What’s funny is, boleh tgk effect kalau ad price ceiling structure mcm Indonesia domestic flights. Airline takkan jual below price ceiling 🤣 and with fees and taxes end up will be more expensive in the future.
The RM499 ceiling price for flights between Peninsular Malaysia, and Sabah and Sarawak will be maintained for the upcoming Kaamatan and Gawai festivals despite the ongoing supply crisis, says Anthony Loke.
https://t.co/pn0YNH6SlB
What you are really describing is not some "parallel" between Singapore and Dubai.
You are describing what happens when the United States turns other people's countries into service stations for its empire and then calls the danger "regional instability."
The problem is not China sitting in Asia.
The problem is America dragging Asia into American wars and expecting Asians to accept permanent risk so Washington can preserve primacy from 10,000 kilometers away.
China is not the foreign power in the Taiwan question.
The United States is.
China is not the navy parked across an ocean from its own homeland.
The United States is.
China is not the one that built a global system of bases, encirclement, sanctions, carrier groups, proxy networks, and military blackmail.
The United States is.
And this line about Singapore being punished "if China invades Taiwan" already reveals the propaganda frame.
Taiwan is not Mexico to Beijing.
It is not Iraq to Washington.
It is a Chinese civil war legacy frozen by American power projection and continuously inflamed by U.S. interference.
So no, the lesson is not "China might endanger Singapore."
The lesson is that any Asian state that allows itself to become a logistical appendage of U.S. military strategy is volunteering to become collateral for an empire that never fights near its own cities.
That is the American method.
Turn allies into launchpads.
Turn launchpads into targets.
Then talk solemnly about "deterrence" while other people's ports, trade routes, and families absorb the consequences.
You people always describe U.S. military assets as if they were weather.
As if they just naturally exist.
As if missile defense sites, maintenance hubs, reconnaissance access, naval coordination, and strategic containment were not political choices.
They are.
And once you make yourself useful to empire, do not act surprised when you inherit its risks.
The most dishonest part is that you present this as a warning about China, when the entire scenario begins with U.S. militarization of Asia.
Take America out of the equation and the temperature drops immediately.
Keep America in the equation and every port becomes a pressure point, every island a chess square, every Asian country a frontline in Washington's strategy.
China did not bring the United States to the South China Sea.
The United States brought itself.
China did not cross the Pacific to menace California.
America crossed the Pacific, ringed China with force, armed separatism, and then called Beijing aggressive for objecting.
You are not describing a Chinese threat.
You are describing the price of serving American decline.
And that price is always paid by the host, never by the empire.
Who is the "King of Pressure" in the NFL?
It just might be the Seahawks' Mike Macdonald.
Seattle doesn't blitz often, but when it does, it's efficient.
They hold a 50% pressure rate when sending heat—2nd best blitz-to-sack conversion in the NFL.
Here's how they do it:
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