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Is Singapore still based on equality? | Regardless Of Class | Full Episode

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CNA

CNA

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 493
@hoifeikwok7457
@hoifeikwok7457 4 жыл бұрын
As a Singaporean living in UK, I am proud of the achievements of my home country but am ashamed that people in Singapore looked down upon fellow citizens who are in low paid jobs as shown in this video. In UK, people say thank you to cleaners, bus drivers, lollipop men and ladies, etc. To verbally abuse these people who work hard to provide a service to us is unacceptable.
@amyyap2838
@amyyap2838 4 жыл бұрын
Hoi Fei Kwok It’s a joke... Singaporeans look down on Low paid jobs. Thinking ownself very high class... what a joke, they are third world people living in first world country, their mentality is very Outdated...
@lord2529
@lord2529 4 жыл бұрын
Class and wealth comes separately.
@Zosterias
@Zosterias 4 жыл бұрын
First world country with third world citizens.
@jackhon
@jackhon 4 жыл бұрын
Are you kidding? The brits practically invented classes with their hierarchical separation of society.
@hoifeikwok7457
@hoifeikwok7457 4 жыл бұрын
@@jackhon they did not invent class system. A lot of cultures have their own class system and the Brits have their own. But now it is not as obvious as before and generally people do not verbally abuse people who are lower paid, etc. And even in workplaces, we call our boss by first name.
@krollpeter
@krollpeter 4 жыл бұрын
If the low paid cleaners, smelly rubbish collectors, the old uncle who cleans your table is not here - Singapore would drown in dirt and pests. If the ambulance driver, the Philippina nurse, or the elderly caretaker was not there - many of us would die alone at home on minor illnesses, because it was impossible for doctors to do their job. If the gardener, the security guard, or the Indian road worker was not there - we all would live in a big slum. Some people are totally overpaid. Some other people have jobs that are paid far lesser than their actual importance. And what is probably worse: We look down on them over our noses.
@joesr31
@joesr31 4 жыл бұрын
Jobs are often not paid based on importance rather, the level of skill required. Higher the skill, the lesser the supply of labour, thus, the higher the pay. For example, comparing a neurosurgeon to a bus driver, some may argue the bus driver is a more important job as it is required in the daily lives of many people, however, because it is a low skilled job, many people are able to qualify for that job if they tried thus the pay is lower as compared to a neurosurgeon who requires a lot more commitment and ability since not everyone are capable of getting a specialist medical degree, thus are higher paid
@krollpeter
@krollpeter 4 жыл бұрын
@@joesr31 sorryy, I now have to quietly leave that room. Why? "Jobs are often not paid based on importance rather, the level of skill required." Exactly that is what I found is more and more NOT the case.
@leblackrosethorn3834
@leblackrosethorn3834 4 жыл бұрын
thing is that, even the teachers encourage us to study hard so "we don't become like them". they will be like no offence and ofc u agree u won't want to be a cleaner etc, but the fact that schools make it a driving factor for students to study hard, those students are bound to grow up looking down on these cleaners, even despite the cleaner appreciation days and stuff like that, proving these class divides are really not going to change.
@285jim
@285jim 4 жыл бұрын
Then u can take the study hard part as the good motivator and then reject the obnoxious and ungrateful and mean spirit part. Be even more sensitive than the teachers, so to speak...
@leblackrosethorn3834
@leblackrosethorn3834 4 жыл бұрын
@@285jim yeah ik just saying how our education is flawed🤷🏻‍♀️
@MAR-wz3vx
@MAR-wz3vx 4 жыл бұрын
U can study hard then help those cleaners what
@leblackrosethorn3834
@leblackrosethorn3834 4 жыл бұрын
@@MAR-wz3vx yeah n do what? Give them money every month? Millionaires don't do that I'm pretty sure
@MAR-wz3vx
@MAR-wz3vx 4 жыл бұрын
@@leblackrosethorn3834 ya thats why we are encouraged to give and help the poor in islam we dont look down on others. We are not supposed to keep our wealth seflishly to ourselves. Lead a simple life and use the rest of ur earnings to help others. When u lead a simple life, eat what u need to eat, u will also realise u wont get diseases like type 2 diabetes from eating too much food etc... just be simple and help others
@MAJORflab
@MAJORflab 4 жыл бұрын
Im really touched at how down to earth the host of this series is. He’s literally a senior minister which might be news to some ,dresses like an everyday singaporean and he’s hosting an entire series of this documentary instead of just sitting in his office and delegating it to someone else. As a person, i really feel inspired by him of walking the talk :)
@shadowhunter5481
@shadowhunter5481 3 жыл бұрын
Ironically his son goes to an IP sch
@ananthnm3014
@ananthnm3014 3 жыл бұрын
@@shadowhunter5481 why is that ironic? in my opinion your class doesn't really affect your chances of getting into a top school, because im not of a high class but im also part of an IP school
@shadowhunter5481
@shadowhunter5481 3 жыл бұрын
@@ananthnm3014 nah it's not that I too am in an ip school but js the background matters alot with stuff like how high in the education hierarchy u will climb
@jaliniesiri1717
@jaliniesiri1717 4 жыл бұрын
Wow..Thank you Janil for highlighting and creating awareness to the public and the rest of the world. Many ask why I left Singapore to moved to Colombia. It is the sense of belonging and perceived value that my country and family did not provide me. It took me 26 years to figure out that im the designer of my fate.The segregation in education is completely biase and does not encourage 'slow' students to succeed. It just puts a label and it takes years for a child to remove it him/herself. I could never be an teacher in Singapore because entry to JC/Polys did not favour students who dont do well in Math and Science. Im an NA student and went through ITE,POLY and UNI to finally 'socially succeed' in life.Today im teaching Global Perspectives and English in a private school in Colombia.I am valued as a professional(not by race or class) and I have a sense of belonging which I longed for. I may not have the equivalent salary as compared to exchange rates but I am a teacher today.
@PirateKing1256
@PirateKing1256 3 жыл бұрын
Omg! I just moved to Colombia! Just 1 month ago. I'm 28 this year. Enough is enough!
@etloo1971
@etloo1971 3 жыл бұрын
Colombia in South America? You'll have to speak and write Spanish then.
@sashawinnie1884
@sashawinnie1884 4 жыл бұрын
It's depressing how our education is crushing the self esteem of our children and as a result the lower end, usually the poorer side often feels less motivated.
@tycokid8989
@tycokid8989 4 жыл бұрын
I think it boils down to Singaporeans were taught of meritocracy. "If you are still in lower class, could mean that you did not worked hard enough." To break that, we should ask the next question, "how come? This way, we may be able to understand the complex reasons such as unfortunate family circumstances. -from a lower income family living in 3-room flat.
@TheMandom88
@TheMandom88 4 жыл бұрын
Most Singaporeans are reserved, they don't even greet each other in the lifts and tend to keep to themselves. They prefer privacy then the old kampong spirits of helping each others and sharing a story of a family dilemma so that whole kampung know. However, there are good samaritians who will stop in to help irregardless of races or religions.
@kongthai..
@kongthai.. 4 жыл бұрын
That's not true.
@kongthai..
@kongthai.. 4 жыл бұрын
That's not true
@Irkkan
@Irkkan 4 жыл бұрын
True man
@Catty889
@Catty889 4 жыл бұрын
Well there is some truth in that, I too, do it too. But when others greet me, I do not hesitate to repay the kindness back. Occasionally when I greet them, they do the same as well.
@gamingrex2930
@gamingrex2930 4 жыл бұрын
If white collars and blue collars respected each other more, it would be better :(
@pointlesssentience3987
@pointlesssentience3987 4 жыл бұрын
Oh hey, isn’t this the same documentary that somehow won an award despite manipulating an IP students response to make her seem elitist?
@se4nng
@se4nng 4 жыл бұрын
Yea, the really skewed video....
@yopin7026
@yopin7026 4 жыл бұрын
Can you give some sources? How did they manipulate
@pointlesssentience3987
@pointlesssentience3987 4 жыл бұрын
Koen Foo www.google.com.sg/amp/s/sg.style.yahoo.com/amphtml/cna-regardless-class-seemed-too-230004399.html
@chickeabiddy
@chickeabiddy 4 жыл бұрын
@@pointlesssentience3987 thanks for sharing. good read.. no wonder i feel like this documentary seem so stereotypical, CNA cut out so many insightful points brought up by the interviewees
@mariamelanialallo1215
@mariamelanialallo1215 4 жыл бұрын
@@pointlesssentience3987 thanks for your insights, it's interesting for me. Honestly, this documentary will still be cool, even if they don't alter the reality. too bad, media and their polarization....
@MegaENCHANCER
@MegaENCHANCER 4 жыл бұрын
I strongly believe that one of the reasons children have the conception of social class division is because of their teachers in school. When I was in primary school especially, my teachers continually reiterated that we must study hard so we don't "end up in a neighbourhood secondary school" where you'll be with other unruly students. My teachers attached negative connotations to neighbourhood schools and that vastly influenced my classmate and I's perception on neighbourhood and "branded" secondary schools. It made me have the perception that people from neighbourhood schools are usually academically untalented and have bad character (very ashamed to admit this). And apparently usually teachers who don't do well in branded schools will be transferred to a neighbourhood school. (I was also from a lower tier class in a branded primary school and I remember students from the upper tier class laughing at our PSLE score goals.) It was only until I went to poly and met many other people from neighbourhood schools then I realised my perception wasn't true. I have met many hardworking, kind and academically talented friends in poly who were from neighbourhood schools. A place to start solving the social class division is by educating teachers to not make derogatory comments about neighbourhood schools. Insinuating and making such comments creates huge divisions.
@angelamagnus6615
@angelamagnus6615 4 жыл бұрын
Teachers are ,unknowingly or not, the biggest agents of fear in our education system.
@lilianteo3229
@lilianteo3229 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, during my time (40 over years ago), my teacher used "car park attendants" as lower class.
@yivunqp963
@yivunqp963 2 жыл бұрын
Parents play a bigger part. If parents show respect to these workers, children will automatically pick up those cues.
@shinhwaleo
@shinhwaleo 4 жыл бұрын
I born and raised in a HDB rental flat with my mum ( sometimes with her boyfriend) in a 1 room flat we were staying. Now my own hardship and people around me ( opportunity) and right belief bring me where I am now. I can't denied that I or my mum still had the poor class people mindset / bad poor people habit within us. Everyday is a challenge to become a better me than yesterday.
@khamarulzakaria2280
@khamarulzakaria2280 4 жыл бұрын
Don’t let others affect you or look down on you. Be the best version of yourself. Work on your craft if you feel lacking. Find streams that you can improve on. Regardless, treat everyone with respect and kindness.
@cheehiong
@cheehiong 4 жыл бұрын
I work as a management consultant now and I came across this video and spoke with my manager about this social class "situation" just to have a perspective on this. The outcome of the conversation was that there is a structural societal issue that just doesn't come across as a topic of discussion even as working professionals. My background hasn't been fantastic, low-income family, barely made it into express stream, did well in polytechnic and got into university (average scores). The thing is, companies and even tertiary education institutions should really rethink what it means by getting a "certification" or what an education should really encompass. Is it really just for a piece of paper that does not fully justify your future work performance or should tertiary education be a little more holistic in the topics that are taught, how the classes are taught and how students are really assessed. Stop looking at education as a MOE problem where MOE should solve this. You need to get MOM and the larger community to be involved in this. Its just cause and effect. PS: Its just dumb to have universities grade on a bell-curve and give students 'B's even though they can score 90 marks just because they are not the top 15%.
@yivunqp963
@yivunqp963 2 жыл бұрын
For the bell curve grading, it is not "dumb". If students scoring 90 are not in the top 15%, it just means the paper set for that exam is too simple.
@cheehiong
@cheehiong 2 жыл бұрын
@@yivunqp963 no you are right. And scoring in the top 10% doesn’t necessary mean having aptitude in that when it comes to applied situations like at work too. There’s always a fear of grades inflation as well, but I’d rather hire a Harvard B student than a A student from a backwater university. That’s just how it works in reality
@yivunqp963
@yivunqp963 2 жыл бұрын
@@cheehiong true. But most of the time, the people you wish to hire are those in the top 10% WITH the amplitude to execute real-life scenarios. There are definitely those who can perform better with lesser grades but it is on the interviewer to gauge the amplitude of the candidiate.
@AstrobumTV
@AstrobumTV Жыл бұрын
The pros of having the bell curve in the education system is that when you fail as a class, you still pass as an individual.
@RemusReddragon87
@RemusReddragon87 4 жыл бұрын
No ,most people in the express stream DO NOT look down on you , maybe just a handful of them. In reality, the reason why you feel that you're looked down upon is because you feel ashamed that you're in that stream and if you were to be in the express stream , you would look down on others(not in the express stream), therefore you feel that you're looked down upon as you would do the same if you were in the express stream ( I was from NA if you were wondering)
@k-popk-dramaj-anime7777
@k-popk-dramaj-anime7777 4 жыл бұрын
Remus Lee If you are NA then I am NT which is even lower than you and I did quite well for my studies because I studied very hard ...well said !!!
@bigbadcalamity721
@bigbadcalamity721 4 жыл бұрын
True i was from express stream but i was closer to NT students than NA. Always hanging around with them and playing football every day. I have no idea why NA kinda dislike express stream students. We don't look down on them. NT students are much more friendly and easier to get along with. Maybe NA students just have an inferiority complex.
@maganashaker167
@maganashaker167 4 жыл бұрын
Huh? Why would Express stream look down on people?
@esyphillis101
@esyphillis101 4 жыл бұрын
Muhammad Nazrin Maybe it’s the feeling of being in the middle, “neither here nor there” if you get what I mean.
@unknown4327
@unknown4327 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for voicing out this! I think most express students dont look down upon others. I feel that most of the awkwardness stems from difference in common topics. Because there is lesser common ground due to background and environment, people who feel that they are lower status might feel left out from the conversation of the so-called "higher class". This happens regardless of "class" for example i'm sort of middle class but the poeple ard me are like doctors and med students from high income households. When they talk about travelling to europe or stuff like that ofc i wouldnt be able to chip in as much. But doesnt mean that they look down on me what because thats their lifestyle! Also, i feel that im able to learn more about their perspective and see that those so-called respected professions are just people and they are actually not as stuck-up as others think.
@albertwong1919
@albertwong1919 4 жыл бұрын
I like this documentary we need more like this to really understand that income gap and the effects on our young generations is detrimental to social cohesion and our social fabric and is the probable cause of what we are seeing now in HK! We cant be doing the same things when Singapore was poor and developing, now when we are already a developed nation. We need new policies and our education system needs to review how to bring up the self esteem and confidence of those in the left behind category eg. those Malay boys who feel inferior due to being in the normal stream and wanted attention and to create a bad boy image to boost their self confidence. Everyone wants to be respected and feel relevant and we should start with out your generation so we dont get into a class and social divide base on our intellectual capabilities which is connected to our social status and economic status.
@nuyorican1985
@nuyorican1985 4 жыл бұрын
This is crazy to me as an outsider looking in. In the USA yes we have class discrimination, in many parts of society however that doesn't stop many of us from making deep friendships with people. I have friends from all walks of life. I'm a "white collar worker" I work in healthcare but I have "blue collar worker" friends that work in what many would think is a lower end career. Just because of my job doesn't mean that I'm better than they are. I just don't understand why people are placed in separate "class" systems in school based on background. That's setting people up to fail. The best way is to integrate the schools. And revamp the way the school system is done. I felt bad for the 2 teen kids that felt just because of the way they talked means that they feel the "other side" thinks they are less than them. And what that girl said that integration wouldn't work shows she's already dividing herself and doesn't want to interact with "lower class" students. It shows that the way the government runs the schools in Singapore they are inadvertently creating class separation. This is just crazy to me. But again I'm from the US so we do things differently here. I was in Singapore several years ago and I saw many people treat the lower paid workers like they were less than human. I honestly didn't have a good time in Singapore because my Singaporean friends who happen to be upper middle class made many situations uncomfortable for me. I can't tell you how many times I told them not to treat security guards, maids and others with respect. I told them that it is unacceptable behavior no matter where you grew up. It took them a long time to break that nasty habit but they are doing better. However personally based on my experience in Singapore I won't go back because the class discrimination and to an extent the racism in certain areas where to much to bare. And that's coming from a New Yorker now living in the southern US. Even my friends who grew up in southern US states that were with us didn't like the way richer people in Singapore treated others of lower skills or class. That to me says a lot. I guess for me here in the USA were are always taught that no matter what "class" you were born into you can be whatever you want to be. Your social class means nothing. But seeing this shows me that in Singapore "class" really matters. Even though it shouldn't matter at all. That's setting up people for failure no matter what "class" you were born into. I grew up poor personally and I had a hard time in school but I worked hard and now I am a division manager for a healthcare company. If I would have grown up in Singapore I feel I wouldn't have been able to achieve everything I have now.
@striker44
@striker44 7 ай бұрын
Schools in USA also have "gifted" students and also cliques form right from elementary which exacerbates in middle and high school. The private school kids don't even interact with public school kids. The class system continues between the executive class and upper social circles which many are not even aware or included in. Each live in their own circles and understandably so. In Singapore it is harsh because of very land size, high density of educated population, these class differences shows up very strongly compared to the US. I do agree that they have designed to differentiate which will backfire in some ways as a nation.
@GKP999
@GKP999 4 жыл бұрын
I think it is important to be respectful and polite to everyone regardless of class or the kind if work that the person does.
@simonsimon2888
@simonsimon2888 4 жыл бұрын
Everyone of us are born with his or her weaknesses or strengths. i grew up in old Singapore when social classes exist too. But, the youngsters are humble and realistic with themselves. They show respects for those who are better than them. In return, they get respects too. HUMILITY for everyone and better parentings. SINCERITY and TRUSTWORTHY. Remember, the older generations are from many poor families. Every mother will teach their children "let you be poor but HONEST!" So, it is not MALU(Shame) to be poor for this word HONESTY is richer than any gold in the world.
@soonny002
@soonny002 4 жыл бұрын
This is an age-old dilemma... Hunter-gatherer societies have the most egalitarian worldview but even they need some hierarchy to maintain order and viability within the group. One of the biggest reasons why they are egalitarian was because each individual's value to the group was apparent for all to see as long as the group remains relatively small so every member can track themselves relatively easily. Our value as individuals in today's massive and complex societies is harder to fathom or measure. For example, how should we value two employees of similar skills and calibre? One chooses to work 15 hours a day while the other works for 5. Surely you'd think the former was a much more valuable member of the workforce... until you realise that the latter employee had to work less in order to care for his sick child at home, and without his help, his child might have to be hospitalised for prolonged periods of time which may cost much more in tax payer's money. People needed a way to value each other and themselves, but with no reliable way of doing that, we turned naturally to a simple yet misleading way of valuing ourselves against our wealth. That is, we falsely equate our worth or value to society by the amount of money we make, rather than what we actually contribute. And if education was a proxy to wealth, then our value will be tied to that. The same goes for occupation, housing, assets, etc. Garbage collectors are often cited as a good example of this fallacy because although they are not highly regarded within society, take away their jobs and society will soon start to suffer. It is the same for farmers, undertakers, police officers, social workers, etc. Yet the world will tick over just fine long after the banker has gone on strike, even though they made the most money. Singapore's 'class' problem is really a 'value' problem. If people valued themselves by the amount of wealth they could gather, then surely there will be a class divide because this is the very nature of a capitalistic economy. Thus people are bound to feel shitty about themselves when they find themselves at the bottom of the food chain. Capitalism has its own problems but that's a story for another day. Until then, it is the predominant economic system that is lifting millions out of abject poverty but at the same time perpetuating and worsening income inequality. But what if there is another way to value a person's worth in society other than our incomes? *shrugs* Would we start feeling better about ourselves? Maybe. Note: I'm not saying that wealth is not important because poverty is a very real thing and people do suffer from it. I'm just saying that there should be more than one way to measure our worth in society other than our earning power.
@davidscz
@davidscz 4 жыл бұрын
My personal observation in one of companies I used to work in: most people don't initiate conversations with people of roles whom they see as less important (i.e cleaners etc), even though the cleaners are in the pantry most of the time. I also noticed there is a stigma towards speaking malay, but I initiated conversations in Malay towards the cleaner anyway, cuz it felt more sincere and warm. He is hardworking, honest person who worked 2 jobs but struggled to stay afloat financially as his child is suffering from a chronic illness. For an extended period of time no one talked to him much, until one day a new country head from overseas took over, suddenly there is a surge of people talking to him (albeit just touch n go), I felt a bit disgusted by the lack of sincerity, as if just to put up a show
@ethanites
@ethanites 4 жыл бұрын
“justice AND equality” is something we say in our pledge every day in schl. but some of my classmates think that just coz they’re in the top class theyre the best and can look down on those in average classes. some of them even go to the lengths of racism that they think that malays in the schl are dumb cuz there are only 4 malays out of the 80 kids in the top 2 classes. but i’m not saying the top 2 classes aren’t controversial among the average classes too. some kids in the average classes think that the top2 classes are snobs and toxic. some times id hear them say “they’re sexist” or “they’re bad at making friends that’s why there so toxic all the time” then there are the teachers, yes I know all teachers have favourites but when I moved on to p5 and P6 I noticed that my teachers are REALLY biased and you’ve guessed it, the smarter kids are always given the better treatment than those who take more time to learn although I haven’t really experienced these kinds of issues, I really hate to see my “smart but not as smart as the geniuses” classmates getting scolded by the teacher over trivial matters like asking to go to the toilet or asking if they can go for their early recess activities as they’re running late and if they don’t arrive in time, they’ll be punished while the better kids always get praised over the same kind of things let’s say this: john is a genius in the class tom is also in the same class but may not be as much of a genius as john tom: “teacher, can I please go for my recess duty?” teacher: “YOU KNOW WHAT TOM?! SINCE YOU WANT TO LEAVE CLASS SO MUCH, GET OUT NOW!!” john: “teacher, i need to go for my recess duty” teacher: “look at john, so responsible and punctual, you all should learn from him, ok you can go.” y’all see the difference? exactly. in the end, they’re both students, they’re humans, they’re the same. let’s refer back to the pledge “justice and equality” is this presented? no. I honestly need this issue to be fixed, I’ve even heard my teacher say this to my classmate: “you already know, *name* I hold a grudge against you.” I will not state which school I am from but I’m sure my school isn’t the only school facing this issue. I don’t think that people should judge others by their intelligence in this world, but what can a simple student like me do? I can’t just write to the government and rant about the fact that the pledge isn’t taken seriously. but I just hope that whoever reads this can understand that you are not alone in this. if we become good citizens like how our fore fathers hoped that we would be, who knows? maybe the next generation will really bring out the equality that everyone deserves, despite race, religion, occupation, intelligence, etc remember, we’re all humans, no one should be treated differently
@ericliu7845
@ericliu7845 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly pretty impressive to have an open dialogue of this situation, coming from a senior politician of the ruling party.
@truenorth4173
@truenorth4173 4 жыл бұрын
Class division of humanity is been goin on since ancient times!
@SuccessforLifester
@SuccessforLifester 4 жыл бұрын
I spoke to a estate cleaner before and he was quite happy. He said he has bought a big house back in his country and when he got married, the wife had to give him a dowry
@Jack-hy2ki
@Jack-hy2ki 4 жыл бұрын
Thats becos sgd is very much stronger than his country's currency. We as Singaporean can also work overseas in a country where their currency is very much stronger than SGD. We too can buy big house in sg and get married. Dowry part will depend which culture.
@SuccessforLifester
@SuccessforLifester 4 жыл бұрын
@@Jack-hy2ki That opportunity of working in a more developed country and then buying big house locally is harder for Singaporean
@Jack-hy2ki
@Jack-hy2ki 4 жыл бұрын
@@SuccessforLifester who say so? Have u tried? I have friendssss for very good examples. Those frequently flying overseas to work live in EA or HDB marionette. Which easily cost $600k above, driving big cars and wearing expensive watches. Those working overseas live in condo or landed in sg and driving big car too.
@SuccessforLifester
@SuccessforLifester 4 жыл бұрын
@@Jack-hy2ki says I. These are the highly skilled people you are talking about. A local cannot go overseas to be a cleaner and achieve the same result.
@Jack-hy2ki
@Jack-hy2ki 4 жыл бұрын
@@SuccessforLifester did they ever tried? Did the lower income ppl even tried to upgrade themselves? Sorry to say I have a handful of cousins who are low income and they did nothing to upgrade themselves. I lived in poverty and I worked hard to upgrade myself. I worked in companies which required me to fly frequently too. I now have my own house too. Its all in the mind set. Also not many ppl will want to fly frequently too. Reason always want more time with family. Those flying frequently or station overseas do not need time for family?
@tonykennedy1615
@tonykennedy1615 4 жыл бұрын
Equality of opportunity is desirable. Equality of outcome is impossible. People are not equal in nature. Central planning always creates more harm than good.
@dl5066
@dl5066 4 жыл бұрын
@DON HUANG But at the same time you are denying others who have worked hard of their chances, how do you determine who should and who should not get a chance? Should someone who has put int more time and effort have his or her opportunity robbed from them because they are of a certain race? Cause that's exactly what affirmative action does.
@dl5066
@dl5066 4 жыл бұрын
@DON HUANG There are 100 opportunities in life, you advocate giving some of them to people for 2nd/3rd chance, that does that mean for others who are going for the same opportunities? Take US universities for example, fixed number of seats, Asian kid would get in on merits but cannot because there is a max Asian quota. Now tell me how affirmative action does not deprive this kid of an opportunity in life?
@dl5066
@dl5066 4 жыл бұрын
@DON HUANG again you're making grandiose statements that do not make sense. We all know that opportunities are limited in life hence people work for them. In the case I've specific used (University admission) it is plan and simple, so stop making stupid comments. You're claim to be supporting equality of opportunities but are actually preaching equality of outcomes. And equality of outcomes can only be achieved by taking opportunities from some who worked for it and giving it to others. I have no issue if that's what you believe, but to claim it is common sense distribution is both hypocritical and senseless.
@dl5066
@dl5066 4 жыл бұрын
@DON HUANG My humble advice for you, stop living in your fantasy world and get real. Everything you said sounds good but you can't carry a conversation based on facts, only on your imagination and emotions. I feel sad for you. P.S. Get off that high horse lol
@aloysiusteng5357
@aloysiusteng5357 4 жыл бұрын
wow I don't remember speaking like this at 12 years old....
@ScarletCamelia
@ScarletCamelia 4 жыл бұрын
How do we not see that we are still trying to work on the symptoms rather than the root cause of this deepening social divide? It all comes down at the end of day, to how are we treating the fellow human being just next to us, or the one who is clearing our garbage in our housing estate, or the person who is keeping our roads and train stations clean, or even the elderly person who is in our family, right there in our home. One day, we will be the ones who will be treated as such too, when we are older and weaker, "poorer" not just in wealth, because this is the society we have built, just by being the way we are and how we treat those who have less than us.
@Christian7355c9b
@Christian7355c9b 4 жыл бұрын
No! Recent incident regarding an 'educated' guy who took photos of a woman bathing in the NUS hostel...He got off easy because according to the judge...he is in a different class altogether because of his education level
@someconscripteddoomer619
@someconscripteddoomer619 4 жыл бұрын
Last time people would ITE no good always got alot of gangster and naughty students. When this story came out, nobody cares about it😑
@kelsroom2
@kelsroom2 4 жыл бұрын
When I was kid, I don't even know what is branded things.
@derraumdeuter2109
@derraumdeuter2109 4 жыл бұрын
Ikr. I was in primary school during 2011 even then we didn't showboat or even know abt branded items.
@jeankmeow4422
@jeankmeow4422 4 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid in primary 2, my classmates already know what car our dads' are driving... Very materialistic!
@derraumdeuter2109
@derraumdeuter2109 4 жыл бұрын
@@jeankmeow4422 when were u p2 like which year?
@kongthai..
@kongthai.. 4 жыл бұрын
Children are unaware of many things. That kid with the branded goods is very mature
@foodie1300
@foodie1300 4 жыл бұрын
Keep up the good work CNA. Branded schools and their teachers should watch this. I like Mr Janil:)
@armistice2358
@armistice2358 4 жыл бұрын
Getting out of poverty is possible, but the formula used is far different and despised by the conventional wisdom. Tough mental strength, big guts and not following the crowd. This is what I learn from my father who went from being born in poverty and being *Look Down* by everyone to 10s of Millions with annual income of 7 figure base on my estimation and figures I have.
@mrrebel4163
@mrrebel4163 4 жыл бұрын
Yup. I Guess to be successful. You have to do what 99% of people won’t do to be the 1%. I suggest get a job into sales, then do business, then invest the money in property.
@kiatsan5781
@kiatsan5781 4 жыл бұрын
Let's face it. The poor ones are those who owe the banks. Regardless of how big or small the car or house is.... If you owe the bank, you are in debt. Period. Many with condos and continental cars. Are they really rich. They could be struggling like any other people. So before you judge others. Look into your own wallet first.
@kiatsan5781
@kiatsan5781 4 жыл бұрын
@DON HUANG I totally understand what you are saying. I will offer you an example. For instance, my cousin recently bought a sports car worth $800k plus and she paid in full. Her house is also paid up. She's free of any financial obligations. It's never important whether she invest her extra cash or not. Now, The smart people that you mentioned. It's fantastic If their possessions are fully paid off and investing the surplus cash into bonds or other investments tools to generate an interest of 5% or more but should any of those smart people have loans to clear.. That's debt. Regardless of how smart they are.. Ultimately a loan is debt to to cleared. They have to face the piper every month. Hypoptically, if I had a million dollars cash in a bank and I owe my friend $10. I am in debt. That's my point.
@Andy-eb1hq
@Andy-eb1hq 4 жыл бұрын
Wats the pt of speaking among urself
@certifiedbruh2180
@certifiedbruh2180 4 жыл бұрын
Are you defending the rich
@hughkwan9681
@hughkwan9681 4 жыл бұрын
31:00 how can u not expect the awkward situation of embarrassment coming from both ends when your moderating plan was so ill prepared? the school environment can only influence 30% of a student's development. 70% is out of school and mostly from their own families and the neighborhood and social circle they come from.
@seth-leong-scott3474
@seth-leong-scott3474 3 жыл бұрын
I think that they should have brought in express students into the conversation... not just extreme ends like IP and NT because that really skews the results in some sense -Regards, a Sec 3 express student
@agatha8585
@agatha8585 4 жыл бұрын
Hi, I just finished P-S-L-E a month ago (I’m from Singapore) Gonna be honest, it’s very stressful and all but to us it’s normal and not surprising. We take our first examinations at the age of 9, I dunno if this is normal in other countries I have a friend in my school who moved to Texas (She was the type of student who ALWAYS failed in class, C’s and below only) and when she moved to Texas she passed her exams with all 90% and above. We have a pretty advanced education.
@striker44
@striker44 7 ай бұрын
She must be happier and free of the miseries now. She may prosper without duress.
@oliviakong7498
@oliviakong7498 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video. We got to start this long battle of re-educate our Singaporeans through the public and implement into our Educational system. Various channel we could work on with social media, school theatre, newspaper, radio, etc. Start off from our education. Correct and relearn how to be a better human being. Introduce social studies might not be enough. Enhance with Confucius studies or relevant. The school teacher playing an important role along the learning path of every single student requires to take up human resource management with psychology regularly to relearn and unwind the stress as well as to handle situation of what and how to speak, teach, listen and understand. A well check balance aside working hard towards our goal and emphasize on helping others in need. A well balance between academic as well as emphasize more humanity, empathy. Building a confident mindset and master the skill to curb with low self-esteem or when situations/ things don't sounds good, discouraging, awkward etc. The basic foundation of being as a human being is to love, care, respect, empathy and not forgetting to share among with the others. More freelancer teachers are needed to help those families who really needs help with their studies.
@NormallyImKim
@NormallyImKim 2 жыл бұрын
This video is really impactful. But the divide is tough to tackle. It will take generations for everyone to be on similar footing.
@maclee2470
@maclee2470 4 жыл бұрын
lky had said before, the national pledge is not realistic but an aspiration
@angelamagnus6615
@angelamagnus6615 4 жыл бұрын
He is lame. If he is not selling his vision, why is the LKY workship cult still around as if he is some sort of demigod. Or his "realistic" analysis is just an excuse for some of his inability to do certain things? If life is as bleak and that we should not dream higher, then he should not be the visionary leader in the first place.
@angelamagnus6615
@angelamagnus6615 4 жыл бұрын
I also don't need an LKY to tell me that our nation has inherent limitations like no natural resources and small population. It is as obvious as f*** to someone who dares to use his brain to think.
@limlisa
@limlisa 4 жыл бұрын
@@angelamagnus6615 people who have no aspiration will not have hope. No hope they won't work and there will be no progress for the country.
@angelamagnus6615
@angelamagnus6615 4 жыл бұрын
@@limlisa This is obvious. It is up to every individual to dream big and work for it. Whether it is Singaporean or American or Indian dream.
@limlisa
@limlisa 3 жыл бұрын
@@angelamagnus6615 that why we work towards the aspiration but must be realistic. Nowadays people are too naive and believe a change will do more good
@wumingkkk
@wumingkkk 4 жыл бұрын
I was on Instagram looking at people who love to post about their lives. There is this particular young girl who has a well to do mother went shopping for their new house. She said in her video that Best Denki is the most boring place and nothing in the store ever interests her. Hinting that the place is for normal people and disgusted in normal places like this. She loves to shop in Marquis, Bently and other expensive places. This problem starts with young when money is too easily available for them and they start looking down on normal things.
@sarinahpape4569
@sarinahpape4569 3 жыл бұрын
An eye opener! Treating people decently with respect doesn't have to be dependent on their class.l am not perfect! People are good naturally. Positive action usually have correct right reaction. Very rare do people reacted negatively. Yard stick are used to measure which class they belong to in society. They have a choice.
@tri4432
@tri4432 4 жыл бұрын
I was from express stream, i never looked down on na or nt stream like how they perceived. same for the rest of my classmates
@amyyap2838
@amyyap2838 4 жыл бұрын
Don’t pretend la
@renderz8435
@renderz8435 4 жыл бұрын
Amy yap youre the epitome of toxic singaporean
@liubaohuat732
@liubaohuat732 3 жыл бұрын
Sure bo?
@peterwang1011
@peterwang1011 3 жыл бұрын
@@amyyap2838 He is just being polite.
@Unknownplsyer
@Unknownplsyer 3 жыл бұрын
Good for you but it doesn't mean others are like you. Personally, I have been called stupid once from someone in express stream and I'm in na...
@albertwong1919
@albertwong1919 4 жыл бұрын
Class divide, social divide is due to human nature and belonging in a group. First impressions due to how u dress, how u talk etc.. human beings are social creatures and birds of the same feather will flock together. I dont think this issue can ever be solved.
@albertwong1919
@albertwong1919 3 жыл бұрын
@@jg1174 - In a nutshell it really comes down to the 'I' vs the "We" and which takes priority. Every individual are unique and different like the grain of sands on a beach.. education and in the ancient times religion serves to maintain the good for the 'we', but essentially if we believe the laws of nature, the "I' takes precedence for the survival of the fitness hence this paradox of nature vs nurture. Education or even religion cannot completely replace the morality of an individual and his/her motivations and actions in life but can only serve as a guide and principle essentially its the person that really decides there is where the "I" becomes the dominating factor, hence u can even find people committing acts that goes against their religion/education in the same name of same religion/education, your so called sickness.
@Bigjoe99
@Bigjoe99 4 жыл бұрын
The fact so many are surprised by the situation is a reflection of Singapore as a represssive society - by govt, by family and friends, culture, even work culture and ideas. How can a kiasu and kiasi society not result in the situation? .Not seeing these people is understandably because all of us are narcissist but not being aware and not caring that being narcissist result in the situation is what makes us lesser people.
@arianrolex6456
@arianrolex6456 4 жыл бұрын
So I'm express stream and I can 10000000% assure you that most of us look down on especially the NT.
@singapore_liu8639
@singapore_liu8639 3 жыл бұрын
Wa! 100%meh
@arianrolex6456
@arianrolex6456 3 жыл бұрын
A lot sia. A lot of ppl think that NT students take drugs and all, and the school purposely makes our curriculum such that the NT or NA students don’t mix with us. It’s happening, even if people don’t believe so, and I think schools are only reinforcing this fact
@xiangling241
@xiangling241 Жыл бұрын
SG has security guards who can speak excellent and fluent English. They probably can secure high-paying jobs in other countries.
@soapy2587
@soapy2587 4 жыл бұрын
we are forgetting who we are as human beings
@chiaolim7773
@chiaolim7773 4 жыл бұрын
The class divide starts in the schools. Those with money sent their kids to tuition to get better grades which leads to higher educational level. I don't fault those parents but the government needs to step up to give the disadvantages kids a better chance.
@SuccessforLifester
@SuccessforLifester 4 жыл бұрын
Education is not everything. eg. To get into medicine, you need to go through an interview. I know of many average results students getting into the course while top students didn't get in. There is some kind of politics and backend social engineering taking place in their decision.
@SuccessforLifester
@SuccessforLifester 4 жыл бұрын
@DON HUANG Yeah some of the top students rejected to enter medicine was instead offered a Government scholarship. The offer came before the rejection letter and the offer letter said that they know they were being rejected.
@SuccessforLifester
@SuccessforLifester 4 жыл бұрын
@DON HUANG This is a situation where the standard typical old generation family was not prepared for. They simply asked the children to study hard, not knowing that other skills are just as important. Hence the mantra of just studying and working hard is not as straight forward as it looks. The families who were better off were able to expose their children to high level settings and as a result, churned out a different breed of people that tend to do better in life later.
@SuccessforLifester
@SuccessforLifester 4 жыл бұрын
@DON HUANG Yes. One of my distance relative's son could afford it and was sent to UK for the medical degree. If I am not wrong he now lives and works there. I ever saw him on TV shaking hands with Tony Tan during his visit to UK. The irony is that many students who couldn't do well locally and yet are rich enough to be sent overseas, tend to be favoured by companies rather than smart, locally educated students who could not afford to go overseas
@SuccessforLifester
@SuccessforLifester 3 жыл бұрын
@@jg1174 Thanks for the long sharing. Humans really overcomplicated life..
@kingsufian07
@kingsufian07 4 жыл бұрын
I think, being less or having more what make us difference is our conversation. Best if you mix around for both side and not just stick to....... one lane.
@owenchuarbx
@owenchuarbx 2 жыл бұрын
It's still relavent today (as of writing in 2022) as I am still thinking about my future. Thanks again CNA.
@janeloh6064
@janeloh6064 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this topic. Indeed it aches us when we abuse our mindset & eyes by scanning others and labelling high or low class. Neither extreme are preferred.
@turtlegeneral
@turtlegeneral 4 жыл бұрын
23:39 aw this kid shows so much maturity and empathy!
@thamutha
@thamutha 4 жыл бұрын
Its better to be rich than wealthy in Singapore. My version of rich is happiness, peace, love and kindness etc. To attain this, One needs to know about the conscious mind and the subconscious mind. My story I am from a poor income family.Barely had enough money for myself.Sometimes went to school spent a day in sec , ITE , Poly, national service doing group projects and long lectures without food to eat.I was bullied because i had a higher conscious and was Indian often referred to as black even when i wasn't. I was always at the lowest point in my life.I was in hell every single day.i was a still a bright burning sun happy kid until one day i burnt out and became weak,scared, insecure.I became the thing everyone wanted me to be which was below them.Most of these attacks came from the rich and religious. I was posted to Home Team Academy and was motivated.I saw how weak i was and i had to make a change in my life.I never stopped training.I wasn't into gym and so i focused more on body weight workouts, no shortcuts, no autopilot, no protein shakes no steroids.Proper healthy diet and self discipline. Life started getting better not because i had a degree in something or a high paying job. Life started to get better because i understood the word spirit meant in the phrase " mind,body,spirit" and the only way to unlock the spiritual side of myself was to suffer.When i look back on my life and asked myself why did i suffer?why can't i be like that rich kid or that kid? I realized that it was an external fake world and i was destined to live in the real world unlocked through pain and suffering.I was always nice to everyone even when everyone else treated me like shiit and through suffering i learnt to be better human being.Not by sitting for a test getting straight A's but by suffering the right way. The Problem I believe that the reason why people are divided, disrespectful, racist, unkind, toxic, narcissistic etc is because they have been programmed from birth through the subconscious mind to do A B C D to Z and death.My little sister comes home age 5 and tells me she's been called black when shes white or apu nene which means hairy Indian man with nipples.That's what she tells me.Where did the kids learn this?So its no the kids fault. Its people.Its society.A purely subconscious society filled with stress anger hate, revenge envy and people try to rub their hell life onto others.Fake life ,fake people, machine minds operating at 100% subconscious mind 0% conscious mind the spiritual mind.Stay away form these people and surround yourself with highly conscious good people for a better life.That is the solution.
@norman6499
@norman6499 3 жыл бұрын
I feel for u my friends, im a father of 2. It is really the parents who plays a big part in childrens character. There are many times i feel like giving those parents a big slap on their face.
@crowe286
@crowe286 4 жыл бұрын
Singapore definitely has a class system. Look at any construction site!! Younger Singaporeans consider themselves educated & expect a job to match. Anything not acceptable is left for other non singaporean residents to do & paid less. There is also a huge wealth divide across the island. Wealthy nation yet many elderly still have to work as there is no social security system so all elderly are cared for & can retire with dignity.
@maxi-he9dg
@maxi-he9dg 4 жыл бұрын
Very true..non Singaporeans shud not come here and take those unacceptable jobs..also hav more woman at construction sites and give them equal rights
@ScarletCamelia
@ScarletCamelia 4 жыл бұрын
Have we been teaching and focusing on academics and achievements, while forgetting about learning to be a decent human being to our fellow neighbours and countrymen. Were we not taught as a child to go help the elderly auntie carry all her heavy marketing plastic bags? We can offer ourselves and contribute in our small way when we have the means or are stronger or younger, and why not offer a lending hand where needed when it comes to technology or helping a fellow schoolmate / work colleague facing challenges with learning?
@craigt.6283
@craigt.6283 4 жыл бұрын
Difference in education levels, jobs and wealth might be difficult to change or arguably, will always exist. But differences in income class dont have to translate to difference in social class. Our attitudes to people from different economic standings is a personal choice.
@plantiron
@plantiron 2 жыл бұрын
It's not a personal choice. Its nature
@Yuu-it1zk
@Yuu-it1zk 4 жыл бұрын
Very informative documentary thank you
@rhuyisia8163
@rhuyisia8163 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the enlightening video. However, it's not only the segregation of the rich and poor, priviledged and disfranchised in our society at large the only problem! There is also segregation among rich and poor family members, siblings, next of kins etc too! I reckon it's an uphill battle to work around these complexities. However, the efforts by SG govt on such initiatives, dialogues are commendable indeed! Kudos SG!
@leblackrosethorn3834
@leblackrosethorn3834 4 жыл бұрын
thing about stream divides is that as a student, unlike race or sex, u can relate better to students with the same stream as u so people naturally tend to divide themselves. just an opinion based on my observation
@amyyap2838
@amyyap2838 4 жыл бұрын
Look at Lee Bee Wah. Speak like an ah Lian also can become MP. Kids u all shouldn’t be afraid of how u sound.
@zhengtingling5432
@zhengtingling5432 4 жыл бұрын
Yup and she remain in power for how long? Nobody dares to vote her down????? Remember 70.9 percent of Singaporeans cast their votes for this shyt inequality they are complaining.
@ScarletCamelia
@ScarletCamelia 4 жыл бұрын
Our societal issues are starting from where we have the youngest children at school and that is also where we can do something to start correcting the issue that will spread to the rest of society. To be a decent human being - includes being mutually respectful and inclusive as a society. To be "humane" - simply cuts across social status, intellect, power, wealth, language, race or class.
@koifish4276
@koifish4276 4 жыл бұрын
wow... i’m afraid to go to secondary school now... thanks i guess. either way thanks i see how horrible all the labels and divisions are now. i’ve never really thought about it but now i see how horrible human kind is, i and many others think it’s safe to say that humanity is hopeless. those that can survive that barrier of sorts, i applaud you.
@malvr2104
@malvr2104 4 жыл бұрын
The opinions shown in the video do not represent that of all students in each respective stream. I understand your worries but it will be okay, there will be wonderful experiences and you will have the chance to make lifelong friends. Try not to let your fear stop you from enjoying sceondary school life to the fullest, and if you can't help but feel afraid, reach out to a trusted adult or friend :) all the best for you and secondary school life !
@zhengde
@zhengde 4 жыл бұрын
I am 29 now. I went through the streaming process. This system is really pointless and stupid and creates division amongst the young before they have the chance to explore the many possibilities of life. Really stupid. Can the government please just take away any and all streaming process. If the strong and the fast cannot help the weak and the slow, I think Singapore will be f**ked.
@leehyunsong7001
@leehyunsong7001 4 жыл бұрын
You stand a chance to be successful if you work hard, but not guaranteed.
@armistice2358
@armistice2358 4 жыл бұрын
100% guarantee, just a different formula and not following conventional wisdom.
@wenshan9101
@wenshan9101 4 жыл бұрын
Neoliberalism will inevitably lead to antagonism between the different stata of society. To assume the market is efficient in distributing opportunities, resources and capital is naive. To assume a person who earns 10 times the income of another to consume 10 times as much is absurb. And everytime costs increase through inflation, taxation etc, the impact is increasingly pronounced as we descend the social strata. This will create faultlines and disrupt social cohesion through a displacement of the middle-class which is suppose to act as the buffer.
@AzimSobri
@AzimSobri 4 жыл бұрын
Why need to compare, just love each other la
@danielblue4460
@danielblue4460 3 жыл бұрын
If a young Singaporean from the fringes of society wants to upgrade, study harder than your peers. Nothing is impossible through ladder of Education.
@ZRRRRR
@ZRRRRR Жыл бұрын
The kind of teachers that were assigned to classes in my primary school are so apparent in a way that you will only see a few form teachers taking those few classes that are the 'top classes'that will attain high PSLE scores. It was a matter of fact that you don't even need to ask around or be told why. Schools sadly play a huge role into such 'division' based on results & insinuating possibly ranked by intelligence.
@samualjunior6547
@samualjunior6547 4 жыл бұрын
SCHOOL HAD A VERY BIG IMPACT TO HOW KIDS DEVELOP THEIR SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND HOW THEY LOOK UPON PEOPLE IN THE FUTURE AND MOST SCHOOL DIVIDE KIDS BASED ON THEIR GRADES AND THIS IS WRONG.
@bibirkering1720
@bibirkering1720 4 жыл бұрын
Samual Junior I completely agree with this
@pinkapple6530
@pinkapple6530 4 жыл бұрын
This is why Parasite won an oscar. We are truly living in a parasitic society.
@danielquantum143
@danielquantum143 Жыл бұрын
Class divide is unavoidable. But as long as the wealthy and privileged do not control, manipulate, suppress, alienate and brutalize the rest, most of us do not care simply because you cannot stopped anyone from their bad attitude, you can avoid them and walk away, you can decide to stay amongst the good ones, hence eventually you will see such divisions.
@drewgoh5748
@drewgoh5748 4 жыл бұрын
First line: In half a decade, Singapore achieved dizzying heights of success. ???? Were we not successful in 2014? Or did the narrator mean "Century"?
@HQR000
@HQR000 4 жыл бұрын
personally i think they should eradicate school classes based on streaming. instead they should do a pairing/buddy system where academically stronger students help out their academically weaker partners because not only do weaker students get personal one-to-one help but the academically stronger students can also benefit from the act of teaching itself as it reinforces their fundamentals & what they learn in general. this can also apply to non academic studies like home ec or d&t or even pe... so every student will have a sense of pride that we're all good at something & holding the responsibility to help another person who is weaker in that certain subject or skill motivates them in terms of developing leadership & enhancing what they're good at. on the other hand it also provides a platform for social mixing without this 'us vs them' notion.
@t.a.9142
@t.a.9142 4 жыл бұрын
In half a century. not half a decade... opening statement is wrong
@jefflith2974
@jefflith2974 4 жыл бұрын
This is sad to actually see the other side of singapore.
@assertive925
@assertive925 3 жыл бұрын
A society should be based on equity; not equality. Providing technical education to underpriviliged should be priority of the government. Also, a nation(especially) a wealthy nation should be prioritizing on spiritual advancement of its public. Lao Tzu(Taoism) is suited for the island nation. Lack of freedom hampers quality of life.
@PPGGGGGGGGGGGGG
@PPGGGGGGGGGGGGG 4 жыл бұрын
Singapore is still a city of opportunities if one uses education to their advantage and guard their mental health each day.
@mohddamiri4369
@mohddamiri4369 3 жыл бұрын
Dont worry guys for low wage workers like me....i also encounter this situation before.....be humble in a kind of religious matter....we have GOD to assist us....patience is the most significant faith that i believe.
@trent11ify
@trent11ify 4 жыл бұрын
Even if you don't acknowledge or appreciate them, dont look down or abuse them - keep humanity alive
@amustafa6905
@amustafa6905 4 жыл бұрын
@CNA Hi CNA, is the survey results mentioned in the video available to the public?
@garettchng398
@garettchng398 4 жыл бұрын
This video is useless Government need to stop forcing everyone study, staying in school for long hours and doing well in our academics. Not everyone want to succeed academically period. What about people who are talented and passionate about the arts? In singaoore it's all about academic. There are people who loves sports music etc but we can't do it full time cus of freakin studies. Even if we can, we can't cus Singapore emphasize so much on studies and literally everyone dont give a shit about ur talents but ur results and your education level.
@MrNavarros
@MrNavarros 4 жыл бұрын
Garett chng I agreed 💯with you.
@DarkwearGT
@DarkwearGT 4 жыл бұрын
They r forcing areas for lower academical people that r getting as much as average decreasing their power Like grab and gojek They r lowering their power From getting 7000 a month Not removing fuel and commission They actually earn 3000 a month They think they r earning too much even the fact that they work 7 to 10pm My father work after bringing me to school untill 12 pm He work so long And get that low salary Now they r lowering it He recently got a heart attack during my exam period
@AaAaaa-vt8sw
@AaAaaa-vt8sw 4 жыл бұрын
humanities program, sota and lasalle? Academic performance and excellence in the arts are not mutually exclusive
@garettchng398
@garettchng398 4 жыл бұрын
@@AaAaaa-vt8sw pure bs go read up most ppl there will still end up doing non-arts related fields
@AaAaaa-vt8sw
@AaAaaa-vt8sw 4 жыл бұрын
@@garettchng398 of course not everyone gets their dream job. Opportunity only goes to those with talent, you cant make a living out of passion alone, especially in the arts. Also most people i know that went to those schools are actually working in the same fields, but it might just be me
@gdp2102
@gdp2102 4 жыл бұрын
Good job man Janil. Keep it up
@vhoy7899
@vhoy7899 3 жыл бұрын
That Conversation with those kids in the group... made me feel sad... it's very sad
@hugin9876
@hugin9876 4 жыл бұрын
I worked for a company owned by Malaysian-Chinese boss. One instance, the boss bought brand new laptops for all software engineers except for the two Filipino. Even though the Filipino have the most work load (so they use their own personal laptops for work)
@teddytatyo
@teddytatyo 4 жыл бұрын
@@amyyap2838 why the animosity towards Filipinos?
@hugin9876
@hugin9876 4 жыл бұрын
@@amyyap2838 Filipino may be socially lower class. But they do better job than locals because they are compelled to do better. Locals are entitled to slack and be lazy because they are "higher class" :v
@amyyap2838
@amyyap2838 4 жыл бұрын
Hu Gin what a joke... Filipinos are not a threat... most of them are working as retail and domestic helpers... few lucky ones working as white collar will lose to other foreign talents such as India or china...
@hugin9876
@hugin9876 4 жыл бұрын
@@amyyap2838 What a racist you are. Yes a lot of Filipino do blue collar jobs. But in my company, one Filipino engineer made singaporeans, malay, indian and chinese look very inferior.
@amyyap2838
@amyyap2838 4 жыл бұрын
Hu Gin that’s one in a million. Good for him.
@startgametoday
@startgametoday 4 жыл бұрын
Don't understand how those so called the wealthiest people are considered "High-Class" while they are in million-dollars debt.
@danielquantum143
@danielquantum143 Жыл бұрын
Mr Mohamad Shukri, you are correct those arrogant people who called you "stupid security" are inhumane. Let me put it my my own words, they are extremely stressed, extremely entitled, isolated from the greater society, self-important, myopic, and sad !
@derraumdeuter2109
@derraumdeuter2109 4 жыл бұрын
The way they speak and the way I speak (×3)
@audreychoong7323
@audreychoong7323 3 жыл бұрын
It is sad but it is a fact that children born from parents / families of higher income are given more advantages in life compared to those children of lower income group. And, if the parents of higher income are arrogant or behaving arrograntly towards people of holding lower income jobs, they inadvertently transfered such arrogrant behaviours to their offsprings. Afterall, children learn from their parents.
@alexi2460
@alexi2460 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing research.
@namesensored9584
@namesensored9584 4 жыл бұрын
People will always think of things in retrospect of how it is socially generally accepted by the public instead of their own true opinions in fear of criticism.
@downundabrotha
@downundabrotha 3 жыл бұрын
The woman in the Black jacket and Grey shirt was the realest of them all.
@leochen887
@leochen887 3 жыл бұрын
FWIW, I grew up in a family where we had cooks and maids and gardeners and chauffeurs and we attended prep schools. Nevertheless, I had my daily chores which included sweeping our front walk and driveway, keeping my room neat and clean, cleaning the chicken/duck house, feeding the dog, maintaining good grades, etc. IOW, I led a privileged life. OTOH, our servants were treated as family members, to be respected, appreciated, and even loved. I was treated well, but they could discipline me if I misbehaved. So I never felt like they were hired help, of lower class, etc. They were indeed family and we were lucky to have them. In my adulthood, I did rather well working in a multinational corporation. But I would tell folks that 'when you're talking to me, you're addressing the bottom of the organization chart...' IOW, I was very approachable, thoughtful, took responsibility when things went wrong and gave credit when things went well. Everything else was/is bullshit.
@yivunqp963
@yivunqp963 2 жыл бұрын
You are in the small minority where you are so extremely rich that you can act poor and will be regarded as modest. For the rest, acting poor just mean you will get step over whenever the chance arise.
@Afangtravelnetwork
@Afangtravelnetwork 3 жыл бұрын
great content ...love CNA...
@wh7824
@wh7824 4 жыл бұрын
I think inequality on the poor and riches do happen not only in Singapore, but almost anywhere else in the world, of course i do know Singaporean lifestyle is somewhat on the top level, materialistic items / lifestyle is a must to be accepted in the society, but the way they treat the lower income class people do makes me sad and angry at the same time, i think it is part of the millennial culture. Being Indonesian myself, my parents and my family have always asked us to respect our drivers, maids and all that since we were small. even we treat them super nice, and sometimes we even took our maid overseas alongside us for holidays.
@matthewmann8969
@matthewmann8969 3 жыл бұрын
I imagine there is some racial and ethnic barriers to it too usually Chinese are more privileged then Malays And Indians
@skyla2258
@skyla2258 Жыл бұрын
And the gap is only going to get wider. I suggest that they count their cost before they begin the construction in the future. With the introduction of any new thing, there will definitely be effects and how long it will ripple through the society is really hard to tell. In my 2 cents worth, I think IP should be their last. At least for now.
@boaneh8049
@boaneh8049 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent MP 💯🎯
@pikachuthunderbolt3919
@pikachuthunderbolt3919 2 жыл бұрын
No need to divide student till high school on the basis of scores That's the worse thing Singapore does . Those who were unable to score good in primary doesn't mean they can't do good further too . Thank God I was never born in this country I was quite a dumbo in primary school due to some personal factors but in middle and high school I stood among good students in class. As my parents helped me in the last class of primary school. I studied well with concept clearance further . What if I haven't got good opportunities because my country had PSLE s in primary school . It's hard for kids to climb the ladder if they are assumed to do unwell even at start .
@keithhosannah3022
@keithhosannah3022 3 жыл бұрын
Did this show copy from Jubilee's "Middle Ground" at 16:17?
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