A little more about Singapore, according to that noted authority, my taxi driver to the airport:
About 75 percent of the population (4.4 million) is Chinese, 15 percent is Malay, and 8 percent is Indian. The rest are other Asians and European/American ex-pats.
The main languages are Mandarin Chinese, Malay and English (it IS a former British colony and part of the Commonwealth).
In the early 1970s, the island opened its first freeway. Now there are 8, almost 9. Rarely does a traffic jam delay you for more than 15 minutes (take that, I-95!).
Every male has to do a 2-year stint in the military.
And then this is what some of my colleagues there told me about the city:
Singapore's relationship with
Malaysia is kind of like the U.S. relationship with Canada: They love to deride each other, but ultimately, they are good neighbors.
To ensure racial harmony, the government ruled that public housing blocks have no more than 25 percent of any ethnic minority living there.
It's 3 degrees north of the equator, so it really doesn't ever cool down.
You can live well on the cheap there. One British pound is worth almost 3 Singapore dollars.
It's a good place to get places from, with
Phuket,
Perth and other cities about 4 hours away by plane (so less time than it takes to get from NJ to FL, for example).
And on the subject of taxi drivers, I find them to be a great resource for learning about places. Especially here in London, where they have to take an exam called
The Knowledge, for which they have to know really almost every London street, hotel, church, and much, much more.