Stuff you must read today (Sat, 14 Nov 2009)

  • Goh Chok Tong: The pioneer bond-breaker?
  • “…the circumstances seem to suggest that the young Goh Chok Tong in 1965 could have very well been one of the first few – if not the first – to have broken a civil service bond in Singapore.”

  • Stop the exploitation of workers
  • “While my colleagues and I have never objected to foreign talent – and let me be on record that we are in need of such talent – the truth is that the Foreign Talent Policy has much to do with foreign but little with talent.”

  • PR Buys HDB Flat for $653,000
  • “This is the story of how young Singaporeans are being squeezed out of the housing market. The PRs are squeezing them out. One account does not tell the whole story, of course, but you know who has the full figures, don’t you. And that’s why you will also never know the full story.”

  • Decriminalise consensual underage sex
  • “Instead of repealing Section 376A altogether, because it serves a valuable purpose in protecting minors against abuse from sexual predators, perhaps a better solution is to introduce a legal exception for consensual sex between underage participants, with the issue of ‘consent’ between the minors to be proved as a question of fact.”

  • the papers must roll out
  • Eisen gives a blow-by-blow account of this year’s Straits Times National Schools Newspaper Competition:

    “4pm: Ok, whenever I see fishes now I think of sushi and sashimi.

    4.05pm: Whenever I see stingrays I think of Chomp Chomp, Newton Circus and barbequed stingray.

    I decide against joking about this to the Underwater World PR lady. I don’t think she will take that joke very well.

    4.15pm: HUNGRY. WANT SUSHI.”

Recent increase in website traffic.

Not too shure where it’s been coming from, but thanks everyone who’s been visiting the site. One person whom I do know has been reading my blog regularly is Mr Tan Kar Wee (Google him, you know you want to, current and future employers), who recently revealed to me his voyeuristic inclinations by way of an SMS-ed belated birthday greeting. I suspect he didn’t want to be just another statistic. LOL!

Anyway, he says he’s been using Google Reader to read my links. At last count, there were three subscribers to my feed – so I’m guessing the other two subscribers are Dr Ashley Tan and Mr Andrew Chong. Right? 🙂

Kar Wee was also asking where I get my links from and how I post them up. It’s also related to Google Reader – this post should explain everything. Google Reader rocks, but my readers rock more! 🙂