
JBChiangRai
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Everything posted by JBChiangRai
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Bad advice, Never order COD, you cannot check the package before paying and then your cash is with the courier who will give it to the sender, which may or may not be Lazada, and if it's not Lazada then you're stuffed.
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It’s clear the seller sent the parcel to you directly COD without involving Lazada. You paid Best and Best paid the seller directly without Lazada being involved at any time. You never paid Lazada so they can’t refund you. The seller probably asked you to confirm your address and you gave it to him. We have a rule in my household, absolutely no COD shipments, EVER! Anything arriving COD is never accepted here. This is just one of many types of COD scams, there are others, always, but always pay through the Lazada payment channel at time of purchase.
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Will the wall primer + color hide this mess?
JBChiangRai replied to FrederikKitten's topic in DIY Forum
As a property developer, I concur with that, you will always see an outline where old meets new plaster. -
No Problems from Cannabis Legalization: Health Minister
JBChiangRai replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
I enjoy a glass of wine. I don't see a problem with sensible alcohol consumption. Actually, I don't have a problem with people smoking cannabis, if it doesn't cause them a problem. The problem I have with cannabis is the people who develop a problem with it (by that I mean triggering metal illness), they generally think they can smoke more to alleviate the symptoms, and that doesn't work, it's a downward spiral. The issue is how do we know which category a new user of THC is going to be in? I am also against the young with still developing brains taking it. -
No Problems from Cannabis Legalization: Health Minister
JBChiangRai replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
Can you read? I said I used a little in 2004, not that I "smoked a joint". I smoked a few times a week after work for a few months. I stopped because the mental tasks I had to do at work, I couldn't complete without reverting to the computer. I noticed I had "lost my edge". Of course I do go around with my clipboard asking everyone I meet if (a) they are depressed, and (b) do they use marijuana (not!). I came to the conclusion my cannabis use may have been responsible for my depression after reading "Cannabis Pharmacy, the practical guide to medical marijuana" by Michael Backes, Andrew Weil M.D. & Jack McCue M.D. where it states there is a biphasic (a big word for you) link between depression and getting high and I test that hypothesis (I know it's probably another big word for you) when other people tell me they suffer with depression. I never said my friend ate "a couple of space brownies", reread what I said. I gave no indication of how many she has eaten. It was her choice to go to a health farm at great expense for her. I was simply travelling down to another of my homes in Thailand and gave her a lift. Judgmental aren't you, magistrates are arrogant and hypocrites, actually we volunteer our time unpaid to give something back to society. Life has been particularly good to me, I've been most fortunate and I really enjoy giving something back. Most magistrates fall into two categories, they have either been extremely successful in business and can both afford the time out their business and want to give something back, or their employer recognises the good they are doing and continues to fund their salary for the time they volunteer. I can see why defendants up in front of a magistrate might consider them arrogant, perhaps that is where you formulated your opinion? -
No Problems from Cannabis Legalization: Health Minister
JBChiangRai replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
Yes I did see a lot more from alcohol, mostly fights and drivers. It's not really valid to say cannabis is ok because alcohol is a lot worse, it's a bit like saying you can stick your fingers in that 220v outlet because it's not as bad as jumping off that high building. -
No Problems from Cannabis Legalization: Health Minister
JBChiangRai replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
Perhaps I am biased, I sat on the bench as a magistrate for a few years and saw the damage marijuana can do. I have a friend receiving medical treatment for depression now in a health farm, she recently started eating space brownies. I drove her there myself last Monday, she’s receiving rTMS therapy. I ask people with depression if they are marijuana users, a high percentage say they are. I used a little in 2004 and a year later had my one and only bout of depression. -
No Problems from Cannabis Legalization: Health Minister
JBChiangRai replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
Cannabis Pharmacy, The Practical Guide to Medical Marijuana. Michael Backes, Andrew Neil M.D. and Jack McCue M.D. -
No Problems from Cannabis Legalization: Health Minister
JBChiangRai replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
If the law is followed, cannabis with 0.2% THC won’t cause a problem. Unfortunately, it’s not being followed and THC content nearer 100 times that is being sold. In higher concentrations (enough to give a high) it can cause mental illness in a significant proportion of people and affects brain development in most young and still developing brains. I am not sharing an opinion, I am stating medical fact. Thailand is ill prepared for mental illness.- 105 replies
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Indian Man Caught At Airport Trying To Smuggle Controlled Wildlife
JBChiangRai replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
So now you know what the chicken is in your Bhuna -
Thailand to Build Nearly 1,400 EV Charging Stations by 2030
JBChiangRai replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
I think you are misunderstanding the numbers. The OP is talking about government charging stations, presumably they mean PEA, MEA, EGAT. There are hundreds of privately owned/managed high voltage DC charging stations already at PTT, EA Anywhere, MG, ElexA, EVP, CL etc etc and hundreds more AC charging stations at Malls, Restaurants, Petrol Stations, Coffee Shops and many of them are free. A savvy EV owner can charge and travel for free all over the country. I commute Chiang Rai to Chiang Mai every few weeks and never pay to charge my battery EV car. -
A warning for those using the other forum in Chiang Rai…
JBChiangRai replied to JBChiangRai's topic in Chiang Rai
That statement was intended to be an attempt at hyperbole humour, ill advised I'd agree, humour rarely travels in digital form. There is a website set up that appears to be for general property sales, but in fact it only promotes one development (by a Dutch guy I think). -
A warning for those using the other forum in Chiang Rai…
JBChiangRai replied to JBChiangRai's topic in Chiang Rai
Somebody please tell bechou and yknot that spaghettimilanese can’t reply to their messages because he was the other party banned. So to answer your question yknot (how friendly is that?), that’s how friendly it is, and that’s how lightly moderated it is. -
A warning for those using the other forum in Chiang Rai…
JBChiangRai replied to JBChiangRai's topic in Chiang Rai
Not really! Everyone is banned or hates the owner. -
A warning for those using the other forum in Chiang Rai…
JBChiangRai replied to JBChiangRai's topic in Chiang Rai
That forum is based on Simple Machines Forum Software, they don’t support admins reading Private Messages, actually they are totally against it, but there are 3rd party tools to do it, but you have to actively decide to be a nosey parker. -
I haven’t posted there for the best part of a month (I prefer not to), but I was banned 2 days ago, hours after an exchange of Private Messages with another member criticising the owner of that site, we were discussing how he hears voices and does irrational things. The other member was also banned, and he assured me he did not share our Private Messages.
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One rule for the wealthy remains strong in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
I don’t buy that. His Red Notice was visible some years ago, now it’s not, but other Thai villains Red Notices are visible. Why would it suddenly disappear? Photos of him enjoying the high life occasionally appear, for example in London. Are we really to believe his passport doesn’t trigger Law Enforcement to react as he crosses borders? and that for some unknown reason the RTP asked Interpol to hide his Red Notice? The simplest and most likely explanation is probably the answer here. -
The car exiting the junction from a side road (turning right) has priority over the car on the main road turning right into the side road.
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One rule for the wealthy remains strong in Thailand
JBChiangRai replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
There doesn't appear to be an Interpol Red Notice out for Boss... View Red Notices (interpol.int) -
Traffic lights is a different case. What I said is actually the law, not custom. When you are turning right into a side road, traffic exiting turning right onto the main road have priority. I saw a poster about this on the steps up to the 2nd floor in the Pattaya driving licence centre and it sometimes features in driving tests on the computer.
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I am from the UK, we also drive on the LHS. I have only noticed one difference with the law here, if you are on the main road turning right into a side road, people exiting the side road have priority and you must give way, it is totally the opposite in the UK. Then you have local customs, in Chiang Rai we only have one roundabout, it is fed by a dual carriageway each side and two side roads perpendicular to the dual carriageway. All the approach roads are clearly marked with white stop lines on the road, but drivers on the dual carriageway think they have priority. I witnessed an accident there once and discussing with the insurance assessor he told me that the guy who thought he could cross the white line straight onto the roundabout was at fault, i.e. exactly the same as in the UK (I think France is different)
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This says it all. You recognise your business's success is dependent on your staff. Treat them as you would your closest family, show them you are one of them and that you value them. I have run a successful business here for 8 years, I have lost one member of staff in that time, because she moved away. I don't pay substantially more than anyone else, upper quartile for sure, but my staff would consider me their friend and I likewise. Yes we get the same grandfather dies every year from some of them, but I turn a blind-eye. Face is everything in Thailand. There is always Lao-khao for them to drink at the end of the working day, if the ice cream bike comes around, they all get given ice creams etc etc. You need to have a special set of inter-personal skills to be successful with Thai workers, never criticise, handle poor workmanship with great tact. If you don't have these skills, you'll always have a high workforce turnover.
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