Showing posts with label lesson to learn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lesson to learn. Show all posts

Sunday, August 01, 2010

F word again:Foreign Talents in MNC




someone works in an MNC.
He commented recently that Singapore citizens are a rare breed at his workplace. In his extended team of about 30, there are Indians, British, Asian Americans and Malaysian Chinese, but
only 2 Singaporeans.


And one of the 2 is a contract worker!

This is not only limited to his extended team.
Throughout the office, spanning several floors in the building, he said
it’s hard to find more than a handful Singaporeans
in middle to senior positions.

why?

Quotas are only applicable to work permits and ‘S’ pass foreign workers

On the other hand, foreigners earning more than $2,500 hold employment passes. They are classified as “professionals” (as opposed to “skilled workers”). These foreign professionals are not subject to any quota.

This MOM reply to a query in ST says it all (boldface mine):

“Apart from the S-Pass, companies can also bring in foreign professionals, managers and executives on employment passes to meet their staffing needs.
There is no quota for Employment Pass holders. However the applicant must be paid a basic monthly salary of at least $2,500 and have acceptable qualifications.”

There is no quota.


If you run a company and pay more than $2,500 to each employee, you can have 100% foreigners in your company.

‘Local workforce’ refers to those full-time employees (Singapore citizens or permanent residents).”

So, technically, any company in Singapore can hire zero Singapore citizen and have foreigners as all its employees.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Flood:ION Orchard




remember the former park next to Orchard MRT station where Filippina maids used to gather during weekends when they had their day off.

The flooding at Orchard/Paterson junction is unusual.

Prior to construction of ION,

the piece of empty land was a big sponge allowing rainwater to flow into the ground.



However, heavy rain falling on the entire complex now cannot flow into the ground directly would naturally
pond at the lowest point


ie. the Orchard/Paterson junction.

suggestions for your next step:

Sell your property
if it is in low lying areas to unassuming FTs who have decided to come here to participate in the gold rush.

Even new properties with basement carparks have not been spared eg.

Gentle Reflections at Gentle Road was hit.

The value will drop if everyone follows this trend.

Even if you can get insurance coverage for floods, the premiums will be higher.

The recurring floods has tarnished our image of having 1st class infrastructure. There needs to some answers to these all too frequent 50-year freak events.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Flood: they said it was stamford canal, but we say it was The Marina Barrage





When you have massive floods on Singapore’s main shopping street, it cannot be blamed on unusually heavy downpour.

There is something not right in our drainage system. Since embarking on many infrastructure projects to transform Singapore, we have become more flood prone especially in areas which were never flood prone before.

This is worrying!

It cannot be that the more we develop our city, the more flood prone we become.

While being no experts compared to the PUB, one cannot help but make certain casual observations:

The Marina Barrage is a dam in Singapore built across the mouth of the bay, between Marina East and Marina South. It was officially opened on 1 November 2008.



1. The Marina Barrage was meant to help alleviate floods. Yet it may have been the cause of floods. In theory, the barrage can be opened to lower the level of water in the canal system. However there will be several hours between opening the barrage at Marina Bay and for the water to flow out from Bukit Timah or Stamford Canals.

Given our climate where we get heavy downpours in 1 – 2 hours, our canals may not be able to cope with the sudden rush of rain water and therefore overflow which resulted in the floods.

2. The flooding at Orchard/Paterson junction is unusual. Prior to construction of ION, the piece of empty land was a big sponge allowing rainwater to flow into the ground.

However, heavy rain falling on the entire complex now cannot flow into the ground directly would naturally pond at the lowest point ie. the Orchard/Paterson junction.

3. Flooding at Balmoral Road which was thought to be eliminated has now re- emerged. Could it be due to the construction of the tunnels of the Downtown line where again rainwater cannot flow directly into the ground and thus flooding the area?

The recurring floods has tarnished our image of having 1st class infrastructure. There needs to some answers to these all too frequent 50-year freak events.

Many parts of Singapore eg. Balmoral, Newton have been largely flood free for the last 15 years until .... 2009 when the Marina Barrage started operating.

If water is to be retained in marina reservoir, then water will flow back into the canal system feeding into the Singapore River ie. Bukit Timah etc. rendering these canals to be much less effective as they are already half full before any heavy downpour.

Furthermore the water table will rise which means that our soil will be less porous to soak in the rainwater during a heavy downpour.

If our precious water reserves were to be released at the barrage before any downpour, it would probably take 10 hours before water level at Bukit Timah canal to be lowered. And what if the downpour was not that heavy?

Why release precious water reserves so that there will not be floods?

Why not put up with floods after all it would be only 1 - 2 hours of incovenience.

Therefore the government cannot tell us the truth and PUB, the scape goat, will continue to give us hundreds of excuses from leaves to sensors to flaw in computer software to new flood alleviation programmes etc etc.


The truth is that IF THE MARINA BARRAGE CONTINUES TO BE OPERATIONAL SINGAPORE WILL ENTER INTO A NEW ERA OF BEING FLOOD PRONE IN MANY AREAS.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

advice to young gals





Find a guy who calls you beautiful instead of hot,
who calls you back when you hang up on him,
who will lie under the stars and listen to your heartbeat,
or will stay awake just to watch you sleep...
wait for the boy who kisses your forehead,
who thinks you' re just as pretty without makeup on.
One who is...
constantly reminding you of how much he cares
And how lucky and fortunate that he is to have YOU.

Wednesday, June 09, 2010

tears


after what he has done for the people, and yet people despised him.
even totally shamed him.
that was just too much, but people kept on hammering at him.
when he has done so many good things, there was no arugument.
but when things started to get out of hand, there are finger pointing at him and his dark side.

this is unfair.

but we know that is life.
when you are down with accusations, you have to dig your deepest heart and soul, and have a good fight.
it is easy to give up, but when all the things gone to past, it tasted sweet when one recalled those tough times.

so, let's get going and not to stop too long.

Monday, June 07, 2010

poor harvest


few weeks ago, i have taken a walk round the forest nearby to check this year's harvest of the durians.

last year, 2009 saw a bumper harvest despite the economic downturns.
i can see the baskets and basket of durians when the season was in full swing.

after the walk, i was extremly disappointed with the findings:
2010 will be one of the worst harvest i have ever seen in years to come.
it is very bad,indeed.

i have asked one of working colleagues who normally picked durians and his remarks are same as mine.

don't expect too much this year.

Monday, May 31, 2010

transport fares


come july the 3rd, there will be fare adjustment for the buses and MRT.
for some commuters, they may have slight savings while other remained the same.

but not for the elders who enjoyed a flat rateof 68 cents before 3rd july.
now the flat rate has increased to 86 cents, an increment of 18 cents.

still, it was a tiny sum as compared to others who enjoyed saving instead.

however, they are the vocals ones, perferred to be the silent ones, and kept quiet since the fare's adjustments a few weeks ago.

Friday, May 21, 2010

honour


i will fight for honour,
regardless of everything.

Monday, May 10, 2010

shield


protect yourself.
guard your heart well.

Sunday, May 09, 2010

do not break



Life is a mixture of good times and bad times,
happy moments and unhappy moments.

The next time you are experiencing
one of those bad times or unhappy moments,
Try your best not to let the situation get the best of you.

If the going gets tough and you are at your breaking point; show resilence.

Bend; But don’t break!

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Now we know where we stand





confirmed: singaporeans played second fiddle to the foreigners

Of course, it does not really surprise me.

For years, Singapore has been moving steadily in the pro-foreigner / anti-citizen direction.



Another writer said: “Now we know where we stand. The policy has downgraded Singaporeans to below foreigners.”

we're not the only country in the world with stupid politicians. Each of us just needs to find a way to move on, adapt and survive - notwithstanding the government's errors.

No point complaining about it.
Just take the PAP as another challenge in life you need to overcome.

Take your small, steady steps to deal with it.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Speak Good English Movement




speak simple English: make it simple

Saturday, July 25, 2009

we like new immigrant

From the Straits Times: "Helping foreigners fit in"

With his trademark grin, [MP Charles Chong] added: "When you ask Singaporean residents for feedback, they will complain that they have to wait more than 15 minutes for the bus. But when you ask new immigrants, they are happy that the bus comes in under 30 minutes."

MP Charles Chong was told what he was told
. and he told us what he was being told.
it was confirmed that they have preferred new immigrants than local singaporeans..

they are much easier to please and serve them. and they do fit in the overall great plan..to eliminate singaporean from their comfort zone and let them "venture" to oversea.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

painless punishments





MAS has banned 10 institutions from selling structured notes for periods of 6 months to 2 years.

the finance companies got away scotfree with painless punishments while the investor who trusted these companies suffered huge losses while their whole life saving vanished in the air.

in the end, trust no one.

Monday, July 06, 2009

cherish each day




Michael Jackson's sudden death reminded us of how fragile life is.
two days ago, he was rehearsing for the live concerts in London, alive and full of energy.
two days later, he has passed away, at the age of 50 years.
he has so much things to do, and things have not been done yet.

luckily he has prepared his will 5 years ago in 2002. he has at least left behind something for his sons and daughter.

these things we should planned ahead, and not to rush when things are needed urgently.


so, cherish each day.
plan ahead.
you will never know what will happened the next day.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Michael Jackson





from economist:

FOR a life so extraordinary the manner of Michael Jackson’s passing on Thursday June 25th was utterly banal: a middle-aged man succumbing to an apparent heart-attack. (There was speculation that an alleged dependency on prescription painkillers may have been a contributing factor.) During his progress from child prodigy to the self-styled “King of Pop” and, more recently, an eccentric semi-recluse, no part of Mr Jackson’s private life had given any other hint of normality. But behind the mask that plastic surgeons had made of his face was a keen brain for wringing cash out of pop music—and for spending it.

Mr Jackson first performed on stage at the age of six, accompanying his four older brothers. The Jackson Five, under the strict stewardship of their manager and father, signed to Motown Records in the late 1960s and began producing a string of hit records—a sequence of success that Mr Jackson continued in a 30-year solo recording career. It is reckoned that his final tally of album sales is around 750m—the most that any artist has sold. And one of those, “Thriller”, released in 1982, became the most successful yet seen, shifting 65m units. This record may well remain unchallenged: sales of albums have suffered as pop fans these days prefer downloading individual tracks from the internet.

The length of Mr Jackson’s career ensured that he experienced, popularised and even pioneered many of the techniques that help artists to profit from their musical talents. At the beginning of his career, touring was a vital component of performers' incomes, though a shift to earning money from selling records was well under way. By its peak, in the 1980s, touring had come to be seen by the music industry as a loss-making promotional tool to shift albums.

Mr Jackson did not invent the pop promotional video, as he is sometimes credited with doing. But he took this art form to new heights with the lavishly expensive video he made in 1983 for the title track of the “Thriller” album. He brought in one of Hollywood's top directors, John Landis (best known for “The Blues Brothers”), and spent an unprecedented $500,000 on the 14-minute miniature epic. But it was money well spent: the launch of MTV, two years earlier, whose format was being copied by other broadcasters, meant that videos had rapidly become one of the most valuable tools for marketing recorded music, and more cost-effective than concert tours. The “Thriller” video was broadcast incessantly all around the world, pumping up the album's sales.

At the height of his success Mr Jackson and his team of managers made the shrewd calculation that the value of pop music was wrapped up in the publishing rights to songs just as much as in record sales. In 1985 he paid $47.5m for ATV Music, which owned the copyrights to most of the Beatles' songs. Ten years later he sold half his interest for $150m to Sony. The value of his stake was probably around $500m when he died. This was roughly equal to the upper estimates of the debts he was struggling to refinance, which he had amassed funding his increasingly bizarre style of living.

Despite his vast earnings Mr Jackson was forced to borrow huge sums against his stake in ATV and his future earnings (recently reckoned to be about $19m a year) to pay for his huge shopping sprees and the upkeep of “Neverland”, his ranch in California. Last year he announced plans for a long series of concerts in London to boost his income and pay off his creditors. Playing live has re-emerged as the way to make money from pop as falling sales, rampant piracy and digital distribution have slashed revenues from recorded music.

Despite having built himself an extravagant fun palace, with its own zoo, fairground and elaborate topiary, Mr Jackson cut an increasingly lost and lonely figure in his later years. Though twice married and with three children, his closest relationships appeared to be with a chimpanzee and a succession of young boys. The questions raised by these unusual friendships continued to hang in the air until his death. He was acquitted in a Californian court in 2005 on charges of molesting one 13-year-old boy but reportedly paid $20m out of court in 1994 to head off other allegations of child abuse.

His status as a pop genius may well always be tainted by the strangeness of the life he chose to lead. Elvis Presley, still the unchallenged King of Rock’n’Roll, is increasingly remembered for his music, as memories fade of his own unusual private life. Mr Jackson would doubtless have craved to be held in the same public awe and affection (his dynastic ambitions even stretched to a brief marriage with Lisa Marie, Presley’s only child). But, sadly, for now he will be remembered by many as “Wacko Jacko” rather than the King of Pop.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Full knee replacement operation

My mother went for knee replacement operation at NUH by one of the ambitious and young orthopedic doctor. He was also the head of the department. Since then, he has left NUH for private practice.
as he was new to the position and did not have much practical experience, he called for full knee replacement operation.
i was opposed to the operation, but he has persuaded our mother to do it. and she agreed to do it.

i should have asked for second opinion, but did not. i asked sister and she also agreed mother to do the operation.

few years, our mother found her operated leg was much longer than the normal one and she walked with a limp.

Monday, April 27, 2009

what comes around goes around



Mr Wang Says So in his 25th April's blog told us something about AWARE.
he said:

Founder member and former nominated member of parliament Kanwaljit Soin said: 'It is not just a woman's issue but the whole issue of how civil society actors behave in Singapore.

'If the new members do not agree with Aware's issues, then they should not join. There is plenty of room to start another organisation.'

He agree fully with her. In his opinion, the new Aware ExCo has no credibility. They deserve no respect.

Yes, the new ExCo team employed a certain strategy and they won the Aware election. And yes, their strategy was constitutional and legally "correct".
But it merely reminds him of the
PAP's gerrymandering tactics - the way they brazenly redrew the maps, changed the electoral boundaries to their own advantage, and forced their way to election victories.


Those PAP tactics were also constitutional and legally "correct". But those tactics carry no sense of integrity and deserve no respect. At any rate, they won't gain his respect.


He feel exactly the same way about how the new ExCo members have invaded Aware. Their tactics are as honorable as a terrorist attack.

As you probably know by now, the new ExCo chairperson is Josie Lau. She works at DBS, marketing credit cards. Today, for what it's worth, Mr Wang is going to make a small, symbolic gesture as a DBS customer.

He will call DBS and terminate his credit cards. The DBS person on the line will ask me why (they always ask for that kind of customer feedback). And he will say that it's because of their Head of Marketing, Josie Lau.

He will say that he have a very poor opinion of her behaviour in the Aware saga, and that for that reason, he has decided to stop using DBS credit cards. Furthermore he will request for his feedback to be given to DBS's senior management.

what comes around goes around

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Canton Wok closed down




we have read that chef-owner Ang Song Kang, popularly known as Chef Kang, has had to file for bankruptcy after a failed business venture in China.

he invested in a Guangzhou motor and machine oil plant in 2005 with two Chinese nationals. He had known one of them for about three years.

his partners asked him to pump in more money as the recession had affected business. he did so for six months, until the plant supervisor called him one day that the workers have not been paid.

he flied to the plant and found out the factory was empty. his partners have ran off and he has to pay the worker three months' pay from his restaurant's account.

in the end, he has cashflow problems and has to close down.

all because he trusted his partners which led to his downfall.

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

the North Star



no matter how, you always tell us the direction: north