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Reply #358 mmc's post
byk la lu punya volvo.
itu volvo sudah kansel la.
wa pegi kerja pon naik bas je.
jimat beb. singgit boleh buat pegi balik kerja |
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Reply #357 innocentti's post
ayoooo...
manyak sori la inno. wa sudah silap.
wa call abg ipar wa, dia tak pakai hydrofuel laaa...
banyak, banyak sori.... |
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hmmm...
all quiet in the eastern front eh?
me found a very interesting article:
A question of loyalty: the Malays in Singapore
NEARLY 13 years ago, then Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew triggered a debate about Malay loyalty with televised comments he made before a university audience (December 1986). Lee stated that the government had taken two opinion polls prior to and following the visit of Israeli President Chiam Herzog (November 1986) to the republic.
The poll found that the number of Malay respondents who were not against the visit fell sharply from one poll to the next, while the proportion of non-Malays who did not oppose the visit rose marginally.
Lee interpreted this to mean that "in certain circumstances, the Malay Singaporeans react with the emphasis on Malay/Muslim rather than Singaporean.
An article in the Far Eastern Economic Review Asia 1998 Yearbook (pg 222f) says, "To Lee this came down to a question of loyalty : "Are we sure that in a moment of crisis, when the heat is on, we are all together heart to heart? I hope so. But we ought to have a fallback position and quickly fill up all the missing hearts if some go missing."
The same article says, "In February 1987, Lee's son commented further on the status of the Malays in an open forum on why Malays do not hold sensitive positions in the armed forces. Explaining that there are no Malay fighter pilots, for example, because their religion might conflict with their duty to Singapore, he provoked a backlash of criticism from the Muslim community in addition to Singapore's Muslim neighbours."
The article goes on to say, "these statements represented some of the most frank public commentaries ever made by Singapore's political leaders on the role of the Malays, which continues to stir emotions among the Malay community."
As recently as September 18, Mr Lee, speaking at a Singapore 21 forum said, the reality is that while Singapore has made progress in integrating the different races, certain emotional bonds are instinctive and cannot be removed overnight. (Straits Times September 19, 1999)
Asked by a polytechnic student if Singapore could overcome this and become a nation, Mr Lee said: "Yes, I think so, over a long period of time and selectively. We must not make an error.
"If, for instance, you put in a Malay officer who's very religious and who has family ties in Malaysia in charge of a machine gun unit, that's a very tricky business.
"We've got to know his background. I'm saying these things because they are real, and if I didn't think that, and I think even if today the Prime Minister doesn't think carefully about this, we could have a tragedy."
"So, these are problems which, as poly students, you're colour-blind to, but when you face life in reality, it's a different proposition."
Reports in the Singapore media this year refuting Indonesian Presidents Habibie's remarks in February that Singapore was racist because Malays could not become military officers only stated that there are Malay officers in the armed forces.
The reports made no reference to the documented remarks (above) of the two Lees regarding Malay loyalty.
The reports also did not state:
* 1. if Malays hold sensitive positions in the armed forces;
* 2. if any Malay officers in the Singapore air force are fighter pilots; and
* 3. if the Lees have changed their expressed position regarding loyalty of the Malays.
While meritocracy is still maintained in the island and the Singapore armed forces appoints and promotes Malays, there is no evidence that Malay Singaporeans hold sensitive positions in the Singapore armed forces.
typical eh? |
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Reply #361 tin's post
wo sudah tukar plan ka....mau beli bintang tiga ka sikalang... |
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Reply #364 mmc's post
banyak la lu.
menteri beso terangganu beli itu bintang tiga pon kena tanya.
kalo wa beli itu bintang tiga, maunya Inno datang interbiu wa.
Kan Inno kan, kan, kaaannnn.... |
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Reply #361 tin's post
lu duduk putrajaya ke tin? |
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Reply #362 tin's post
takpa2..next time lu buat lagi denda ketuk ketampi dgn tarik sideburn.. |
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Reply #365 tin's post
apa salahnya kalau lu nak beli..worth it..kan maintenance lagi murah dari perdana v6..kehkehkeh |
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Reply #366 innocentti's post
tarak la.
KL jugaaaa... |
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Reply #368 innocentti's post
cit....
nanti BPR kata mariiiii.... |
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Reply #369 mmc's post
ohoooo...
sudah buat potshot, lu larik buat fisio yea???:@ |
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Reply #363 tin's post
"If, for instance, you put in a Malay officer who's very religious and who has family ties in Malaysia in charge of a machine gun unit, that's a very tricky business.
artikel ni ade agenda.... |
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Reply #373 tangopapa's post
manader artikel yg takde agenda |
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Reply #369 mmc's post
tataula..mungkin napsu dia sudah naik nampak itu hummer tayang kat the curve kot.. |
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sawadikarp... kuntum araikarp... |
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Reply #378 yipun78's post
uik..kat umah sewa ke yip?
salam dan selamat pagi semua.. |
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Reply #379 innocentti's post
rumah sewa apa kaitan makan roti bakar dengan rumah sewa |
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