In Lee Kuan Yew's tiny island tin pot dictatorship there has not been a single worker strike for the last 30 years, except for one surprisingly by Chinese migrant low wage bus drivers which expectedly didn't get anywhere. Five of them were charged criminally, one was sentenced to 6 weeks jail, the other four are waiting in jail for their sentence and 26 were deported to Communist China.
In Singapore Island, there are no minimum wage laws which means you can pay a worker $2 a day if you like, labor unions are managed by the government which protect employer's interests rather than the other way round, workers have no way to further their interests under the law, and the ethos in the labor market is simply, take it or leave it.
Throughout the island's state controlled newspapers the past few days (there is no independent press) the government has repeatedly referred to the strikers as having destroyed
So in effect
Therefore, it is telling global companies that with this totally submissive workforce, they could make tons out of their backs.
Selling such a slavish workforce does not speak well of the employers who take advantage of them and neither does it speak well of the workers for being shamefully spineless and willing.
In
Gopalan Nair
A Singaporean by birth in Exile
Attorney at Law
Tel: 510 491 4375
5 comments:
Send your blog to the CEO of every foreign company that is based in Singapore.
Print these letters on your blog.
E.g. Google and Twitter.
To Anonymous,
"Send your blog to the CEO of every foreign company that is based in Singapore".
Why don't you do that too?
Strike I say.
The Singapore of today is so dependent on cheap foreign labour that a strike would cripple its entire infrastructure.
And because the native inhabitants are so concerned with status quo and monetary value rather than individual freedoms, let the generation responsible for their wealth truly show them how democracy begins.
Go to Straits Times online now and you will find another 2 foreign workers on strike since 8am SG time. What is happening to my beloved country.
Hi Gopalan
Anyone wanna disagree with this?
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-05/rich-world-s-fastest-inflation-may-escalate-on-singapore-wages.html
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