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The history of Thailand’s holy-day alcohol ban – and why it could soon be lifted


webfact

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42 minutes ago, Woof999 said:

That's kind of missing the point.

 

Taking foreigners out of the picture, a Thai not being able to do what they can do on the other 360 days of the year, in their own country, because of the beliefs of someone else is just plain wrong.

And there are for example Christian Thais who can drink....or Hindu Thais who don't demand the ban of beef.

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1 hour ago, quake said:

I'm sure the Monks will drink to that. :giggle:

yes they drink their "coke" from their own bottle...and as more coke they drink as more they smile.

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4 hours ago, ikke1959 said:

But that means for every day not only on the 5 important holidays.. and also is smoking, use of drugs, having money, gossip, telling lies, respect for lives and many more... So alcohol ban can be scrapped as all the other I have mentioned are not implemented too.....

Besides that the ban is more about selling than consuming..Not of this time anymore so stop with this nonsense and also on election days, and all other days they have invented. Make people aware how to (ab)use alcohol safely and driving with alcohol punish severe, if they ever test one   

Saving face when owefamily lots of money but lie through their teeth and state it was given as a loan.
Scum and vermin all over the world and good and bad everywhere and do the wai apology and stating sorry, really!!! GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR

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54 minutes ago, webfact said:

The Office of the Prime Minister also issued regulations in 2015 clarifying that alcohol can be sold only in stores between 11am and 2pm and again from 5pm to midnight only, a regulation that had previously been largely ignored.

Every article keeps stating this as fact, but it's totally false. The "Revolutionary Decree" was revived around 20 years ago under the puritanical Interior Minister Purachai duringThaksin's administration, and the 2015 regulation just re-codified the same policy.

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