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2 hours ago, jules88 said:

I find Michael Thng, Shawn Loh, Zee Phay, Marshall Lim cute

Marshall Lim knows what he’s selling: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=639487025499257 I think Zee Phay, Hamid Razak and Shawn Loh are cute too. 

Edited by Strange Fruit
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On 4/23/2025 at 5:20 PM, partial22 said:

Nope but I think Michael Thng is attractive… 36 and single? Hmm

Michael is the best amongst the new candidates this round

 

many of his youtube around, pls google on your own

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/19cCRCEzWF/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Edited by QinWei

 

there are more than one option avail in googling me https://x.com/gnnbccb?s=21&t=WxsKRj9hm-pT2wyoEmonPQ

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On 26 April 2025, during the fervent campaign period leading up to the 2025 General Election, Malay-language newspaper Berita Harian reported that unaccredited Islamic teacher Noor Deros, founder of the anti-LGBT Wear White movement, claimed in a series of Facebook posts that he had spoken to all the Malay candidates from the Workers' Party, in particular Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap who was contesting in Tampines GRC and urged his followers to vote for Faisal. He also claimed that the Workers' Party had agreed to take up the concerns raised by the asatizah, or religious teachers, regarding the Malay-Muslim community in Singapore. He said the WP had taken seriously his call for the party to raise in Parliament issues surrounding the control and regulation of Islam’s practice in Singapore, citing the Administration of Muslim Law Act and institutions such as the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore. Noor also claimed that he had urged WP and other election candidates to reject the normalisation of LGBTQ+ issues, take a strong stance against Israel, and recognise the state of Palestine.
The same day, the Workers' Party issued a statement saying that it met with various members of Singapore's religious communities, regardless of race or religion. "At a meeting with other religious leaders where Mr Noor was present, the Party confirms there were no promises, commitments or agreements made to any individual, including Mr Noor, in exchange for political support for WP candidates." It also highlighted speeches made in parliament by party chief Pritam Singh and vice chairman Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap about separating religion and politics. "We remain firmly committed to Singapore’s secular, multi-racial, multi-religious society, and to protecting the integrity of our electoral process." Noor had turned up at a meeting the party held with Malay-Muslim religious leaders but there was no prior indication that he would be at the event.
Links:
https://the-singapore-lgbt-encyclopaedia.fandom.com/wiki/Noor_Deros
https://the-singapore-lgbt-encyclopaedia.fandom.com/wiki/Workers'_Party_politicians'_views_on_LGBT_rights

Edited by groyn88
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4 hours ago, groyn88 said:

 Malay-language newspaper Berita Harian reported that unaccredited Islamic teacher Noor Deros, founder of the anti-LGBT Wear White movement, claimed in a series of Facebook posts that he had spoken to all the Malay candidates from the Workers' Party, in particular Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap who was contesting in Tampines GRC and urged his followers to vote for Faisal.

 

Faisal is not a racist or a horrible person.  Regretfully, he does not support LGBT in any forms or shapes.  He did support the wear-white campaign during his second time in office as MP, urging his Muslim fellows to wear white as we approached one of our pink-dot events.   He has since become less vocal on LGBT issues, but we still know he is both a devout family and religous man.  The WP leader came out on time to warn the media (and, I assume, the WP Malay team) not to let their own religious beliefs affect them and to upend our secular society.   I'm not trying to be overly suspicious, but I hope that Faisal's daring decision to run for election in Tampines by splitting from his main Aljunied team has nothing to do with any covert anti-LGBT agenda.   In my opinion, Goh Meng Seng has already awakened these religious folks to the fact that this election is really an anti-LGBT protest rather than a daily read-and-butter debate.  

 

Edited by Why?
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Under 298/298A

 

 

  • Give the Muslim community the right to vote for their Minister-in-Charge of Muslim Affairs
  • Make the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS) an independent body
  • Ensure the MUIS council is composed of ulama from PERGAS, an association for Asatizah in Singapore, and qualified Muslim professionals
  • Have the MUIS Council elect the Mufti and President of MUIS
  • Create spaces within mosques and madrasahs for Islamic perspectives to contribute to national discourse and development
  • Have MHA and the Religious Rehabilitation Group handle radicalisation by acknowledging and addressing the "real cause of political grievances of Muslims globally"
  • Recognise the state of Palestine and sever ties with Israel
  • End "race-based demographic engineering"
  • Put in place legal reforms that uphold the "sanctity of marriage and family life", including possibly criminalising adultery
  • Protect the family institution from "ideologies that undermine it ... particularly LGBTQ advocacy and radical feminist enculturation"
  • Abolish the Internal Security Act
     

These are the views noor demands.

 

 

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/who-noor-deros-online-posts-5090751
 

if the religion leaders in Aljunied shared and aligned the same views. They should be interviewed with ISD and suspend from teaching religion in Singapore as well.

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I can respect that a person's religious view is contrary to my personal values and choices. However, do not impose your religious views on how I live my life, as much as I don't enforce upon you to embrace mine. We can agree to disagree, and be respectful of our differing views. The problem with many of such people is the mentality that if you are not with us, you are against us. It divides people instead of uniting people under things that both sides can agree on. 

Love. 

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  • G_M changed the title to Politician/s that I like / my type

On Monday, 28 April 2025, Workers' Party election candidate Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap was asked by the press about Malaysia-based Singaporean religious teacher Noor Deros, founder of the anti-LGBT Wear White movement, who had come into the spotlight for his social media posts mixing race, religion, anti-LGBT activism and politics. Noor had criticised PAP election candidate Masagos Zulkifli while calling on voters to cast their ballots for Faisal. He also claimed to have met the WP’s Malay candidates.
Faisal replied that he was open to meeting “everyone for the sake of listening”. He had always pressed for open conversations and not shied away from bringing up “sensitive” topics in parliament. "That is the right way to move forward. We must believe in the value and beauty of diversity,” he said. “But it doesn’t mean that when we listen to people, we agree with them.”  
This was the first time that Faisal had addressed the posts made by Noor. The latter's post began to make headlines after the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and Elections Department Singapore (ELD) said in a statement on Friday, 25 April 2025 that they had detected online posts made by foreigners attempting to influence the General Election. Their Facebook posts, which had since been taken down, mixed anti-LGBT activism, religion and politics and expressed support for certain opposition candidates running in GE2025. Although Noor was not named as one of the foreigners, his own Facebook posts, which urged the Muslim community to vote along religious lines, drew public attention.
Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said on Saturday, 26 April 2025 that foreigners urging Singaporeans to vote along religious lines had "crossed the line" and that Singaporeans alone should decide on Singapore politics.
Several opposition parties, including the WP, followed suit in speaking out against foreign interference in the upcoming General Election.
When asked about voters who may vote for him because of Noor, Faisal said “all voters are smart enough to consider...to weigh the different arguments. I leave it to the intelligence of the voters, and I respect the voters' decision to vote whoever they want to vote.”

Links:

https://the-singapore-lgbt-encyclopaedia.fandom.com/wiki/Muhamad_Faisal_Abdul_Manap's_views_on_homosexuality

https://the-singapore-lgbt-encyclopaedia.fandom.com/wiki/Noor_Deros

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4 minutes ago, groyn88 said:

On Monday, 28 April 2025, Workers' Party election candidate Muhamad Faisal Abdul Manap was asked by the press about Malaysia-based Singaporean religious teacher Noor Deros, founder of the anti-LGBT Wear White movement, who had come into the spotlight for his social media posts mixing race, religion, anti-LGBT activism and politics. Noor had criticised PAP election candidate Masagos Zulkifli while calling on voters to cast their ballots for Faisal. He also claimed to have met the WP’s Malay candidates.
Faisal replied that he was open to meeting “everyone for the sake of listening”. He had always pressed for open conversations and not shied away from bringing up “sensitive” topics in parliament. "That is the right way to move forward. We must believe in the value and beauty of diversity,” he said. “But it doesn’t mean that when we listen to people, we agree with them.”  
This was the first time that Faisal had addressed the posts made by Noor. The latter's post began to make headlines after the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and Elections Department Singapore (ELD) said in a statement on Friday, 25 April 2025 that they had detected online posts made by foreigners attempting to influence the General Election. Their Facebook posts, which had since been taken down, mixed anti-LGBT activism, religion and politics and expressed support for certain opposition candidates running in GE2025. Although Noor was not named as one of the foreigners, his own Facebook posts, which urged the Muslim community to vote along religious lines, drew public attention.
Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said on Saturday, 26 April 2025 that foreigners urging Singaporeans to vote along religious lines had "crossed the line" and that Singaporeans alone should decide on Singapore politics.
Several opposition parties, including the WP, followed suit in speaking out against foreign interference in the upcoming General Election.
When asked about voters who may vote for him because of Noor, Faisal said “all voters are smart enough to consider...to weigh the different arguments. I leave it to the intelligence of the voters, and I respect the voters' decision to vote whoever they want to vote.”

Links:

https://the-singapore-lgbt-encyclopaedia.fandom.com/wiki/Muhamad_Faisal_Abdul_Manap's_views_on_homosexuality

https://the-singapore-lgbt-encyclopaedia.fandom.com/wiki/Noor_Deros

Please don’t post anything related to the election, we are talking about the guy.

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