The Ugly Singaporean Award
– that NICKLAS HANSEN, a disappointed visitor from Denmark, wrote a letter to TODAY about a younger woman pushing past an elderly one just to get a seat on the MRT train at City Hall. The woman, travelling with her husband and little daughter, alighted at the next stop at Dhoby Ghaut. (A photo of that bitch will do just fine.)
The World This Week
– that Pat Robertson warned residents of a rural Pennsylvania town that disaster may strike there because they ‘voted God out of your city’ by ousting school board members who favored teaching intelligent design. All eight Dover, Pa., school board members up for re-election were defeated Tuesday after trying to introduce ‘intelligent design’ – the belief that the universe is so complex that it must have been created by a higher power – as an alternative to the theory of evolution. “I’d like to say to the good citizens of Dover: If there is a disaster in your area, don’t turn to God. You just rejected him from your city,” Robertson said on the Christian Broadcasting Network’s ‘700 Club’. (How can a messenger of God ask people to not turn to Him? Oh, this is the same Pat Robertson who suggested that the U.S. should assassinate murder Chavez, right?)
– that Hillary Clinton said that she supports the separation fence Israel is building along the edges of the West Bank, and that the onus is on the Palestinian Authority to fight terrorism. “This is not against the Palestinian people,” Clinton, a New York Democrat, said during a tour of a section of the barrier being built around Jerusalem. “This is against the terrorists. The Palestinian people have to help to prevent terrorism. They have to change the attitudes about terrorism.” (No point offend the Jewish lobby if you want to run for President.)
– that across the U.S., pundits are salivating at the prospect of a 2008 presidential election between Condom-leezza Lice and Hillary Clinton. Iit is being called the match-up from heaven. (The Democrats may want to say, ‘We offer you the first women President and then throw in an Afro-American as Veep’, but it is not unexpected of the Republicans to say ‘We offer you the first woman and Black President in one package!’ Match-up from heaven, indeed.)
– that Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, the brother of Warmonger Bush, ruled out running for president in 2008 but left open the possibility of a subsequent bid in an interview with a German magazine. (Maybe you Americans love them. But some of us here among the rest of the world have had enough of Bushes, and Clits Clintons.)
– that 4 state legislators in Massachusetts have introduced a bill that would soften the crime of bestiality, a move pro-family activists say is a natural progression of the state’s legalizing same-sex marriage. The new measure would give activist judges the option of slapping perps with a mere two and a half years in plush local jails, or even letting zoophiliacs walk with a $5,000 fine. Previously, those convicted of ‘a sexual act on an animal’ could receive up to 20 years in prison. (They should be thankful that God is saving His wrath for the End Times ever since His Son went to the Cross. Otherwise, a close cousin of whatever that wiped out Sodom and Gommorah will be on its way.)
– that the American Civil Anti-Christ Liberties Union has filed suit over a Georgia law that exempts the Bible from sales taxes, calling it discriminatory. Candace Apple, owner of the Phoenix and Dragon Bookstore near Atlanta and a plaintiff in the suit, argues the exemption should apply to any book that addresses the meaning of life, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. (Well, which of those other books addressing the meaning of life helped the founders of the United States draft the Constitution?)
– that Warmonger Bush was urged to raise Beijing’s crackdown of the Falun Gong Far Long Gone ‘spiritual’ group during his talks this week with Chinese lea-duhs. “President Bush must bring up the Falun Gong Far Long Gone in his public meetings with President Hu Jintao and China’s lea-duhs, and call for, in unambiguous terms, an end to the suppression,” the group’s spokesman Erping Zhang said. “It is imperative China’s lea-duhship hear in strong terms that what they are doing to Falun Gong Far Long Gone is unacceptable and needs to stop,” he said in a statement. (Oh well, neither is the Far Long Gone’s irritating anti-China propaganda acceptable. And it needs to stop as well, in Singapore.)
– that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez accused Mexican lea-duh Vicente Fox of being a ‘puppy’ of Warmonger Bush and said: “Don’t mess with me, sir.” Fox shot back that ‘we have dignity in this country’ and demanded an apology. Now the two nations are withdrawing their ambassadors. (Fight lah! Fight lah! Talk so much.)
– that he brutal slaying of an unarmed police officer who interrupted a robbery in Bradford city centre has had an unexpected fallout: Calls for the death penalty to be reinstated in Britain. (It is easy to say we should be humane and treat murderers humanely and that putting them to death is a matter of revenge and being barbaric, until murder happens before our very eyes in all its ugly ‘glory’ or happen to one of our family.)
– that a long-awaited Vatican document says practicing gays, those with ‘deeply rooted’ homosexual tendencies or those who support gay culture cannot be admitted to the priesthood, an Italian newspaper reported. “The church cannot admit to the priesthood those who practice homosexuality, present deeply rooted homosexual tendencies or who support the so-called ‘gay culture’.” the newspaper said, citing the document. (Way to go, Pope Benedict XVI! And it’s high time the world take back the word gay from the homosexuals. Otherwise no one can sing ‘Old Black Joe’ anymore, because this is how it starts “Gone are the days, when my heart was young and gay.”)
– that the French cabinet is to ask parliament to extend by three months a state of emergency aimed at tackling unrest in impoverished suburbs. The laws, which allow local councils to impose curfews and ban gatherings, were introduced for 12 days. (They should get help from China. Really.)
– that a French gover-min bill extending until February a state of emergency will be presented to the national assembly after President Jacques Chirac said that widespread rioting in the country revealed a deep identity crisis. In his first address to the nation since the troubles began on October 27, Chirac vowed to fight the ‘poison’ of discrimination faced by France’s immigrant communities and described the unrest as ‘a crisis of meaning, a crisis of identity’. (It is a crisis that is a result of not just the ‘poison’ of discrimination, but also the ‘poison’ of refusal to assimilate.)
– that as Australian police combed through the evidence seized in a string of raids that thwarted major terror attacks in Melbourne and Sydney, investigations revealed that a competition was brewing between two terror cells based in the two cities to be the first to deliver the death-bomb in the country. Detectives said that cell members were anxious to become martyrs and that the Melbourne cell wanted ‘to do something’ about the fact that the Sydney group appeared to be leading in the race to stage an attack. (If they wanted to die so badly, just die quietly without taking innocents along with them. A simpler way would be to find a long beam, and all of them can each fashion a noose to see who can hang himself faster.)
– that the Al Qaeda in Iraq group has claimed responsibility for three hotel bombings that killed at least 56 people in Amman, the biggest outbreak of violence in Jordan since 1970. Hours after the attack, Abu Mussab Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born lea-duh who heads Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda cell in Iraq, said in a statement on the Internet that his followers carried out the attacks, Jordan’s state news agency, Petra reported. The blasts at the Radisson SAS hotel, the Hyatt Amman and the Days Inn killed at least 56 people and wounded more than 93 others. Investigations later in the day led to the arrest of several people in connection with the attacks, AFP reported, citing an unidentified security official. (Zarqawi should be allowed to die painlessly. He should be killed in such a way whereby he slowly lose his senses, and can actually feel his awareness slowly slip away until the last thing he knew is that his awareness is like the only spot of light of a switched off television screen, before it winked out. Yes, that is how Zarqawi should die. And of course, families of the terrorists should be given a copy of Osama’s Secret Diary.)
– that calling the terrorist al Qaeda in Iraq lea-duh a ‘lowlife’, Jordanians flooded the nation’s capital in bitter protest of the triple suicide bombings that shook the city a day earlier and killed at least 56 people, most of Arab descent. “Burn in hell, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi!” hundreds of protesters shouted, denouncing the terrorist network’s lea-duh – a Jordan native – after an Internet posting stated his group was responsible for the attacks. (Now it’s time to turn that anger into strength by rooting out the terrorists in your midst.)
– that despite admissions by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and a would-be Iraqi female suicide bomber, Iran says Israel was responsible for the deadly blasts that killed 57 people last week at three hotels in Jordan. “The explosions in Jordan are a suspicious matter. Most probably the Zionist regime (Israel) was behind them,” Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi told reporters. (And Iran is behind it whenever someone in the world has constipation or diarrhea.)
– that as part of their campaign for upcoming ‘Palestinian’ elections, senior politicians from Fatah Party have been advocating the past few days continued terror attacks against Israel, including the firing of missiles, until the Jewish state leaves the West Bank and Jerusalem. The rhetoric comes in spite of a cease-fire signed by Abbas and Ariel Sharon, and Abbas’ pledge to the international community to disarm the ‘Palestinian’ terror groups. (And it is almost unlikely that it’s just election rhetorics.)
– that even though 4 official investigations and a hospital pathology report failed to find evidence of foreign substances in late Yasser Arafat’s bloodstream, a former senior Arafat aide claimed an Israeli assassin killed the ‘Palestinian’ lea-duh by blowing a slow-acting poison into his ear. (Oh really? I thought he die of syphillis.)
– that Warmonger Bush was due in Japan late Nov 15 to begin a week-long trip to Asia, hoping for progress on the North Korean nuclear crisis and aiming for action against deadly bird flu. After a refuelling stop at a military base in Alaska, the US president headed for Kyoto, where he was to tour Japan’s most-visited Buddhist temple on Wednesday before holding talks with Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. In a seperate news, an earthquake measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale shook northern Japan early Nov 15, causing authorities to issue a tsunami warning and evacuate hundreds of coastal homes, officials said. Tsunamis measuring up to 50 centimetres (20 inches) hit the Japanese east coast about one hour after the undersea quake hit at 6:39 am (2139 GMT), local officials said, but there were no reports of any damage or casualties. (There’s no clearer sign even the part of the Earth at Japan doesn’t welcome Warmonger Bush.)
– that China said it had no plans for a summit with Japan to improve relations stretched to breaking point over Konkz-umi’s visits to a controversial war shrine. “We have not arranged for talks at this level,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang told AFP here ahead of an Asia-Pacific summit to be attended by both Konkz-umi and Chinese President Hu Jintao. (No point talking to someone with a forked tongue and claiming to be leaving his post in a year.)
– that China has vowed to vaccinate all of its estimated 14 billion poultry to contain the spread of bird flu. In his announcement, Chief veterinary officer Jia Youling said all the fees would be covered by the gover-min. The move comes as new outbreaks of bird flu were confirmed in several regions of China in the past month. (So what’s the point when people are going to eat them later anyway? Above which, the virus will just mutate into another form that the vaccine can’t do shit about.)
– that Warmonger Bush prodded China to grant more political freedom to its 1.3 billion people and held up archrival Taiwan as a society that successfully moved from repression to democraZy as it opened its economy. In remarks sure to rile Beijing, Bush suggested China should follow Taiwan’s path. “Modern Taiwan is free and democratic and prosperous. By embracing freedom at all levels, Taiwan has delivered prosperity to its people and created a free and democratic Chinese society,” Warmonger said. (Well, it makes no difference which path China takes if there’s no change in the level of corruption. While corruption is not appreciated, China can do without the kind of political mess in Taiwan.)
– that 3 urns have been stolen from a crematorium here and notes left in their places demanding a ransom of HK$50,000 for the safe return of each set of ashes. A 27-year-old worker at the Tseung Kwan O Chinese Permanent Cemetery, the city’s largest, discovered the empty niches. (They can keep the urns and try and sell them to others for HK$50,000.)
– that Chen Shui-bian has dismissed criticism of his disclosure of the amount of aid given to former ally Senegal. Chen said the cost of the West African nation’s move to switch diplomatic recognition to Beijing needed to be made public. “If the President does not say it out, then nobody would know. Can we let ourselves be bullied in this way?” he said while campaigning for candidates from the ruling DPP who are contesting elections for city mayors and county magistrates next month. (Chen apparently likes to make himself the butt of all jokes. He is welcomed to do so often had he not make the people who elected him look like fools.)
– that in a move expected to stir further outcry, Taiwan’s state media regulator fined a Hong Kong-invested cable news network NT$1 million on charges of violating a media ownership law. “We decided to fine TVBS NT$1 million as its investor portfolio has violated Article 38 of the Broadcasting and Television Law,” Mr Pasuya Yao, head of the Government Information Office (GIO), said. (Would they award TVBS NT$1 million had it exposed dirt of the opposition instead?)
– that Myanmar’s military junta started moving key ministries to a secret location in the mountains and dense forest. The ruling generals made no announcement concerning the move. But officials said the relocation of the commerce, foreign, home affairs and post and telecommunications ministries to Pyinmana, about 320km north of the capital Yangon has began on Nov 6. Analysts say the move – under preparation for several months – was prompted by fears of an invasion by the U.S., one of the junta’s staunchest critics. (Got oil? No oil, no worries.)
that members of a Thai transvestite gang have confessed to hiding strong sedatives in their mouths and spitting them down the throats of victims during deep kissing. Then they rob the drugged tourists. The confession came from three attractive transvestites arrested in Bangkok last week. Police say they’d robbed a Bangladeshi businessman of more than $7,300 in cash and valuables. A police lieutenant colonel has this warning for tourists: “Don’t rush to kiss a stranger on the mouth or you will end up in a deep sleep.” (A deserving fate for the perverts with such interests.)
– that after three years on the run, Azahari Husin, one of Asia’s most wanted men, met his death in a manner befitting a master bomb-maker – blowing himself to bits as anti-terrorist police stormed his hideout in Batu, East Java. Within 24 hours, forensic detectives had confirmed through fingerprint and DNA tests that one of the two bodies found following the Wednesday night blasts was Azahari’s. “The fingerprints match those sent by the Malaysian police,” deputy police spokesman Sunarko Danu Ardanto told reporters. (A deserving end for a mass murderer. Too bad he can’t die a the number of times equal to the number of people his bombs have killed.)
– that a balaclava-clad man, believed to be Malaysian Noordin Mohammad Top, threatened Western nations in a recording found in the hideout of Azahari Husin. Noordin and Azahari have been accused of being top members of the Al Qaeda-linked regional Jemaah Islamiyah terror network and blamed for the 2002 Bali bombings and a string of attacks in Southeast Asia. “Accidents and terror by mujahedin will continue to take place as long as Western countries deploy their soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan,” said the man. (Go find your balls to go take the fight to the enemy soldiers instead of attacking innocents. But it’s a little hard to find something that is non-existent.)
Singapore This Week
– that Mama-thir was quoted in Utusan Malaysia as saying that ‘Singapore is getting bolder now that they could even threaten us’. In response to media queries, an MFA spokesman said Foreign Minister George Yeo was surprised and dismayed to hear that Mama-thir had interpreted his response to questions in Parliament as a ‘threat’. (The paranoid hears threat and feels threatened everywhere. Every shadow, and even the movement of cold air brushing his butt-hole is a threat.)
– that Singaporeans are not having enough sex. The country fell several notches to a dismal 40th out of 41 countries surveyed on how frequently they have sex for the 2005 Durex Global Sex Survey. That translates to 73 times a year, a drop from 79 times a year in 2004 with Japan propping up the table at 45. (The survey is in error. There are local homemade sex videos on sammyboy.com, and Japan probably produces more than half of the world’s pornography.)
– that the gover-min may pay a special bonus to low-income middle-aged workers to encourage them to stay employed. This latest plan to narrow the growing income gap was announced by Babt Lee at the Tali-PAP convention. The idea for bonuses was floated by Ng Eng Eng and Baby thinks it will work. The special one-off payout is to be given when there is a Budget surplus. It is to help low-income workers aged over 40, many of whom have both children and elderly parents to support. Those with the lowest incomes will get the biggest bonuses. (Yes. Erection Election is coming.)
– that consumers will soon have the choice of paying by cash, card, handphone or fingerprint. Singapore’s leading electronics payments provider, Network for Electronic Transfers Singapore (NETS), has developed prototypes that will allow mobile phones or fingerprints to be used to make payments. (In the future, robbers may actually say, “Give me your finger!!” or “Finger, or Life?”)
– that after two-and-a-half years of population surveys, appeals and a recent placard protest, the gates to the $80-million Buangkok MRT station will be opened by mid-January. Yeo Cheow Tong Lam Cheow Kong made this announcement after an event at Changi Airport. (The white elephant finally turning gray?)
– that Lam said, “We have asked SBS Transit, in lieu of their reduced losses on the Northeast Line (NEL), to consider opening the station.” While a survey conducted by the LTA showed that the MRT station would only be viable in 2008, Mr Yeo said SBS Transit was now prepared to open the station. He stressed that this was ‘a commercial decision’ as the govern-min will not step in to offset any losses. (此地无银三百两。[Translation: There is no gold 300 taels here. Generally a sarcastic remark used by the Chinese to says that someone is tried to hide something but end up making it obvious to everyone.)
– that the decision to open the Buangkok MRT station along the $4.6 billion North-east Line (NEL) is purely a commercial one. Reiterating what Lam Cheow Kong had said, Teo Chee Hean expressed surprise that people had been linking the opening of the station – scheduled for January, two years earlier than was recently just announced – to the upcoming GE. (Feign innocence, huh? Anyway, there’s the other bonus thing for poor workers right? Now that’s an election gimmick.)
– that if the household income is more than $750 per head, you are entitled to no health susidies from Touch Home Care [THC]. (Wow! It doesn’t matter if you make $3010 a month and you have 4 members in the household! The good news, THC isn’t the gover-min. The bad news? Imagine that this is what the gover-min is planning to do to well, ‘ensure that susidies are given to those who really needed it’. Good luck to Singapore. You need all the luck you can get.)
– that When MP Cynthia Phua suffered from a bout of flu after returning from Guangzhou last week, she imposed a ‘self quarantine’ and stayed home for two days. “It was not bird flu but I was still very concerned,” said the MP for Aljunied GRC. “Self restraint is important.” As the chairman of the steering committee of the ‘Our Town Sparkles’ campaign – an islandwide project to encourage residents to keep their estates clean – Mdm Phua is concerned with cleanliness, especially how it can prevent the outbreak of diseases. (While it is the responsible thing to do, ‘self quarantine’ isn’t a luxury simple joes like you and I can afford, without worrying about losing our jobs!)
– that a 10-member international advisory panel coordinated by MDA has given their support and recommendations to the Media 21 blueprint after two days of intensive meetings that included a session with Lao Goh. Conspicuously absent in the Media 21 blueprint and the panel’s feedback, however, was the issue of media freedom. (The propaganda machine has always been free to do what it does best.)
– that to raise a gross sum of $11 million, the NKF ran up expenses of $4.48 million. (Will a detail breakdown on how much of that $4.48 million is paid to MediaCorpse, or even SickTel, to ‘cover their cost’ be forthcoming?)
– that Mediacorp MediaCorpse has refuted suggestions that it profited from the NKF Cancer Show. NKF had paid MediaCorpse $2.5 million to produce the show. But most of that cost went towards paying for commercial TV spots – which MediaCorpse had billed NKF at discounted rates – to promote the show. (More than 50% out of 4.48 million! And if we take this 2.5 million off MediaCorpse annual P/L, would they be in the red? And all along, we all thought they did it for FREE!!!)
– that not all the money went to MediaCorpse. About $2 million was spent on advertising and promoting the show in local newspapers – including The Stooge Times, Lianhe Zaobao, Lianhe Wanbao, Shinmin Daily, The New Paper and Today – and other media such as in MRT trains during the month-long campaign. Of the $2.5 million paid to MediaCorpse, most went towards buying commercial airtime to plug the 1-900 phone numbers. Part of the money was spent on production. This included paying for the use of studio, rehearsals and recordings and insurance premiums for MediaCorp artistes involved in dangerous stunts. (This is a damned classic example of ‘I die I also wanna drag you along with me to hell’. Now lets have some fun looking at how SPH and SickTel squirm.)
Trivial, Jokes and Thoughts from Discussions
– that the roadsign along West Coast Highway is written as ‘West Coast Hway’. (For a moment I thought which Ah Hway in West Coast so big shot got a road named after her and wondered where is the sister road – ‘West Coast Lian’.)
– that antivirus companies are releasing tools this week to identify, and in some cases remove, copy protection software contained on recent Sony BMG Music Entertainment CDs. The software has been identified as a potential security risk. The Sony software, found on several of the company’s recent albums, is triggered by playing one of the CDs in a PC. From the CD drive, the software installs itself deeply inside a hard drive and hides itself from view. This cloaking technique could be used by virus writers to hide their own malicious software, security experts have said. There is a range of opinion among security companies about how much risk the software poses, from those who consider it no worse than an adware pest to those who view it as potentially dangerous spyware. (Darth BiRdYz says, “Remove the blasted shit. Protect your CDs without installing the blasted shits onto my PC!!”)
– that according to Computer Associates, the Sony software makes itself a default media player on a computer after it is installed. The software then reports back the user’s Internet address and identifies which CDs are played on that computer. Intentionally or not, the software also seems to damage a computer’s ability to ‘rip’ clean copies of MP3s from non-copy protected CDs, the security company said. (Now that’s even more offensive. If you want to stop me from making counterfeits of stuff belonging to you, FINE! But you have no right to decide what else I can or cannot make a copy of! And I was told this shit even reports to Sony what discs I am playing on my PC. Now that’s intruding into my privacy!!)
– that Sony’s controversial anti-piracy CD software has been labelled as spyware by Microsoft. The software giant said the XCP copy protection system counted as malicious software under the rules it uses to define what Windows should be protected against. It is planning to include detection and removal tools for XCP in its weekly update to its anti-spyware software. (Well done, Microsoft. Anything that hides itself, and breaks Windows when you attempt a manual removal should be rightfully classified as malicious!)
– that stung by continuing criticism, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, promised Friday to temporarily suspend making music CDs with antipiracy technology that can leave computers vulnerable to hackers. Sony defended its right to prevent customers from illegally copying music but said it will halt manufacturing CDs with the ‘XCP’ technology as a precautionary measure. “We also intend to re-examine all aspects of our content protection initiative to be sure that it continues to meet our goals of security and ease of consumer use,” the company said in a statement. (Down with Sony BMG Music Entertainment!!)
– that Sony BMG Music Entertainment will recall millions of CDs that, if played in a consumer’s PC disc drive, will expose the computer to serious security risks. Anyone who has purchased one of the CDs can exchange the purchase. The company added that it would release details of its CD exchange program ‘shortly’. (Exchange? They should just give consumers a new one, for FREE. That’s for breaking Windows on their PCs.)
– that ‘genius’ CHIAM MOI LENG said, “Residents living in 4-room units could be sharing the same corridor with those living in 5-room units. A cleaner who sweeps and washes the common corridor provides similar services to both the 4 and 5-room households. Wouldn’t it be reasonable for the town councils to consider standardising conservancy charges since additional services are not provided to owners of the bigger flat units?” (And 4-roomers will think they are paying more and make noise. Come on! And what’s next? The guy on the 2nd floor complaining that he’s paying more than the guy on the 10th floor because part of his conservancy charges end up for servicing the lift which he doesn’t use. Here’s two suggestions for you: First, get a kriffing life. Next, downgrade to a 4-room. Then you get to pay the same conservancy charges as a 4-roomer, alright?)
– that certain cases of mouth cancer appear to be caused by a virus that can be contracted during oral sex, media reported, quoting a new Swedish study. People who contract a high-risk variety of the human papilloma virus, HPV, during oral sex are more likely to fall ill with mouth cancer, according to a study conducted at the Malmo University Faculty of Odontology in southern Sweden. (Remember always: Your mouth is for eating and drinking.)
– that terrorists blow themselves up because they believe they will all go to heaven served by 70 virgins. (Now that explains why there’s a lack of virgins on Earth.)
– that in 2005, some people wanted the word ‘brainstorming’ replaced by ‘thought shower’ so as not to offend people with brain disorders, and they also wanted ‘deferred success’ to replace ‘failure’ so as not to embarrass those who don’t succeed. The phrase that topped this year’s list was ‘misguided criminals’, one of several terms the BBC used so as not to use the word ‘terrorist’ in describing those who carried out train and bus bombings in London that killed 52 people in July. (No wonder ‘the war against the misguided’ repeatedly met with ‘deferred success’. And a ‘thought tropical storm’ is perhaps necessary to win this war.)
– that a friend sent me this interesting comic. (No one could have said it better than the Cantonese about this Moore fellow: “食碗面,反碗底” [Literal translation: To overturn the bowl after you have eaten the noodles. I think the closest English equivalent would be ‘Biting the hand that feeds you’.]) |
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