I know a 14 yr old thai girl who was recently pregnant and had an abortion.
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3
Nose Jobs: Thai Fashion Statement or Beauty Fail?
What all these narcisisstic sods dont realise is that after the surgery it makes them look 10 times uglier along with the UK stupid trend for trout pouts and painted on eyebrows, nose ,lip ,ear, cheek ,ass, belly button, eyebrow piercings all topped off witha few tatts really screams "Im different".....when reality is they aint, they just look a frikkin mess. -
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Trump the convicted felon gets off so why not Bidens son?
Senseless. It appears you have been severely traumatized by the recent political events in the United States. Your president Trump has a lot more to load in your ears. -
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Pattaya Flourishes from Quiet Fishing Village to Vibrant Tourist Hub
...........and in some cases it's the same girl from 60 years ago! 555! -
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Nose Jobs: Thai Fashion Statement or Beauty Fail?
You won't get many responses on this topic because many of the old members on AN have Thai wives with nose implants and they don't want appear judgmental of their own wives on this topic. -
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Drunk Driver Kills Three on Motorcycle in Sisaket
Note to self " don't argue with wife's uncle " -
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Israeli Attacked in Thailand by German Tourist, Report Says
The topic is a reported attack on an Israeli by people identified as German. I doubt the attackers were native born Germans. As rude as they might be, even the modern day Germany right wing groups typically don't do that. I will not be surprised if the attackers are anything but German. It is like the moto jerks in Phuket who are described as French when they are more likely to self identify as North African. -
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Viral Clip Shows Foreign Man Swimming in Bangkok’s Filthy Khlong Saen Saep
When I first got here 40+ years ago it looked really bad then. -
154
What low/medium price wine do you recommend.
Sorry, but I can't agree with you and what you stated was part of a "misconception" put around a few years ago. For a start, if the ABV is 10% or thereabouts, then the product will not attract the full tax/duty anyway, so why would a producer lie on the label and to the authorities that it was a fruit wine when it wasn't, because it simply doesn't need to do this when the "wine" has a low ABV%? So the producer and seller of this wine which you believe is really pure wine and has no fruit juice in it, means that producer/importer is actually breaking the law as is the retailer and I don't believe any company would risk that. Furthermore, some of these "fruit wines" are produced in Australia and a wine buyer I know in Australia got back to me (and actually posted on this thread a few years back) with my questions about this "fruit wine" and stated that the producers of "real wine" really did frown upon this practice of adding fruit juice to the grape juice in making the wine, which was against their principles. They stated that this was not what they considered "wine" but was pure cr@p. So it does happen. So what you're trying to say is that the whole "fruit wine" industry is a lie perpetrated by producers in Australia and Thailand, not to mention other countries from which this fruit wine emanates, namely France, Italy, Chile, South Africa and New Zealand to name a few that I can recall. Sorry it is just not feasible and not only the winemakers in Australia who were in touch, but also a senior manager of Wine Connection here admitted to me that in some cases, bulk grape juice was shipped to Vietnam, where it was mixed with pineapple or passionfruit juice in the case of white wine, and sold here as Les Solstices (and still is). And just to make it perfectly clear to you, Siam Winery, in its early correspondence, admitted that it imported bulk grape juice from South Africa and addedl Roselle to the juice before fermenting it, so it attracted the lower tax breaks because it could be labelled "fruit wine". PS. There was also an article in a magazine a few years back where the author was aghast at the fact the so-called "fruit wine" (Mont Clair) was being sold in UK supermarkets and was positioned next to "real wines" thereby confusing the consumer and strongly condemned this practice. So do you really think that the perpetrators of this "fraud" with regards to mislabelling of wine would risk huge reputational damage and huge fines by lying on the labels – – I don't think so because not only the producers, but the sellers (supermarkets and importers) would sustain fines and brand damage.
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