
LivingNThailand
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British and Norwegian nationals arrested for illegal employment
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Absolutely not. -
British and Norwegian nationals arrested for illegal employment
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Lots in phuket. Now they have muey Thai visas. What is the government thinking? We need quality tourism. Sigh. Seriously low life’s here now. -
British and Norwegian nationals arrested for illegal employment
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
There must be 1,000s of young people illegally working here in Phuket. You can spot them. They are not tourists. Women in yoga pants carting their children arounds, bakeries, coffee shops, car rental & motorbike shops, all with Russian signs. Russians selling real estate. Russian commercials. Russian families buying cars, home improvement items and driving the rental properties up in price. These people are not tourists. If the police would check on all of them they could clean up the employment problem and clear them out. Local Thai people are very upset and not much has been done about it. It’s very sad. All because the PM wants high tourism numbers. -
Medical Experts Warn Against LSD ‘Death Stamps’
LivingNThailand replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
I rented a room out to a guy who spent his summer savings on 2000 hits of acid he bought from a US preacher passing through. He was selling it for a living. I would not let him keep it in the house so he had it buried in the snow around town. In the spring when the snow melted he had a pile of the stuff to deal with so he got into it ,one a day for a week then seven at one shot. That did it he went up and never came down. He threw out all his possessions, nice cameras etc. and would sit all day in the bath tub. He stopped eating regular food saying honey had everything a body needs till I told him it had no vitamin C so he bought a case of oranges. Anyway he spooked my girlfriend so I had to run him off so I could get laid. The last thing I heard about him was that they put him in the nut house but he climbed over the wall and escaped. I knew a guy like that on Maui once. It did get him out of the draft. -
Yes, probably speeding, but there is a big curve in the underpass. Not dangerous is not speeding typo, what I meant was , yes there is a curve in the underpass. If you are going the speed limit it is not dangerous. If you are speeding and out of control, yes dangerous. There are orange traffic cone-like things embedded into the divider through the tunnel. At the curve, most of them have been taken out by drivers..... speeding.
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Yes, and that is why we were importing from Thailand and not China. In my original post, I said that we could not compete with the lower priced China government-subsidized products. The mass wholesale market wants cheap, not quality. It's very hard to explain unless you lived it. The constant battle of "it's cheaper at XYZ company" and trying to explain to your customer that our product was better quality than XYZ and XYZ was cheaper because the Chinese Communist government was paying factories to produce products and flood the other markets. If a product costs $3 to produce, the Chinese government was giving the factories $1-$1.50 so they could undersell the other markets. i.e. Thailand. I'm not certain how wide spread the practice is now because I'm not in the market, but I would bet it is going strong. Sorry if I sound bitter, but if Thailand wants to compete they need to make sure that the products are similar in price, which means putting tarrifs on products coming in from other companies, like China, to be competitive...but I don't think it will happen.
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Is this guy the prime minister of Thailand? Or the PM of China? PM Srettha said in the original article: "There is no way that the Thai producers can compete with the Chinese products as far as production cost is concerned. " What a this is exactly why we had to close our business. We were importing products from Thailand and could not compete with the cheap "government-subsidized" products from China. This article makes me want to vomit. The PM can protect Thai businesses by imposing stiff tariffs on goods from China so that Thai companies can be competitive. That's how it works Mr. PM. He obviously doesn't want to help the country or the small Thai businesses. Please tell me that this article was an early April Fools Day article.
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TAT rolls out ‘Thais Always Care’ online communication campaign
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Especially from China? Why? Before I moved here eight years ago, I must have made two trips a year to Bangkok / Phuket for about 30 years. Personally, I didn't really see a big influx of Chinese visitors until about 2014, and that ended in 2020. Why, or why, does the government go on and on about the Chinese? It's a big world out there, guys. Lots of other countries. The knee-jerk back-and-forth programs make the government look panicky and desperate. BTW, that is a rhetorical question, I really don't expect a rational answer. -
Thailand’s tourism operators question 40 million visitors target
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Totally unscientific evidence, but I tend to agree. I live in a residential area of Phuket and last year at this time many new Russian families moved into the area. There was sort of a frantic pace about it. Now it's quiet and only the same families are here, not new ones. The Villa market was trashed every day and stripped, and the beer cooler was cleaned out every day by the Russians. Now, during peak season, everything is quiet at the market and things are civilized. Just the normal flow of tourists. The only places that are crowded are the streets and traffic, and most of those are Thais driving crazy and idiot tourists on motorbikes and big bikes. Can't wait until "high season" is over. I think after Chinese New Year, it will be almost back to normal and quieter, in my humble opinion. -
Yeah, happened to me one time. Probably about 20 years ago. We refused to get out of the taxi. It was late and we had traveled 24 hours. No way were we getting out of the taxi. And yes, it still goes on. I had an AIrBNB condo for rent before the pandemic. Happened to at least 3 of our customers, that I know of.
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Thai Tourism Bounds Ahead After Post-Covid Surge
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
I read a post from a guy who survived the Koh Lipe sinking. They asked the boat company multiple times if it was safe to go out in the sea and leave for Lanta, and they were reassured it was. It's a multiple problem. Poor boat maintenance, a cowboy captain, and poor judgment. None of those boats were maintained for over two years, and now they are in the water. This is very bad PR for Southern Thailand. Just waiting for the next boat to sink. I don't think they will ever get their act together on water safety. -
Thailand Pushes ‘Land Bridge’ to Speed Trade
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Of course. And it gives the Jolly Green Giant a reason to rack up his frequent flyer miles. But I still don't see how it could work. Not the way container shipping is now. Maybe way in the future, in a galaxy far, far away-- -
Thailand Pushes ‘Land Bridge’ to Speed Trade
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Yes, but they have been "talking" about this for a long time. I just don't see it working at all. Too many components, too many people involved, too much red tape, too much everything. In my humble opinion. K.I.S.S. Keep it Simple Stupid. But seriously, I'm really glad I don't import and work with shipping companies anymore. What a pain. -
Thailand Pushes ‘Land Bridge’ to Speed Trade
LivingNThailand replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
I used to import goods from Asia into the United States. There are several other issues to consider here. When a container ship docks in a foreign country, it has to go through some customs procedures, which can take a day or two. Also, at least in the US, the containers are all X-rayed. Not sure if they do that here. Then there have to be enough trucks with cassis available for each container ship. These are not always available right away, delaying some or all of the containers even further. Not all the containers will necessarily need to be offloaded at the land bridge, so this would have to be sorted out somehow. When arriving at the other side of the land bridge, there will be some sort of customs paperwork that will be needed to comply with going to the next foreign port. Now, does the container ship turn around at this point or go forward? What about the new containers that need to be loaded onto the ship, or is this just a one way deal and the ships go back empty? This is a logistical nightmare. That and all the other "negative" aspects everyone else has mentioned point to a very long shipment time. Something no importer wants. A couple of days delayed in Singapore is much more desirable in a businessperson's mind and pocketbook. -
True words. I've lived here quite a while, but now I'm not sure about something. When the light turns red, does the other light turn green instantly? There doesn't seem to be any cushion except for that countdown. I think I've only seen one yellow light in the 8 years I've lived here. I'm not saying it's better than where I'm from, but the yellow light has a more powerful warning than the #1 when you are speeding down the road. Having said that, many people run the red light in my home country. That's why I always waited until I saw ALL the cars go through. The biker went through the red light, and couldn't wait 2 seconds. I see that all the time in Phuket, like every day multiple times. The taxi was going way too fast and couldn't stop. I see that every day multiple times. I'm surprised I don't see more bad accidents. Very tragic.