JBChiangRai
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This is called “sanctions”. Bringing pressures to bear on a nation’s peoples because of the actions of their leader, which incidentally are “taken in their name”. Nobody is saying individual Mr Ivan is bad or Mrs Olga is bad, but we have to bring pressures to bear through them and hopefully change the actions of their leader. We ALL have a duty to do that. Remember, all it takes for evil to triumph is good people to do nothing.
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What absolute rubbish. Emirates are running a normal schedule to Moscow, any Russian can easily get home. As for Ukraine, that’s a different matter. I’m appalled by the tourism industry here, especially the 5* hotels run by Western General Managers. Zero statements supporting Ukraine and condemning Russia. Organisation’s like SKAL are conspicuous by their failure to even mention the genocide and war crimes going on in Ukraine. As long as the Russians have money, they are welcome everywhere here. Except my businesses in Chiang Rai, we’ve taken a stand and banned Russian citizens. what a complete lack of morals we are seeing in the Hotel Industry, appalling!
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I’m on holiday in Khao Lak and I had some stitches removed at Takua Pa government hospital yesterday, it’s a very small hospital, tiny in fact, they said they are getting more than 100 new Covid diagnoses a day, I think the real figure in thailand is >100,000 new cases/day perhaps more than double that.
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NATO Mission Iraq (NMI) is a non-combat mission that aims to strengthen Iraqi security institutions and forces so that they are able to prevent the return of ISIS, fight terrorism and stabilise their country. It was at the NATO Summit in Brussels in July 2018, following a request from the government of Iraq, that Allied Leaders launched this advisory and capacity-building mission in Iraq, which was established in October 2018.
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Putin started out wanting $20-30M for his retirement pot, it didn’t take long for him to want to be the richest person in Russia then the World. He can’t spend it anywhere except Russia and is at risk of losing everything if he loses power - which is what must happen now to restore peace and dignity to the Russian people.
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Can Thailand really afford to stop exporting to Russia?
JBChiangRai replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News Headlines
Life has a way of rewarding “Doing the right thing” Is the right thing “Business as usual” with an aggressor invading a sovereign nation? I think not. -
Inexpensive substitute for atorvastatina 40mg in Thailand?
JBChiangRai replied to pub2022's topic in Health and Medicine
Never buy Atorvastatin in a pharmacy here. Go to a government hospital and get it prescribed. I pay 120 baht for 3 months supply of 40mg Atorvastatin (last tine they gave me double 20mg). -
In my experience, the electronics fail well before the titanium plates in the cells wear out. I forgot to mention, make sure any systems you buy are fanless. Chinese made fans invariably fail.
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Emaux salt chlorinators are the best value, but if you really want to save money then buy the salt cell generator on eBay and drive it with a car battery charger, about 1,300 baht will buy you a 6v, 12v, 18v, 24v battery charger with a 1-10 control knob for the output. Two of my pools and the pools of two of my mates are powered this way after the electronics failed (which seems to be the weak link). Just remember to reverse the polarity every month or so and adjust the current after adding salt. Still going strong after 5 years on the same salt cells. The electronics on salt water chlorinators are basically fancy constant current devices that automatically compensate for salt concentration. Another tip, don’t tile your pool, use granite. It will last the life of your pool and the cost is about the same or less. I have previously used Astral Pool, LA Swim and Zodiac devices, they all failed ultimately.
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Hiring a Lawyer/Going to Court advices?
JBChiangRai replied to ESLTeacher1989's topic in General Topics
The car owners are entitled to have their cars repaired by the main dealers or main dealer approved repairer. The car owner is entitled to reject the repair if he can see it's been repaired. I rejected a repair at the Toyota main dealer in Pattaya when the door they repaired was off shade a tiny bit. I'm amazed how many people drive around in cars where the odd door or wing doesn't match the rest of the car. Whilst I have in the past painted previous car panels at 1,500 baht/panel, if it was my new Porsche you would be into hundreds of thousands of baht. In Chiang Rai, the transport costs alone to Bangkok for painting would eat up your 50,000 baht. What car would you rent them for the 2-3 weeks whilst it was away? They are entitled like for like, if it's a supercar you might well be into a million baht or a lot more. Bear in mind, if they sue you, you won't be able to leave the country until it's settled, it could take up to 5 years. Costs are rarely awarded and your costs will be anywhere between 50,000 and 250,000 baht. There is a lesson here for all condo owners, it's difficult to argue water running down a wall that destroyed an original LS Lowry watercolour painting didn't come from your condo. Your liability insurance should at least match what is below you or be prepared to hand over your condo and any other assets you have in Thailand and if that doesn't settle the debt, to be prevented from leaving here for the rest of your life. -
My family's real estate development company have boomed in covid times. In terms of rental properties there is very little rental stock in Chiang Rai and what there is, is mostly horrible, prices have not dropped for decent rental properties here at all. Regarding sales, you can tell immediately looking at a property whether it will sell, and most won't sell in a decade or more, not only must it be well presented but location is really important. The good real estate agents push what they know will sell, agents need to be pro-active and show a customer not what he asks for but what he needs and will actually buy. For example, a customer may ask for a single storey home with 5 bedrooms, a good agent will ask why single storey? why 5 bedrooms? The answer could well be single storey because the buyer is worried about getting old, 5 bedrooms may be because he needs 3 bedrooms and 2 offices. If the right questions aren't asked then a multiple storey home with elevator and 2 offices would be overlooked by the poor agent and a good agent will close the sale. We had a sale where an agent rented a house to a customer who comes to Thailand for 6 months of the year. She didn't KYC, she didn't know their long term aim was to buy somewhere. Another pro-active agent did ask the right questions, did some sums and demonstrated it was cheaper to buy one of our new houses in the long term and they sold them one of our 3 bedroom houses. When I told the first agent who rented them the original house, she said I was mistaken because her customer wasn't in the market to buy. She lost a rental customer and lost the sale on our house which she also had listed. All because she processed enquiries, wasn't pro-active and didn't understand her customers real needs. It's like the old job interview trick where the interviewer says "Sell me this pen?". What he's looking for is questions to qualify what he uses to write with, what problems he has with what he currently uses, what he needs, and then match his product, the pen, to those needs. There's a saying in sales "Two ears, one mouth, use them in proportion". if you don't understand what your customer really needs, you'll do a poor job and more than likely lose the sale or at best sell them something they will regret and blame you for later. I have a story about one of those too, a friend came to a party at one of my houses and said "Why didn't my agent show me this? it's exactly what I wanted", it's the same agent btw. I suspect the big agents here have a founder who knows what he's doing and sales agents who are mostly clueless. I also predict boom times coming when the country opens up.
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Finding an architect near Chiangmai
JBChiangRai replied to jrmaanda's topic in Real Estate, Housing, House and Land Ownership
By "Traditional Thai way" I mean concrete post and beam on pads or piles, with block walls of some sort and cement rendered. I've seen foreigners ask Thais to build in steel or to finish with real "finishing plaster" and it either fails miserably, looks a mess and/or goes massively way over budget. On more than one build, I've seen the contractors walk off site, never to return, invariably with more money than is reasonable at that point. I think you have to be extremely tactful to work with Thai construction teams too, they are very sensitive and losing face can be a major problem. It's quite possible to build post and beam and finish it off with architectural decoration to look different, for example, look at the Queen Mother's swiss log cabin at Mae Sai, it's actually concrete post and beam construction.