Monday, April 03, 2023

WOTC - Double standards

 Wisdom of the Crowd: 86% of the respondents said that double standards were applied in the treatment of the KOM and LHY issues.


https://tklcloud.com/Crowd2/chart3.aspx?id=2855

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Some of Watson's staff are "deaf" or 'mute". They are employed only to stock up shelves. I saw them with a small sign on the front and back of their shirt. Sorry I am "deaf" or Sorry I am "mute." I learned something new, that sometimes "deaf" and "dumb" don't come together.

Anonymous said...

The husband sues the ugly wife and wins a pretty ugly divorce settlement.

The story of Jian Feng the Chinese man that divorced his wife and then sued her for being ugly, Feng divorced his wife for breach of contract and then sued her.

After the wife had their child the man was apparently appalled by the child’s looks. He became suspicious the wife may have had an affair because the baby didn’t resemble either of them.

The wife later confessed to having plastic surgery. After seeing what the woman looked like prior to surgery, the man who claimed to have been so in love with her became disgusted. In May 2012, he filed a lawsuit, claiming she tricked him, and he married her under false pretences.

The male judge apparently sympathized with the husband, Feng won and was awarded $120,000. Always heard beauty is only skin deep.

No word on custody and support of the child. Apparently, beauty is in the eye of the beholder but not in the DNA.

Anonymous said...

Why majority who live abroad chose not to come back for good?

A uni close friend(double degree holder) of mine recently came home from London for a three-week visit with her English husband and two very young children. They live in a single-storey three-bedroom house one hour drive to London which costs ₤720,000. Since their salary is paid in ₤s the exchange rate is of no different.

They found the pace of life very fast, people were impatient, rude and always in a rush.
They chose to stay in their service apartment, ordered in and have friends and relatives visit them rather than them going out. The two times they were out, some people gave them daggers look like their pushchair had brushed into someone. Most eating places are cramped and not child friendly.
"Agoraphobia" was the word they nicknamed themselves. We received a one-liner when they reached their home. "Glad to be home!"

My reasoning.
Those who live here nowadays, are mostly from China and Malaysia. A money-face country where time is money. Half of the population are foreigners.


Anonymous said...

One of our Muslim colleagues with a young family is making plans to switch living in Brunei. One of his brothers was already there a few years ago to test the water and claimed that there are more pluses than minuses. Uncertain how they pass the test to live there.

Anonymous said...

2 is already too many.

1. Was in a queue behind a young Asian couple at paying counter. They spoke to the cashier in
a mix of Singlish and a foreign accent. Curious, the cashier asked where they are from. Heard faintly something like they were home for a visit but live in Perth.

2. Was sitting next to a family of about 7 of all ages at a restaurant. At a glimpse. there was an elderly couple whom we presumed were the parents who spoke a mixture of Mandarin and dialect. The rest spoke in the accent of angmo. Looks like home for a visit?

Anonymous said...

这个国家保护银行和金融机构而不是人民和客户。 当有人将错误行为的注意力带到 M.A.S. 他们的答复是调查,如果有任何行动都是私下进行的,我们不确定是否有隐瞒?

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