Fathership

严防XBB毒株,泰国抽查从新加坡入境游客,手术推迟、备更多病床,全岛紧急应战新疫情

不久前,卫生部曾经预言今年年底新加坡会迎来新一轮疫情,而这轮由XBB毒株引发的疫情在不在他们的预估之内还不得而知。

|1 min read
严防XBB毒株,泰国抽查从新加坡入境游客,手术推迟、备更多病床,全岛紧急应战新疫情
<p>被传言称是能够“击穿近乎所有疫苗”的XBB毒株,不仅让新加坡本岛陷入新一轮的防疫管控,也让不少已经开放的国家,开始对新加坡提高警惕。</p> <p>特别是新加坡人喜欢去的旅游地泰国,这两天就突然开始对新加坡有了一些动作。</p> <p>一旦新加坡的疫情态势更加糟糕,<strong>或许会有更多国家和地区,开始加入这个行列。</strong></p> <p>进入2022年以来,新加坡开始逐步开放,而世界一些国家,也纷纷开始有限度地解封。</p> <p>其中,那些比较依赖旅游业的国家和地区,是这一轮“开放潮”中的先行者,想借由开放来冲一波经济,挽回一些疫情期间的损失。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/BA0jPpK.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>然而,计划虽然很好,但新冠病毒的变异速度,却似乎是超出了这些地方的承受能力。 </p> <p>就在这一周,泰国就出现了多起XBB变种毒株患者,甚至根据泰国国家基因工程及生物科技中心(BIOTEC)健康卫生创新与管理研究团队主任、病毒学学者阿南博士的说法,还有三名患者入境从泰国入境中国香港后确诊了,</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/RbUo2Fh.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>当然,根据泰国疾病控制局DDC的官方口径,目前泰国的新增确诊病人大多都是奥密克戎感染人群,最新出现的变异株BQ.1.1和XBB并没有在泰国蔓延。</p> <p>不过,泰国官方依旧对XBB毒株不敢掉以轻心。而近来XBB疫情持续爆发中的新加坡,则被泰国官方点名了。</p> <p>根据《泰国邮报》的消息,泰国疾病控制局副总监素蓬透露,目前泰国机场已经开始加强管控。<strong>任何来自新加坡、香港等出现XBB病例的地区入境的旅客,会被随机抽查病毒毒株检测。</strong></p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/3J6qFzJ.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>其实,虽然香港已经开始出现了XBB毒株的苗头,但根据新闻报道,输入香港的病例中,有很大一部分都是来自新加坡的。</p> <p>因此,有理由相信泰国方面,将对新加坡游客开始严防死守。</p> <p>当然,泰国方面目前只是选择对新加坡游客随机抽查,而不是全面提高入境限制,可能和新毒株的特性也有一定关系。</p> <p>根据各国收集到的数据来看,XBB这种亚型变异毒株并不会比之前的毒株更严重。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/Npt7Z1w.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>当然,面对这种新变异株,新加坡也需要时间完全甄别和厘清其特性。</p> <p>面对着新一轮的疫情,新加坡政府部门和医院正在做着准备。</p> <p>过去一周,新加坡疫情出现了反弹已是不争的事实。</p> <p>在过去几天里,新加坡单日新增病例已经多次在10000例左右,甚至在这周二还再次突破一万的大关。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/rgO3CJK.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>然而,现在日增病例还远未达到峰值。新加坡卫生部长王乙康,在10月15日表示再过一个月<strong>(也就是11月中旬)</strong><strong>,这一轮疫情才可能彻底来到峰值。</strong></p> <p>通过与国大苏瑞福公共卫生学院的专家进行的数据建模,王乙康向外界透露<strong>这一轮疫情峰值时的日增病例数,会来到相当惊人的15000,</strong></p> <p>在新加坡已有超过200万人感染的现状下,或许新一轮疫情会有不少人是重复感染新冠的群体。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/JSpVC70.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>不过,这次和疫情似乎不会像之前几段疫情持续时间那么久,王乙康表示这轮疫情将会是“短暂而剧烈的”。</p> <p>因此,新加坡医疗系统,似乎已经在为新一轮疫情开始做准备了。 </p> <p>据《海峡时报》报道,新加坡公立医院目前,正在努力为可能激增的病患<strong>腾出约800张床位。</strong></p> <p>为此,公立医院已经广发通知,<strong>推迟接下来的那些非紧急手术。</strong></p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/ibtMfOv.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>这个消息一出,当然会引起社会的一阵恐慌,让人担忧新加坡的医疗是不是无法应付新疫情。 </p> <p>因此,新加坡卫生部在昨天发表了一份文告,表示新加坡的医疗资源暂时能够应对现有的病患,只是需要未雨绸缪罢了。</p> <p>当然,新加坡卫生专家也不否认,未来可能激增的病例,会对医院急诊部门带来一些压力。 </p> <p>一位专家Kenneth Mak就表示,相关医院已经制定了应急措施,包括将医生和护士重新部署到急诊科,以及准备更多床位和保留空间给那些病患。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/QUKr3Sw.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>“新加坡现在的当务之急,是安排更多资源到急诊科,以更好的管理和照顾那些重症和需要紧急看护的病人。”Kenneth Mak是这么说的。 </p> <p>当然,也不是所有的手术都会被推迟。医院的医生们,会详细分析病人的状况,<strong>优先考虑那些一旦不接受治疗情况就会恶化的病人群体。</strong></p> <p>也有一些患者,会在这段时间内被转移到其他医院,让他们尽可能得到及时的护理。</p> <p>至于那些不再需要急症护理的人,也可能被转移到过渡性护理机构,以便腾出床位供更多危重患者使用。</p> <p>就现在而言,新加坡的医疗资源并不像去年那么紧张。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/dbSTEOS.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>除了医院正在加紧做好准备外,一些新加坡人也已经开始了自我防护。 </p> <p>昨天,是新加坡50岁以上群体可以接种莫德纳二价疫苗的第一天。根据媒体报道,<strong>迄今为止就已经有4000多人报名自愿接种了</strong>。 </p> <p>现在,新加坡的卫生专家们已经观察到了XBB变异株的一些特性。比起过往的所有毒株,它的传播性要强得多。</p> <p>与此相对的,就是新变异株的毒性,不如之前那些毒株那么强。</p> <p>当然,根据很多人的亲身经历,染上新冠病毒后即使只是轻症,但个人还会难受一阵子。 </p> <p>而根据卫生部的估计,那些完全没有感染过德尔塔毒株和奥密克戎原始株的人,相比之下将有更大风险感染XBB毒株。</p> <p>因此,卫生部长王乙康,再次向民众发出呼吁,希望那些符合条件的群体继续接种疫苗。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/heODscz.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>虽然卫生部和专家们对新毒株还有一丝隐忧,但似乎新加坡依旧不打算升级限制措施。</p> <p>正在举办的大型活动,和街上看起来依旧相当淡然的人们,似乎代表了新加坡防疫的态度和主流声音。</p> <h3 class="“headings“">新加坡防疫政策摇摆不定?</h3> <p>自从新加坡8月底官宣,取消入境限制措施,并解除了室内强制口罩令以来,很多大型活动回归新加坡。</p> <p>9月底10月初重回新加坡的F1方程式大奖赛,就是最好的例子。三天的活动里,一共吸引了超过30万人观赛和参加活动。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/jD3pPtb.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>除了F1大奖赛外,其他很多活动也在如期进行中。昨天,备受全球电竞迷期待的、一年一度的DOTA2最高荣誉赛事——The International 2022小组赛阶段,已经在新加坡打响了。</p> <p>不过,因为场馆安排,以及赛程需要,小组赛阶段并未在人流密集的新达城会展中心举办,而是在所住酒店内举行。</p> <p>只待接下来的周末,这些从小组赛突围而出的战队,将会开始来到线下,接受粉丝们的欢呼。</p> <p>一方面,主流大型活动并未受到新一轮疫情影响而暂延。</p> <p>另一方面,<strong>新加坡也扩大了居家康复和自行检测的人群范围</strong>,似乎隐隐代表了政府想要极力减少疫情带来的负担的想法。 </p> <p>昨天,新加坡卫生部官宣,从这个月25日起,那些<strong>感染新冠的婴儿和孕妇</strong>可以自行进行检测和隔离、或者在家庭医生照料下进行康复。</p> <p>原本,这些三个月至一岁的婴儿,以及怀孕不到36周的孕妇,是被认定为高风险人群,需要在冠病第一级医疗方案下接受ART和PCR检测,情况严重者还要被送院接受密切治疗。</p> <p><img src="“https://i.imgur.com/kWEae5Y.png“alt=““/"></p> <p>而现在,这类群体被重新归类为低风险群体,只需要在冠病第二级医疗程序下康复。</p> <p>也就是说,在他们确诊新冠后,就能和大多数人一样在家进行ART检测并自我隔离,72小时候要是检测结果呈阴性,就能结束隔离出门了。 </p> <p>当然,面对新一轮疫情,卫生部长王乙康表示出了相当的谨慎。<strong>他并没有把话说死,一口咬定不会重新恢复过往的限制措施。</strong></p> <p>他表示,目前政府无意重新宣布恢复强制口罩令,<strong>但也不能排除政府在未来,恢复更严格的口罩规定或其他安全管理措施的可能性。</strong></p> <p>根据他的说法,政府正在努力避免回到疫情大流行初期实施的那些限制规定。但这一切,都必须依赖个人能够尽好应尽的责任,比如在室内或其他人流密集的场所戴好口罩等等。</p> <p>为了保护那些还没有完成疫苗接种的人,<strong>政府也有可能会重新实施疫苗差异化安全措施。</strong></p> <p>这一切,都需要视新疫情的情况而定。王乙康现在也没法下断言。 </p> <p>不久前,卫生部曾经预言今年年底新加坡会迎来新一轮疫情,而这轮由XBB毒株引发的疫情在不在他们的预估之内还不得而知。</p>
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PPP's Goh Meng Seng - Trump's tariffs will not last so why worry?

Even a “short” tariff is cause for worry. It’s like saying a heart attack won’t kill you because it only lasts a minute.

|3 min read
PPP's Goh Meng Seng - Trump's tariffs will not last so why worry?

Goh Meng Seng’s claim—“Trump’s tariff will not last”—seems to gloss over the issues of uncertainty.

In a Facebook post published by Goh, he said: "Trump's Tariff will not last. At most, it's between China and US but even for that, it will be much moderated."

His Facebook post, while likely aimed at calming nerves and challenging the PAP’s narrative, underestimates how even a fleeting tariff can ripple through a trade-dependent economy like Singapore’s.

The problem with "It won't last"

Goh’s assertion that Trump’s tariffs are a short-term blip sounds reassuring, but it misses the forest for the trees. Uncertainty is the real poison in global trade, and Singapore, with its open economy, is particularly allergic.

Even a temporary 10% tariff on Singapore’s exports to the U.S. spooks investors and businesses. A “short” tariff could still scare off a chip fab or logistics hub - of which Singapors economy is largely based on, costing billions in future growth.

Singapore’s role as a transshipment hub means it’s hyper-sensitive to global trade flows. A brief tariff could disrupt just-in-time manufacturing or shipping schedules, leading to delays, higher costs, and lost contracts. For example, electronics, a key export, rely on tight margins—any hiccup can cascade.

If China’s economy slows due to tariffs on U.S. goods, Singapore’s exports to China (think components, chemicals) could tank.

Even a three-month tariff war could shave 1.5% off GDP, per analyst estimates, hitting jobs and wages. That’s not a “bloop”; that’s a retrenchment notice.

Goh’s point might be that Singapore’s resilience—built on diversified trade partners and government agility—can absorb a temporary shock.

Fair enough.

We’ve got FTAs with the EU, ASEAN, and Japan, and the PAP’s track record of rolling out SME aid is solid.

But resilience doesn’t mean immunity. Uncertainty breeds hesitation—businesses pause hiring, and consumers tighten belts.

Why uncertainty is the real villain

Trade isn’t just about tariffs; it’s about confidence.

Singapore thrives on predictability—stable ports, clear trade rules, and a government that doesn’t surprise you.

SMEs, which employ 70% of Singapore’s workforce, can’t plan if tariffs might vanish or double. Should they eat the 10% cost? Pivot to new markets? Lay off staff? The indecision itself is paralyzing.

Trump’s tariffs aren’t just about Singapore. If the U.S.-China trade war escalates, global demand could slump, hitting Singapore’s exports across the board.

Does Goh Meng Seng have a point?

To give Goh some credit, he’s likely trying to counter the PAP’s “sky is falling” narrative ahead of GE2025.

The PAP’s warnings—PM Wong’s “seismic change,” SM Lee’s globalization eulogy—can feel like election scare tactics.

Goh’s post taps into that skepticism, suggesting the PAP’s hyping a temporary issue to rally voters.

And he’s not entirely wrong: Singapore’s economy has weathered shocks before (SARS-08, COVID-19), and a short tariff might not trigger Armageddon. The government’s got tools—subsidies, retraining programs, trade pivots—that could soften the blow.

But Goh’s oversimplifying.

The damage—lost contracts, spooked investors, job cuts—lingers.

And if Trump’s tariffs spark a broader trade war (say, EU retaliates or China doubles down), Singapore’s caught in the crossfire. Goh’s confidence feels like a campaign soundbite, not a strategy.

Goh’s “it won’t last” is refreshingly defiant, but it’s also naive. He’s betting on resilience without acknowledging the chaos a “bloop” can unleash.

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Singapore cannot be truly neutral in the US-China conflict

Choosing neutrality would mean avoiding economic and security alignment with either side, but Singapore’s reliance on both markets forces pragmatic engagement. It's not a test of neutrality — it’s power.

|3 min read
Singapore cannot be truly neutral in the US-China conflict

Can Singapore stay neutral in an increasingly volatile geopolitical landscape?

Former Trade Minister and current Minister of Education Chan Chun Sing’s said in a CNA podcast that it's not about choosing sides—sometimes that’s decided for you—but about making Singapore so valuable that everyone wants a piece.

While Chan’s perspective highlights Singapore’s pragmatic diplomacy, it sidesteps a stark reality: neutrality, in the face of deep economic and strategic entanglements with both the US and China, is a mirage.

Neutrality promises impartiality but Singapore's reality mocks it

Singapore cannot be truly neutral in the US-China tariff war due to its deep economic, strategic, and geopolitical entanglements with both powers.

In 2023, China devoured 14% of Singapore’s exports ($83 billion) and supplied 13% of imports, while the US took 13% of exports ($76 billion) and 10% of imports.

US foreign direct investment ($234 billion) is a growth engine, while China’s Belt and Road Initiative exploits Singapore’s ports, processing 37 million TEUs in 2024.

Singapore backs US-led Indo-Pacific frameworks like the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF). Launched in 2022, IPEF’s 14-nation coalition (excluding China) aims to boost trade and supply chains.

China, excluded from IPEF, views it as a US strategy to counter its regional influence, a sentiment echoed by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who labeled it an attempt to “decouple” economically and “incite confrontation.”

In 2024, China’s state media jabbed at Singapore’s IPEF role, hinting at trade blowback but nothing came out of it as of today. However, the message was clear: neutrality is a fantasy when your biggest trading partner feels betrayed.

Walking a regional tightrope with ASEAN

Singapore’s security reliance on the US, especially for deterrence in a volatile region, tilts its strategic calculus.

Neutrality would require distancing itself from US defense cooperation, but this is unlikely given Singapore’s need for a counterbalance to regional threats, including China’s assertiveness in the South China Sea that affects ASEAN.

Singapore has no claims but supports a rules-based order, implicitly aligning with US freedom-of-navigation operations against China’s claims. This stance, articulated in Singapore’s 2024 Foreign Policy Report, draws China’s ire, undermining perceptions of neutrality.

As an ASEAN linchpin, Singapore pushes for regional unity but ASEAN’s fractures—Cambodia and Laos cozy up to China, while the Philippines and Vietnam lean US—make neutrality a diplomatic minefield.

Singapore's real play is not neutrality, but power

Choosing neutrality would mean avoiding economic and security alignment with either side, but Singapore’s reliance on both markets forces pragmatic engagement.

Favoring one risks alienating the other, yet remaining aloof could marginalize Singapore in global trade networks.

Instead, Singapore pursues strategic autonomy—hedging bets, diversifying partners, and maximizing flexibility. This approach, allows Singapore to navigate the conflict without being fully subsumed by either side.

In 2023, Singapore's S$600 billion economy grew 1.2% despite tariff headwinds, proving its adaptability.

Singapore’s edge lies not in avoiding sides but in making itself so valuable that sides compete to win its favor.

That’s not neutrality — it’s power.

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WP do not have to worry about an opposition wipeout — they will win Aljunied & Hougang

By framing the election as an existential threat, Pritam aims to ensure WP supporters turn out in force, particularly in strongholds where voter turnout can make or break a result.

|3 min read
WP do not have to worry about an opposition wipeout — they will win Aljunied & Hougang

Workers' Party (WP) new face, Harpreet Singh, recently let slip that he doesn’t want to be “parachuted” into a “safe seat", according an interview with The Straits Times.

Harpreet's comment reveals the party’s belief in “safe seats” like Hougang and Aljunied, suggesting internal confidence in their electoral strongholds.

By admitting there are “safe seats,” Harpreet confirmed what many suspect: Hougang (WP’s turf since 1991) and Aljunied (theirs since 2011) are as close to a sure bet as it gets in Singapore’s PAP-dominated landscape.

In GE2020, WP held Hougang with 61.2% of the vote and Aljunied with 59.9%. These margins, while not overwhelming, reflect consistent voter loyalty in a political landscape dominated by the People’s Action Party (PAP), which won 83 of 93 seats in the last election.

Yet, WP leader Pritam Singh continues to warn of a potential “opposition wipeout,” as highlighted in a Channel News Asia report early this year.

Pritam's wipeout narrative

Pritam Singh’s emphasis on a potential wipeout, as articulated in his call for party unity, appears designed to galvanize supporters and prevent complacency.

By framing the election as an existential threat, Pritam aims to ensure WP supporters turn out in force, particularly in strongholds where voter turnout can make or break a result.

Yet, this narrative risks undermining the WP’s credibility.

Harpreet’s admission of safe seats suggests the party privately believes its core constituencies are secure. Publicly warning of a wipeout, then, could be perceived as disingenuous, especially by a discerning electorate.

If voters sense the WP is exaggerating risks to manipulate sentiment, trust in the party could erode—a dangerous prospect when authenticity is a currency in short supply.

It is also not helpful that Pritam himself was convicted for dishonesty.

Earlier this year, Pritam was convicted on two counts of lying under oath to a parliamentary committee. The case stemmed from his handling of former WP MP Raeesah Khan’s false statements in Parliament in 2021, where she fabricated a story about accompanying a sexual assault victim to a police station.

Playing the 'underdog' card

Pritam Singh isn’t daft. He’s a lawyer, an MP, and a guy who’s navigated Singapore’s political minefield for years. His wipeout narrative isn’t about doubting WP’s grip on Hougang or Aljunied—it’s about firing up the base.

In Singapore, where voter apathy can creep in, scaring supporters into showing up is Politics 101.

But there’s a flip side. Overplaying the underdog card risks crying wolf.

If WP’s seats are as safe as Harpreet implies, Pritam’s gloom-and-doom could erode trust.

Voters aren’t stupid—they see through spin.

And in a city where trust in institutions is high (78% of Singaporeans trust the government, per a 2023 Edelman survey), coming off as manipulative isn’t a great look.

Pritam’s banking on fear to mobilize, but he might be underestimating how savvy Singaporeans are.

With GE2025 around the corner, WP should ditch the drama and double down on policy.

Safe seats or not, elections are won by showing up for the heartlands, not by shouting “wipeout” from the rooftops.

In a nation of pragmatists, substance trumps spin every time.

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Vivian Balakrishnan's Facebook blooper also bloop-bloop in 2015

Is the Facebook glitch in the System or the Man?

|2 min read
Vivian Balakrishnan's Facebook blooper also bloop-bloop in 2015

Back in 2015, during the General Election’s Cooling-Off Day — a sacred 24-hour no-campaigning zone— Vivian Balakrishnan’s Facebook page was caught posting.

The Elections Department (ELD) issued a stern reminder about the rules, and Vivian’s team chalked it up to a “technical bug” causing “recurrent auto-posting,” later confirmed by Facebook (Straits Times, 2015).

Most gave Vivian the benefit of the doubt but fast-forward a decade, and that “one-off” glitch is starting to look like a feature, not a bug.

Another "bug" bites

On March 13, 2025, Vivian’s official Facebook page “liked” a post by Calvin Cheng suggesting pro-Palestinian activists be shipped to Gaza with no return ticket — a diplomatic disaster in a single click.

The backlash was instant, with netizens and activist groups like Monday of Palestine Solidarity slamming it as tone-deaf, especially given Vivian’s parliamentary nods to Palestinian causes.

By April 2, Vivian denied liking the post, claiming “unauthorized activity” and reporting it to Meta for investigation.

One too many glitches

Vivian’s social media has gone off-script, and the “bug” excuse is wearing thin.

In 2015, we could shrug it off—social media was still a wild frontier, and bugs weren’t uncommon.

But in 2025, when Singaporeans are dodging phishing scams and securing their Singpass with 2FA, a minister’s verified account getting “hacked” or “bugged” raises red flags.

When a minister’s account keeps glitching, it erodes confidence.

If Vivian’s team can’t secure a Facebook page, how do we trust them with cybersecurity or foreign policy?

With GE2025 looming, Singaporeans want leaders who can keep up — on policy and on Facebook.

Anything less, and Vivian risks being debugged by the ballot box.

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Fear-mongering over US tariffs necessary because S'poreans are complacent

Fear-mongering over U.S. tariffs is a PAP scare tactic, says PPP’s Goh Meng Seng. But it’s also necessary given Singaporeans’ complacency in thinking years of economic prosperity would not burst the island's utopian bubble.

|4 min read
Fear-mongering over US tariffs necessary because S'poreans are complacent

Singapore’s economy is heavily reliant on global trade, with exports accounting for a significant portion of its GDP (about 170%) — think electronics, shipping, manufacturing.

U.S. tariffs, even at 10% on Singapore’s exports, could disrupt supply chains. Growth forecasts? Down 1.5%.

If U.S.-China tariffs spike, China’s economy slows, and Singapore suffers. Fewer ships, quieter factories, jobs on the line. With living costs up 4%, families are already stretched.

PAP say "be worried"; PPP say "don't bluff"

Prime Minister Lawrence Wong has described the tariffs as marking a “seismic change” in the global order, signaling the end of rules-based globalization. Senior Minister Lee Hsien Loong echoed this, noting that Singapore can no longer rely on a stable global trading system, raising the risk of a recession.

People's Power Party chief Goh Meng Seng calls PM Wong's statement "fear-mongering". They call the PAP’s warnings “scare tactics” to spook voters into sticking with the safe bet.

Crises usually send Singaporeans running to the PAP, but Goh’s betting on change. Voters are livid about housing costs and stagnant wages—why obsess over tariffs when you can’t afford a flat?

PAP has historically benefited from a “flight to safety” during crises, where voters favor stability. However, according to Goh, this strategy may be less effective now, as voters are more polarized and focused on local issues like housing affordability.

PPP: US tariffs on Singapore is "ikan bilis"

The PPP’s claim that the government is overreacting could stem from the fact that Singapore’s 10% tariff is relatively low compared to others (e.g., 26% for India). They might argue that Singapore’s diversified trade partnerships (e.g., with ASEAN, EU, and Japan) and free trade agreements could cushion the blow.

But they miss the forest for the trees. Tariffs aren’t just about U.S. trade—they disrupt global flows.

A slowdown anywhere hits our ports, factories, and wallets. Brushing it off as “ikan bilis” is reckless, like ignoring a leak in a ship.

The PPP’s skepticism taps voter frustration, but it underestimates a real economic storm.

Additionally, some opposition figures may believe the government’s messaging exaggerates immediate risks to rally voters, when the full economic impact might take time to materialize.

COVID-19 measures were also an overreaction but look at where it got Singapore

PM Wong referenced the COVID-19 response, where early government action was criticized as overreach but later proved necessary. This suggests a pattern: proactive warnings about external risks (like tariffs) aim to prepare Singaporeans for tough times, even if the full impact isn’t immediate.

According to Goh, he said to "let the big boys (US and China) hash it out" - reiterating that the tariffs are temporary and for Singapore to focus on domestic issues.

Goh rightly highlights domestic pain—housing and jobs are urgent—but dismissing tariffs ignores how global shocks amplify local struggles.

Some analysts argue that Singapore’s agile economy and government interventions (e.g., support for SMEs) could mitigate damage. The PPP might be banking on this resilience -- an irony seeing that PAP's policies created this resilience - to argue that panic is premature.

Election noise means opinions from political parties need to be taken with a grain of salt

With the General Election (GE2025) set for May 3, opposition parties are differentiating themselves by challenging the PAP’s narrative. Calling out “fear-mongering” appeals to voters frustrated with the PAP’s dominance. The PPP’s critique is partly electoral posturing.

Conversely, the PAP’s emphasis on unity and preparedness could be seen as leveraging the crisis to bolster its campaign.

However, dismissing the tariff threat as “fear-mongering” overlooks the broader economic stakes that affect the livelihood of all Singaporeans, and is nothing short of myopic.