continuing post by MooKu:
Any bills tabled by the Opposition Members of Parliament will not have sufficient supportersHmm that is, if the ruling party deliberately wants to suppress any power or any kind of action that will prove to be favorable to the opposition, then they will not support those bills? But what if those bills are to the people's great advantage?

Throughout the political history of Sinapore, the Ruling Party has shown disdain and arrogance towards the ideas and views given by the Opposition Parties.
From the early warnings of merger with Malaysia, to the current economic and social problems in Singapore, the Ruling Party has displayed arrogance and condescending superiority of their own infallible position of their own political views.
During the early days before merger with Malaysia, there were strong opposition of such a move from the Opposition Parties - such as the now defunct Barisan Sosialis (actually fall-out members from the PAP, who had serious disagreement with LKY and his team), Worker's Party, Singapore Democratic Party - all with different political personailities from today.
Merger with Malaysia was pushed through in a referendum that some say was heavily weighted towards the fateful outcome.
It took another twenty years after 1965, when Singapore was kicked out, that LKY acknowledged that if he had the wisdom of the 'Father of the present Sultan of Brunei', Singapore would have followed Brunei's decision not to merge into Malaysia.
During the late 1980s and 1990s, the Secretary-General of the SDP had written several books about the slanted policies of the Government that portends future hardship for Singaporeans.
The various criticism raised in the books were also raised in Parliament by Opposition Members of Parliament, and these criticisms included:
(1) Education Policies that placed unreasonably high standards that resulted in wasted talents at an early age, resulting in a high rate of psychological casualties amongst the young, which can only cause future social problems.
(2) Economic Policies that provide huge incentives for foreign MNCs to establish their facilities in Singapore, to provide a high absorption rate of the large number of tertiary and secondary, academic and technical graduates that annually join the labor pool.
This high dependence exposes Singapore's weakness in depending on MNCs that itself are highly dependent on cheap labor, and hence will easily relocate to alternative locations with cheaper labor pools.
(3) Government participation in local economic activities through Government Linked Companies, and partnerships with MNCs, that killed local enterprise and any further interests in entrepreneurship.
(4) Government neglect and inattention towards the social and economic hardships of the lower income group and the destitute in Singapore society.
There remains a large section of Singapore society that are living in homes that are either rented from the HDB, or from tenants of HDB Flats that illegally sub-let rooms to eke out a living.
These are the group that remain trapped in the cycle of low income, inability to perform educationally, untrained and unskilled to participate meaningfully in the economy so as to pull themselves and their family out of their circumstances.
These criticisms were never acknowledged and have been continuously refuted in public, with headlines in the newspapers of statistics from the Government data bank.
QUIETLY, the Government tinkered with the education system, with the many changes in the syllabus, with the Education Minister and ministry officials, Parliamentary Sub-committees, making oversea trips to study the education systems of USA, Europe, UK and Japan.
Schools were suddenly encouraged to be flexible in their approach towards education to develop a more creative and thinking person, instead of the heavy dependence in meeting exam standards.
Schools were allowed to drop their participation in the 'O' and 'A' Levels benchmark exams for entries into the Tertiary Insitutions.
Exam orientated syllabus were dropped, and the students are regularly graded according to their performance in assignments and projects.
The number of Universities in Singapore have now been increased, when it was once deemed politically sensitive for a country to produce too many intelligent univesity educated persons, which the economic performance of a country cannot absorb. This view was held by our Government since independence, as the political turmoil in the Philippines, Indonesia, India and in Europe, have always been led by Political Thinkers with University Education.
Since the economy crashed in 2002, with massive retrenchment by MNCs relocating to China and other cheaper labor areas, the Government has embarked on a belated drive to encourage Local Enterprise and create Singaporean interests in ENTREPRENEURSHIP.
There has been talk (so far talk only) of Government Linked Companies being dismantled, so as to allow local enterprise to thrive. Unfortunately, the dismantling seems to see the GLCs going into the hands of approved individuals, who seem to be acting as proxy for the Government again. Wayang Kulit at work.
Quietly, the Government has adopted policies that they have publicly abhorred to assist the lower income group and poorer sector of the Singapore population - as they begin to default and pay for their daily needs of having a roof over their head, utilities and essential services on a daily basis.
The Government has to subsidised and provide social welfare on a larger scale as a larger number of Singaporeans begin to qualify for assistance as their economic capacity lowered as a result of the present economic situation; and this the Government does so only grudgingly, with requirements attached that 'rub salt into wounds' suffered by the economic downfallen.
Up till this day, Government direct assistance towards the welfare to the aged has been practically zero, with only the paltry tax deduction towards a single individual income tax from each household.
No direct Government grant is given to any Welfare Home that look after the aged, and this policy is adopted in a moralistic tone that it will require the young to continue to look after their aged parents.
With the economic hardship that has been felt since the first economic fallout in 1985, made worse in 1997, and double whammed in 2003, the young can hardly cope with their double jobs to maintain their own needs, let alone looking after their aged parents with high medical fees.
Without Government grants to Welfare Homes to look after Senior Citizens, the Welfare Homes are dependent on charity and contributions; and have to charge a high monthly fees to take care of the aged that are left in their care.
The contradictory demands made by the Government towards Singaporeans only serves to put more unnecessary pressures.
They need Singaporeans to be productive, to be entrepreneurial, to contribute to the economy. Meanwhile for the employed, they work for a reduced salary and CPF, while the Government charges higher rate for essential services and also increase the GST.
They expect Singaporeans to look after the aged parents, but they expect Singaporeans to be gainfully employed too. To be gainfully employed, Singaporeans will need to employ a foreign domestic help to look the aged left at home. Meanwhile, the Government will impose a Foreign Worker's Levy that is more then double the wage paid to the foreign domestic help.
Do we need to suffer another cycle of hardship as had experience repeatedly since independence in 1965 ?
Without any strong Opposition presence in Parliament to provide a serious challenge to the Ruling Party that form the Government, it can only result in the continued high handed, arrogant, and condescending attitude that has been displayed by the Ruling Party towards alternative views.
It is only with a credible presence in Parliament that will signal to the Ruling Party that Singaporeans are willing to take a risk for CHANGES to be made to the status quo.
Business cannot continue in the usual manner all the time.