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Not feeling welcome


DrJack54

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2 hours ago, uhuh said:

I explicitly said prices are much higher here than they are in Western Europe "if you have to pay out of pocket there" (normally nobody has to pay out of pocket there,  but it does happen - foreigners without insurance,  people who have only private insurance for reimbursement later, people whith high deductibles, many reasons).

 

The actual prices most Europeans pay are much lower. 

 

Example: Pantoprazol in Germany bought without insurance, 11,78 Euro

Bought with insurance 5 Euro (these are the "subsidized" prices - actually,  they are not subsidized, they are paid for by social health insurance, not by taxes; fees for social health insurance are typically several hundreds EUR per month)

Pantoprazol as just paid to an upcountry private Thai Hospital: 2436 baht - more than 6 times the German "free market" price

 

Crestor in Germany without insurance: 82,09 euro,  with insurance 8,20 euro

Crestor as just paid in the same upcountry Thai Hospital 4760 baht

 

Plavix in Germany without insurance 39,95 euro,  with insurance 5 euro

Plavix  as just paid in the same upcountry Thai Hospital 3542 baht

 

BTW German pharmaceutical prices are expensive by international standards,  that's why i chose Germany as a comparison

 

 

Insurance is a scam as explained by SteveK: high premiums, forced contraction,  no value whatsoever because the insured sums are ridiculously low and everybody needs an additionally  "real" insurance (with coverage of millions of baht)

 

 

And I explicitly told you , because In your home country you get subsidised medical just like thai pay absolute minimal. What do you not understand about that?

 

since when high premiums became a scam?

Edited by BestB
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2 hours ago, uhuh said:

Very much different from Switzerland (very easy - never seen Thai ladies with Swiss passport?), Norway,  Germany,  to name a few.

How is it different and how much did man had to pay for the Thai lady to become a citizen? Rest assured it was not free, did not take few weeks and was not with out a lawyer which also cost money 

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2 minutes ago, BestB said:

How is it different and how much did man had to pay for the Thai lady to become a citizen? Rest assured it was not free, did not take few weeks and was not with out a lawyer which also cost money 

There are quite a few my wife helps to run a European Thai Network and there were 3 or 4 who came on the England tour a couple of years ago. Needless to say they are all loaded having the European equivalent of the baht the Swiss Franc !

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5 hours ago, dimitriv said:

 

 

The insurance is a new requirement. The possibility that there is maybe a way around this is for me not so important. The knowledge that maybe tomorrow there will be something else without possibility to escape is what matters.

 

Let's talk about morals. Or lack of it.

 

Would it be right to send someone home after 20, 30 years, if he cannot prove that he has enough money to stay?  Living together with someone you are married to is a basic human right.

 

Would it be right to send someone home if he doesn't have 400k in the bank? After he lived here for 20 or 30 years, is married, and has children? 

 

It is a violation of human rights.

 

 

 

 

 

You can exercise your human rights and bring your wife back to your home country... 

In the UK you would have to prove a minimum income of (approx) £19000 per year, or greater than (approx) £65,000 savings...

If you can't meet this you can complain about the violation to your human rights... 

 

Or... you can stay in Thailand and meet the 400,000 Baht requirement. 

 

 

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4 hours ago, uhuh said:

Very much different from Switzerland (very easy - never seen Thai ladies with Swiss passport?), Norway,  Germany,  to name a few.

I know a few Thai ladies with Norwegian passports. The reason why many don't get them is Norway does not allow dual citizenship so they have to relinquish their Thai citizenship and all that goes with it.

They come back to Thailand on tourist visas much the same as any other Norwegian.

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14 hours ago, SteveK said:

If any country in the world toughened up their immigration and visa regulations, you would obviously expect some of the foreigners to leave, through either choice or necessity. What Thailand is doing now is slowly turning the screw until all but the richest ex-pats are left. They don't mind the wealthy ex-pats, or the 2-week millionaires, but everyone else is clearly not welcome. Forget your wife and family and forget your business in Thailand. They only want you here if you've got megabucks and don't mind sharing it around. Ex-pats eking out a living on under 1000 baht a day are definitely not wanted. 

 

Either come here as a tourist and blow your budget in two weeks. Or come here as a rich ex-pat and spend an absolute shed load of cash. If you're in-between these two groups you are SOL. Go to a much nicer country where you will be welcomed and not treated like a criminal for doing nothing more than coming too often (what a joke).

 

The entire country is mismanaged from the top down.

This is the post of the month. Could not agree more.

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14 hours ago, GeorgeCross said:

 

in my case its instability - at 45 i am comfortable and settled and can pay/qualify for anything i need, but with now TWO major changes to long stay visas not being grand fathered in i cannot plan for any future changes that may come between now and me reaching 80 years old and have no faith that they will be enacted in the best interests of those they apply to - in other words it will always be thailand first, guests last.

 

as such feel it is safer to move my family to europe where we can all live together forever (my wife will obtain a passport) + i can work in any field i choose as a sole trader

 

maybe we will holiday in thailand from time to time but until the day i die i will never invest another satang here

 

 

"Guests last". Excuse me, but just who are the "guests"?

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11 hours ago, nakluapattaya said:

Lol rules getting enforced, laws getting stricter. Sad for those wanting to stay long term. But its pretty normal, Thailand is not so desperate anymore to just want to let anyone in.

 

Personally i hate it, i wanna stay forever on tourist visas. But it makes sense. In my country u can only stay for 3 months as a tourist. Other long term options are either being married to a citizen or work. Kinda the same like Thailand tho, but my country also accept refugees. In my country most people dont like immigrants. So i think Thailand is still very tolerant. As most westerners are just drunk old guys coming for the rentgirls, or smelly backpackers.

"As most westerners are just drunk old guys". That is nothing but a load of nonsense.

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11 hours ago, uhuh said:

I have been here a number of years and feel more and more not wanted. 

By officials and by ordinary people.

 

I don't have issues with immigration, but always filling out new forms and trips to CW every second month is not my idea of fun.

But if you like these things,  good for you

What visa are you on when you have to fill out forms every second month?

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3 minutes ago, NanLaew said:

Fifteen years minimum. Sorts out all those hapless, lubbed-up, lightweights with burned bridges first.

Fifteen years will short out all the Old gizzards also ????

Unfortunately, I am one of them :sad: 

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8 hours ago, BestB said:

And I explicitly told you , because In your home country you get subsidised medical just like thai pay absolute minimal. What do you not understand about that?

 

since when high premiums became a scam?

I just said for the second time the prices i am talking about are not subsidized. 

Forget it.

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7 hours ago, Gecko123 said:

1. In one of his earliest addresses after taking over the government, Prayut not only talked about foreign criminal elements operating in Thailand, but how Thailand's sex industry was a blemish on the country's international reputation. This stigmatized the entire ex-pat community as potential criminals and sex tourists. It also stigmatized Thai women in the sex industry or in relationships with foreign men, which made entering into relationships with foreign men less socially acceptable

First what I heard in May 2014 (I don't remember which one of them said it)
"Too many farangs !"

 

7 hours ago, Gecko123 said:

9.There's also a school of thought that Thailand, like a number of other SE Asian countries, has fallen under the spell of China which appears to want to consolidate its sphere of influence in the region. Lured by promises of financing for large infrastructure projects and military aid, the Thai government may be deliberately becoming less welcoming of Western expats because they are seen as potential voices of Western liberalism. China also is suffering an imbalance of males to females, and may see SE Asia as providing a safety valve for this problem by eliminating the competition sex tourism presents. When you consider what is going on in neighboring countries vis-a-vis Chinese investment and consider the talk about possible decoupling of the world economy into different spheres, some of these immigration moves perceived as unfriendly towards Western foreigners start to make a little more sense

I agree with everything you wrote, especially with this one.

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20 minutes ago, smutcakes said:

What visa are you on when you have to fill out forms every second month?

Have you ever heard of TM 90, TM 30, TM 28? Plus I needed a certificate of residence,  that took 3 trips to CW (no, they didn't mail it) within 3 months. 

I like the market at CW, but the trips there are getting too frequent. 

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17 hours ago, CharlieH said:

In my opinion, alot of the issue is around the falling of some currencies coupled with the strong baht, it has devastated some incomes and many  I believe are hitting a financial crisis and out of pride or embarrassment, saving face, call it what you will, may be using the continual trials and changes in immigration criteria as the reason but perhaps its more one than the other, and the latter is more comfortable to blame or give as a reason, I suggest.

 

After all if you have the finances, and you have a family etc, there are always ways, and alternatives, those alternatives wont matter a squat if you dont have the finances/income anymore.

Spot on - there’s always a way here which is a plus. 
 

More than one way to skin a cat but griping about it won’t solve anything. 
 

Take responsibility 

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