http://dawn.com/2012/11/23/singapore-most-emotionless-society/

Singapore ‘most emotionless’ society
By Kate Hodal | From the Newspaper | 8 hours ago 

NEVER mind its temperate 28ºC weather, low unemployment rate and high 
per-capita GDP — Singapore is the most emotionless society in the world, 
according to a new Gallup poll, beating the traditionally po-faced Georgia, 
Lithuania and Russia in a survey of more than 150 nations.

Asking respondents questions such as “Did you feel well-rested yesterday?”, 
“Were you treated with respect all day yesterday?” and “Did you smile or laugh 
a lot yesterday?”, the survey found that Singaporeans were the least likely to 
reveal experiencing any emotions at all.

Just 36 per cent of Singaporeans reported feeling positive or negative emotions 
on a daily basis, while 60 per cent of Filipinos recorded regularly feeling 
both — the highest response rate of any country worldwide.

“If you measure Singapore by the traditional indicators, they look like one of 
the best-run countries in the world,” Gallup’s Jon Clifton was quoted as saying 
in a Bloomberg report on the survey. “But if you look at everything that makes 
life worth living, they’re not doing so well.”

The poll’s findings — released on Wednesday — soon went viral on the Internet, 
where they became the butt of many jokes, not least among Singaporeans 
themselves.

“Singapore ranked most emotionless country in the world — not sure how to feel 
about that,” ran a number of Singapore-based tweets. “That [poll] is a lie,” 
commented one reader on the online news portal Today. “I use many emoticons to 
express how satisfied I am.”

Singapore’s 5.2 million residents work — at 46.6 hours a week — the longest 
hours in the world, according to the ILO. And only two per cent of the 
country’s workforce describe themselves as engaged by their jobs, according to 
the Bloomberg report, despite the global average being 11 per cent.

While many Singaporeans seem to agree that the nation does indeed work 
excessively long hours, its population is not necessarily “emotionless”, said 
the Singaporean native Adrianna Tan. “Every culture expresses everything 
differently. [The] European love of siesta, or quality of life, is seen in 
Asian eyes to be laziness,” said the 27-year-old IT consultant. “You can’t put 
one set of expectations that one group of people decides is ‘how one should 
live’ and apply it uniformly across the world.”
— The Guardian, London


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