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yellow1red1

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  1. ATF...thanks for your kind comments...he is at Kindergarten, there is no homework or school work..basically just structured play...but thanks anyway for your deep insight.

    Thanks bkkgooner...yes I am hoping the school will straighten things out a bit for our son and I know what you mean about the spoon feeding, shocking at that age really and yeah the sleeping with the parents or grandparents cannot be good although I know it is widely done here...they just dont want to seem to invest the time now to fix a much bigger problem later.

    Thankfully my wife is starting to see the reality now and we will not make the same mistakes with our second son (3 months old now). She is actually pretty amazed at the Farang kid and seeing him for the first time has made her realise the reality of what I have been telling her about parenting and the Western style of structure, discipline and independance.....honestly I think she is quite shocked now she is seeing it for the first time.

    [my wife is starting to see the reality] [for the first time has made her realise the reality of what I have been telling her about parenting] <, This is what i read in the o.p. , between the lines, but that's a whole other story! 555

  2. Something very interesting in the Article,,, it's ALL about the power of the politicians and the power of the bureaucrats. of course the Power of the People isn't mentioned; isn't a [concern]...

    >>> It [could] be so simple, using Intelligent Design, instead of having to rely on Dumb Luck.

    There could be a technocratic House which points all of the Civil Managers. While they are not Elected by the whole, the Peoples' Elected Reps view the Short Lists of Candidates for the position of Duty and Responsibilities and the Elected House has to Approve the Appointments. Now, the beauty that makes it Corruption-proof, is the Civil Managers, who Administer the Portfolios, cannot Collect Taxes. The Peoples' House, who Collects the taxes, can't spend monies. The Elected Reps are an Intermediary between the Partners, the People and the Crown. There are no Premiers nor Governors, the Elected Reps are Equal to each other and good at accounting and budgeting, because they get asked for Funding every year.

    [[[btw, a FB Friend of mine, the former Vice-Premier of Bhutan has suggested, on his FB Timeline that his country discuss my concepts and have a referendum on changing their Constitution. In 2010 I warned him their new democracy would turn just as bad as the other ones around the world, with an unlocked back door for the Corrupt and the division of the People into political Gangs, all which came true, of course. In Thailand I was interviewed on a PhangNga radio station, by a Provincial Governor, a few professors, and some highly place VIP's are FB friends and they have shown my architecture to high places. This is tangible and progressing on many fronts in the West, too]] It's really very simple; we now have Smart Phones but are burdened with Stupid Political Systems, all of which, quickly, turn into Kleptocracies, ALL of them.

    Sure there is political Corruption; yes 3 million children will starve to death in 2015, [when there are 7 billion acres of arable land - do you have your acre?]. Yes the Pacific Ocean is a garbage dump. Did I mention Arms Lobbyists? Just don't say the human race is a civilized species, we are NOT.

  3. just the other day,,, it occurred to me,,, with all of this desire to move towards democracy, and away from democraZy.... why? oh why hasn't the NCPO conducted a few binding referendums,,, where the People can Assemble on Issues??? where the People can propose Laws and Issues? where NO political advertising is allowed and NO leaders are Elected, only the Issues and Laws to be decided? One reason it would be SO hard to put forward is because, you guessed it?, that [would] be REAL democracy.

    > it would BUST the West [if] Siam transformed into a REAL democracy.. the yanks, zionists , EU central bankers , ALL of the kleptocrats would Rush to put a STOP real democracy in Siam < they will not tolerate democracy,,, they want a return to democraZy!

  4. Okay, after we figure out Thai logic, let's tackle [how women] think. After that [Am/Chinese husband had stopped sending support payments for her and her two children(fell in love with a young Lao girl)] Am/Chinese should be a cinch, eh.

    Finally, we can get the grips on how the human species lets 3 million children starve to death, every year, while, still, claiming to be [civilized]. NOT!

  5. The sooner that civilians are allowed to carry arms the better what is needed is a Thai NRA, no more punch ups.

    Oh dear, don't you think there are enough guns and gun crime about in Thailand?

    it's a weird coincidence, but Thailand and america are side by side in World Listing for homicide Rates. somewhere around 103rd & 104th if memory serves. so.... the idea of either country [teaching] the other [the way do it] is a Laff as big as an elephant.

  6. get over the hurdle that Thorium is a nuclear power plant. we can't compare a land line to a Smart phone.

    ==========

    The waste can be spread on fields, they can't melt down, can't make nuclear weapons from Thorium, CAN burn off Uranium wastes in the Thorium plants. It's not like the cold fusion myth.

    China IS going ahead with Thorium plants.

    • Like 1
  7. You child is already Thai. You should get a her a Thai passport so she can travel to here without a visa. It would be best to apply for her passport in Vancouver. She can hold both nationalities. Canada nor Thailand forbid dual nationalities.

    You should get your child registered on a house book here so later she can get a Thai ID card and get passports here in the future.

    You wife also can also hold both both nationalities and should enter Thailand on her Thai passport.

    near what I suspected... that info about a house book is a gem, though. *thanks* [any vacations we can manage will be fine on their Canadian passports, but if they ever want to go there for an extended period, we have the detailed info, now]

  8. Our child was born in Canada. I am born and raised Canadian. The mother was Temporary Resident at the time, now is a Canadian. When the child was born the Thai Consul in Vancouver, happily, Issued a Thai Birth Certificate. {I was dumfounded there was no 'fee' to pay.}

    I'm 93% certain the mother is a dual Thai-Canadian, meaning she could return to Thailand, at will, and resume Thai citizenship [sometimes i wish - lol]

    What about the child? Could she apply for a Thai Passport? If she ever wanted to, when a young adult, could she move to Thailand and take up Citizenship, based on her Birth Certificate? [she's not fluent in Thai, if that matters?]

    ---------------------------------

    If a Thai, dual Citizen, returned to take up life back at home, would the Thai Income Tax Dept want a cut of any of the years of over seas earnings? Could they receive their over seas Pension funds without any strings Attached to Thai taxing?

  9. The big problem with democracy is that it gives too much power to poor people, so the wrong people get elected. Only the rich and powerful elite are actually qualified to run things, and so, if by error they do not get elected, they need to halt democracy, and then decide with their superior wisdom if and when there is going to be another election.

    The fact that these misguided poor people don't want the elite to run things must be solved by educating them until they DO want the elite to be in charge, and so they MUST hold off elections until that happens.

    The only other way of ensuring the right result is to somehow limit the votes. Clearly it's totally wrong that a poor farmer's vote has as much weight in the elections as that of a very rich CEO, say , who has high intelligence and knows a lot of judges and politicians. That gives the poor farmer an unfairly equal say, even though he is not rich or powerful, and doesn't know the right people.

    A good way to get round this glaring imbalance would be to restore the full weight of the rich CEO's vote by making each farmer's vote worth, say, one quarter of the vote of a rich person. Then society would get back to the way we all know it should be: with the people who always run things guaranteed to go on running things in perpetuity, with no unhelpful confusion.

    This would be very good for Thailand, as rich people always help poor people, even at the cost of their own financial disadvantage, and so giving rich people a vote worth four times more than poor people would HELP poor people. It's so obvious!

    In any case I now believe the Army are waiting for an event that will itself precipitate so much political and social chaos that they will be forced to keep control for at least five years (or more) to ensure public order...

    great rhubarb! bet a nickle yer a Canuck, eh. [or write for Mad Magzine]

    and, oh, please do tell... what is this Event we can expect?

  10. Democracy is over-rated when used in Asian lands like Thailand, partly because you have the 'm' word to take care of things if it all goes tits up. The military just hold things together until the 'democracy' part gets its act together and stops being such a clusterfck.

    Democrazy is over-rated. *full stop*... It's only kleptocracy with a dress on.

    >> Emma Goldman 1900. "If Voting made any difference, They would make it illegal."

    >>> The Pacific Ocean is a garbage dump and 3 million children will starve to death in 2015. Still, low brains talk about human 'civilization'. 555

    The political systems of history rely on, pure, dumb luck to be successful, not intelligent architecture. Lately, in the West, it's been, mostly, bad luck!

  11. A, it's less about religion, buddhists/muslim, and more about smuggling and political corruption, just like everywhere else in the World and in history. Hopefully, they will cut a gang lead deal on who gets what slices of the Corruption Pies.

    B, They could hide the gangland deal, by masking it in a [Distinct Society Clause], like Canada did with Quebec.

    -----------------------

    As long as the siphon to BKK is flowing, there will be upset Regional Nabobs, same old story. [eg: Suhkotai breaking off from Khmer Empire].

    --

    all through History, over and over and over, again >>>>

    Sukhothai had been a trade center and part of Lavo (present day Lopburi), which was under the domination of the Khmer Empire. The migration of Tai people into the upper Chao Phraya valley was somewhat gradual.

    Modern historians stated that the secession of Sukhothai (once known as Sukhodaya)[2] from the Khmer empire began as early as 1180 during the reign of Pho Khun Sri Naw Namthom who was the ruler of Sukhothai and the peripheral city of Si Satchanalai (now a part of Sukhothai Province as Amphoe). Sukhothai had enjoyed a substantial autonomy until it was reconquered around 1180 by the Mon people of Lavo under Khomsabad Khlonlampong.

    Two brothers, Pho Khun Bangklanghao and Pho Khun Phameung took Sukhothai from Mon hands in 1239. Khun, before becoming a Thai feudal title, was a Tai title for a ruler of a fortified town and its surrounding villages, together called a mueang; in older usage prefixed by pho (พ่อ) "father",[3] (comparable in sound and meaning to rural English Paw). Bangklanghao ruled Sukhothai as Sri Indraditya – and began the Phra Ruang Dynasty - he expanded his primordial kingdom to the bordering cities. At the end of his reign in 1257, the Sukhothai kingdom covered the entire upper valley of the Chao Phraya River (then known simply as Menam, "Mother of Waters," the generic Thai name for rivers.)

    Traditional Thai historians considered the foundation of the Sukhothai kingdom as the beginning of their nation because little was known about the kingdoms prior to Sukhothai. Modern historical studies demonstrate that Thai history began before Sukhothai. Yet the foundation of Sukhothai is still a celebrated event.

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