Red Shirts and Rowdy Royals

The secret WikiLeaks cables that explain how Thailand went from paradise to political mayhem.

BY ANDREW MACGREGOR MARSHALL | JUNE 29, 2011

A decade ago, Thailand was a beacon of democracy and progress in a neighbourhood mired in archaic autocracy. Three of its neighbours -- Burma, Laos, and Cambodia -- are trapped in the past and very far from being free. The fourth, Malaysia, is an apartheid state in which access to education and jobs depends on race. Thailand was regarded as the natural leader of the ASEAN bloc and an example for other democratizing nations to follow. Tragically, all that has changed.


5 Key U.S. Cables for Understanding Thailand's Turmoil
Obtained by Reuters and curated by Andrew MacGregor Marshall.

Thailand is slipping backwards into authoritarianism, militarism, and repression. And a general election on Sunday, July 3, seems unlikely to change that. It's an election in which whoever wins, Thailand's people are likely to lose.

On the surface, the election is a straight fight between the incumbent Democrat Party of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and the Pheu Thai party formally led by Yingluck Shinawatra, the younger sister of exiled telecommunications billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra -- who remains a central figure in Thailand's crisis. At stake is far more than which party will form the core of Thailand's next government. The election is the latest skirmish in a long struggle over the balance of power between elected politicians, the military, and the monarchy. At this stage, Thaksin's proxy party looks set to win power -- and generals allied with the 78-year-old Queen Sirikit, the estranged wife of the widely beloved King Bhumibol, are likely to do all they can to sabotage that.

The election contest can only be understood in the context of multiple conflicts being fought at all levels of Thai society in the twilight years of King Bhumibol's reign. The most momentous of these conflicts center on the palace. Because Thailand has the harshest lèse-majesté legislation in the world -- any perceived insult to the king, queen, or crown prince is punishable by three to 15 years in prison -- discussion of the central role of the monarchy in Thailand's turmoil is outlawed and media reports have had to rely on tortured euphemisms and oblique hints. In theory, the country is a constitutional monarchy in which the king has little formal power but uses his moral authority to intervene at times of great crisis to save the country from disaster; in practice, the palace is enmeshed in politics and intervenes constantly, but usually through a network of loyal royalists to hide its role. Trying to explain Thai politics without reference to the role of the palace is thus like trying to tell the story of the Titanic without any mention of the ship. As Pravit Rojanaphruk, one of the country's most outstanding journalists, wrote in a column this month: "The 'invisible hand', 'special power', 'irresistible force', all these words have been mentioned frequently lately by people, politicians and the mass media when discussing Thai politics, the upcoming general election and what may follow."

A few months ago, through my work as a senior Reuters editor, I gained access to the "Cablegate" database of U.S. diplomatic communications believed to have been leaked by U.S. soldier Bradley Manning. The cables revolutionize the understanding of 21st-century Thailand because unlike almost all journalistic and academic coverage of the country, they do not mince words when it comes to the monarchy. As I began work on an extensive article about the cables, I realized that because it represented an epic breach of the lèse-majesté law, it could never be published by Reuters, and I would be unable to visit Thailand again for many years. I took the decision to publish the article anyway, and resigned from Reuters on June 3 to do so. That I had to leave my job and become a criminal in Thailand just to report on the cables says all that needs to be said about the lack of freedom of information that is stifling important debate on Thailand's future.

Two linked power struggles involving the palace are at the heart of Thailand's crisis. The first is the battle over royal succession. The 83-year-old King Bhumibol has been hospitalized since September 2009, inexplicably refusing to return home to one of his palaces even when doctors pronounced him well enough to do so. A cable by then-Ambassador Eric G. John says King Bhumibol is "by many accounts beset long-term by Parkinson's, depression, and chronic lower back pain." The impending end of his reign has sparked intense national anxiety in Thailand. King Bhumibol's son and heir, Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn, has a reputation for being a cruel and corrupt womanizer. A notorious video showing a birthday party for his pet poodle Foo Foo -- who holds the rank of Air Chief Marshal -- has been widely circulated in Thailand; in it, the prince's third wife, Princess Srirasmi, dressed only in a thong, eats the dog's birthday cake off the floor while liveried servants look on. Thais are terrified of the prospect of Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn becoming king and overwhelmingly support his younger sister, Princess Sirindhorn. But King Bhumibol has shown no sign that he will pass the throne to his daughter -- known to Thais as "Princess Angel" -- and doing so would in any case fly in the face of centuries of royal tradition.

Ironically, the majority of Thailand's most ardent royalists are among the prince's biggest foes, because of their fears that he would destroy any shred of respect for the monarchy and also because he is widely believed to have some kind of alliance with the Thai establishment's nemesis, Thaksin. For this reason, many royalists are rallying round Queen Sirikit in the hope that she can become regent when King Bhumibol dies and rule on behalf of one of Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn's young sons. Queen Sirikit has placed herself in pole position for doing so -- in particular, hard-line army chief Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha has long been an acolyte of the queen.

But Queen Sirikit, like her son, is a profoundly divisive figure. She has explicitly linked herself to the "Yellow Shirt" mass movement that helped topple Thaksin and successive governments that supported him, and her decision to attend the funeral in 2008 of a young Yellow Shirt woman killed in a street battle with police sparked unprecedented online criticism of the monarchy in Thailand and has exploded the myth that the palace is above politics. Queen Sirikit had long been a backer of the hated son she once described as a "black sheep," but after some blazing rows she seems set on trying to win the throne for herself. That would almost certainly result in violent conflict in Thailand, possibly pitting the pro-queen factions of the military against other army units resentful over Queen Sirikit's influence.

Besides the conflict within the palace over the succession, there is also a conflict among the palace, military, and parliament over ascendancy in charting Thailand's destiny. The military has long been the dominant force in Thai politics, usually in alliance with the royals. Elected politicians have generally had very limited real power. Thaksin changed all that, and his ascent to power and subsequent ouster in a 2006 coup sparked national conflict that has compounded the succession struggle. Thaksin won overwhelming electoral mandates in 2001 and 2005, and he imposed his authoritarian "CEO style of management" on the country. He was deeply corrupt and had little time for democracy, but he delivered genuine benefits, especially to the country's poor, and was rewarded with immense and lasting popularity. But by breaking Thailand's unwritten rule that politicians should operate within narrow boundaries and leave most of the real power in the hands of the generals and monarchist bureaucracy, Thaksin became seen as an existential threat to the palace, and the establishment is determined to prevent his return to power.

Underlying these key power struggles are many others. Thailand's crisis also involves a class conflict in the rigidly hierarchical society, with the rural and urban poor broadly backing Thaksin against an establishment unwilling to allow the "uneducated masses" to decide who runs the country. The conflict also has a regional dimension: Thaksin is very popular in the north and the impoverished Isaan region in the northeast, while the Democrats maintain a traditional stranglehold on the more prosperous south of the country. And it's partly a contest between competing economic visions -- the populist crony capitalism espoused by Thaksin and the "sufficiency economy" model promoted by King Bhumibol. At the deepest level of all, the conflict is about what it means to be Thai, and whether Thais must have unquestioning reverence for authority and the monarchy or become a more open and democratic society.

Thailand, a strategic crossroads and transport hub in Southeast Asia, is also a key battleground in the economic and geopolitical rivalry between the United States and China. The United States has long been a key ally of Thailand's military and monarchy, a relationship forged during the war against communism in Indochina. U.S. diplomats see Thaksin as more willing to work with China, though he studied in the United States and also considers himself a friend of America. China is increasingly courting the Thai military, and some analysts even see the succession struggle in geopolitical terms: Princess Sirindhorn speaks fluent Mandarin and is very close to China's government; the Chinese have built a special compound outside Beijing for her to stay in during her frequent visits. Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn is a diplomatic disaster, and a planned trip to China in 2007 had to be canceled because of his unreasonable demands for special treatment. Queen Sirikit is an ardent Thai nationalist wary of outside influences.

One troubling insight shines through very clearly in the U.S. cables: Leading members of Thailand's establishment not only hate Thaksin, but they are terrified of the prospect of him regaining power and wreaking revenge on those who have wronged him. Moreover, with the king old and ill, the royalists do not want to risk a pro-Thaksin party holding office when he dies, as that would give Thaksin and his allies a huge advantage in determining how the succession struggle plays out. For all these reasons, if his sister Yingluck wins the election, she is unlikely to govern for long: The establishment is likely to resort again to Yellow Shirt mob violence, a judicial intervention, or even another coup to unseat her. And that will tear Thailand even further apart.

But an election result that keeps the Democrat party in power would be no better in terms of solving Thailand's strife. The party is almost certain to come second, according to opinion polls, and if it forms the next government it will have to do so in a coalition with the Bhum Jai Thai party of Newin Chidchob, a politician who even by the depressing standards of Thai politics stands out as being particularly venal and dangerous. Many Thais will feel their political aspirations, expressed democratically via the ballot box, have again been ignored by the elites. And Thailand's national agony will continue.

One further crucial struggle is being fought in Thailand today. It is between those who believe there needs to be a frank and open national debate about the role of the monarchy and the influence of the military in 21st?century Thailand, and those who seek to suppress and criminalize such discussion. The leaked cables contain strong evidence that King Bhumibol is in the former camp. Queen Sirikit and of course the military are strongly opposed to such debate. They seem to have failed to realize that they are standing against the tide of history and the march of technology. They cannot stop Thais from becoming informed in private, and if they outlaw public discussion and fail to evolve, the result is likely to be violence and the possible end of the Chakri dynasty. Only debate and compromise can save Thailand from further conflict. And that's another reason that the leaked U.S. cables are so valuable. If they can help destroy the lèse-majesté law once and for all and promote debate, they will have done a great service to a proud but troubled nation.

CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAULT/AFP/Getty Images

 

Andrew MacGregor Marshall is a freelance journalist based in Singapore. He resigned from Reuters after a 17-year career to write freely about the U.S. cables on Thailand.

TANGERINE

10:27 AM ET

June 30, 2011

Well this article managed to

Well this article managed to ruin it's credibility by the third sentence. Are the affirmative action policies favouring the Bumiputera in Malaysia racist and should they be abolished? Yes. Do they make it an apartheid state? No, of course not.

That word has just a bit of baggage attached to it and shouldn't be thrown around to casually describe any system of racial quotas. It might grab the reader's attention through sheer shock value, but it certainly doesn't lend itself to an intelligent or informative discussion.

 

ZENJOURNALIST

8:00 PM ET

June 30, 2011

Apartheid

From Wikipedia:

The crime of apartheid is defined by the 2002 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court as inhumane acts of a character similar to other crimes against humanity "committed in the context of an institutionalized regime of systematic oppression and domination by one racial group over any other racial group or groups and committed with the intention of maintaining that regime."

On 30 November 1973, the United Nations General Assembly opened for signature and ratification the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid (ICSPCA)[1] It defined the crime of apartheid as "inhuman acts committed for the purpose of establishing and maintaining domination by one racial group of persons over any other racial group of persons and systematically oppressing them."

In my view, Malaysia's policies that provide different educational and job opportunities based on race clearly constitute inhumane policies in the context of an institutionalized and systematic attempt to preserve the primacy of one race.

Enough said.

 

TANGERINE

11:54 PM ET

June 30, 2011

I think that requires

I think that requires extraordinarily broad readings of 'inhuman acts' and especially 'systematic oppression.' If the word can be used to describe both the National Party and Black Economic Empowerment, it's not really too useful, certainly not with the baggage that comes with it.

The word is so strongly associated with the worst and most pervasive excesses of such a system, and has such opprobrium attached to it, that using it to describe even as elaborate an affirmative action system as Malaysia's is irresponsible and misleading.

 

TANGERINE

11:54 PM ET

June 30, 2011

I think that requires

I think that requires extraordinarily broad readings of 'inhuman acts' and especially 'systematic oppression.' If the word can be used to describe both the National Party and Black Economic Empowerment, it's not really too useful, certainly not with the baggage that comes with it.

The word is so strongly associated with the worst and most pervasive excesses of such a system, and has such opprobrium attached to it, that using it to describe even as elaborate an affirmative action system as Malaysia's is irresponsible and misleading.

 

ZENJOURNALIST

2:53 AM ET

July 1, 2011

Apartheid

Well, I guess it depends on what you think is inhumane. To me, it is inhumane that a child of one race should have worse access to education than a child of another race, on a systematic basis. But we can agree to disagree. I would hope that you can at least see that I hold a valid view - even if yours differs - and that it does not undermine the credibility of my reporting on Thailand. Best wishes.

 

TANGERINE

10:31 AM ET

July 1, 2011

That's quite fair yes. Like I

That's quite fair yes. Like I said in my original post, the system is racist and it should be (for everyone's sake, including the Bumiputera's) abolished. Just to me that system and apartheid, commonly perceived as it was practised in South Africa, are of such different orders of magnitude as to be incomparable.

But you're right, reasonable people can certainly disagree on this. I apologize for my overblown first comment, it was undeserved. What you did with the Thai documents required courage and will hopefully speed that country's progress towards a healthy political system. As you well stated, Thailand gets a free pass too often simply because it has been for decades the most functional of a dysfunctional bunch.

 

PADTHAI

4:06 PM ET

July 4, 2011

Bias & ill-will against Thai King & Thailand

Andrew got a good start comparing Thailand with her neighboring countries. But he misrepresented a few facts & chose to blame the Royal Palace as the force behind the scene that has been against Thaksin & his followers as well as against the progress in democracy. He also blamed the lese majestic law as the primary reason that causes national ill and that stifles people’s freedom of expression & information. Andrew’s article is not a constructive but has a destructive intent.

As the long term resident reporter in Thailand for 15 years, I questioned his knowledge on Thailand & his motive on this article. Whatever the actual content of the cable written by the US diplomat(s) in Thailand that sent to the US Dept was, the views expressed there are just opinions that are not necessary correct and/or factual entirely.

From the start Andres misapplied the word “Rowdy” to Royals instead of the Red Shirts who are Thaksin’s blind followers, who have no respect to the rules of law & no hesitation to resort to violence. It’ll be better if Andrew would explain & specifically give the examples of what the Royals has done that represented ROWDY acts. What the crown prince’s wife did walking around naked in their residence to celebrate their pet’s birthday is their personal matter. It’s the choice they made; they have to live with their misdeeds & poor judgment. You criticized them just like the majority of Thais who deemed this as inappropriate because you & most Thais expected the couple to behave like the royalty but forgot that they, just like us, are humane and not perfect.
Andrew failed to realize that according to Thai constitution, Thai armed forces are required to protect the country & the Royal institution as well as to be loyal to the king in the similar manner that U.S. citizens pledge allegiance to the U.S. flag & the nation. When members of associations and students of schools in the US & other countries are not condemned to pledge their loyalty to the organization, it should be more than acceptable for Thais whether civilians or uniformed officers to be loyal to their King who has devoted his life working for Thai people & Thailand. In the US & other countries, there are laws against graffiti on public & private properties. There are also laws to protect individuals from being baselessly defamed & from being threatened. Being subject to such wicked acts, victims are given the right to take legal actions to defend & protect themselves. But in Thailand, we don’t want our King, Queen, members of royal family and members of the regency council to appear in court spending time & resources to defend & protect themselves from hostile acts & evil intent against them by Thais or foreigners. These are the primary reasons we have the lese majestic law. But just like what has happened in America & other countries around the world, the administrative & judicial branches are not perfect in prosecuting & punishing the accused wrongdoers. It’s not uncommon that facts & evidence on legal cases are distorted or overlooked while rules of law are misinterpreted; thus innocent people have been wrongly punished. Yes, the law has been misused by people & politicians against others with hidden agenda. But it’s very irresponsible to blame the law itself instead of people & officials involving the administrative & judicial functions of the law.

I and majority of Thai people wonder why foreigners have to be so overly concerned & outwardly advocate to destroy this lese majesty law if the majority of Thai people accept it and happy to live with it? What give the foreigners the right to meddle in the internal affairs, customs or traditions, and culture of another independent nation?

Near the end of his 3rd paragraph, I don’t see the need or relevance for Andrew to add the adjective word “estranged” in bold to Queen Siritkit as the wife of our beloved king. If there is any separation at all, we Thais understand because His Majesty has been in the hospital for a few years already due to frail health. Whether the separation is real, we do not see it a problem or the reason that caused the political crisis or social chaos. We know that our King & Queen are human, have family and have to deal with the family affairs just like other human beings. Yes, as human being, nothing is perfect; our beloved king has family problems too, but they are his private matter that HM has to deal with. Nonetheless, the separate whether true or not did not occur when they were young. Both our beloved King & Queen have appeared together in informal & formal functions as old and frail as they are in recent times. Again, I question Andrew’s motive in using the word “estranged” wife for Queen Siritkit here!
When Andrew said that he had to give up his employment with Reuters & left Thailand to write this article because he fears the lese majestic law will be applied on his questionable article, he also has implied that freedom of information is nowhere to be found in Thailand and that there is no open debate in Thai society for issues confronting the nation and/or affecting the future of the country. His statement and/or implication are absolutely not true but purely fabricated lie. Compared to the periods during Thaksin’s time as the country PM and those before him, there are more newspapers, media & magazines. While in power, Thaksin monopolized the nation’s satellite TV & telecommunication. Today, there are over 60 licensed independent satellite TV operators in the country. The press & media have much more freedom to publish & broadcast their stories. Reporters from competing press & media have reached out to Thai people in all corners of the country to stage interview & organize community debates on issues affecting their locality. The cyber surfers in Thailand have enjoyed faster speed of service when they get on the Internet. The number people suing Internet and cell phones to communicate & get information via social networking & websites have undoubtedly increased.
It is undeniable that freedom has limitation and comes with the responsibility. This is why there is libel suit against baseless defamation. This is why there are rules and regulations for passengers to follow from the check-in procedure passing through the security inspection to on board the aircraft that flies them to distant destinations. Therefore, it is not a secret at all that from time to time, govt officials have to exercise their authority to apply the pertinent laws to ensure people will be responsible in freedom of expression and information they disseminate.

In this modern day & age, Thai society has also evolved with time & changes occurring around the world. Like most developing nations under the capitalism & free market economic systems, the gap between the rich and the poor is getting wider and wider. With the proliferation of democracy and education, other than the 2009 military coup, the military’s roles & influence in Thailand politics & society are not as dominant as the past 2 decades and before. Military personnel are members in the society. Top military brasses are educated people & many are trained in the US. Therefore, they have to be more aware of public sentiment and global reaction or objection as well as condemnation if they resort to use military force to interfere with civilian rule & democratic process. Thus, they have shown restraint despite being provoked by the rowdy red shirt armed guards and their violent acts, and despite repeated provocations by the intruding Cambodian soldiers along the dispute border. Yes, Andrew is correct that credit should also be given to Thaksin in neutralizing the power of Thai armed forces on interfering with governmental affairs. But Andrew should tell the reader that Thaksin did it by buying them out in the same fashion as he bought out most of the small opposing parties to win his first general election.

Andrew did a disservice to the reader by suggesting that Thaksin’s popularity & populist policy are the threat to the palace and His Majesty. At his age and with his poor health and status in addition to his Buddhist faith, there is no good reason for King Bhumibol to personally envy Thaksin’s success. HM’s focus has always been on well-being of Thai people and the progress as well as stability and peace of Thailand since his early days as the young monarch. The King’s primary palace in Bangkok is much smaller than mansions belonged to the rich in Thailand, in the US and other countries. This is why HM has advocated sufficiency economy. That’s why HM has worked hard traveling to all corners of the country by all means to be in touch with Thai people whether there’s paved road or not. If Andrew has any fairness and honesty at all, he should tell his reader that our beloved king has often emphasized the need to be ethical and diligent as well as harmonious for officials and Thai people to work together for the progress, peace, stability and happiness of the nation. HM also has publicly promoted democracy and stressed the importance for having democratic process. There is no doubt that Thailand is an open society and in many aspects, Thailand has more freedom that most nations in the world including the U.S. But still, there are plenty of rooms for improvement especially in the area of ethics, transparency, check & balance system, quality of live, etc.

As the patriarch and head of the household, when the crisis hit the family, it should be acceptable for the head of the family to express concern & constructive suggestion to right the wrong and to find the best possible ways to resolve the crisis/conflct. Is it wrong in the process to say things in black & white or right & wrong? When the children in the household have a fight among themselves and tried to destroy the house or set the house on fire, should the head of household do nothing or say nothing? When the nation’s capital city was attacked & set on fire by members of the family, is it wrong for the patriarch (HM in this case) to express his sorrow to see the tragic incident incurred in front of his in his time?

I wish Andrew and other foreigners who have the same negative view will have the decency to stop blaming our beloved King who we regard as the father & soul of our country for the conflict and what has gone wrong in our country. Blaming the all ill in Thai society particularly the lack of freedom in expression and information solely on the lese majestic law is the mark of tunnel vision. Ignoring other factors especially wide spread corruption contributing to the political & social problems equates to being narrow minded. If Andrew really loves and cares about Thailand, and if Andrew has nothing to hide, he should have honestly & truthfully provided more constructive comments and ideas instead of promoting the destruction of the single law, the lese majesty.

For Andres and other similar minded people (Thai & foreigner) who hate this law so much, they behave like those thieves, criminals and wrongdoers who hate the laws and procedures enacted to catch them and punish them for preventing them from carrying out & attempting to get away with their wrongdoing.

 

ANDREWDOVER

1:00 PM ET

June 30, 2011

Overall good article, but

I complement you on the serious work needed to produce this material.

But I can't say as a very outside observer I come to the same conclusions.

In particular I did not see the evidence in the links for this statement:

"One troubling insight shines through very clearly in the U.S. cables: Leading members of Thailand's establishment not only hate Thaksin, but they are terrified of the prospect of him regaining power and wreaking revenge on those who have wronged him."

Rather than:
"... , if his sister Yingluck wins the election, she is unlikely to govern for long. The establishment is likely to resort again to Yellow Shirt mob violence, a judicial intervention, or even another coup to unseat her.", I expect Thailand to muddle along, even after the current King passes from the scene.

 

ZENJOURNALIST

8:06 PM ET

June 30, 2011

Muddling along

It's clear from the cables that since 2005, the Thai establishment has been trying to undermine Thaksin and his allies however possible. The leaked cables only go up to the spring of 2010 so they do not offer comment on Sunday's election; however, there is no reason to believe things will be much different now.

If your characterization of the last five years is "muddling along" then I agree Thailand may well have more of the same. I would say the situation is much worse than a muddle.

 

ANDREWDOVER

7:27 AM ET

July 2, 2011

There are positive aspects to Thailand too

For example, the World Factbook reports an estimated 1.2% unemployment rate and a 7.8% real GDP growth rate for 2010. It has $176 billion in gold and foreign currency reserves which is ranked 12th in the world.

It is certainly possible that the various Thai interest groups fail to reach a compromise solution, and violence breaks out, but I just put the odds at less than 50% where the author seems to estimate it at over 50%.

 

MACCHIAVELLI

4:44 PM ET

June 30, 2011

this thai soap opera

is pretty fascinating. respect to the author for having the balls to ball on reuters to publish it.

guess the moral of the story is reuters isn't really that great of place to work!

 

DAIVA66

2:18 AM ET

July 1, 2011

If the word can be used to

If the word can be used to describe both the National Party and Black Seo

 

GRANT

12:17 PM ET

July 1, 2011

Thailand's troubles go right

Thailand's troubles go right back to its WWII history, the nation has been constantly divided by factions.

 

SLIMANDSEXY

11:36 PM ET

July 1, 2011

thai plagued with problems

Thailand is a wonderful country but like all other countries, it too has its problems. Even though it was an emerging country that many was looking to become a reigning country it was plagued with its problems.

Prostitiion remains to be a big part of the income that is generated from the country, the people want freedom but with so many years of following their leaders because the think they know best is really bad.

What they need is a guru masterclass that will help them change the way how they think.

They must realize that in order to change their country they must be willing to change the way how they perceive their country. The palace cannot hold the same power and they change, something has to give

 

JAMES135

11:51 AM ET

July 10, 2011

I Can Concur....

that Thailand has already slipped back into a military state. I was just in Thailand about six months ago and I have to say that this place is very odd. Many of the people are miserable and the "King" forces his people to like him with all sorts of propaganda and brainwashing messages on billboards, magazine advertisements, and TV ads. I mean, how can a place like this be healthy when the King forces himself on you and if you question his authority you are thrown in jail? While I was there on business visiting my executive coaching client, every time we were in a cab they would tell us how civil war could break out at any moment and that people were very unhappy. I could see in people's eyes how worried they were over the civil unrest. I really hope they can find peace soon

 

LALOPARSAD

6:23 AM ET

July 25, 2011

The word is so strongly

The word is so strongly associated with the worst and most pervasive excesses of such a system, and has such opprobrium attached to it, that using it to describe even as elaborate an affirmative action system as Malaysia's is irresponsible and misleading earnextramoney.Prostitiion remains to be a big part of the income that is generated from the country, the people want freedom but with so many years of following their leaders because the think they know best is really bad.

 

KILLTOY

8:55 AM ET

July 25, 2011

Agree in fact

I'm surely agree with you.
That fact is really acute and actual right atm coz people think too good about their leaders whilst they do everything right on the contrary.
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MACORTEZ461

1:13 PM ET

July 29, 2011

Red Shirts and Rowdy Royals

The secret WikiLeaks cables that explain how Thailand went from paradise to political mayhem. Well, I guess it depends on what you think is inhumane. To me, it is inhumane that a child of one race should have worse access to education than a child of another race, on a systematic basis. But we can agree to disagree. I would hope that you can at least see that I hold a valid view - even if yours differs - and that it does not undermine the credibility of my reporting on Thailand. Best wishe voice data integration Thailand is a wonderful country but like all other countries, it too has its problems. Even though it was an emerging country that many was looking to become a reigning country it was plagued with its problems. Prostitiion remains to be a big part of the income that is generated from the country, the people want freedom but with so many years of following their leaders because the think they know.