Jon-san Wrote:But I would appreciate if you refrain from using such language as "foreign trash" to describe them. They are, after all, humans, and not trash. The tone of discussion used in this forum has thus far been polite, cordial and informative. Please help to keep this tone as such.
On instinct, it is easy to blame the foreigners. As an engineering student in a local university, I have encountered foreign students given free scholarships and monthly allowance but their academic results are not really of a scholar's standards. Upon graduation, foreigners gain an unfair edge in the job market over Singaporeans because they do not have reservist duties. Which employer wants to have his worker disappear year in year out for a few weeks? It is highly disruptive. If you were an entrepreneur, given all things being equal, would you prefer a Singaporean with reservist duties or a foreigner with none?
Faced with such unfairness, the natural reaction of a Singaporean is to blame the foreigners. I have to curb my own resentment everytime I take the crowded MRT with foreign accents around me. However, if we put ourselves in their shoes as foreigners in a foreigner-friendly country, we would also seize the opportunities created by bad government policies that put foreigners at an advantage over locals. I agree with Jon-san that we should refrain from calling foreigners trash (but not easy to curb such resentments in practice because the over-crowdedness reminds us of it on a daily basis). They are just normal opportunistic human beings like the rest of us.
I hope the government will do some self-reflection this time round. Why did the ground turn so sour? Why do they find it so hard to find good candidates from the private sector? Why are even former civil servants joining the opposition? Given the lower rewards and higher risks of joining the opposition versus PAP, why is the opposition still able to draw quality candidates this time round?
Touzi Wrote:Hyom's post maybe ironical, but it is definitely not hypocritical! He is reflecting what many pro-singapore voters are feeling. Most who loves singapore will not want the PAP to be voted out at this stage.
Before I forget, thank you for your support. I agree with you that many pro-Singapore voters, despite their unhappiness with government policies on foreign immigration and housing, do not want the PAP to be voted out in the coming election.