribes come in? Last I checked, I didn't even write anything related, much less alluded to bribery. And Big Business? Yeah, given how the Government is so pro-business, is that supposed to be a surprise? Or am I supposed to grovel? Where is the people's voice now? Aside in some secluded corner of the web in some forum hosted in an overseas server?
Actually, we chose to suck up to every single power under the sun save the Soviet Union until the late 80s. Note the concessions given to China and Japan.
Naturally, since it is part of our policy to be a friend to just with about anyone who would give us money. We nearly accepted a few billion dollar aid from the Soviet Union to build a rail system, only rejecting probably in part political and in part because the Government didn't think there was a need for one back then. Goh Keng Swee not fancying a rail system probably added more to it.
Actually, communist infiltration of the country continued until the late seventies. As for the Indonesians, you don't know the security measures insituted against them. The degree of British/Australian involvement remains classified to this day, although the main bulk of our security measures involved the real area of conflict, namely, East Malaysia.
Certainly no guerrilla war was fought, else it would have been bloody obvious there was a war on our hands. If it was to do with Bomb making, how blowing up buildings would win the people over to the Communists is beyond me. Mind you, the Communists in Singapore were working towards more of destabilizing the Government, and forcing the current Government to step down. By and large, their motives were largely to achieve it through political means. Protests and what not were merely to pressure the Government to bow to their demands.
The PAP crushed the various Malay parties of the time and deported others.
Largely deporting those that came down from Malaysia and forming the local UMNO party and so forth.
lol. Why is it that your only attempt at argument is to always raise up false positions and attribute positions to others that they didn't take?
The Barisan Socialist were essentially the crux of Chinese chauvinists and communists that split away from the party. Coldplay was initiated using communists as the threat.
Which part of it was false position, when I suggested a scenario? Or did the word "scenario" suddenly disappear from the dictionary?
So? I'm not in favour of the anti-communist hysteria BTW or even the existing ISA. I'm merely pointing out that your arguments, that the Communists weren't actively trying to take power in Singapore is wrong. They were.
Where did I say the Communists weren't actively taking power? Between your lack of a reading comprehension, and your constant strawmanning, I am beginning to suspect the former. If you are going to use big words in debating, get your fucking reading comprehension right. My entire gist of the argument has been from the start that the PAP grossly inflated the communist threat and that LKY has been a manipulative bastard coveting power from the start, going in so far as colluding with the communists just to gain power to pursue his own agenda, and then pursuing a vendetta after they opposed him and abandoned their erstwhile alliance.
Commparing them to Confrontation is misleading because the government did insitute security measures, including bomb searches and border security against infiltration. Not to mention assisting the British and Malaysians in jungle operations in Sabah, as well as drawing in British/Australian intelligence support, part of which still remains classified.
Agreed, though obviously it wasn't enough to stop them from bombing that building.
The last issue would be whether anti-communist action was appropriate. Considering that the Malayan Emergency was still ongoing and the context of international and local politics, its certainly was. Becoming communist aligned would had cut us off from our traditional economic and political support in the world, from Britain and the Commonwealth, America and Malaysia. Much less Indonesia which adopted an anti-communist attitude after Confrontation.
My argument thus far, has been that the anti-communist action has been excessive, hence why I disagreed with the 30 year house arrest imposed on many ex-Barisan Socialist members. Quite frankly, it could be well proven that they intended to stirr up trouble and as I understand it, inciting riots was a chargeable offence. If you are going stop the violence, at least do it in the context of the law and not some act that allows one to bypass the law. If there is a need to charge with treason, then damn hell do it. The ISA should not be, and should never be used as a legal short cut.
Other than the fact that it shows your pathetic strawman about the people not caring is utterly false? Petitions for gay rights and parades, anti war movement and of course, 277a shows that there IS an active civil rights movement in Singapore as well as interest in Singapore laws and rights.
Did you indulge in fallacy of overgeneralisation when all this so called caring constitutes a pathetic statistically insignificant minority of the population of some 3.8 million or so? And does 10K signatures constitute anything in this fucking country while the fucking majority are homophobics?
But hey, keep moaning that the people don't care, k? You can go to your emo corner right over there while us grown ups try to get things done.
Yeah sure, I will be sure to scan my Math and Physics degree certs in a couple of months when I graduate from the University of Michigan and return home to work. :roll:
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Post by ray245 »

Hmmm....speaking of how the PAP manage things in the past, is there ANY political parties that have shown some sort of 'evidence' that they can manage singapore better in terms of their idealogy?
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Post by PainRack »

Fingolfin_Noldor wrote: Er yah, it took you that long to figure it out did you? Or are you as usual opposing for the sake of opposing?
Rather. Its because you claimed Instead, they placed economic development on the top priority with development of society a far distance third or fourth, if it was even ever on the list..
I chose to address your claim directly, and then addressed your intent second.
:roll: Tell me now, has it failed to occur to you that education in those days weren't too developed and that a lot of the people of that generation weren't particularly well-educated? Or has the statistics flown you by? Or you haven't seen first hand school dropouts in the army? Or you forgotten the fact that the Army used to have entire companies of hokkien speaking people who are still alive today and most likely jobless?
Ahem. You claim that not enough was done to keep students in school, especially the poor ones. Your basis for that claim?
What use is an O' level cert these days? Or has it not occurred to you that many of the people who were permanently unemployed had an O' Level cert or less?
Now.During the seventies, an O level English WAS good enough, allowing you to enter clerical services.
Mind then can you explain how the Cubans developed a significant Biotech R&D sector or the Israelis for that matter (Aside from the fact that the average Israeli is probably smarter than the average Singaporean, judging from the level of innovation)? The Cubans are even more ironic since they had little access to important raw materials for even a significant manufacturing industry. Could it have been done? Probably? Did I condemn the maturation of the economy? Who's the strawmaning moron now? The manufacturing sector was obviously necessary, but were attempts made with eye to the future? Obviously NOT.
And you're making errorneous claims as usual. Do you even know what A*STAR is?
Are you even aware of the level of engineering and research going on in chemical and yard work? Not to mention Creative soundcards in the nineties? Hey, let's stick to innovative? Oh Yes. Osim... F&B? Yeo's drink, Yar Kun and even Klinney.
The irony is that you're claiming that the Singaporean government hasn't created a magical R&D and other enterprises out of scratch. Yet, the main complaint by others is that by locking up expertise, the government is denying private enterprise the ability to conduct their own R&D.
Considering that PM Goh has been harping on the need to go global and praising Creative as the ultimate entrepreneurs and research genius since 1995, you're obviously full of shit as usual.
How is this a red herring when I was being more specific about my complaints? Or are you looking for cheap feeble points as usual? All the attempts at R&D in the 90s were so pathetic, that Thomson ISI rated Singapore in the order of the 92nd in 2004 in terms of citations per paper, excluding self-citations: http://www.newsintercom.org/index.php?itemid=288 (THe old url for the list is dead or not free, but this post preserved the contents of the statistic.)
Nice goalpost shifting. First you complain that nobody cared about R&D and innovation, now, you complain that the government attempts sucked so badly that its ineffective.And your measure of effectiveness is citations per paper?

What about actual products and ideas? Hey, maybe we shouldn't just point to NavyField ja?
:roll: So... the past and the present relate how now? And er, where did the bribes come in? Last I checked, I didn't even write anything related, much less alluded to bribery.
Ahem. The single minded focus on jobs and economy, though it bore fruits on which the PAP continues to coast along on those fruits, it failed to nurture a society that was more vocal and more willing to challenge societal norms. Instead, they allowed Lee Kuan Yew to pursue his own vendetta against the Communists, going so far as locking some of them for decades.

As for the past and present, are you daft? Without any prevalent means of opposition, new means and methods had to be created from scratch. The internet is only just one of the new ways of presenting differing opinions, with alternative media finding more room to express itself outside the ST forums, which are biased and limited by editor choice. With more "free space", the highly censored means of MP sessions,letter feedback and ST forums was blasted open. But even so, its still a trickle and its still being developed. While many civil rights organisations such as AWARE has been in existence for decades, it has also been until the nineties where the presence of more media had allowed them more opportunities to educate and present their dissenting views.
And Big Business? Yeah, given how the Government is so pro-business, is that supposed to be a surprise? Or am I supposed to grovel? Where is the people's voice now? Aside in some secluded corner of the web in some forum hosted in an overseas server?
Your point being? Stop with the sniping and address the issue. Its clear you agree that the only community which emerged with its voice intact.... had the biggest say in politics.

Certainly no guerrilla war was fought, else it would have been bloody obvious there was a war on our hands. If it was to do with Bomb making, how blowing up buildings would win the people over to the Communists is beyond me. Mind you, the Communists in Singapore were working towards more of destabilizing the Government, and forcing the current Government to step down. By and large, their motives were largely to achieve it through political means. Protests and what not were merely to pressure the Government to bow to their demands.
The only reason why militant action was directly ruled out, is because Chin Peng had advocated the revision of the MCP policy while in Perak. The failure of armed insurgency was clear back then in the 60s, and his new directives of taking the fight to politics was slowly distributed down the MCP command chain. It was too late to affect the Emergency in general, but it revived their political organisations in the cities by redirecting attention there.
Which part of it was false position, when I suggested a scenario? Or did the word "scenario" suddenly disappear from the dictionary?
Ahem.
Have you considered that the history was written by the victors? You are mistaking righteousness for ambition.
Where did I say the Communists weren't actively taking power?
Correction. I should had stated, that you assumed their actions to take power was not threatening to Singapore position, both externally and internally.
My entire gist of the argument has been from the start that the PAP grossly inflated the communist threat and that LKY has been a manipulative bastard coveting power from the start, going in so far as colluding with the communists just to gain power to pursue his own agenda, and then pursuing a vendetta after they opposed him and abandoned their erstwhile alliance.
Actually, LKY abandoned the alliance and turned on the Communists so as to prove to the British and the Tunku that Singapore was fit to join Malaysia. If you read his memoirs as well as the Tunku own statements, the existence of the Communist faction in the PAP was one of the major barriers against entry towards Malaysia, a pet goal for the PAP. As for grossly inflating the communist threat, you're looking at the endpoint of 1 decade of Malayan Emergency, a war in everything save name when Coldplay was initiated.
Agreed, though obviously it wasn't enough to stop them from bombing that building.
And you don't know how many other bombs were disarmed. I had the opportunity to train under one of the SCE bomb experts who served during that time. He gave us examples of what occured back then.
My argument thus far, has been that the anti-communist action has been excessive, hence why I disagreed with the 30 year house arrest imposed on many ex-Barisan Socialist members.
What 30 year house arrest members? There has only been 1 person who got that treatment. The majority got detained for a couple of years and were either deported or then released back into Society. Was it unfair? Certainly.
Quite frankly, it could be well proven that they intended to stirr up trouble and as I understand it, inciting riots was a chargeable offence. If you are going stop the violence, at least do it in the context of the law and not some act that allows one to bypass the law. If there is a need to charge with treason, then damn hell do it. The ISA should not be, and should never be used as a legal short cut.
I disagree. Its isn't a legal short cut, its created an entirely new legal process entirely. Which is why the ISA required revision, and the only reason why the defeat of the relevant act was never boohooed on the internet a couple of years back was because 9/11 occurred.

Frankly, the time to revise that law is long overdue. You might want to start up a new petition.
Did you indulge in fallacy of overgeneralisation when all this so called caring constitutes a pathetic statistically insignificant minority of the population of some 3.8 million or so? And does 10K signatures constitute anything in this fucking country while the fucking majority are homophobics?
Because you fucking claim that all of us don't care you dipshit.
Ever heard of the silent majority? Or in this case, the active non vocal majority?
Do you honestly believe that the fucking majority of people are homophobics? If so, why isn't anyone boycotting David Gan? Why is Kumar still walking around scot free? Hey. Perhaps you might explain to me why Zouk is so comfortable holding lesbian and gay parties and functions and there exist gay bars such as Rainbow and Venom, which have unfortunately closed after the recession?
Even on the political forums, where we should expect a high concentration of conservatives, we seen homosexuals and their supporters arguing there.


Yeah sure, I will be sure to scan my Math and Physics degree certs in a couple of months when I graduate from the University of Michigan and return home to work. :roll:
Does that matter when the only thing you have ever done is simply whine and moan, without even trying to get changes done? You don't even ATTEMPT to see how the changes could be made to achieve your vision. That's pathetic. Even just empty talk and discussion on how society could change is infinitely better than you just complaining.
Let him land on any Lyran world to taste firsthand the wrath of peace loving people thwarted by the myopic greed of a few miserly old farts- Katrina Steiner
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Post by AniThyng »

ray245 wrote:Hmmm....speaking of how the PAP manage things in the past, is there ANY political parties that have shown some sort of 'evidence' that they can manage singapore better in terms of their idealogy?
For what its worth, what you really need is for the opposition, doesn't really matter who it is, to get enough votes to break the PAP's 2/3rds majority. That alone will be a catalyst for change.

Though I stand by my previous assertions that the opposition is certainly not prepared to run the country, nor are they necessarily prepared to run states. But you need an opposition, that much is clear.
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