Thai tax tangle: Expats warned of new rules on overseas income
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6
Russia using donkeys to move ammo 555
Its a difficult war to judge who is losing. No one is winning of course. Until Germany lost WW1, it wasn't losing. In WW1, both sides poured men and materiel into a front line that never moved. Once Russia pulled out, you would have thought that Germany would have the advantage. But it didn't. There was no surrender, just an Armistice. A fly on the wall in Spring 1918 would have concluded that German advances was a turn in the war to thekiir advantage. But what that fly on the wall wouldn't have realised in Spring 1918, was that by summer 1918, the German army was exhausted, its reserves spent, and domestic discontent at home as the effects of blockades (aka sanctions) were beginning to hit the civilian population). And by the Autumn, Germany agreed, without argument, to all the extreme terms of the armistice. Only with the benefit of hindsight do we realise the sequnce. Pack animals still have their use, in terrains where vehicles cannot operate, such as high up in the mountains. Dontetsk is pretty flat really, and it (was) covered in fairly decent roads. Of course, the appearance of donkeys might just mean its the appearance of donkeys, and has no significance. I doubt Russia is running out of 4-wheeled vehicles. So if donkeys means anything, it might mean they are starting to ration their refined fuels. The Russian government is still trying to maintain a pretence of normality in Moscow and St Petersburg. People are not getting rounded up in the streets and pressganged. They read about mobilisation in faraway parts of Russia and how convicts are being called up. Because mobilisation is in other parts of Russia, they don't really know anyone directly affected by the war. They are still going on beach holidays to Thailand and Turkey. Ukrainian hits on refineries is obviously having some effect on availability of Russian petroleum products; probably not as much as people think. Some is for lucrative export, some is earmarked for industry, some for public transport, some for the consumer market, and some for the miitary. The donkeys might be a sign of things being squeezed, so we ought to next see rationing of consumer supplies, and lines appearing at Russian gas stations. What Youtuber "Inside Russia" calls the second phase, when Russia starts turning in on itself, and blaming internal issues for difficulties. One signal being picked up is increasing "non-payment"; businesses not paying their bills. This is quite a Russian thing last seen in the last days of the Soviet Union, and during the early Yeltsin years. The government stops paying contractors. The contractors stop paying their suppliers, and down it goes. We should be applying more pressure to Putin's proverbial neck at this time. The war isn't going to end by Ukraine winning, anymore than the British and French Armies never had a victory parade in Berlin in 1918. Its going to end when Russia wants it to end. Right now, the Americans seem to want it to end on Putin's terms, where he achieves everything but the complete capitulation of Kyiv. Aggression is rewarded, because anything else is apparently "not realistic". China has now stopped buying coal off Russia, a big loss of income. North Korean troops, those that are left, are apparently going home. Iran is probably navel gazing now after the loss of Syria and Lebanon. What is curious is Belarus. Belarus recently had elections, a rigged outcome, but no widespread protests like l ast time. So why isn't the Belarus leader coming to brother Putin's aid, with the offer of troops, and equipment? In December 2024, Belarus and Russia concluded a mutual defense pact. There are around 5-6 brigades of Ukrainians in Kursk, just down the road from Belarus, but now they are dug in, so Russia really needs 15-20 brigades to get them out, which is why they haven't so far, and they have been sending in the Reluctant-Suicide Korean troops, and reputedly Yemeni laborers. Why aren't there hoardes of Iranian Revolutionary Guards joining the "good fight"? Spring is coming. Russia spent the winter, instead of regrouping, reequipping, trying to advance a few kms here, a few kms there. Both sides are clearly exhausted, and desertion rates for both are going up. The quality of the Russian equipment is worsening. Their refurbishment centres are a long long way back in the rear (the tank factories are all on the other side of the Urals, ever since Moscow was nearly over run in WW2). On the contrary, Ukraine's rear is not so far back. Both sides are facing spares shortages; there are mixed reports on the Ukrainian side, with the pro-Russian sites reporting its all gone to pot, but others give a different view. https://www.lrt.lt/en/news-in-english/19/2151722/lithuania-becomes-repair-hub-for-german-tanks-damaged-on-battlefield-in-ukraine Who knows. Russian spares shortages are due to sanctions (more modern Russian tanks had Thales range finding systems, now no longer available) and likely corruption. Spares shortages in the west seems to be down to corporate disagreements rather than any inability to actually make the parts. -
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Tariffs on Thailand
Just go to a grocery store and check the prices of US imported grocery products. It's ridiculous. I checked using an AI interface and it seems that tariffs on food and agricultural products can range upwards of 50% and tariffs on US made clothing can range upward of 60%. Needless to say I don't purchase US made goods here in Thailand. So honestly, I consider reciprocal tariffs to simply be leveling the playing field. -
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Thailand's Tourist Boom: 4.8 Million Visitors So Far
Ah, Tat stats... first, halve the number, because tourists, both international, and locals, are counted entering and leaving, on top of that if moving from hotel to hotel, you get counted again. -
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NYC Catholic School Teacher Resigns After Heated Anti-Trump Rant at Student
Trump has deprived 50% of the people the right to vote? Really? -
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Thailand's Tourist Boom: 4.8 Million Visitors So Far
Elaborate ? The higher class visitors are not so visible. Like the 5 star enclave in Wongamat. But what do you expect in the main parts of the Pattaya infrastructure sh*tshow.
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