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154th Trying to Justify FAP Traitors Keeping SGs' CPF Money?
An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:
Is ST intending to tell CPF members something? June 9th, 2014 | Author: Editorial An article about a widow who spent in just a year all the $1 million she received from insurance payouts and donations, filled up page 3 of the Sunday Times (ST) yesterday (‘$1m gone in a year: Widow is now broke’, 8 Jun): The widow, Madam Pusparani Mohan, received the money after her husband was killed 2 years ago in an accident at the Changi Airport Budget Terminal. At the time, a PRC passenger had a quarrel with a taxi driver, commandeered the cab and drove off with it. The PRC crashed the vehicle at the Budget Terminal killing Mdm Pusparani’s husband, who was working as a cleaner there. ST wrote, “Today, that money ($1 million) is all gone.” ST said that Mdm Pusparani is now looking for work in Singapore to support her four young children back in Johor Bahru. “I made a mistake. People knew I had so much money and they all came to me. I am so stupid. I never buy house and finished all the money meant for my children,” Mdm Pusparani told ST. “Now I don’t have enough for my children’s future,” ST quoted her. ST detailed how the money was “whittled away”:
ST reported that Mdm Pusparani is currently working as an accounts clerk in JB earning RM2,000 a month. “Today, her employer pays her rent for an old, double-storey terraced house, which her family of five live in. A huge portrait of the late Mr Chandra is the only thing adorning the empty living area. Her children’s shoes are torn and worn out; so too are their schoolbags,” ST wrote. “The family sleeps on two old mattresses in one of three rooms on the second storey. Clothes are piled up on the floor as they cannot afford a cupboard to keep them in,” ST added. ST also reported that Mdm Pusparani tearfully said she felt ashamed. It is not known why ST decided to publish this news yesterday, taking up a full page, even though Mdm Pusparani had already whittled away all her money more than a year ago. A reader, who highlighted this news to TRE, thinks that perhaps ST is trying to convey a message to Singaporeans who are demanding the release of all their CPF monies at age 55. The reader said, “Prominence to the article was given with a picture snapshot of the heart-broken widow and her four children on the front page with the article and added pictures splashed on entire page 3 as top news.” The reader is of the opinion that ST is intending to convey a message to all Singaporeans demanding full early release of their CPF savings. And that is: “Watch out – you will end up like the widow with premature and unplanned CPF withdrawals”. “Press control is also mind control – shaping and shifting the thinking of ordinary people to a desired path,” the reader noted. “So you chop the head of the chicken by playing up the story of the widow to frighten the monkeys!” Incidentally, it is also observed that ST published this news “strategically”, a day after the CPF protest at Hong Lim Park on 7 June 2014, even though Mdm Pusparani had whittled away her $1 million more than a year ago. Is ST intending to tell CPF members something? Will all Singaporeans behave the same way as Mdm Pusparani if they are given back all their CPF monies at 55? What do you think? Click here to view the whole thread at www.sammyboy.com. |
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