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    • https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/courts-crime/police-tighten-rules-for-massage-establishments-amid-increase-in-vice-activities       it will just go underground     imagine underground with many many tiny tunnel, you raid 10 tiny tunnel, 1000 tiny tunnel got alerted and goes ghost.   unless human have no sex need.  crack down is pointless         which is why now it getting harder and harder to catch. online group so many doing posting, even sg maid also got own group weekend doing sex side job    plus   ah tiong coming to sg no need visa, some ah tiong come to sg to rob and some come for quick sex job for $$$$$         you got manpower to catch up with them? what they have....
    • Every time there’s a story about massage parlours and vice in Singapore, the script is almost identical. Something slips through, operators exploit a grey area, complaints start coming in, and then the government steps in to “tighten rules” and “restore order.” And somehow, we are supposed to read this as competence. Because yes, on the surface, it looks like the system is working. Problems appear, they get identified, regulations get updated, enforcement increases, and everything becomes clean and orderly again. Compared to most places, Singapore does this extremely well. But after watching this happen again and again, it starts to feel less like competence and more like denial. Because if the same thing keeps happening every few years, maybe it is not just a loophole problem. Massage parlours have been regulated for years. When that became too controlled, activities shifted into beauty salons. When that got flagged, they moved into “open-concept” setups that were considered lower risk. Now even those are being pulled back into the licensing system. This is not a new issue. It is the same issue wearing different clothes. And every time, the government reacts like it is encountering it for the first time. Close the gap, tighten the rules, increase inspections, problem solved. Except it is never solved. It just relocates. What is frustrating is not the enforcement itself. Nobody is arguing that illegal activity should be ignored. The problem is how shallow the response always is. Everything gets framed as a regulatory failure. Some operator found a gap, the system adjusts, end of story. But vice does not exist because of gaps. It exists because there is demand. And that demand is not coming from some mysterious external force. It is coming from the same society that the government is so proud of managing so efficiently. So here is the uncomfortable part nobody wants to say. Maybe the system they keep praising is also the system producing the conditions for this kind of behaviour. Because people do not suddenly wake up and decide to participate in grey markets for fun. They respond to incentives, pressures, and constraints. In a place where: work is exhausting living costs are high space is limited life is tightly structured people will look for ways to cope, escape, or make money outside the clean, official pathways. That is not a moral statement. That is just how behaviour works. But Singapore has a very specific way of dealing with this. It does not ask why. It controls. Everything is about tightening boundaries. More licensing, more checks, more enforcement, more categories. The assumption is always that if you regulate hard enough, the problem will disappear. But that only works if the problem is actually the rules. If the problem is the environment, then all you are doing is suppressing symptoms. And that is exactly what this looks like. A system that is extremely good at making things disappear from sight, but not particularly interested in understanding why they keep appearing. You can see it in the language. “Errant operators.” “Disamenities.” “Regulatory gaps.” It turns everything into a technical issue, as if the solution is just better calibration of rules. But from the ground, it does not feel technical at all. It feels like pressure. Pressure to work, pressure to earn, pressure to keep up, pressure to survive in an environment where everything is expensive and tightly managed. That pressure does not show up in official reports, but it shows up in behaviour. Workers look for higher-paying opportunities, even if they are in grey areas. Businesses look for ways to maximise revenue in a high-cost environment. Customers look for outlets that are not part of the rigid, predictable structure of everyday life. And all of this feeds into the same ecosystem that the government then tries to stamp out. What is almost impressive is how consistently this gets ignored. Each time the issue resurfaces, the response is identical. Tighten rules, increase enforcement, close loopholes. There is no real attempt to step back and ask whether the system itself is contributing to the cycle. Because that would require admitting something uncomfortable. That the same model that produces order also produces pressure. And that pressure does not just disappear because you regulate harder. Instead, we get this endless loop. A grey market appears. It grows quietly. Authorities crack down. The environment becomes clean again. Everyone praises the system. Then a few years later, the same thing shows up in a slightly different form. And we repeat the entire process as if nothing has been learned. To be clear, Singapore will continue to look well-managed. These activities will be pushed out of sight, hidden better, or made more difficult to operate. On the surface, everything will appear under control. But that is the problem. Singapore is very good at looking under control. Not necessarily at being honest about what is happening underneath. So when I read about another round of tighter rules for massage establishments, I do not see a decisive government fixing a problem. I see a government that is extremely good at reacting, but deeply unwilling to question itself. Because as long as the focus stays on enforcement, the real question never has to be asked. Not “how do we stop this.” But “why does this keep happening here, of all places, despite everything being so tightly controlled?” And if the answer to that question points back to the way the system itself is designed, then maybe the issue is not that Singapore is failing to control vice. Maybe it is that the system is quietly generating the very behaviour it keeps trying to eliminate. And tightening the rules is just the easiest way to avoid admitting it.       https://www.reddit.com/r/SingaporeRaw/comments/1srimy9/singapore_loves_to_crack_down_on_vice_but_never/    
    • Two of the four Chinese nationals arrested for their alleged involvement in a series of theft cases were brought back to the scene of the alleged crime at an eatery in VivoCity shortly after 10.30am on Tuesday (April 21). The police had received several reports of theft in the vicinity of Marina Bay Sands, Palawan Beach at Sentosa and VivoCity between April 1 and 14.  Ren Fubin, 40, Sui Haibo, 40, Yu Haibo, 50 and Zhang Wei, 43 were arrested last Tuesday after officers from Ang Mo Kio Police Division, Central Police Division and Clementi Police Division identified them through ground enquiries and with the aid of images from closed circuit television (CCTV).   Among the stolen items were an iPhone 15 pro, a Volkswagen Golf car key and an EZ-Link card with the total value amounting to $1,733. They allegedly targetted unattended bags and personal belongings of individuals, who were distracted or were not vigilant about their possessions. Zhang Wei is alleged to have committed theft at an eatery in VivoCity at about 1pm on April 1. Ren is accused of the same offence, where he allegedly worked with Zhang Wei and two other Chinese nationals to commit the said offence. Throughout the morning, Zhang Wei and Ren Fubin were both separately taken around the eatery for about 20 minutes each.   Zhang and Ren were each dressed in white collared T-shirts and fitted with arm and leg restraints. Only Ren was taken to the carpark where they allegedly disposed of the unwanted stolen items. They will return to court on April 27 to face theft charges.  If found guilty, they may be jailed for up to three years, fined or both. The police warned the public to not leave their belongings unattended.
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