Singapore River / Marina Bay

Some of the photos I have taken with my Sony Ericsson W550i of Clifford Pier after they have the boats moved out and also along the Singapore River.


Along Singapore River #1

Along Singapore River #2

Clifford Pier

Marina Bay

Notice: The TGIF newsletter will been suspended until the first week of June.

Cathay Cineplex

Went to the Cathay Cineplex to watch Poseidon and took some photos of the place with my Sony Ericsson W550i. I am definitely not happy with the way they have turned this once historical part of Singapore into just another shopping mall. If this is actually preservation, I must say it’s been a real pathetic attempt at rejuvenation. Incidentally, they are also rebuilding Newton Circus Hawker Centre and I shudder to think of what it will turn out to be.

A lot of shops are yet opened when we walked around, but the cineplex is definitely a lot better than Eng Wah’s at SunTec. The seats were spacious and well laid out.

Enjoy the photos. If they are blur or badly taken, the fault is mine solely and not that of the equipment.


Front

Lift Lobby

Box Office 5F

Da Vinci Code Display on 5F

View from 6F

View from 6F

Picture House History display

5F looking down

Da Vinci Code? What Da Vinci Code? His name is Leonardo and this is what someone think of it

The Last Templar


The Last Templar

Yet another book along the lines of Dan Brown’s ‘Da Vinci Code’, about a cover-up of the true person of Jeshua – aka Jesus – of Nazareth. It goes along the line that the early Church founders have mystified the historical Jesus of Nazareth, and that the current Bible is but a political construct of the Roman Empire. In other words, the Biblical Jesus Christ is nothing more than a fairy tale.

This story is build around the premise that the Knights Templars found evidence that threatens the very spiritual foundation of the Roman Catholic Church – and the Christian faith – and used it to blackmail the Pope at that time. The only comfort was that this book wasn’t yet another ad naseum piece about the Holy Grail and the bloodline of Jesus.

I will not touch on much of the story of the book, because it would be a spoiler for anyone who wants to read it. Above which, I am a really lousy book reviewer and I can’t really remember exactly why I picked up the book from MPH, except for its title.

While the idea that the Knights Templar blackmailing the Vatican is interesting (or revolting, since everyone knows the Templars to be a military order formed to defend pilgrims going to the Holy Land), the author of this story also made use of the characters in his book to raise some interesting points. To the logical and analytical mind, one cannot refute these points right away. For e.g.

  1. No one knew exactly who wrote the Gospels and much of the New Testament, as we know it: Archaelogists and scholars generally agree that it is common for people in that era to use the names of others to write stuff, and thus the argument that the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John might not necessarily be written by the disciples of Jesus with those names (in the case of Matthew and John), or Mark and Luke.
  2. Some of the earliest books were written many years after the resurrection of Jesus Christ: The first Gospel, the Gospel of Mark appears about 40 years after, and the Book of Revelations almost 70 years after. In other words, if these were really written by Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, the writers themselves would have been quite old. Considering the human lifespan at that time, the detractors do have a point. Also, if written records have come later, it would mean that it was just a record of an oral tradition prior to that. Knowing how things gets distorted when passed mouth to mouth, the truthfulness will thus be in doubt.
  3. The the present day Bible is a political construct. It did not come into being until the Council of Nicaea in 325AD. (My personal opinion is that the powers that be at that time, the Roman Emperor Constantine and the church leaders, all have their own agenda in doing so. The leaders a desire to crush any self-contradicting views, doctrines and beliefs among the believers, and the Roman Emperor the intention to mold the Christian religion as some form of social control of a fragile Empire that has only been recently unified after a long civil war, and also to pacify the now numerous Christian community in the Empire.)
  4. Many conflicting books which are difficult for reconciliation were discarded: The Gospels of Peter, Philip, Thomas, Judas, Mary Magdeline and the Egyptians, along with the secret book of John and the Gospel of Truth are such examples. All of these were ruthlessly destroyed because it challenges the Church’s stand that it is the only way to God. It is somewhat a miracle that copies of these gnostic books survived, hidden away for thousands of years until very recently.

The question is, if you are a believer, will you now start questioning your faith? Certainly almost no one could doubt that this social system proposed by Jesus – a system of compassion, care and welfare for those who needed it – is one of the best systems around in taming the savage and selfish beast within the human being. But what of your faith in the divinity of Jesus?

The author of the book raised another interesting point when he pointed out using one of his characters in the book to argue that if you are ready to believe the ‘alternate views’ of Jesus Christ, such as Jesus having left behind a bloodline, or that he is absolutely human but not divine, then you clearly never truly believe the Gospels in the first place. Above which, just as much as people believe in Jesus’ miracles without having seen him done them, how could anyone believe in any documents having a contrary view of him?

‘The Last Templar’ might have been just another ‘Da Vinci Code’ type fiction, had it not gotten me to start thinking about such things and getting myself to put them down in writing.

Historical fact: Founded in 1118AD, The Knights Templars – the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon – was a Military Order during the Crusades, and it also founded the concept of banking in Europe. The Templars inspired similar orders like Hospitaliers around the same time, and they were the staunchest defenders of the Christian faith in the Holy Land during the middle ages until the Latin kingdoms eventual defeat in 1297AD.

On 13 Oct 1307AD, Philp the Fair, King of France arrested all the Templars in France. They were accused of heresy, apostasy, devil worship and all manners of sins – e.g. sodomy, spitting and urinating on the Cross, and were subjected to a ruthless inquisition. It was no surprise many Templars were found guilty, with many confessions extorted under extreme torture probably along the same order of those during the Spanish Inquisition. The reason the French King has done so was because he owed the Templars a vast debt and he coveted the Templars’ wealth and alleged vast hidden treasures they found under the second Jewish temple in Jerusalem.

However, the ‘lost treasures’ were never found and they have inspired countless stories and even a movie, ‘National Treasure’. In the movie, it was suggested that the Free Masons are somewhat related to the Templars. Many similar conspiracy theories have since arise over the ages regarding the Free Masons and the Knights Templars.

Look! Someone is screaming unfair!! Woo-hoo…

A friend of mine once mentioned that the Stooge Times Forum page is one section he never reads and wondered why I get all worked up when I read the rubbish coming from it. I really don’t know why but perhaps, I am a sucker for ’emotional pain’?

Here’s another ‘fine’ example of such another piece of rubbish that got me worked up.

Selective upgrading unfair, S&C fees too high

IN ‘GIVING a lift to the upgrading debate’ (ST, May 4) writer Ong Soh Chin harbours the same misconception as most HDB residents when she mentioned that ‘Mr Low Thia Khiang of the Workers’ Party has pointed out that his Hougang residents have managed to enjoy free lift upgrading even with the limited funds of its town council’. A town council’s revenue comes from the service and conservancy charges levied on each HDB household, part of which is provided by the government as subsidy.

The lift upgrading in Hougang was funded by the money the town council saved, as routine expenditure is significantly less than the revenue it collects, even after providing for sinking-fund retention. The money in the town council, in whatever form, be it sinking fund or excess management fund, belongs to the HDB households within that town council.

What is unfair and inequitable, even within each town council, is that the surplus money which is used to fund the so-called free lift upgrading for a few blocks at a time is contributed by all the households under the town council.

Those whose HDB block is not selected for lift upgrading should ask the town council why another block was chosen instead of theirs. The justification that a town council cannot simultaneously carry out lift upgrading for every block is no consolation to those whose block is upgraded at a future date, as, by which time, they or the parents may have died or moved.

A more equitable method is for the households of each HDB block to pay for the lift upgrading themselves, with the town council allowing them to use their portion of the surplus money in the sinking or management fund from their prior S&C contributions.

The talk about surplus funds raises the question: Are the S&C charges too high?

It is time the government reviews the collection of S&C charges and their use for selective upgrading, to see how past unfairness and inequity could be remedied.

Bin Hee Heng

I quote: “What is unfair and inequitable, even within each town council, is that the surplus money which is used to fund the so-called free lift upgrading for a few blocks at a time is contributed by all the households under the town council.”

Very funny, because I don’t see Bin looking at it from a grander level, and see his alleged ‘unfairness’ occuring on a national level when the Tali-PAP takes money to fund upgrading for a few districts at all time – not to mention expecting residents to co-pay a small amount – with surplus money contributed by all Singaporeans – one way or another – to the nation.

And going by his logic, then how is it also fair, that Polytechnic students do not get their fare concession, when the transport companies (or was it LTA), consistently argue that the concessions are paid by all other full fare paying passengers? Are full fare paying passengers thus overpaying, because only certain students of a particular age group are given fare concession?

Before the gover-min should even ‘review the collection of S&C charges and their use for selective upgrading, to see how past unfairness and inequity could be remedied’, it should jolly well first review how it spends the state’s revenue to further the ruling party’s very own political agenda!

No wonder Taiwanese legislative councillor Lee Ao thinks that Singaporeans are stupid, and of a bad breed! Does anyone see a reason he would have considered otherwise when reading some of these exceeding dumb letters?!

记2006年5月6日大选

这一夜,我感动得哭了。

这一夜,后港与波东巴西居民以无上情操震动了狮城, 也让目下许多时事与政论分晰员跌破了眼镜。

威武不能屈?
富贵不能淫?
贫贱不能移?

这些我曾经追崇而又不确定存在的人, 这一夜出现了。 不是一个不是十个, 而是以万计的涌现了。

就在数天前, 有人以一亿八千万新元嚣张放肆,目无忌惮地公开污褥了这数以万计的选民。

同样数天前, 又有人以公开对手帐目来屈褥一名年过古稀但仍因为了国家, 选民和理念而咬紧牙关迈入可能是他终于倒下的战场的老战将。

就是这一夜,选民们狠狠地回敬了这些一心想用钱解决困难的‘精英’两个结结实实的漏风巴掌,把他们打得三荤五素,更把他们的掌舵人打得一夜白头。

也在这一夜,波东巴西民众更颁了枚成就勋章给詹先生,一枚不经总理口,不经总统手,而是以万张选票与八千万元铸成的勋章。

可憾的是, 总理说他是失望的!!

家有争子不败,国有争臣不亡。

有对金钱说不的选民,有不畏艰难的敌对从政者,对行动党而言,战果也许是苦了点。但以总理的立场,却应该给于嘉奖,因为这是国家之福,亦是领导的好运气。背负了人民八十多万张选票, 三份二支持,总理应更从容的展现出国大于党的大政治家风范。毕竟终要有一流选民与对手,才能真正成就一流的政俯。

– 一名 ‘世界级’ 选民 (‘World Class’ Voter) 的心中话


I do not dare to take credit for this piece and I thank the person who gave me the opportunity to post this piece on my blog. I did not write this, but I have read it several times, until I was moved to tears.

I dedicate this to:
first and foremost, the brave and loyal people of Potong Pasir and Hougang;
Mr Low Thia Kiang, MP of Hougang SMC; and
Last but not least, Mr Chiam See Tong, MP of Potong Pasir SMC

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