Showing posts with label Others 其它. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Others 其它. Show all posts

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Epoch Times: An Excerpt from ‘Diary of An Expat in Singapore’

Epoch Times, Singapore Edition

478_B6
By Jennifer Gargiulo
Diary of An Expat in Singapore records the tongue-in-cheek journey of an Italian expat living in Singapore.
The author Jennifer Gargiulo takes a hilarious look at life in Singapore – packed with funny anecdotes, snapshots and top 10 lists: Signs you are in a Singapore taxi; Stereotypes about Singapore that are actually true; Things first time visitors to Singapore say; Politically-incorrect expat profiling by nationality; and many more.
Diary is based on the author’s popular blog of the same name. It has been in the Kinokuniya bestseller list since it was published.
Uniquely Singapore (Part 1)
1) Swimming in an outdoor pool on Christmas Day
Only in Singapore. As I watch my kids frolicking in the water, I make a mental list of all the other things that make Singapore unique and differentiate from Verona, as well as from most other places.
2) Parental guidance
No need. Profanity on television is bleeped and there is no nudity. I mean, none. My kids are totally shocked when they watch TV in Italy. And, that’s just the commercials.
3) Capital punishment
Once hoping to have a lively debate with my university class, I brought up the issue of capital punishment and asked my students: “Who’s in favour, who’s against?” 100% infavourno debate. I knew I should have prepared more material.
4) Live-in maids
Cheap labour from the Philippines, Indonesia, and Myanmar. Here, even the maids have maids. Seriously. The wealthier Singaporean families have more than one maid so it is entirely plausible to hear how maid number one is training maid number two. The ideal scenario in Singapore includes a grandparent who keeps an eye on maid number one while she keeps an eye on maid number two. A viable solution for the dual-working-parent household or merely a way to keep the grandparents busy? Who’s to say?
5) School etiquette
Currently, there is a debate as to whether local teachers have the right to cut their students’ hair should the need arise. Yes—if it’s longer than the standard allowed or if the student has already been given prior warning. The mother at the centre of the haircutting media storm was protesting not only because a teacher had taken it upon herself to cut her child’s hair but because that was a $300 hairstyle. Let me repeat that: $300. Understandably, the student didn’t receive much sympathy. All students are expected to wear uniforms, nojewellery, and no make-up. Sneakers must be either all black or all white. The good thing is kids don’t need to worry about being mugged over expensive trainers.
6) Construction work
Ubiquitous working sites, trees being cut down, and consequent loud jackhammeringyou just don’t hear this in Verona. As my kids see it: “That’s because everything is already done in Italy.” Condos here are knocked down for being too old (as in 20 years, not 200 years old). The concept of old equalling bad is hard to comprehend for a Westerner, especially one from Europe. Sadly, beautiful shophouses and green spaces are being replaced by concrete.
Malls are constantly competing with each other on Orchard Road as truckloads of Bangladeshi workers make their daily commute to work; all the bustle contributes to creating the image of Singapore as a city that never sleeps. And, if you live near a construction site, that’s not just a euphemism.
7) Food courts
Fantastic culinary oases, open all day and late into the night, where you can eat all sorts of delicious, inexpensive meals. Indian curries, Korean kimchi, chicken rice… all for $5 (less than a coffee at Starbucks). In some courts, you can use a special debit card that can be topped up at the entrance. Forget BYOB (Bring Your Own Beer), here the only acronym you need to remember is BYON (Bring Your Own Napkin).
8) Tuition… for kindergarteners?
Do you remember when you were little and couldn’t wait for school to be over so you could go out and play? At first, I wondered where all the Singaporean kids were and then I was told they have tuition after class. In kindergarten? How far behind are they? This helps explain why the Singaporean school system has such an excellent reputation.
Also, the inordinate amount of time spent cramming for exams (that’s the moms), and the consequent breaking out in hives (again, the moms). However, if I think back to when I was in elementary school, my afternoon activities consisted of reading or playing outside with my friends until my mother called me inside for Dinner. Not
math, thank God.
My Singaporean neighbour told me her daughter was the only student in her whole class to not have a math tutor. And that was only because she had left her own job as a real estate agent to become her daughter’s personal tutor. The girl’s education dictated their lifestyle (the mother’s quitting of job, the choice of condo they lived in), there was a lot riding on her test results. Pressure? Just a tad.
9) Cheap taxis
Very, very cheap. The price of an espresso at a bar in Italy—albeit one where you pay extra to sit down. True, taxis are cheap, but there are many variables. Peak hours, routes selected and booking fees can easily double one’s final cost. Also, taxi drivers are not too keen on picking up your child from school. Even though the meter is running it’s something they still hate to do. I have had taxis drive away the minute I stepped out to pick up my daughter… and I hadn’t even paid the fare. They just couldn’t bother to wait.
10) Eternal heat
This is actually a stereotype. It’s not always very hot and humid. Sometimes, it’s just hot and humid. The Singaporeans have a solution to this. It’s called air con.
A famous Italian writer, Tiziano Terzani, who lived in Singapore during the 1960s, remembered how there used to be no need for air con because there was such a pleasant breeze—thanks to the lush vegetation throughout the island. Unfortunately, the incessant construction work is dramatically decreasing any chance of that now.
When there are no trees, there is no breeze. Hopefully, the urban planners will not allow Singapore to become another asphalt jungle. Did somebody say Hong Kong?
11) Singlish
So, is the national language English, Chinese, or Malay? Nobody really knows. The government can’t make up its mind and there are too many dialects to consider. No bother, most Singaporeans speak Singlish.
Not always clear as certain answers sound like questions and vice-versa: “Can I have some coffee?” “Can. Can.” (Is that a yes or an invitation to break into a French dance routine?)
Had I not moved to Singapore, I might never have known that the word off can be used as a verb: “Would you like me to off the air con?”
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The Divine Culture Returns

(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T643U-E1nsM)


2014年神韵 SHENYUN

http://www.shenyunperformingarts.org/

Sunday, March 31, 2013

"Schindler's List" - Do we have the courage to be the next Schindler? 我们有勇气与胆识成为下一个辛德勒吗?

 Let's watch a short review of the 1993 Oscar wining film "Schindler's List" directed by Steven Speilberg -

In Poland during World War II, Oskar Schindler gradually becomes concerned for his Jewish workforce after witnessing their persecution by the Nazis.

《辛德勒的名单》拿下了第66届奥斯卡金像奖〝最佳影片〞等七个大奖。美国电影学院AFI百年百大电影榜中,把《辛德勒的名单》列为第八名,也是前十名中,唯一一部入选的90年代电影。它的影响力有多深远呢?直到今天,人们只要一提到纳粹屠杀犹太人的历史,就会联想到《辛德勒的名单》。

今天的〝看电影〞,我们选择这部老片子《辛德勒的名单》,介绍给大家。

【看电影】辛德勒名单20年 人道精神成隽永

 (Source - http://www.ntdtv.com/xtr/gb/2013/03/29/atext871336.html)



The Girl in Red - Schindler's List (3/9) Movie CLIP (1993) HD

(http://youtu.be/j1VL-y9JHuI)



《辛德勒的名单》,带给人们无限的反思与自省,是什么样的力量,让一个投机商人,愿意掏光毕生积蓄,也要救人一命。600万个生命,辛德勒倾尽所有,也只救回了1100条人命。二战结束后,国际誓言,绝不再让这样的悲剧重演。

或许有一天,我们都可能会面对这般残酷的现实,在利益和道义之间作出抉择,到那个时候,我们有勇气与胆识成为下一个辛德勒吗?

"Schindler's List" - Schindler exhausted all his savings but only managed to save 1100 lives.

After the end of World War II, the international vowed never to let such a tragedy happen again.

Perhaps one day, we might face such a harsh reality, to make a choice between the interests and moral.

At that time, do we have the courage to be the next Schindler?

China Communist Regime's crimes -
ORGAN HARVESTING of Falun Gong Practitioners

(Do we have the courage to be the next Schindler? 我们有勇气与胆识成为下一个辛德勒吗?)

(http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLD679A818AFA257E7)


Monday, December 31, 2012

LeSportsac store opens at Changi Airport Terminal 2!

Good News To all LeSportsac fans out there!

King Power International opens LeSportsac store at 
Singapore Changi Airport Terminal 2!
(L-R) King Power Managing Director Travel Retail and Duty Free Sunil Tuli, King Power General Manager Annie Loo and Le Sportsac’s Tomoaki Naito at the Le Sportsac opening

Source: ©The Moodie Report  - http://www.moodiereport.com/document.php?c_id=30&doc_id=33459

By Melody Ng, Asia Bureau Chief


SINGAPORE. King Power International, a subsidiary of King Power Group (Hong Kong), has opened a stand-alone LeSportsac store in Singapore Changi Airport’s Terminal 2. 

The 55sq m store has a three-year term, starting from November 2012. 

The LeSportsac speciality store is one of three Changi concessions won by King Power International earlier this year. The other two three-year contracts, beginning 7 November, were for Kipling (51sq m) and Harrods (87sq m). 

King Power Group (Hong Kong), led by Antares Cheng, has operated numerous concessions at Changi over the past 20 years, from retail to food & beverage. 

TERMINAL 2

Departure Transit Lounge (North) 
Opening Hours : 6.00am - 1.00am
La Vie Manoush Tote

LeSportsac is quintessential American lifestyle brand of causal, trend setting bags. Founded in 1974, the company maintains a strong presence across the globe, offering a fashion forward line of handbags, travel totes, messenger bags, backpacks, and accessories.



 Extra Large Weekender

The lightweight fabric combined with high performance hardware characterizes its iconic, functional styles available in a wide variety of colors and prints.


 Baby Bag


LeSportsac Artist In Residence: LouLou & Tummie  Frame Tote

A leader in the accessories market, LeSportsac continues to offer fresh, innovative new styles that remain consistent in terms of quality and character while partnering with trendsetters around the world.
Men's Tucson Messenger


 Disney It's a Small World Collection by LeSportsac  - Travel Cosmetic


While shopping at LeSportsac, watch this interesting video below.

Sometimes, you might find a note pleading for help from the
 'Made-in-China' product that you had bought!

Secret Note Found in Kmart Holiday Decorations Reveals China's Labor Camp Horrors




Oregon native Julie Keith has found herself in the middle of one of China's biggest controversies, the persecution of the Falun Gong meditation practice.

It all started more than a year ago when she purchased a 17-piece graveyard kit at a local Kmart. It was sitting in storage for a year until this past October. She was just about to donate it because it was collecting dust, but decided to use it for her daughter's fifth birthday party, which falls right before Halloween.

[Julie Keith, Portland, Oregon]: 
"And as I opened some of the Styrofoam headstones, a note popped out. I opened the note and it was from this person pleading for help in the labor camp in China and wasn't sure what to do with it."

The letter, written at the Masanjia Labor Camp in Shenyang, northeast China, paints a grizzly picture. 

"If you occasionally buy this product, please kindly resend this letter to the World Human Right Organization. Thousands people here who are under the persecution of the Chinese Communist Party Government will thank and remember you forever."

The letter claims detainees work 15-hour days and are paid less than $2 USD a month for forced labor. It says thousands are held there, and that many are persecuted Falun Gong practitioners.

And it doesn't end there. It goes on to say , "People who work here, suffer punishment 1-3 years averagely, but without Court Sentence (unlaw punishment). Many of them are Falun Gong practitioners, who are totally innocent people only because they have different believe to CCPG. They often suffer more punishment than others."

[Julie Keith, Damascus, Oregon]:
" The first thing I did was Google the labor camp and it horrified me... some of the stories coming from there. But it really made me happy that I don't live in a country where that kind of thing happens."

China's labor re-education system is notorious for rights abuses. The system is used heavily in the Communist regime's persecution of the Falun Gong spiritual practice. In 2008, the US State Department estimated up to half of the 200,000 registered detainees in Chinese labor camps were Falun Gong adherents.

[Julie Keith, Damascus, Oregon]: 
"I was aware there were prison camps and forced labor, but just not anything so horrific."

Julie says she's she spoken to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Homeland Security Investigations, who are now looking into the claims. 
 
Sears Holdings Corporations, which runs Kmart, has also said it is holding its own investigations.


From - http://ntdtv.org/en/news/china/2012-12-27/american-woman-finds-letter-from-notorious-chinese-labor-camp.html

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Why Jiang Zemin and CCP Persecute Falun Gong?
[VIDEO] Why Jiang Zemin and CCP Persecute Falun Gong?