Originally posted by angel7030:
go buy sanitary pad...
U want me to touch bread?
NEVER.
I wont buy for u la. I rather watch u bleed.
Originally posted by jgho83:U want me to touch bread?
NEVER.
I wont buy for u la. I rather watch u bleed.
u know bread talks or not??
me only bleeding for love...not for you.
Originally posted by angel7030:
u know bread talks or not??
me only bleeding for love...not for you.
do you know what you are saying or not?
Anyone knows?
Originally posted by jgho83:do you know what you are saying or not?
Anyone knows?
if i do not know what i am saying, how does anyone knows?? U siao or what??
Originally posted by angel7030:
if i do not know what i am saying, how does anyone knows?? U siao or what??
Nobody else replied yet. Got anyone knows what u mean meh. Lets wait and see first.
Originally posted by jgho83:Nobody else replied yet. Got anyone knows what u mean meh. Lets wait and see first.
again, I also dunno what i am saying and you expect someone to know..OMG, u really siao liao
Originally posted by angel7030:
again, I also dunno what i am saying and you expect someone to know..OMG, u really siao liao
make up your mind, do u know or dont know???
One moment u say u know what u ownself toking about, now u say dunno... haiya i cannot waste time on u liao.
Originally posted by jgho83:make up your mind, do u know or dont know???
One moment u say u know what u ownself toking about, now u say dunno... haiya i cannot waste time on u liao.
mi know or dunno got nothing to do with you, how much money you have??
"PM Lee calls on ASEAN leaders to send message of co-operation
By S.Ramesh, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 28 February 2009 1322 hrs SINGAPORE: Send a clear message to the world that ASEAN is open for business. That's the call made by Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in a wide-ranging interview with the ..."
Doesn't he know what a laughing stock he is? If he thinks that the Asean leaders will take notice of whatever he says, he must think they are fools when the biggest fool is him for losing $100 billion of public money at the hands of his wife.
None of the Asean countries lost public money to foreigners like the way this anus cancer son lost public money
"Asean MPs form caucus to champion right
A group of Asean parliamentarians on Saturday formed a caucus on right and free expression calling the Asean leaders to uphold press freedom.
Members of parliament from Cambodia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand signed a declaration to form the caucus."
A direct slap in the face of the anus cancer patient...
The honorable Thai Prime minister delivers a slap on the face of the dishonorable cancer of the anus son of the cursed despot:
ASEAN SUMMIT
Bloc's 570 million people have been awoken and will seek a role in the process: Abhisit
Originally posted by AndrewPKYap:
"PM Lee calls on ASEAN leaders to send message of co-operation
Channel News Asia - 4 hours agoBy S.Ramesh, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 28 February 2009 1322 hrs SINGAPORE: Send a clear message to the world that ASEAN is open for business. That's the call made by Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in a wide-ranging interview with the ..."
Doesn't he know what a laughing stock he is? If he thinks that the Asean leaders will take notice of whatever he says, he must think they are fools when the biggest fool is him for losing $100 billion of public money at the hands of his wife.
None of the Asean countries lost public money to foreigners like the way this anus cancer son lost public money
Will dog chee have done anything better?
Originally posted by Honeybunz:Will dog chee have done anything better?
Who the fark cares?
Only when people are in power are they held accountable.
At the present, what is critical is that nepotism must be striked down hard or the country will be slowly destroyed....
Come to a consensus which GRC should fall to the opposition
Up.
LKY pls read this thread,it is your Bibles.^^
Damned cursed despots... persecuting people criticising them....
Another day in the lion city, almost
John Berthelsen
Asia Sentinel
Singapore again ousts the editor of the Asia Sentinel
You can say one thing for Singaporeans. They have long memories. And if you think the place is loosening up, think again.
In 1988 — 21 years ago — my projected three-year stint as the Asian
Wall Street Journal's correspondent in Singapore ended two years early
when the Singaporeans refused to grant me another work visa, and I was
forced to leave the island republic to its own devices. Singapore does
not now take kindly to the practice of independent journalism, and it
didn't then. The media watchdog organization Reporters Without Borders
ranks Singapore 140th out of 167 countries surveyed in terms of freedom
of the press. The country has been kicking foreign journalists out for
writing critical articles about the republic since the early 1970s.
Fast forward through three jobs and several countries to March 17, 2009
– Tuesday – when I flew to Singapore for a one-day stopover as a
formality to getting a new visa for Indonesia. The bullfrog-faced woman
at the country's immigration counter, an office that is among the
world's fastest and most efficient – stiffened visibly when she entered
my US passport into her computer, and immediately called for backup.
Twenty-one years later, I was being bounced out of the country again.
The Burmese general Thein Sein was luckier. The junta member got a warm
welcome and an orchid named for him. Perhaps there was a mixup, or
perhaps he banks there.
Seconds after the woman passed my passport through her scanner, I was
shepherded away from the usual scrum of passengers headed out into
Singapore's tropical sunlight, and into a facility where a stone-faced
immigration officer apparently busied himself making telephone calls.
When I attempted to ask to inform a colleague on the same trip that I
had been detained, he shooed me back into the facility, where I sat
watching a couple of football teams contend for a half hour or so.
After what appeared to be a series of telephone calls to bureaucrats
somewhere, ultimately, I was led away and into the upper reaches of
Changi Airport. Changi is a great airport, with an array of stores that
would cause envy to some of the world's best department stores. But
there are parts of Changi that you probably aren't ever going to see.
One of those parts was a barren room with a quote on the wall from J.M.
Barrie, who created Peter Pan, that "it is more important to like what
you do than to do what you like." It was equipped with a couple of
racks of bunk beds and two television sets, where I sat with a
half-dozen Chinese hookers who watched a Martha Stewart cooking show
with considerable interest, considering that none of them spoke English.
An couple of hours later, a wholly polite and accommodating immigration
officer acceded to my request and paroled my passport from other
officials so that I could go to duty-free and liberate a couple of
bottles of gin to take back to nominally dry Jakarta. He showed the
passport to the duty-free lady to endorse the purchase, then took the
passport back. Finally I was herded to seat 64D on SQ958 – the very
last row. I wasn't to get my passport back until SIA officials escorted
me to Indonesian immigration, where I, my passport and my duty-free
liquor were liberated.
I am hardly alone in being bounced out of the island republic. Lee Kuan
Yew and his prime minister son, Lee Hsien Loong, for decades have been
suing for defamation and taking other actions against journalists who
don't parrot their version of events. As far as can be determined, they
have lost just one case – in 1984, when Senior District Judge Michael
Khoo made the mistake of ruling that Lee Kuan Yew's mortal enemy, the
late opposition politician Joshua B. Jeyaretnam, was innocent of making
a false declaration about the accounts of his Worker's Party.
Judge Khoo was promptly transferred out of his position as a senior
judge and sent off to the attorney general's chambers. No judge in the
intervening 24 years has ever made the mistake of ruling against the
Lee family, especially in cases involving the press.
The government or members of the Lee family have filed defamation or
contempt charges against virtually every major publication in Asia,
including the International Herald Tribune, the Financial Times, Time
Magazine, the Economist, the now-defunct AsiaWeek and any other
publication that refuses to toe the Lee line. The Far Eastern Economic
Review, especially under the late editor Derek Davies, was a particular
target. The Review in September was fined for having defamed the Lees
pere and fils, in relation to an interview with Chee Soon Juan in which
the serially jailed opposition leader said Singapore would never change
until Lee Kuan Yew was dead.
After the renamed Wall Street Journal Asia was nailed as a paper for
the biggest contempt fine in Singapore history – S$25,000 – the
government apparently decided that wasn't enough. The attorney general
filed suit against Melanie Kirkpatrick, a senior editorial page editor
of the Wall Street Journal itself, 15,339 kilometers away, in kind of
the legal equivalent of Kim Jong Il deciding to launch an
intercontinental ballistic missile because the powers that be weren't
paying enough attention to him.
In a way, it's reassuring that the government could reach across 21
years to pick my name out of the mists of history. It probably means
they are vigilant enough to continue to pursue Mas Selamat Kastari, the
limping jihadi terrorist who somehow managed to escape in February of
2008 from the most secure prison on that most secure 650-sq km island,
and elude capture for more than a year.
This is a government that is said to routinely monitor the telephone
conversations of journalists and opposition figures, keeps them under
surveillance, reads their computer traffic at the uplink, searches
their trash and reads their mail before they get it. Kastari, they say,
is still somewhere on the island. He won't get away, if Special
Branch can take the time away from pursuing the press and the
opposition to look him up.
John Berthelsen is the editor of the Asia Sentinel.
http://asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1773&Itemid=189&limit=1&limitstart=0
Court rejects Thaksin suit against Sondhi
"The court ruled that the defendants did not commit wrongdoing because they served the role of academics, thinkers and communicators when they expressed opinions that were critical of the administrative policy of the Thaksin regime."
It is a no-brainer, actually, unless you are a cursed despot with a son suffering from cancer of the anus.
What he means is that no one must question the nepotism, cronyism and his efforts at taking as much of the people's money as possible and putting as much as possible into his, his relatives, his cronies and the pockets of his dogs.
Learnt from the cursed despot and cronies with regards to bonuses paid to Ho Jinx... the church made a stupid investment, spending $500 million in partnership with Temasek to build a church/shopping mall at One North last year (article in The Straits Times on 16 September 2008 titled “Church pumps in $220m more: New Creation Church’s total stake in lifestyle hub will be $500m”) just before the economic crisis becomes full-blown but paid himself/themselves S$500,000.00 anyway, inspite of the stupidity.
TT Durai must wished he was a Church Pastor
Let somebody start a new topic on this... I sianz start so many topics...
...and once more... my "prophecy" gift is evident because I complained about this very church in ~Eternal Hope~ (Going to church to become rich)(16 Feb `09, 7:40AM) last month, and this news come out this month....
You dont believe in curses rubbing off on cronies?
DBS CEO dies of cancer - 11 Apr 2009
Good for you!
Cursed despot!!!!
KNS, called IMH, today Monday close...Uncle Medicines no more liao, this time really cham liao. Ok lah..together 1....2.....3....
DEspoT!!!