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soalbundy

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Everything posted by soalbundy

  1. Fact is that massive character defects in Trump have been exposed, he even rips off his own supporters, even his sanity has been questioned. His ignorance in trade matters has certainly been shown when he increased the trade Tarifs with China and declared to all and sundry that China was paying the Tarifs, of course the opposite was true, the American importer was paying the increase which was passed on to the American public. He questions Nato, global warming, COVID. He doesn't pay his contractors or his lawyers, he cheats banks and the IRS with false information. The man is a train wreck.
  2. Five people died either shortly before, during, or following the event: one was shot by Capitol Police, another died of a drug overdose, and three died of natural causes. Many people were injured, including 138 police officers. Four officers who responded to the attack died by suicide within seven months.
  3. No, he is just too old for the job in my opinion but he isn't a rapist, a thief, a conman or a traitor.
  4. They certainly thought they were, let us not forget people died and were injured in this 'harmless' riot. The real danger was the polarization and hatred that this brought about, doubt from the magas about an unbiased justice system, doubt from America's allies about the stability of Americas political system, ridicule even, America's reputation dropped to the level of a banana republic. Trump is undoubtedly the most decisive, and ignorant president America has ever had, in any European country he would have retired in shame.
  5. Every country gets the leaders they deserve, through inaction or ignorance, unfortunately America deserves Trump although not through inaction. I should think that most civilized countries would act with distaste towards him if he won the election, he is a danger to the free world and democracy. Biden should gracefully retire and let a younger dynamic person contest the election. Really, is this the best the USA has to offer, Biden or Trump ?
  6. Well police, firemen, nurses, doctors, airline staff, armed services, hotel staff, restaurant and bar staff apart you are correct, normally there should be no need if a company is well organized. I've worked in the office on Saturdays sometimes if an emergency arose and even offered to do a Sunday but even my boss would balk at Sundays, as he himself once said, "We aren't Japanese, there has to be time for the beer garden." You're right on the maths as well, a pensioner has 7 days holiday a week, that can cause confusion when considering the working population, which I rarely do.
  7. That's only 3 weeks plus public holidays, in Germany I got 6 weeks plus public holidays. Standards vary according to where you live.
  8. Politicians don't have souls and Thaksin is the placebo for the masses, riots aren't in the play book and yes they will get away with it (I hope I am wrong)
  9. Not knocking, I'm a pragmatic realist, everyone chose's their own battles. The Jarrow marchers in the 1930's showed courage and fortitude, it changed attitudes leading to change but it didn't help them personally, so do you become an instrument of change or chose to change your own circumstances for a better life, I chose the latter. Most of my family is now in Australia, my brother became a millionaire, my sister owns a cattle breeding ranch, my two other brothers still in the UK are in dire straights through despair, one is a divorced drug addict on welfare, the other an alcoholic just about able to keep his job, his mortgage wore him down. Dying isn't a choice but how we live is.
  10. How far is this future away? I agree with you in principle but it would be naive to think political change has wings. Social justice is an evolving animal, it took Europe 200 years to get any semblance of social justice and it is still evolving. The establishment in all countries is still in power, governments are just the PR face of money and real power as Liz Truss found when the markets threw her out. A societies problems don't disappear with a change of government, they are handed on. A charismatic leader can jump start change but only with the help of the establishment and only if there is profit in it for them. Social unrest isn't profitable and a few inches are given to keep the money rolling but substantial change? I don't think so......billions of pounds for two aircraft carriers but no money for social housing or a failing health service, they don't bring in any profit, aircraft carriers on the other hand....The elite control the media with stories of 'reds under the bed' so they are needed, the homeless not so much.
  11. Still 84 years in the past are we? Why not use the quote from Wellington, "Give me the night or the Prussians", said as he was about to lose at Waterloo, that's even further back in time, you should like that.
  12. The perfect plan is unfolding, Machiavelli couldn't have done it better. It's unfortunate but I can't help but admire the establishments machinery, it runs like clockwork. Democracy has a lot to learn, they'll get there eventually but not with naive wishful thinkers, a cold calculating heart with a court of idealists on the periphery to keep that heart from freezing is required.
  13. I'm pragmatic and have little sympathy for patriots. I chose were I wanted to live and work, the fact that Germany pays a good pension as opposed to the crumbs handed out by the UK and pays a yearly increase no matter where I live is just an added bonus. I haven't been to the UK in over 50 years and what I read about it now only confirms that I made the right decision then, in the UK I only existed, in Germany I had a life.
  14. This old sock has holes in it, even the European court upheld HM governments view point, the UK is broke. They can't even help the poor in the UK, expats woes aren't even on the list of 'things to do'. We have no leverage and yet every few years this theme crops up, an exercise in futility.
  15. This was something akin to what I had deduced for myself, as I said earlier, the establishment has had a thousand years of experience in holding on to power, pseudo democracy in Thailand hasn't even had a hundred years. If one looks at the pathetic political performances in America and the UK it's pretty obvious that the establishment is still in power there as well so we should reserve our judgement regarding the pantomime happening here. I regard Thaksin as being the best of a bad bunch, certainly he is a rogue but at least he did something for the poor even if it was calculated to hold on to power rather than out of genuine concern. Self enrichment? Well who here is so pure as to throw the first stone? Thaksin's return will happen, it will draw the teeth of the red shirts and prevent mayhem on the streets, a play book written by experts. Pita is a confused virgin who has wandered into a brothel by comparison.
  16. If you want a word of mouth tourist number increase......put up the prices, works in bars with too few customers....not.
  17. How was he able to get away with this over a period of 25 years ? Jimmy Savile comes to mind, a wall of silence.
  18. Yet! but things will change if the old gang is given power. Up until now the street has remained calm and surprisingly civilized, this has emboldened the Junta, possibly a fatal miscalculation.
  19. Unfortunately THIS will be the harbinger of violence, now the street will speak.
  20. Having a friendly postman or postwoman is a plus, they go the extra mile for you and don't 'mislay' your post. My one has rung me up while sorting the letters at the post office, "That letter you keep asking me about is here now, be with you shortly", she now stops for a coffee and chats with the wife, relax, you're retired, not running from danger.
  21. I have never had this problem. I can give you an example. The electrical wiring in the loft in my new house was a disaster, Spaghetti. I asked around in the village and found (oh wonder) a qualified electrician, he had the papers that qualified him to wire a hotel. He looked in my loft, muttered something akin to swearing shaking his head. "You buy me what I tell you and pay me 500 Baht a day," this was 18 years ago. I agreed. He gave me a list, wire class A, yellow plastic tubing, screws, drills, etc. He arrived with a helper but the electrician would pay him himself. It was the hot season, stripped to their underpants they worked, I think, 4 days. I looked in the loft, it was empty of hanging wires, neat plastic tubing screwed to walls and rafters. I gave him a 1,000 Baht per day, he was utterly shocked and tried to refuse but I insisted. Two days later he came to my house with a fuse box, "It's not new but it's better than the one you have, I'll put it in for free, you've already paid me too much," I blushed with embarrassment, I wouldn't have worked in that loft for a 1,000 pounds a day.
  22. Uniforms were designed to stop the differences between rich and poor, everybody had the same clothes so nobody could come to school wearing the latest fashion and sneer at the poorer students ( children are cruel). Unfortunately uniforms are more expensive than they should be and someone with 3 or more children find it difficult to pay. My parents in England had 6 children and only my father worked, looking back now in my old age I wonder how they managed. At school you are not only taught facts but also how to learn, the logic of dissemination. At my son's school (which I consider very good, highly disciplined) students are often given homework on subjects that the teacher has only superficially touched on, the students are then asked detailed questions on the subject which forces them to search for themselves using their iphones, here the internet is of great value and they learn how to hunt out information for themselves. As a European I have no problem in paying for an iphone but I can imagine for a rice farmer this is no small matter and yet many of their children (where I am) have gone to university. My eldest step daughter won a scholarship at this school and was sponsored by Toyota to do business studies, my other stepdaughter is now an electrical technician. Farmers do know the value of education and sacrifice a lot for their children.
  23. I beg to differ but can only speak for my own village in Isaan. The people are house proud, when I first came here 18 years ago most houses were wooden on stilts (built by their or their father's own hands, I doubt many Europeans would be able to do that); today most are brick built with all mod-cons and the best car in the village is my well kept 15 year old Honda Jazz, the others are old pick-ups used in farming activities or a motorbike. These people aren't brainless, the greatest tragedy that could befall them would be to lose their land through debt so they do plan ahead as to what they can afford. Much has been spoken of iphones, as well as communication devices they take the place of a falang's computer for entertainment which they can't afford, they use the wifi from the pu jai baan, the village shop, the village clinic, or the government office, my wife regularly watches films on her iphone and my son uses his to gather info for his homework which is why the school requires the students above a certain age to have one, He now has a laptop and we cant get him off it.
  24. I think many comments here are a little unfair, stereotyped Thais, lazy, no forward thinking etc. Many have no other option than to borrow for things like school activities, school uniforms, fees, learning materials etc. (also iphones, required at my 16 year old's school) especially as farmers are relying on the coming harvest, they've invested in their crops but haven't received any money yet. Also many small employers, garages, shops, builders, don't even pay the last minimum wage let alone the new one. I know enough Thais with two jobs not just one. I certainly don't find them lazy, the builders at my local temple are erecting buildings that are works of art and work enthusiastically in all weathers with no safety equipment even though, as the foreman told me, the pay isn't that good, their midday meal is the monks left overs. Europeans with guaranteed wages, bonuses, holiday money, sick pay, pensions etc. enjoy benefits that a Thai can only dream of and due to low state pensions often have to support their parents as well as their own children. Many of you have no idea what these people go through because to save face they don't grumble, at least not to a stranger, they are an admirable proud, stoic people, corruption/rip offs among the little folk here is understandable. Unlike the UK, where every 7th person is on the poverty line and in debt, there are no food banks or charitable organizations (that I know of anyway) to help out. The system is wrong, not the people.
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